Charles Anderson (governor) explained

Charles Anderson
Order:27th
Office:Governor of Ohio
Term Start:August 29, 1865
Term End:January 8, 1866
Preceded:John Brough
Succeeded:Jacob Dolson Cox
Order2:7th
Office2:Lieutenant Governor of Ohio
Term Start2:January 11, 1864
Term End2:August 29, 1865
Preceded2:Benjamin Stanton
Succeeded2:Andrew McBurney
Governor2:John Brough
State Senate3:Ohio
District3:Montgomery & Warren Counties
Term Start3:December 2, 1844
Term End3:December 6, 1846
Preceded3:Joseph Barnett
Succeeded3:John Hopkins
Party:Republican
Whig
Birth Date:1 June 1814
Birth Place:Louisville, Kentucky
Death Place:Kuttawa, Kentucky
Children:Sam Anderson
Alma Mater:Miami University
Allegiance: United States
Branch: Union Army
Serviceyears:August 9, 1862-February 21, 1863[1]
Rank: Colonel
Unit:93rd Ohio Infantry
Battles:

Charles Anderson (June 1, 1814 – September 2, 1895) was first a Whig and later a Republican politician from Ohio. He served briefly as the 27th governor of Ohio.

Early life

Anderson was born in "Soldier's Retreat," Louisville, Kentucky,[2] son of Richard Clough Anderson and Elizabeth (Clark) Anderson, sister of George Rogers Clark and William Clark the famous explorer. Anderson graduated from Miami University in 1833, studied law and was admitted to the Ohio bar in 1843.[3] He moved to Dayton, Ohio, where he began a law practice and was later elected county prosecutor.

Career

In 1844, Anderson was elected to the Ohio Senate and made a name for himself as an advocate for black rights. He then moved to Texas for health reasons. He gave an impassioned speech in San Antonio in December 1860, strongly opposing secession and calling for the "perpetuity of the national Union." Angry local pro-Confederates threatened Anderson and arrested him without charge, but Anderson escaped and returned with his family to Dayton.

President Abraham Lincoln sent Anderson on a pro-Union speaking tour of Europe, after which Anderson accepted command of the 93rd Ohio Infantry and was commissioned in the Union Army as a colonel. Badly wounded in battle in Tennessee at the Battle of Stones River, Anderson resigned his commission and returned to Ohio to recuperate.

Anderson was elected the seventh lieutenant governor of Ohio in late 1863 and took office the following year. On August 29, 1865, he became governor upon the death of Governor John Brough.[3]

Anderson served less than five months, until January 8, 1866. Ohio historian Dwight L. Smith wrote that his brief term in office was "uneventful... [and] the services he performed were merely routine."

Death

After leaving the governorship, Anderson resumed his legal practice and moved back to Kentucky, where he died at the age of 81.

Anderson is interred at Kuttawa Cemetery in Kuttawa, Kentucky.[4]

Family life

Anderson was born to a prominent family, his father, Richard Clough Anderson Sr.,[5] was an aide to the Marquis de Lafayette during the American Revolution.[6]

Charles Anderson's brother, Major General Robert Anderson, was also a United States Army officer, notable for his defense of Fort Sumter at the outset of the American Civil War. Another brother, William Marshall Anderson, was a noted explorer, politician, and briefly a member of the New Virginia Colony of ex-Confederates in Mexico during the reign of Emperor Maximilian.[7] (Note: Rev. William C. Anderson, who served as president of Miami University from 1849 to 1854, is sometimes erroneously cited as an Anderson brother.)

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Reid, Whitelaw . Ohio in the War Her Statesmen Generals and Soldiers . 517 . 93rd Ohio Infantry . Whitelaw Reid. The Robert Clarke Company . 1868 . 2 . Cincinnati . https://books.google.com/books?id=aaN4AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA517. Ohio in the War .
  2. Anderson, Charles . 1 . 107 .
  3. Web site: Ohio Governor Charles Anderson. National Governors Association. August 5, 2012.
  4. Web site: Chris Anderson. National Governors Association . October 27, 2017.
  5. Anderson, Richard Clough (soldier) . 1 . 112 .
  6. Web site: 2016-07-19 . The Anderson family: It's all in the genes . 2019-01-06 . WCPO . en.
  7. http://content.cdlib.org/view?docId=kt98700720&doc.view=entire_text&brand=oac Huntington Library papers