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James Sevier Conway
Born: December 4 1796, in Greene County, Tennessee
Died: March 3 1855, at Walnut Hill Plantation, Lafayette County, Arkansas
Buried: Family cemetery, Walnut Hill (Conway Cemetery State Historical Park)
Served: 1836-1840
James Sevier Conway arrived in Arkansas in 1820 as a surveyor. In 1823, he
bought a farm along the Red River, in what would become Lafayette County. In
1825, Conway was appointed to survey the western boundary of Arkansas from
the Red River to the Arkansas River. In 1831, Conway served as Arkansas’s
commissioner in negotiations with Louisiana setting the states’ common
boundary. In 1832 when the office of Arkansas Surveyor was created, he was
appointed to the post and in 1836 he was elected Governor of Arkansas. As governor,
Conway called for internal improvements and public education, supported legislative
efforts to create a state banking system and worked to obtain federal protection
against Native American raiding on the state’s western marches. He successfully
lobbied for the establishment of a government arsenal at Little Rock. Numerous
controversies connected with the state militia, the proposed state banking
system and other issues beset the Conway administration; these, combined with
a deteriorating state economy and Conway’s ill-health, probably contributed
to his decision to not stand for re-election. After serving his one term of
four years, he retired to Walnut Hill, his cotton plantation along the Red
River. He remained active in politics and civic affairs, helping establish
the Lafayette Academy in his home county (1842).
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Archibald Yell
Born: ?1799, in Jefferson County, Tennessee (disputed)
Died: February 23 1847, at Buena Vista, Mexico
Buried:Evergreen Cemetery, Fayetteville (originally buried at Saltillo, Mexico; reinterred at Waxhaws Cemetry, Fayetteville and subsequently removed to Evergreen Cemetery)
Served: 1840-1844
Archibald Yell, Arkansas’s
second state governor, was probably
born in east Tennessee in 1797 or 1799.
He served with Andrew Jackson against
the Cherokees in 1813-14 and against
the British at New Orleans in 1814-15.
In Tennessee he read law and was admitted
to the bar, but he returned in 1818
to Jackson's army for service against
the Seminoles in Florida, where his
courage won the admiration of "Old
Hickory." Yell served a term
in the Tennessee legislature and then
received several federal appointments
from Jackson, beginning in December
21, 1831, with the directorship of
the federal land office in Little Rock.
Yell was elected to the House of Representatives
when Arkansas was admitted to statehood
in 1836 and served until 1839. Yell
ran for, and won, the Arkansas governor’s
seat in 1840. In office, he demanded
stronger control of banks but also
recommended a board of internal improvements
and supported public education. In
1844 Yell resigned in order to run
again for Congress. In this campaign
he demonstrated that he could be all
things to all people. During one morning
of the campaign, he won a shooting
match, donated the beef to the poorest
widow in the community, and ordered
a jug of whiskey for the crowd. That
same day he led the singing at a camp
meeting a few miles up the road. He
won the election easily. He served
from 1 December, 1845, till 1 July,
1846, when he resigned to join the
army in Mexico. He was mustered into
the service as colonel of the 1st Arkansas
Volunteer Cavalry, and was killed by
a Mexican lancer while rallying his
demoralized troops at the battle of
Buena Vista.
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Thomas Stevenson Drew
Born: August 22(?) 1802, in Wilson County, Tennessee
Died: January (n.d.) 1879, at Lapin, Texas
Buried: Pocahontas, Arkansas (reinterred May 30, 1923)
Served: 1844-1849
Thomas S. Drew arrived in Arkansas in 1817, supporting himself by working as
a traveling peddler and sometime school teacher. During the 1820s, he became
active in politics and postal delivery. An advantageous marriage in 1827 occasioned
Drew’s entry into farming but he remained active in Democratic Party
politics. In 1844, Drew was the consensus candidate of a badly divided party.
Elected by a plurality, Drew supported a safe platform of internal improvements,
modest aid to education and fiscal conservatism made necessary by the state’s
failing finances. Drew was re-elected in 1848 without any serious opposition
but resigned in January 1849, complaining of the office’s low salary.
During the 1850s, Drew sought to repair his personal insolvency. He served
briefly as Superintendent of Indian Affairs at Fort Smith, before returning
to law. Drew suffered financial reverses during and immediately after the Civil
War, but resumed the practice of law in the late 1860s in Pocahontas. Following
his wife’s death in 1872, Drew moved to Texas where he died; his remains
were returned to Pocahontas in 1923.
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John Selden Roane
Born: January 8 1817, in Wilson County, Tennessee
Died: April 7 1867, at Pine Bluff, Arkansas
Buried: Oakland Cemetery, Little Rock
Served: 1849-1852
Native Tennessean John
S. Roane migrated to Arkansas in 1837,
studied law and was admitted to the
bar that same year. He served as prosecuting
attorney for the Second Judicial District
from 1840 to 1842, and was a member
of the Arkansas House of Representatives
from 1842 to 1846. In that year, Roane
organized and led a company of volunteers
from the Van Buren for the Mexican-American
War. Roane’s lack of any military
experience made him an ineffective
commander; at the battle of Buena Vista
(February 22-23, 1847) Roane’s
command performed poorly under fire.
After the war’s end, criticism
of Arkansas regiment (commanded by
Archibald Yell, who was succeeded by
Roane after Yell’s death at Buena
Vista) and its performance under fire
followed Roane; accusations of incompetence
leveled by Albert Pike led to an inconsequential
duel between the two political rivals
in July of 1847. Due to Governor Thomas
S. Drew's resignation in January 1849
a special election was called; on April
19, Roane was elected Arkansas's fourth
governor. During his term, both Calhoun
and Sebastian counties were created.
Roane also advocated programs for internal
improvements, and increased funding
for education. After a frustrating
administration, Roane left office on
November 15, 1852, returning to his
law practice. During the Civil War,
he served as brigadier general in the
Confederate army. John Selden Roane
died suddenly in April 1867 and is
buried at the Oakland Cemetery, Little
Rock, Arkansas.
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