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nation to its vital center and threatened a dismemberment of the Union.* But the fires of this volcanic upheaval were happily soon extinguished; and, for the purposes of this work, it will suffice to date the period of division in Georgia from the famous convention of 1857, which resulted in the nomination of Georgia's renowned war governor: Joseph E. Brown.

There were five candidates before this convention: John H. Lumpkin, of Rome, an ex-congressman; James Gardner, of Augusta, perhaps the foremost editor in the state, then editing the famous Constitutionalist; William H. Stiles, of Savannah, a diplomat, whose "History of Austria" had appeared in 1848; Henry G. Lamar, of Macon, an excongressman; and Hiram Warner, of Greeneville, a former occupant of the Supreme Bench, afterwards chief justice of the state. These men were all richly endowed and well equipped for public life. Judges Lumpkin and Lamar had won national distinction in Congress and had also made fine records as Superior Court judges. William H. Stiles was one of the most polished orators in the state, brilliant, erudite, accomplished. James Gardner was a man, small in stature but powerful in intellect and possessed of a rare quality of personal courage. Hiram Warner was one of the state's wisest oracles, a man whose great brain, like his pure life, was crystal-clear. Never perhaps in Georgia have abler men contested for the gubernatorial honors.

But scarcely less distinguished was the personnel of the convention itself, an extraordinary assemblage of men. There were nearly 400 delegates in attendance, representing 107 counties. Hon. Tennent Lomax, of Columbus, a gifted editor, then wielding a powerful pen in state polities, was made the convention's presiding officer. To mention some of the delegates, we find enrolled: Linton Stephens, Osborne A. Lochrane, John W. H. Underwood, William Phillips, George A. Gordon, Alfred Austell, Richard H. Clark, Leander N. Trammell, P. M. Russell, William Hope Hull, T. W. Thomas, E. W. Chastain, William H. Dabney, Julian Cumming, George T. Barnes, Peyton H. Colquitt, Charles J. Williams, E. W. Beck, T. L. Guerry, George Hillyer, B. D. Evans, Sr., E. H. Pottle, D. B. Harrell, Hugh Buchanan and F. II. West. One of these, Judge Lochrane, afterwards became chief justice of Georgia. Judge Linton Stephens was also destined to occupy a seat on the supreme bench. In the opinion of many, his powers of mind transcended those of his halfbrother, Alexander H. Stephens. Six of these delegates, Messrs. Chastain, Wright, Underwood, Barnes, Beck and Buchanan, afterwards became members of Congress. Perhaps at least twenty afterwards became judges of the Superior Court. Gen. William Phillips was to command a famous legion in the Civil war. Gen. Alfred Austell was to organize the first national bank in the Southern States. So much for the younger delegates; most of the older ones were seasoned veterans, rich alike in the honors and in the scars of democracy.

But to proceed. The convention assembled on June 24, 1857. Each of the candidates possessed an enthusiastic following. All were confident of success; and there was little talk of a dark horse. But the uncer

*Life and Times of Wm. L. Yancey,'' by John Wetherspoon Du Bose.

Files of the Milledgeville Federal Union, June 24, 1857, et seq. Avery's "History of Georgia,'' 1850-1881, pp. 31-38.

tainties of politics are proverbial. On the first ballot the vote stood: Lumpkin, 112; Gardner, 100; Lamar, 97; Warner, 53; and Stiles, 35. Subsequent ballots revealed a hopeless deadlock. Vote after vote was taken without success. Other candidates were named, but only to receive a minority support; and the situation remained substantially unchanged. Thereupon some of the candidates were dropped. First, the name of Stiles was withdrawn; then Warner's; and, finally, on the twentieth ballot, the vote stood: Lumpkin, 179; Lamar, 175; Herschel V. Johnson, 11; Augustus R. Wright, 5; Hiram Warner, 1; John E. Ward, 3; and Joseph E. Brown, 3. Still there was no result. The deadlock still continued; but unconsciously, at least to most of the delegates, the name of the successful candidate had been sounded.

