Henry Horatio Wells | |
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Portrait of Governor Wells | |
Provisional Governor of Virginia | |
In office 1868–1869 |
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Lieutenant | Leopold Copeland Parker Cowper |
Preceded by | Francis Harrison Pierpont as Unionist Governor |
Succeeded by | Gilbert Carlton Walker as Governor |
Personal details | |
Born | September 17, 1823 Rochester, New York, USA |
Died | February 13, 1890 Palmyra, New York, USA |
Political party | Republican |
Profession | Politician, Lawyer |
Henry Horatio Wells (September 17, 1823 – February 13, 1890), was a Union Army general in the American Civil War and a carpetbagger who served as the appointed provisional Governor of Virginia from 1868 to 1869 during Reconstruction. He was defeated for election in 1869.
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Henry Wells was born in Rochester, New York and grew up in Michigan. He studied law and became a lawyer. He was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives and served 1854 and 1856, as a member of the Republican Party.
During the Civil War he was lieutenant colonel of a unit from Michigan. This unit was an occupation force in the controlled part of the Union Army of Virginia. There, Wells was made head of military police in Alexandria and soon the whole of the Union-controlled territory south of the Potomac River . After the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln in April 1865 Wells played an important role in the pursuit and apprehension of the assassin John Wilkes Booth in a Virginia barn. As thanks for his help in the capture of Booth, Wells became a Brigadier General.
After the war, Wells settled in Richmond as a lawyer. He served as the appointed general of Virginia from April 4, 1868 and September 21, 1869 from. His term as governor focused on drafting a new state constitution for Virginia. Wells's version would have granted African Americans the right to vote but would have disenfranchised Confederate veterans. Ulysses S. Grant intervened and protected the voting rights of the Confederate veterans.
After winning large majorities in the 1866 Congfressional election, the Radical Republicans in Congress took full charge. They closed down the state's civilian government and put Virginia (and nine other ex-Confederate states) under military rule. Virginia was administered as the "First Military District" in 1867-69 under General John Schofield. Schofield appointed his friend Wells as provisional governor. The national government held elections in Virginia 1869 that included a vote on the new state constitution, a separate one on its disfranchisement clause that would have stripped the vote from most former rebels, and a separate vote for state officials. The Army enrolled the Freedmen (ex-slaves). The Republicans nominated Wells. The leader of the opposition "True Republicans" was William Mahone (1826–1895), a railroad president and former Confederate general who said it was time for a New Departure for the state's Conservative Party (it later merged with the Democratic party). That is, whites had to accept the results of the war, including civil rights and the vote for Freedmen. Mahone's candidate for governor Gilbert C. Walker won support from the Conservatives was defeated Wells in 1869 and the disfranchisement clause was defeated. Virginia as a result did not experience the political conflicts that characterized the Reconstruction period in other southern states, yet white Virginians generally came to share the bitterness so typical of the southern attitudes. Virginia was thus the only southern state not to have a civilian Radical government.[1]
Governor Wells has been in an accident in the Virginia State Capitol injured when a balcony of a court hearing because of the crowds during collapse. The floor of the courtroom also collapsed and fell into the Hall of the Virginia House of Delegates . There were over a hundred injured and several dozen deaths. Wells failed to get elected as governor in 1869.
Until 1872, Wells served United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. He later moved to Washington, D.C., where he served as United States Attorney for the District of Columbia. In 1880 he finally retired from public service employees and back again worked as a lawyer. He died in February 1890. Henry Wells was married to Millicent Leib with which he had several children.
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Francis Harrison Pierpont Unionist Governor |
Governor of Virginia 1868–1869 |
Succeeded by Gilbert Carlton Walker Governor |
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