Augustus Maxwell
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Augustus Emmett Maxwell (September 21, 1820 - May 5, 1903) was a United States Representative from Florida as well as a senator in the Confederate Congress representing Florida.
Maxwell was born in Elberton, Georgia. He graduated from the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia in 1841 and was admitted to the Alabama bar association in 1843. After practicing law in Eutaw, Alabama, he moved to Tallahassee, Florida in 1845, the year Florida became a U.S. state.
Maxwell was the Attorney General of Florida in 1846 and 1847, a member of the Florida House of Representatives in 1847, Florida Secretary of State in 1848 and a member of the Florida Senate in 1849 and 1850.
As a Democrat, Maxwell represented Florida in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1853 to 1857. After Florida seceded from the United States and during the American Civil War, he served in the senate of both the First and Second Confederate Congress (but not in the predecessor Provisional Confederate Congress). Maxwell and Jackson Morton were the only two people to represent Florida in both the United States Congress and the Confederate Congress in their lifetimes.
Maxwell's grandson, Emmett Wilson, also represented Florida in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Preceded by Edward C. Cabell |
United States Representative (at large) from Florida 1853–1857 |
Succeeded by George S. Hawkins |
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Confederate States Senators | |
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Alabama: Clay • Jemison • Walker • Yancey • Arkansas: Garland • R. Johnson • Mitchel • Florida: Baker • Maxwell • Georgia: Hill • H. Johnson • Lewis • Kentucky: Burnett • Simms • Louisiana: Semmes • Sparrow • Mississippi: Brown • Phelan • Watson • Missouri: Clark • W. Johnson • Peyton • Vest • North Carolina: Davis • Dortch • Graham • Reade • South Carolina: Barnwell • Orr • Tennessee: Haynes • Henry • Texas: Oldham • Wigfall • Virginia: Caperton • Hunter • Preston |
Categories: 1820 births | 1903 deaths | Confederate States Senators | Members of the United States House of Representatives from Florida | Florida State Senators | Members of the Florida House of Representatives | Florida Attorneys General | University of Virginia | People from Virginia | People of Florida in the American Civil War