Charles T. O'Ferrall explained

Charles T. O'Ferrall
Birth Name:Charles Triplett O'Ferrall
Order:42nd
Office:Governor of Virginia
Term Start:January 1, 1894
Term End:January 1, 1898
Lieutenant:Robert Craig Kent
Predecessor:Philip W. McKinney
Successor:James Hoge Tyler
State1:Virginia
District1:7th
Term1:May 5, 1884 – December 28, 1893
Predecessor1:John Paul
Successor1:Smith S. Turner
Office2:Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Rockingham County
Term2:1872–1873
Alongside George Deneale
Birth Date:October 21, 1840
Birth Place:Berkley Springs, Virginia
Death Place:Richmond, Virginia
Resting Place:Hollywood Cemetery
Party:Democrat
Profession:Politician, Lawyer
Alma Mater:Washington College
Battles:American Civil War
Rank:Colonel
Branch:Confederate States Army
Serviceyears:1861–1865
Signature:Signature of Charles Triplett O'Ferrall (1840–1905).png

Charles Triplett "Trip" O'Ferrall (October 21, 1840 – September 22, 1905) was a Virginia lawyer, judge and politician who fought as a cavalry officer in the Confederate States Army, then served as a U.S. Representative from 1883 to 1894 and as the 42nd Governor of Virginia from 1894 to 1898.[1]

Early and family life

Charles O'Ferrall was born in Brucetown, Virginia (then in Frederick County, Virginia, now near Berkeley Springs, West Virginia) to John and Jane Laurens Green O'Ferrall. His father was an innkeeper and former member of the Virginia General Assembly who was elected Clerk of Court of Morgan County in 1851, and trained his son for the job, which as described below, he received at age 17 due to his father's unexpected death. Meanwhile, O'Ferrell received an education appropriate to his class in local private schools, since Virginia had no public schools until after the American Civil War.

Personal life

While recovering from one of his wounds in the American Civil War as described below, in Enterprise, Mississippi, O'Ferrall met Annie Hand, whom he married on February 8, 1865, before returning to active duty. They had two children. After her death, he married Jennie Wickliff Knight (1846–1908) in 1881, with whom he had four more children, and who survived him.[2]

Early career

When John O'Ferrall died suddenly in 1855, the local judge thought highly enough of Charles O'Ferrall to appoint the fifteen-year-old to hold the clerk's post until an election could be held.[3] Charles O'Ferrall later won an election, at seventeen, to a full six-year term as Clerk of Court. However, he only served less than half the term before the Civil War began.[4]

Confederate cavalry officer

Although Morgan County and what became West Virginia were predominantly loyal to the United States, O'Ferrall supported Virginia's decision to declare secession and joined the Confederate States Army.[5] Enlisting as a private in the 12th Virginia Cavalry, O'Ferrall was immediately offered the position of sergeant.[6] He subsequently distinguished himself in several battles, leading to promotion to the rank of major, and was allowed to form a cavalry battalion, the 23rd Virginia Cavalry.[7] Eight times, O'Ferrall was wounded in battle, twice severely. The first serious wound was a shot near his heart on June 21, 1863 during the Battle of Upperville in Fauquier County. The first surgeon to treat him told him he would die, but his mother (who had been born in Fauquier County) traveled sixty miles to tend to him personally, and with the assistance of Dr. Thomas Settle of Paris, O'Ferrall survived to fight again. On September 22, 1864, in the Battle of Fisher's Hill, O'Ferrall received a severe wound near his right knee that sidelined him for several months, probably recuperating near New Market.[8] [9]

By the war's end, O'Ferrall held the rank of colonel and commanded all cavalry in the Shenandoah Valley. His regiment engaged in the last fight of the war on Virginia soil, dispersing Federal soldiers encamped at Pugh's Run near Woodstock.[10]

Lawyer, state delegate and U.S. Congressman

After the war, O'Ferrall returned to run the family's inn. However, he found this both personally and financially unfulfilling. He decided to pursue a law degree at Washington College (later Washington and Lee University). He graduated in 1869 and started a law practice in Harrisonburg. Harrisonburg would remain his residence until 1893, when he moved to Richmond to begin his gubernatorial term. Initially he lived on East Market Street, then moved to the east side of South Main Street, nest to Judge George G. Grattan.[11]

After former Confederates had their civil rights restored, O'Ferrall quickly returned to politics and successfully ran for the Virginia House of Delegates in 1871. However, the following year, he lost his attempt for a seat in the U.S. Congress.[1] In 1874, fellow legislators elected O'Ferrall as a judge for Rockingham County. However, he found the job tedious and returned to his private legal practice when his six-year term ended.[12]

After several years of practicing law and assisting various Conservative Democratic candidates, O'Ferrall challenged the one-term incumbent John Paul (former Rockingham County Commonwealth attorney and state senator who ran as a Readjuster Democrat) for Virginia's 7th congressional district in 1883. The initial election vote count showed O'Ferrall down by 200 votes (out of 24,000 in a three-person race), but he contested the result and eventually won the seat. O'Ferrall subsequently won reelection five times, serving ten years in the House of Representatives (and Paul became a U.S. District judge). O'Ferrall's congressional career was largely unremarkable, though he did gain a reputation as a staunch advocate for Virginia and of Democratic President Grover Cleveland.[13]

