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Elias Nelson Conway
Born: May 17, 1812, at Greeneville Tennessee
Died: February 28, 1892, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Mount Holly Cemetery, Little Rock, Arkansas
Served: 1852-1860
Brother to Arkansas's
first governor, Elias Conway was born
at Greenville, Tennessee, on May 17,
1812. He moved with his family to Missouri
in 1818. In 1833 Conway moved to Little
Rock, studied surveying was appointed
U.S. Deputy Surveyor, and served as
Arkansas' auditor from 1835 to 1849.
Conway declined the 1844 Democratic
gubernatorial nomination, but accepted
it in 1852. He was sworn into office
on November 15, 1852, as Arkansas's
fifth governor, and was re-elected
to a second term in 1856. During his
administration, the office of state
geologist was created, major improvements
were made to the state’s roads
and also in the state penitentiary,
and large land grants were given to
the state's nascent railroad system.
His greatest accomplishment was restoring
the state's solvency, which he did
by creating a court of chancery to
settle the affairs of the ill-managed
state Real-Estate Bank. Despite a huge
remaining bonded indebtedness, the
treasury held a cash surplus when Conway
left office on November 16, 1860. After
leaving office Conway retired from
public life. His death in 1892 brought
an end to the “family dynasty” of
Johnson's, Conway's, and Sevier's that
had been a conspicuous feature of pre-Civil
War Arkansas politics.
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Henry Massie Rector
Born: May 1 1816, at Fountain Ferry, Kentucky
Died: August 12, 1899, at Little Rock, Arkansas
Buried: Mount Holly Cemetery, Little Rock, Arkansas
Served: 1860-1862
Born and educated in
Kentucky, Henry Rector relocated to
Arkansas in 1835 to manage lands he
had inherited from his father, a land
surveyor and speculator. In 1842, Rector
was appointed U.S. marshal for Arkansas
and in 1848 was elected to the state
Senate. through the 1850s, Rector remained
active in politics and the law; in
1859 he was elected to the state’s
Supreme Court. In 1860, Rector stood
for governor and won against a candidate
fielded by the Johnson-Conway-Sevier “Family” political
machine. In office, Rector proved a
reluctant secessionist, although he
authorized the seizure of U.S. arsenals
in Little Rock and Fort Smith. After
the secession vote of May 6 1861, Rector
headed the state’s mobilization,
cooperating with the ardent secessionists
of the “Family.” In October
1862, Rector campaigned once more for
governor (the constitution adopted
by the Secession Convention in 1861
had shortened the governor’s
term to two years). Rector lost the
election and on November 3 1862 submitted
his resignation to the Legislature.
During the war, Rector served as a
private soldier in the state’s
reserve corps. After the war, Rector
returned to cotton farming and served
in the Constitutional Convention of
1874.
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Harris Flanagin
Born: November 3, 1817, at Roadstown, New Jersey
Died: October 23, 1874, at Arkadelphia, Arkansas
Buried: Rose Hill Cemetery, Arkadelphia, Arkansas
Served: 1862-1864
Son of an Irish-born
cabinetmaker, Harris Flanagin taught
mathematics and studied law in Pennsylvania
before relocating to Arkansas in 1839.
Settling in Arkadelphia, he practiced
law, speculated in land and briefly
dabbled in politics during the 1840s
and 50s. He was selected to the secession
convention in 1861 and although a reluctant
rebel, became captain of a company
of the Second Arkansas Mounted Rifles,
seeing action in the battles of Pea
Ridge and Wilson’s Creek. In
the summer of 1862, Flanagin was promoted
as a gubernatorial candidate by former
Unionists, Whigs and Democrats unhappy
with the clumsiness of the Rector administration.
Flanagin did little to promote his
own candidacy, but won handily. Once
in office, Flanagin urged the legislature
to come to the aid of soldiers’ families,
to stabilize the state’s finances
and to suppress profiteering and illicit
liquor-making but generally took a
passive approach to exercising executive
powers. In 1863, as Union forces advanced
upon Little Rock, Flanagin simply went
home to Arkadelphia, assuming that
his duties were finished. He was recalled
by Confederate authorities, however,
and presided over the Legislature’s
1864 session in Washington. At the
end of the war Flanagin worked to insure
an orderly return to peacetime conditions,
returning to his law practice. In 1874
he served as a delegate to the state’s
constitutional convention, but died
before its final ratification.
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Isaac Murphy
Born: October 16, 1799, at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Died: September 8, 1882, at Huntsville, Arkansas
Buried: Unknown location
Served: 1864-1868
A native of western Pennsylvania, Murphy was educated at Washington College,
later practicing law and teaching school in Pennsylvania and Tennessee. In
1834 Murphy and his family relocated to Fayetteville, where he established
himself as a school teacher, surveyor, and lawyer. Murphy was elected to the
General Assembly of Arkansas two times as the representative from Washington
County in 1846 and 1848, later relocating to Huntsville. In 1861, Murphy was
selected for the Secession Convention. Murphy was ultimately the only delegate
to vote in favor of staying in the Union. Upon the fall of Little Rock an election
was held with the approval of President Lincoln and Murphy was elected governor.
