Andrew Gordon Magrath

Andrew Gordon Magrath

Andrew Gordon Magrath
71st Governor of South Carolina
In office
December 20, 1864  May 25, 1865
Lieutenant Robert McCaw
Preceded by Milledge Luke Bonham
Succeeded by Benjamin Franklin Perry
Judge of the Confederate States District Court for the District of South Carolina
In office
May 6, 1861 – December 20, 1864
Appointed by Jefferson Davis
Preceded by Position established
Succeeded by Benjamin F. Perry
Secretary of State of South Carolina*
In office
November 13, 1860 – April 3, 1861
Governor Francis Wilkinson Pickens
Preceded by Position established
Succeeded by Position abolished
Judge of the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina
In office
May 12, 1856 – November 7, 1860
Appointed by Franklin Pierce
Preceded by Robert Budd Gilchrist
Succeeded by George Seabrook Bryan (1866)
Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from St. Philip's and St. Michael's Parish
In office
November 26, 1838 – November 28, 1842
Personal details
Born (1813-02-08)February 8, 1813
Charleston, South Carolina
Died April 9, 1893(1893-04-09) (aged 80)
Charleston, South Carolina
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Emma C. Mikell
Mary E. Cord
  • Magrath served as Secretary of State during South Carolina's brief tenure as a self-declared independent republic, from secession to ratification of the Confederate Constitution. As such, he served as the chief diplomat of South Carolina, rather than in the same capacity as the modern South Carolina Secretary of State.

Andrew Gordon Magrath (February 8, 1813 April 9, 1893) was the last Confederate Governor of South Carolina from 1864 to 1865, having previously been a United States federal judge.

Early life and career

Born in Charleston, Magrath graduated from South Carolina College with an AB in 1831 and afterwards attended Harvard Law School for legal training. It was in Charleston, reading law under the guidance of James L. Petigru that Magrath gained knowledge of the law. Petigru also influenced his early political beliefs. Magrath was admitted to the South Carolina bar in 1835, entering private practice in Charleston, and was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives in 1838 at the age of 25. He served until 1841 and was known as unionist or cooperationist. He thereafter remained in private practice in Charleston until 1856.

On May 9, 1856, Magrath was nominated by President Franklin Pierce to a seat on the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina vacated by Robert Budd Gilchrist. Magrath was confirmed by the United States Senate on May 12, 1856, and received commission the same day. It was there that he asserted Southern supremacy by striking down a piracy statute on the slave trade. Magrath resigned his judgeship when Abraham Lincoln was elected in 1860 to the presidency. In U.S. District court on the day after Lincoln's election, November 7, 1860, Magrath rose from the bench, saying:

In the political history of the United States, an event has happened of ominous import to fifteen slaveholding States. The State of which we are citizens has been always understood to have to have deliberately fixed its purpose whenever that event should happen. Feeling an assurance of what will be the action of the State, I consider it my duty, without delay, to prepare to obey its wishes. That preparation is made by the resignation of the office I have held. For the last time I have, as a Judge of the United States, administered the laws of the United States, within the limits of the State of South Carolina. While thus acting in obedience to a sense of duty, I cannot be indifferent to the emotions it must produce. That department of Government which. I believe, has best maintained its integrity and preserved its purity, has been suspended. So far as I am concerned, the Temple of Justice, raised under the Constitution of the United States, is now closed. If it shall be never again opened, I thank God that its doors have been closed before its altar has been desecrated with sacrifices to tyranny.[1]

He was involved with the state's secession convention and became the Secretary of State for South Carolina in 1860.

Civil War

In 1862, Magrath was appointed by Jefferson Davis as a Confederate district judge and on the bench he was noted for his opposition to the centralization of power by the Confederate government in Richmond. The South Carolina General Assembly appointed Magrath in December 1864 to be the Governor of South Carolina. He served for less than a year as governor and he was critical of continuing the struggle in the face of overwhelming Union forces. The Union Army arrested him on May 25, 1865 and sent him to Fort Pulaski for imprisonment.

Later life

Magrath was released in December and he resumed the practice of law in Charleston. On April 9, 1893, Magrath died in Charleston and was buried at Magnolia Cemetery.

References

  1. "Richmond Daily Dispatch".
Legal offices
Preceded by
Robert Budd Gilchrist
Judge of the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina
1856–1860
Succeeded by
George Seabrook Bryan
Political offices
Preceded by
Milledge Luke Bonham
Governor of South Carolina
1864–1865
Succeeded by
Benjamin Franklin Perry
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