Governor

After twice failing to win the Democratic nomination for Virginia's governor, O'Ferrall determined to make a strong push in 1893.[14] With the support of the statewide Democratic organization formed by Virginia's U.S. Senator Thomas Staples Martin, O'Ferrall easily won the nomination. The Republicans decided not to contest the election, so O'Ferrall's only opponent was Populist Party candidate Edmund R. Cocke whom he defeated with 59.71% of the vote.[15] O'Ferrall benefited from fears of populism and Black equality to win the election with the largest majority that any Virginia governor had ever received.[16]

The first half of O'Ferrall's term as governor was highlighted by his willingness to use strong measures to preserve law and order. He dispatched armed forces to protect nonstriking miners and maintain peace during a miners' strike and also to drive Coxey's "army" of protest marchers out of the state.[17] Despite his public stance as a white supremacist, O'Ferrall was also quick to send troops to break up mob violence and prevent lynchings.[18] His actions thus defused several high-profile situations, and he remained a generally popular governor through the end of 1895.[19]

In 1896, a Presidential election year, the issue of bimetallism and "Free Silver" dominated Democratic Party politicians, alienating O'Ferrall, who had always staunchly advocated the gold standard. The silver issue culminated in the selection of William Jennings Bryan as the Democrats' 1896 presidential candidate.[20] O'Ferrall became one of a small group of Virginia Democrats who supported the gold standard and opposed Bryan's candidacy.[21] This stand undermined O'Ferrall's popularity and political support and ensured that he would be a lame duck with no significant political accomplishments for the rest of his gubernatorial term.[22] Effectively, O'Ferrall's opposition to the silver issue forced his retirement from public life.[23]

Electoral history

Final years, death and legacy

Although O'Ferrall attempted to resume his legal practice, he faced significant health issues, many attributed to his war wounds.[24] In 1904, O'Ferrall published his autobiography titled, Forty Years of Active Service. Shortly after its publication, O'Ferrall died on September 22, 1905, in Richmond, Virginia, and was buried in the Hollywood Cemetery.[1]

The Library of Virginia maintains his executive papers.[25] His papers are held by the Special Collections Research Center at the College of William & Mary.[26] Additional papers are held by the James Madison University library.[27]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biographical Directory of the United States Congress: O'FERRALL, Charles Triplett, (1840–1905) . 2007-12-17. United States Congress.
  2. Web site: Charles Triplett O'Ferrall - Hollywood Cemetery. www.hollywoodcemetery.org. 17 December 2018.
  3. Book: Weisiger, Minor T. . The Governors of Virginia, 1860–1978 . Edward Younger . University Press of Virginia. 135 . 1982 . 0-8139-0920-1.
  4. Book: O'Ferrall, Charles Triplett . Forty Years of Active Service. The Neale publishing company . 183–184 . 1904 . 0-7222-8280-X.
  5. O'Ferrall (1904) p. 185
  6. O'Ferrall (1904) pp. 21–22
  7. O'Ferrall (1904) pp. 86–87
  8. Agnes V. Kline, Civil War in Rockingham County: clippings from the Daily News Record, unpaginated but bound in the Massanutten Regional Library local history collection
  9. John W. Wayland, A History of Rockingham County, Virginia (1912, republished C.j. Carrier Company, Harrisonburg 1996) p. 359
  10. Book: Frank H. Gille . The Encyclopedia of Virginia 1999; Volume One . December 1999 . Somerset Publishers . 182 . 0-403-09753-3.
  11. Kline
  12. Weisiger (1982) p. 137
  13. Weisiger (1982) pp. 137–138
  14. Weisiger (1982) p. 138
  15. Web site: Tice Moore. James. Edmund R. Cocke (1841–1922). Encyclopedia Virginia. 29 June 2015.
  16. Book: Moger, Allen . Virginia: Bourbonism to Byrd, 1870–1925 . registration . University Press of Virginia . 1968 . 109–111 . OCLC 435376.
  17. Moger (1968) pp. 154–155
  18. Weisiger (1982) p. 141
  19. Weisiger (1982) p. 142
  20. Weisiger (1982) p. 143
  21. Moger (1968) p. 161
  22. Weisiger (1982) pp. 143–144
  23. Moger (1968) p. 165
  24. Weisiger (1982) p. 145
  25. Web site: A Guide to the Executive Papers of Charles T. O'Ferrall, 1894-1897 O'Ferrall, Charles T., Executive Papers of Governor, 1894-1897 43210. ead.lib.virginia.edu. 17 December 2018.
  26. Web site: Charles Triplett O'Ferrall Papers. Special Collections Research Center, Earl Gregg Swem Library, College of William & Mary. 4 February 2011.
  27. Web site: O'Ferrall, Charles Triplett Papers, 1870-1893 : JMU Libraries. www.lib.jmu.edu. 17 December 2018. December 18, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181218010835/https://www.lib.jmu.edu/special/manuscripts/2015oferrall/. dead.