During the Murphy administration Arkansas began healing its war wounds even
as the war continued in the southern parts of the State. Murphy took a low-key
approach to governance and stated publicly that "We have all done wrong." By
the start of 1866 Murphy's plans began to erode: The elections of 1866 saw
a pro-Confederate legislature elected which increased Murphy's problems dramatically.
Murphy decided to remain in office and worked for the best interests of the
State while taking abuse from both sides. When Murphy left office his administration
left a budget surplus even though his administration had begun with no funds.
This surplus evaporated soon after his successor took office. Murphy returned
to Huntsville and took up farming and practicing law once again and lived a
quiet life with his family. On 8 September 1882 Murphy died unexpectedly at
his home. Even former Confederates remembered him fondly in later years and
textbooks that berated the "carpetbagger governments" reserved kind
words for Isaac Murphy.
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Powell Clayton
Born: August 7, 1833, in Bethel County, Pennsylvania
Died: August 25, 1914, at Washington, D.C.
Buried: Arlington National Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
Served: 1868-1871
Powell Clayton, a native
of Pennsylvania, arrived in Arkansas
in 1863 as a young Union cavalry officer.
He bought property near Pine Bluff
and remained in Arkansas after the
war’s end. Clayton was instrumental
in the founding of the Arkansas Republican
party and in 1868 was its candidate
for governor. The gubernatorial election
in that year was conducted with the
referendum on ratifying the state’s
first Reconstruction constitution (which
restored the governor’s term
of office to four years); on March
26 the people voted and on April 1
Clayton was confirmed as governor.
In office, Clayton used patronage effectively
to build a wider partisan base, putting
Republicans into appointive offices
whenever possible. during his service
the Legislature enacted many significant
measures, including levee and roads
improvements, swamp reclamation, establishment
of free public schools and schools
for the deaf and the blind, as well
as a prohibition of racial discrimination
in transportation, housing, education
and restaurants. Clayton’s administration
is better remembered, however, for
controversies such as the declaration
of martial law by the governor in response
to the rise of the Ku Klux Klan, accusations
of corruption in state aid to railroads,
and bitter factional fighting within
the newborn Republican Party. In 1871,
Clayton sought and gained a U.S. Senate
seat from Arkansas. At the end of his
term Clayton returned to Arkansas and
the leadership of the state Republican
party, controlling federal patronage
in the state and effectively establishing
the tradition of “Post Office
Republicanism.” In 1897 Clayton
was appointed ambassador to the Republic
of Mexico and served until 1905, when
he resigned and retired to Washington
D.C. where he died at the age of eighty-one.
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Elisha Baxter
Born: September 1, 1827, in Rutherford County, North Carolina
Died: May 31, 1899, at Batesville, Arkansas
Buried: Oak Lawn Cemetery, Batesville, Arkansas
Served: 1873-1874
Elisha Baxter, a merchant, settled in Arkansas in 1852. During the 1850s Baxter
read law and became involved in Democratic Party politics, serving in the state
legislature and as a prosecuting attorney. During the Civil War Baxter was
a lukewarm Unionist; after the war, he helped establish the new Republican
party and was rewarded with political appointments. Baxter’s rise to
prominence resulted from factional fighting within the Republican party; in
1872, the “regular” Republicans were challenged by an insurgent
movement opposed to party corruption at the national level and to Powell Clayton’s
harsh executive style as governor. The insurgent or “Brindletail” faction’s
gubernatorial candidate was Joseph Brooks, an Iowa-born “carpetbagger.” Baxter
was chosen as the “Regular” candidate and in the election of 1872
the official candidate, though widely disputed, vote count favored Baxter who
was declared the winner. Once in office, Baxter sought to conciliate his old
opponents, Republicans and Democrats alike, but could not silence challenges
to the legitimacy of his election. His overtures to Democrats, plus a controversial
refusal to issue railroad bonds, united Republican opposition toward this Republican
governor. In April 1874 Baxter was physically removed from the State House
and Brooks was sworn in as Governor by the chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
In the month that followed, the two governors’ supporters clashed but
ultimately President U.S. Grant upheld Baxter’s legitimacy in office.
He returned to the State House on May 15 to finish his term. In the summer
of 1874 a new constitution was drafted and submitted to voters, one which once
again shortened the governor’s term to two years. Baxter was twice offered
and twice refused the 1874 Democratic-Conservative gubernatorial nomination.
He remained slightly active in politics for a few years more but ultimately
retired to his farm near Batesville where he practiced law until his death.
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