Thomas J. Jarvis Explained

Thomas J. Jarvis
Jr/Sr:United States Senator
State:North Carolina
Term Start:April 19, 1894
Term End:January 23, 1895
Appointer:Elias Carr
Predecessor:Zebulon Baird Vance
Successor:Jeter C. Pritchard
Order1:16th
Office1:United States Minister to Brazil
Term Start1:July 11, 1885
Term End1:November 19, 1888
Predecessor1:Thomas A. Osborn
Successor1:Robert Adams, Jr.
President1:Grover Cleveland
Order2:44th
Office2:Governor of North Carolina
Term Start2:February 5, 1879
Term End2:January 21, 1885
Predecessor2:Zebulon Baird Vance
Successor2:Alfred Moore Scales
Order3:3rd
Office3:Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina
Term Start3:January 1, 1877
Term End3:February 5, 1879
Governor3:Zebulon Baird Vance
Predecessor3:Curtis H. Brogden
Successor3:James L. Robinson
Office4:Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives
Term Start4:November 21, 1870
Term End4:November 18, 1872
Predecessor4:W. A. Moore
Successor4:James L. Robinson
Office5:Member of the North Carolina House of Representatives for Tyrrell
Term Start5:November 16, 1868
Term End5:November 18, 1872
Predecessor5:N. W. Walker
(as Member, House of Commons)
Successor5:B. Jones
Birth Date:18 January 1836
Birth Place:Jarvisburg, North Carolina, US
Death Place:Greenville, North Carolina, US
Party:Democratic
Alma Mater:Randolph-Macon College
Signature:Signature of Thomas Jordan Jarvis.png
Branch:Confederate States Army
Serviceyears:1861–1864
Rank:Captain
Unit:Eighth North Carolina Regiment
Battles:American Civil War

Thomas Jordan Jarvis (January 18, 1836June 17, 1915) was the 44th governor of the U.S. state of North Carolina from 1879 to 1885. Jarvis later served as a U.S. Senator from 1894 to 1895, and helped establish East Carolina Teachers Training School, now known as East Carolina University, in 1907.

Biography

Early years

Born in Jarvisburg, North Carolina, in Currituck County, he was the son of Elizabeth Daley and Bannister Hardy Jarvis, a Methodist minister and farmer[1] and brother of George, Ann, Margaret, and Elizabeth. His family was of English descent and some of its members highlighted at various points in the history of North Carolina. So, Thomas Jarvis was lieutenant governor of Albemarle during the government of Philip Ludwell, between 1691 and 1697, and Samuel Jarvis led the militia of Albemarle during his fight in the Revolutionary War. Raised in a poor family, although he had the necessities of life, Jarvis worked when he was young in three hundred acre farm owned by his father, while he was studying about the common schools.[1] Jarvis was educated locally and at nineteen went on to attend Randolph-Macon College, earning an M.A. in 1861. He had to exercise as teacher during the summer to pay for college tuition.[1] An educator by training, Jarvis opened a school in Pasquotank County and would later be one of the founders of East Carolina University.

Career

Jarvis enlisted in the military at the beginning of the American Civil War and served in the Eighth North Carolina Regiment. On April 22, 1863, he was named Captain.[1] Captured and exchanged in 1862, Jarvis was injured and permanently disabled at the Battle of Drewry's Bluff in 1864. After the war ended, he was on sick leave in Norfolk and in May 1865, he got probation, returning to Jarvisburg.

In 1865, Jarvis returned home and opened a general store before being named a delegate to the 1865 state constitutional convention. In 1867 Jarvis bought entrepreneur William H. Happer's share of their small general store. After getting a license to practice law in June of that year, he abandoned the store and moved to Columbia.[1]

Active in the Democratic Party, Jarvis was elected to the State House in 1868 and served there for four years, two of them (1870–1872) as Speaker of the House. In 1872, he was a Democratic elector-at-large on the Horace Greeley ticket. Jarvis also married Mary Woodson in December 1874.

