Jefferson Davis
1808–89, American statesman, President of the Southern
Confederacy, b. Fairview, near Elkton, Ky. His birthday was
June 3.
Early Life
Davis's parents moved to Mississippi when he was a boy. He
was given a classical education at Transylvania Univ. and was
appointed to West Point, where he was graduated in 1828. He
spent the next seven years in various army posts in the Old
Northwest and took part (1832) in the Black Hawk War. In
1835 he married the daughter of Zachary Taylor, but she died
three months later. Davis spent the next 10 years in the
comparative quiet of a Mississippi planter's life. In 1845 he
married Varina Howell.
Early Political Career
Elected (1845) to the House of Representatives, he resigned in
June, 1846, to command a Mississippi regiment in the Mexican
War. Under Zachary Taylor he distinguished himself both at the
siege of Monterrey and at Buena Vista. Davis was appointed
(1847) U.S. Senator from Mississippi to fill an unexpired term
but resigned in 1851 to run for governor of Mississippi against
his senatorial colleague, Henry S. Foote, who was a Union
Whig. Davis was a strong champion of Southern rights and
argued for the expansion of slave territory and economic
development of the South to counterbalance the power of the
North. He lost the election by less than a thousand votes and
retired to his plantation until appointed (1853) Secretary of War
by Franklin Pierce. Throughout the administration he used his
power to oppose the views of his Northern Democratic
colleague, Secretary of State William L. Marcy. Davis favored
the acquisition of Cuba and opposed concessions to Spain in the
Black Warrior and Ostend Manifesto difficulties, and he also
promoted a southern route for a transcontinental railroad,
therefore favoring the Gadsden Purchase. Reentering the Senate
in 1857, Davis became the leader of the Southern block.
The Confederacy and After
Davis took little part in the secession movement until Mississippi
seceded (Jan., 1861), whereupon he withdrew from the Senate.
He was immediately appointed major general of the Mississippi
militia, and shortly afterward he was chosen president of the
Confederate provisional government established by the
convention at Montgomery, Ala., and inaugurated in Feb., 1861.
Elected regular President of the Confederate States,
he was inaugurated at Richmond, Va., in Feb.,
1862. Davis realized that the Confederate war effort needed a
strong, centralized rule. This conflicted with the states' rights
policy for which the Southern states had seceded, and, as he
assumed more and more power, many of the Southern leaders
combined into an anti-Davis party.
Originally hopeful of a military rather than a civil command in the
Confederacy, he closely managed the army and was involved in
many disagreements with the Confederate generals; arguments
over his policies raged long after the Confederacy was dead.
Lee surrendered without Davis's approval. After the last
Confederate cabinet meeting was held (April, 1865) at
Charlotte, N.C., Davis was captured at Irwinville, Ga. He was
confined in Fortress Monroe for two years and was released
(May, 1867) on bail. The federal government proceeded no
further in its prosecution of Davis. After his release he wrote an
apologia, The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government
(1881). He was buried at New Orleans, but his body was
moved (1893) to Richmond, Va.
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Fifth Edition Copyright ©1993