Early Years
Jefferson Finis Davis was born on June 3, 1808, in Christian County, Kentucky, less than a hundred miles from where future U.S. president Abraham Lincoln would be born eight months later. Davis was one of ten children; his father owned an inn and was a veteran of the Revolutionary War (1775–1783). The family left Kentucky a few years later and Davis was raised on a small plantation in Mississippi. He returned to Kentucky to attend boarding school in Bardstown and subsequently studied at Jefferson College in Mississippi and Transylvania University in Kentucky before entering the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. He finished twenty-third in his class in 1828 and was assigned to the 1st Infantry Regiment in Wisconsin.
When the Mexican War began in 1846, Davis left Congress and accepted command of the 1st Mississippi Regiment. He served under his former father-in-law at the battles of Monterrey (1846) and Buena Vista (1847). At the latter engagement, Davis was wounded and won national acclaim for helping to repulse a charge by Mexican lances. "My daughter, sir, was a better judge of men than I was," General Taylor reportedly told him, and later that year the governor of Mississippi selected Davis to fill a vacant seat in the U.S. Senate.
After an unsuccessful run for governor of Mississippi, Davis was appointed secretary of war by U.S. president Franklin Pierce in 1853. He proved to be the most active and effective secretary of war since the 1820s, increasing the size of the army, improving training, and establishing a medical corps. He also oversaw the introduction of the minié ball, a partially hollow, conical bullet whose great accuracy and destructiveness would account in part for the Civil War's high number of casualties. After leaving the War Department in 1857, Davis returned to the Senate. Although generally opposed to secession, as many Southern moderates were, he nevertheless reestablished himself as a leading defender of the rights of slave states. When Mississippi left the Union in January 1861, Davis immediately resigned from the Senate.
Troubles in the Field
Virginia finally seceded after the loss of Sumter and Lincoln's subsequent call for volunteers, and in May the government relocated to Richmond. This was both a political and a strategic decision based on Virginia's symbolic importance, sizable population (free and enslaved), industry, and agricultural resources. Although its proximity to Washington, D.C., made the move a potentially hazardous one strategically, the topography of Virginia was militarily advantageous enough to help offset the risk. In particular, the Appalachian Mountains and the state's east-to-west-flowing rivers, such as the James and Rappahannock, served as a natural defense against invasion. Six months later, Davis won election to a six-year term as Confederate president.
A month after the First Battle of Manassas, the Confederate Congress authorized Davis to appoint five men to the rank of full general. Johnston and Beauregard were outraged to find themselves at the bottom of the list—behind the adjutant general Samuel Cooper, a "desk general" and, even worse, a New Jersey native; Albert Sidney Johnston, who had not yet seen action; and Lee, who was at the beginning of a series of humiliating defeats in western Virginia. In a letter to Davis, Johnston accused the president with having "tarnished my fair fame as a soldier and a man." Beauregard was banished to the Western Theater and later relieved of command. He and Johnston, backed by powerful allies in and out of the Confederate Congress, would become bitter enemies of the administration. Davis, who had become "aroused" in the matter, would not forget the criticism. In fact, historian James M. McPherson has suggested that this marked a crucial difference between Davis and Lincoln: while Davis "could never forget a slight or forgive the man who committed it," Lincoln was willing "to hold the horse of a haughty general if he would only win victories."
Davis also had trouble with his western armies. His friendship with Leonidas Polk—an Episcopal bishop who was third cousin to former U.S. president James K. Polk—unwittingly encouraged insubordination, and Joe Johnston, since transferred, seemed to long more for a return to Virginia than for the responsibilities of his immediate command. As a consequence, a poisonous atmosphere developed in the Army of Tennessee that did much to compromise its effectiveness, and Davis, unlike Lincoln, deemed it necessary on occasion to travel outside the capital to involve himself in these contretemps.
Troubles at Home
Davis antagonized many with his increased willingness over time to jettison states' rights in favor of more centralized power. Like Lincoln, he used the war as justification to suspend, on several occasions, basic liberties such as habeas corpus. To maximize the Confederacy's mobilization of manpower, he pushed a conscription bill through the Confederate Congress in 1862, putting him at odds with his own vice president. The fact that the owners of twenty or more slaves were exempted from the draft excited class resentment and led to claims that this was a "rich man's war." In addition, Davis imposed taxes and regulations designed to manage the economy and support the war effort, confiscated private property, and imposed martial law. Such measures were received with great hostility in a nation where states' rights were not only considered sacrosanct, but were the war's justification. As a result, Davis's attempts at fashioning a stronger national government were often obstructed by state and local leaders and protested by angry mobs.
The new strategy was developed in collaboration with Lee and called for concentrating as many forces as possible in a single theater and onto a single field, enabling them to take swift and decisive action. "Offensive-defensive" was extremely costly in manpower and ultimately failed to overcome the weight of superior Northern manpower and resources. While the Maryland (1862) and Gettysburg (1863) campaigns were boldly offensive, they were also defeats. On the other hand, the strategy enabled the Confederacy to reverse nearly all Union gains achieved early in 1862 (when the North, following the Peninsula and Seven Days' campaigns, had come perilously close to taking Richmond) and prolonged the war probably as long as was possible through conventional means. Davis was decidedly less enthusiastic about guerrilla, or irregular, warfare and provided such efforts only limited support.