It was in this wise that a nomination was finally made: On motion of William Hope Hull, of Athens, a committee of three from each congressional district was appointed to report a compromise candidate; and this committee, consisting of twenty-four members in all, was named as follows: 1. Randolph Spalding, George A. Gordon and William Nichols. 2. C. J. Williams, N. McBain and J. A. Tucker. 3. R. H. Clark, J. A. Ramsay and B. H. Ward. 4. Hugh Buchanan, W. T. Thurmond and William Phillips. 5. John W. H. Underwood, E. W. Chastain and Wesley Shropshire. 6. S. J. Smith, J. E. Roberts and William Hope Hull. 7. Linton Stephens, William McKinley and Jefferson M. Lamar. 8. Isaiah T. Irwin, Alex. C. Walker and E. H. Pottle. This committee immediately retired from the hall.

Credit for its effective work must be given to Col. L. N. Trammell, one of the great political Warwicks of his day in Georgia. On leaving his home in the mountains to attend the convention, Colonel Trammell was bent upon nominating his candidate, who, a mountaineer like himself, was then judge of the Blue Ridge Circuit-Joseph E. Brown. Seeing an opportunity for success in the organization of this committee, he secured the appointment of three Brown delegates as members from the Sixth District. In the committee room, Judge Linton Stephens, of Sparta, proposed Judge Brown's name, and sentiment in favor of the North Georgia jurist was so pronounced that he was presented to the convention as the committee's compromise candidate for governor. Hon. Isaiah T. Irwin, of Wilkes, presented Judge Brown's name. His nomination followed.

Like the Roman Cincinnatus, when summoned to the capital in an hour full of anxiety for Rome, Georgia's future war governor was at work in his wheat field, near Canton, engaged in binding wheat, when the news came from Milledgeville telling him of the convention's action. It was like a bolt from the blue. Judge Brown was taken wholly unawares. But not less surprised was Mr. Toombs, when he received the news, out in Texas. Leaving home early in June, Mr. Toombs on the eve of departure had conferred with the democratic leaders and had, so to speak, mapped out a program. But the political slate was broken into fragments. On hearing the result, Mr. Toombs, in an outburst of profanity, is said to have asked the question, afterwards much quoted: "Who in the devil is Joe Brown?"'*

*"'Life of Toombs," by P. A. Stovall. Also Sketch on Atlanta Constitution, Signed "H. W. G."

There was good reason for this mental disquietude on the part of Mr. Toombs. His re-election to the United States Senate hung in the balance. Everything depended upon democratic success. Judge Brown was at this time a somewhat obscure figure in Georgia politics and to entrust the banner of democracy into the hands of a candidate who was scarcely known beyond the Blue Ridge Circuit was, in the opinion of Mr. Toombs, a hazardous experiment. At least it put his own political head in peril; and, hastily packing his leather satchel, he returned to Georgia by the next train.

But there was little need for apprehension or alarm. The democratic candidate was fully equal to the situation, even though his opponent at this time was the afterwards illustrious Benjamin H. Hill, who in this campaign became the American or know-nothing candidate for governor. This political organization included among its members in Georgia at this time some unusually strong men, among them Dr. H. V. M. Miller, styled the "Demosthenes of the Mountains"; Judge R. P. Trippe, Hon. Ambrose R. Wright, John Milledge, Francis S. Bartow, Judge F. H. Cone, Judge Eugenius A. Nisbet, Washington Poe, Thomas Hardeman, E. G. Cabaniss, James Johnson, afterwards governor; N. G. Foster, Andrew J. Miller, and a host of others. Most of the northern whigs had gone into the know-nothing camp only to meet a crushing defeat in the presidential campaign of 1856, with Mr. Fillmore for a candidate, but despite this disastrous result the party was sufficiently strong in Georgia to put a candidate in the field for governor in 1857, Mr. Hill having been nominated by a convention in which fifty-seven counties were represented. Judge Nisbet, a recognized leader of the party, had voted for Buchanan in 1856, as the strongest candidate in opposition to Fremont, but he had returned to his allegiance in state politics. The organization was maintained in Georgia chiefly because an opposition party was needed to hold the ground formerly occupied by the old-line whigs. The effect produced at the North by the Dred Scott decision was to drive the know-nothing and whig remnants almost bodily into the republican fold; while its effect at the South was to furnish thousands of recruits to the ranks of democracy, a course already taken by two staunch whigs, Mr. Toombs and Mr. Stephens, the former of whom, however, preceded the latter. In fact, Mr. Toombs became a democrat early in the '50s. Neither of these Georgians could embrace know-nothingism; to both of them its principles were repugnant. Charles J. Jenkins had likewise refused to embrace its tenets. But, in large numbers, the Georgia whigs found a temporary shelter in the know-nothing camp, where some of them remained until 1863. But with this campaign the organization began to disintegrate even in Georgia; and what remained of it in the nation was eventually absorbed into the two great political parties which stood angrily facing each other on the eve of the Civil war. But Mr. Hill, always a minority leader, was stronger than his party even when his party was strongest.

