Everything about John Henninger Reagan totally explained
John Henninger Reagan (
October 8,
1818 –
March 6,
1905), was a leading
19th century American politician from the
U.S. state of
Texas. A
Democrat, Reagan left the
U.S. House of Representatives when his state
seceded from the
Union to join the
Confederate States of America. During the
American Civil War, he served in the cabinet of
Jefferson Davis as
Postmaster General. After the Confederate defeat, he called for cooperation with the federal government and became unpopular, but returned to public office when his predictions of harsh treatment for resistance were proved correct.
Early life
Reagan was born in
Sevier County,
Tennessee, to Timothy Richard and Elizabeth Lusk Reagan. (Some sources say he was born in the county seat,
Sevierville.) He left
Tennessee at nineteen and like many from Tennessee traveled to
Texas. There he worked as a surveyor from 1839 to 1843, and afterward was a farmer in
Kaufman County until 1851. He studied law on his own and was licensed to practice law in 1846, opening an office in
Buffalo.
The same year he obtained his license, he was elected a
probate judge in
Henderson County and in 1847 he went to the
state legislature but was defeated for a second term in 1849. He returned to his law practice and was elected a district judge in
Palestine, serving from 1852 to 1857. His labors in defeating the
American Party (
Know-Nothings) in Texas led to his election to Congress in 1857 from Texas's
First District.
In Congress, he was a
moderate and a supporter of the Union, but resigned from Congress on
January 15,
1861 and returned to his home state when it became clear that Texas would secede. There he participated in the secession convention that met at
Austin on the last day of January. The convention voted for Texas to leave the union and for Reagan to represent the state in the
Provisional Confederate Congress, but within the month he was in the Cabinet instead.
Civil War
President
Jefferson Davis named him to head the new
Confederate States of America Post-office Department and he accepted. Reagan was an able administrator, presiding over the only cabinet department that functioned well during the war. Despite the hostilities of the
Civil War, the
United States Post Office Department continued operations in the Confederacy until
June 1,
1861, whereupon the new Confederate service assumed its functions. Reagan's masterstroke in establishing his department was sending an agent to
Washington, D.C., with letters asking the heads of the
United States Post Office Department's various bureaus to come work for him. Nearly all did so, bringing copies of their records, contracts, account books, etc. "Reagan in effect had stolen the U.S. Post Office," historian William C. Davis wrote. When President Davis asked his cabinet for the status of their departments, Reagan reported he'd his up and running in only six weeks. Davis was amazed.
Reagan cut expenses by eliminating costly and little-used routes and forcing the railroads that carried the mail to reduce their rates. Despite the problems the war caused, his department managed to turn a profit, "the only post office department in American history to pay its own way" wrote William C. Davis. Reagan was the only member of the cabinet to oppose
Robert E. Lee's offensive into
Pennsylvania in June-July 1863. He instead supported a proposal to detach the
First Corps of the
Army of Northern Virginia to reinforce
Joseph E. Johnston in Mississippi so that he could break the
Siege of Vicksburg. Historian
Shelby Foote noted that, as the only Cabinet member from west of the Mississippi, Reagan was acutely sensitive to the consequences of Vicksburg's capture.
When Davis fled
Richmond on
April 2,
1865, before the
Army of the Potomac under
George G. Meade, Reagan accompanied the president on his flight to the Carolinas. On
April 27, Davis made him Secretary of the Treasury after
George A. Trenholm's resignation and he served in that capacity until he, Davis, and
Texas Governor Francis R. Lubbock were captured near
Irwinville, Georgia on
May 10.
Reagan was imprisoned with Confederate Vice President
Alexander Stephens at
Fort Warren in
Boston. On
August 11, he wrote an
open letter to his fellow Texans urging cooperation with the Union, renunciation of the secession convention, the abolition of slavery, and letting freed slaves vote. He warned of military rule that would enforce these policies if Texans didn't voluntarily adopt them. For this, he was denounced by Texans. He was released from prison later that year and returned home to Palestine in December.
Return to public life
To those who felt that the Reconstruction was unduly harsh, his prescience was hailed—he became known as the "Old Roman," a Texas
Cincinnatus. He was part of the successful effort to remove the Republican
Edmund J. Davis from the
governorship in 1874, after he attempted to illegally remain in office. That year he returned to the Congressional seat he held before the war, serving from
March 4,
1875 to
March 3,
1887. In 1875, he served in the convention that wrote a new state constitution for Texas. In Congress, he advocated federal regulation of railroads and helped create the
Interstate Commerce Commission. He also served as the first chairman of the Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads.
(External Link
) Though he'd been elected to the Senate in 1887 (serving
March 4,
1887 to
June 10,
1891), he resigned to become chairman of the
Railroad Commission of Texas at the behest of his friend, Governor
James Stephen "Jim" Hogg, chairing it until 1903.
Conscious of the importance of history, he was a founder of the
Texas State Historical Association and attended reunions of Confederate veterans in his state. He wrote his
Memoirs, With Special Reference to Secession and the Civil War, published in 1905, and died at his home in Palestine in Anderson County later that year, the last surviving member of the government of the Confederacy.
Historian
Ben H. Procter included Reagan in his list of the "four greatest Texans of the 19th century," along with
Sam Houston,
Stephen F. Austin, and
James Stephen Hogg.
Further Information
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