Later Years
Later, Davis traveled to Canada, Cuba, and Europe, engaged in some minor business concerns, was offered the presidency of what is now Texas A&M University (he turned it down), and again was elected to the U.S. Senate (but couldn't serve according to Section Three of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution). His relationships with his slaves, according to Booker T. Washington, had always been "kindly," "normal," and "happy," a "good will" that was manifested perhaps by the sale of the plantation he and his brother Joseph had run to the now-freed Ben Montgomery.
In 1881, Davis authored The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government, a two-volume defense of his actions and principles that was dedicated "to the memory of those who died in defense of a cause consecrated by inheritance, as well as sustained by conviction." Shortly after this book appeared, Davis's reputation began to rehabilitate among southerners. "In the South," the historian Donald E. Collins has written, "he received a resurrection in public feeling that rose to the stage of near adulation during the final three years of his life and would grow during the three years following his death to place him in the ranks of such Confederate icons as the beloved military heroes Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson." After spending most of his retirement years at Beauvoir, a Mississippi estate on the Gulf Coast, Davis died in New Orleans, Louisiana, on December 6, 1889, from acute bronchitis. He was buried first in Metairie Cemetery in New Orleans and then in Richmond's Hollywood Cemetery.
Time Line
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June 3, 1808 - Jefferson Davis is born in Christian County, Kentucky, less than a hundred miles from where Abraham Lincoln would be born eight months later.
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June 1828 - Jefferson Davis graduates from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, twenty-third in his class. He is assigned infantry duty in Wisconsin.
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June 17, 1835 - Jefferson Davis marries Sarah Knox Taylor, the daughter of his commanding officer, Virginia native and future U.S. president Zachary Taylor. Taylor disapproves of the match and Davis resigns his army commission.
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September 15, 1835 - Sarah Knox Taylor, Zachary Taylor's daughter and Jefferson Davis's first wife, dies of malaria.
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February 26, 1845 - Jefferson Davis, after winning election to the U.S. House of Representatives, marries Varina Howell.
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June 18, 1846 - Jefferson Davis, after leaving Congress at the start of the Mexican War, is elected colonel of the 1st Mississippi Regiment.
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February 23, 1847 - Jefferson Davis, serving under his former father-in-law, Zachary Taylor, at the Battle of Buena Vista during the Mexican War, is wounded and wins national acclaim for helping to repulse a charge by Mexican lances. Taylor, who had disapproved of Davis's marriage to his daughter, now praises Davis.
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December 6, 1847 - Jefferson Davis, a hero of the Mexican War, is selected by the governor of Mississippi to fill a vacant seat in the U.S. Senate.
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November 4, 1851 - Jefferson Davis is defeated in his run for Mississippi governor.
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March 7, 1853 - Jefferson Davis is appointed secretary of war by U.S. president Franklin Pierce.
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March 4, 1857 - Jefferson Davis ends his tenure as secretary of war and returns to the U.S. Senate.
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January 21, 1861 - After Mississippi secedes from the Union, Jefferson Davis delivers his farewell address to the U.S. Senate.
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February 9, 1861 - Jefferson Davis is elected provisional president of the newly formed Confederate States of America by a convention in Montgomery, Alabama.
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February 18, 1861 - Jefferson Davis is inaugurated as the provisional president of the Confederacy in Montgomery, Alabama, declaring that the "South is determined to maintain her position, and make all who oppose her smell Southern powder and feel Southern steel."
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May 26–29, 1861 - The Confederate capital relocates from Montgomery, Alabama, to Richmond.
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November 6, 1861 - Jefferson Davis is elected to one six-year term as president of the Confederate States of America.
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February 22, 1862 - Jefferson Davis is inaugurated on Capitol Square as the elected president of the Confederate States of America.
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June 1, 1862, 2 p.m. - Confederate president Jefferson Davis assigns Confederate general Robert E. Lee to command the Army of Northern Virginia after Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston is wounded at the Battle of Seven Pines–Fair Oaks.
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April 30, 1864 - Five-year-old Joseph E. Davis, son of Confederate president Jefferson Davis, is mortally injured in a fall from the balcony of the Confederate White House in Richmond.
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April 2–3, 1865 - Confederate president Jefferson Davis evacuates Richmond ahead of Union forces and travels to Danville.
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May 10, 1865 - Confederate president Jefferson Davis is captured by Union forces near Irwinville, Georgia.
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May 22, 1865–May 13, 1867 - Former Confederate president Jefferson Davis is incarcerated at Fort Monroe, Virginia, following the Civil War. Part of his bail is posted by the abolitionist Horace Greeley.
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June 3, 1881 - The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government, former Confederate president Jefferson Davis's two-volume defense of his actions and principles, is published.
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December 6, 1889 - Jefferson Davis dies in New Orleans, Louisiana.
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December 11, 1889 - Jefferson Davis is buried in Metairie Cemetery in New Orleans, Louisiana.
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May 27–31, 1893 - Jefferson Davis's body, originally interred at Metairie Cemetery in New Orleans, Louisiana, is relocated to Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond.
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October 17, 1978 - A Joint Resolution of Congress is signed by U.S. president Jimmy Carter reinstating Jefferson Davis's citizenship.
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First published: April 22, 2009 | Last modified: April 5, 2011