There were several joint debates between the two rival candidates for governor, in the first of which, due to his inexperience as a campaigner, Mr. Brown was worsted; but he improved with each public address, growing steadily in favor with the masses, to whom his homely style of speech appealed with telling effect. Mr. Hill found him a foeman worthy of his steel. What the mountaineer candidate lacked in bril

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War Governor, Chief-Justice and United States Senator

liancy of epigram he supplied by directness of speech; and his practical, common-sense way of putting things caught the favor of the public. Col. Isaac W. Avery has drawn the following vivid contrast between the two candidates. Says he: *

"The discussion between Judge Brown and Mr. Hill began at Newnan. It would be difficult to conceive two more radically different men in mind and methods. Mr. Hill was and is a hard foeman to tackle on the stump. He is both showy and strong. He had brilliant repute as a political controversialist. Judge Brown was unshowy, conversational and unknown. Both were bold men. Hill was imprudent sometimes, Brown never. Brown was just the man to puncture imaginative rhetoric. When the heat occasioned by Hill's entrancing declamation had passed off, Brown had the faculty to put the common sense of the situation in a clear, direct, unanswerable way. Brown was cool, wary and ready-witted. In his first speeches alone he did not pass for his real worth. His conversational talks disappointed expectation. But he grew wonderfully. And discussion drew out his power. Hill made some inaccurate statements. Brown used these inaccuracies with tremendous effect. Hill was magnificently mature. Brown improved with an accelerating rapidity every trial. It was with him a constant and marvelous development. Every discussion added to his controversial capacity. He never winced under a blow no matter how severe, and the harder he was hit the harder he struck back. Without humor he yet had a grim perception of incongruity that he put so plainly that it was like humor. The Democratic press crowed lustily over some of Brown's strokes at Hill."

One incident of the campaign deserves to be specially mentioned, both for its spice of humor and because of its bearing upon the final result. Some of the good ladies of Cherokee, Georgia, most of them neighbors of Judge Brown, living in the neighborhood of Canton, made for him a calico bed-quilt in honor of his nomination. Much amusement was created by this incident, which an opposition press employed with great gusto to make the democratic candidate appear ridiculous in the eyes of the public. It produced no end of fun, but the effect of this amusing episode was to endear Judge Brown to the common people and to make friends for him at every humble fireside. This paragraph from the Milledgeville Federal-Union shows how the incident was treated by one of the Brown newspapers. It reads as follows: †

"All we have to say is-go ahead gals-give Joe Brown just as many calico bed-quilts as you please-it will be a compliment to the Mountain Boy, and save the state some hundreds beside. Hurrah for the girls of Cherokee, the plough-boy Judge and the calico bed-quilt.'

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To hasten on, Judge Brown was elected. He defeated by a majority of 10,000 votes the most brilliant orator of his day in Georgia and, for the next generation, became the foremost figure in the state. Less than twenty years before his elevation to this high office he might have been seen plowing a rocky hillside with a bull calf. In 1840, then a slender lad

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+ Ibid., p. 42.

The vote was as follows: Brown, 57,568; Hill, 46,826. Federal Union, October 20, 1857.

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