Patrick Henry Brittan Explained

Birth Date:September 21, 1815
Office:10th Secretary of State of Alabama
Term Start:1860
Term End:1865
Governor:Andrew B. Moore
John Gill Shorter
Thomas H. Watts
Predecessor:James H. Weaver
Successor:Albert Stanhope Elmore
Party:Democratic

General Patrick Henry Brittan was born in Thornton Gap, Virginia on September 21, 1815.

Biography

He learned printing in Washington, D.C. and then migrated to Columbus, Georgia in 1839 to practice his trade. He married Ora Williams of Morgan County, Georgia in that same year. They would have nine children together. They moved to LaFayette, Alabama in 1843, where he established the LaFayette Tribune.[1]

He relocated again in 1847 to Montgomery, Alabama, where he bought a half-interest in the Montgomery Advertiser. He maintained his interest in the paper throughout several partnerships. In 1853, the Advertiser became the first newspaper in the state to be published using a steam-powered printing press. He started another newspaper, the Montgomery Messenger, in 1856. It was a small daily that he merged with the Confederation in 1858, in a new joint venture with two other partners. It was in this year that his new home at 507 Columbus Street was completed.[1] The Patrick Henry Brittan House is a historic Italianate style house in Montgomery. Completed in 1858, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places on December 13, 1979.

Brittan served as quartermaster general of Alabama from 1857 until 1859. In 1859, he was elected as the 10th Secretary of State of Alabama. He served in this capacity from 1860 until the end of the Civil War.[2]

Personal life

Brittan and his wife had nine children: Kate, Mary, Henry S., Emmett, Grattan, Lizzie B., Lucy, Sallie, and Belle. He died in Montgomery on March 18, 1868.[1] Brittan was the uncle of the sculptor, William Randolph Barbee.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alabama Secretaries of State: Patrick Henry Brittan. Alabama Department of Archives and History. 2010-02-14.
  2. Web site: History . Office of the Secretary: Alabama Secretary of State . 2010-02-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071217190109/http://www.sos.state.al.us/OfficeOfSoS/History.aspx . 2007-12-17 .
  3. Web site: Alabama Secretaries of State Patrick Henry Brittan. September 24, 2009. Alabama Department of Archives & History. 24 August 2011.