An opponent of federal Reconstruction policy, Jarvis was elected the third lieutenant governor in 1876 on a ticket with Zebulon Vance. In 1879, Vance resigned the governorship to serve in the United States Senate, and Jarvis filled the vacant position. As governor, he fought against government corruption and attempted to cut taxes, the state's debt, and government control. He also completed the sale of various state railways to private companies. He established mental health services in Morganton and Goldsboro, managed the establishment of normal schools for teachers in North Carolina and helped develop the State Board of Health.[1]

He won election in his own right in 1880, defeating Daniel G. Fowle for the Democratic nomination and narrowly winning over Republican challenger Ralph Buxton. In office, Jarvis convinced the legislature to authorize construction of the North Carolina Executive Mansion, although it was not completed until 1891.[2] [3] He "supported establishing a system of county superintendents of education elected by boards of education, grades of teacher certification, standards of examinations for public school teachers, and lists of recommended textbooks. Also, Funds for the mental institutions continued to increase, and the laws of North Carolina were for the first time codified and state insurance laws fully defined. Also, was built a governor's mansion".[1]

Term limited, Jarvis stepped down as governor in 1885, but was appointed United States Minister to Brazil by President Grover Cleveland. Jarvis held this post for four years, after which he practiced law in Greenville, North Carolina. Following Senator Vance's death in 1894, Jarvis again succeeded him in office, serving as a U.S. Senator through an appointment by Gov. Elias Carr. In 1895, the state legislature, now under the control of Republicans and Populists, would not elect Jarvis to a term of his own.

In 1896, Jarvis was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention, where he supported William Jennings Bryan in his last major political act. He was instrumental in the founding of what is now East Carolina University in Greenville, where the oldest residential hall on campus is named in his memory.

In 1898, while not directly involved, Jarvis's political rhetoric may have contributed to the Wilmington insurrection of 1898, a violent coup d'état by a group of white supremacists. They expelled opposition black and white political leaders from the city, destroyed the property and businesses of black citizens built up since the Civil War, including the only black newspaper in the city, and killed an estimated 60 to more than 300 people.[4] [5]

Jarvis reopened his law firm and in 1912, he founded a partnership with Frank Wooten.[1] In November 1914, Jarvis presided over the unveiling of the Pitt County Confederate Soldiers' Monument.[6]

He died at his home in Greenville on June 17, 1915.[7]

Legacy

Personal life

Jarvis married Mary Woodson in December 1874.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thomas Jordan Jarvis, 1836–1915 . August 3, 2012 . February 3, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180203104038/http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/jarvislet/bio.html . bot: unknown . Retrieved on April 28, 2022.
  2. Web site: News & Observer: Executive Mansion gets its place in history . May 13, 2010 . April 1, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120401164246/http://projects.newsobserver.com/under_the_dome/executive_mansion_gets_its_place_in_history . live . Web site: Archived copy . May 13, 2010 . April 1, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120401164246/http://projects.newsobserver.com/under_the_dome/executive_mansion_gets_its_place_in_history . bot: unknown .
  3. Web site: North Carolina Historical Marker . May 13, 2010 . March 3, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303171030/http://www.ncmarkers.com/Markers.aspx?sp=Markers&sv=H-117 . dead .
  4. News: Race Question in Politics: North Carolina White Men Seek to Wrest Control from the Negroes . The New York Times . October 24, 1898 . Raleigh, North Carolina . 1 . 2022-04-08 . Newspapers.com.
  5. Web site: Thomas Jordan Jarvis and the White Supremacy Campaign of 1898 . 2022-11-26 . collectio.ecu.edu.
  6. Mullis . Justin . "Unveiling Meaning: the Pitt County Confederate Soldiers' Monument and Lost Cause Sentiment" . The ScholarShip . May 4, 2022 . 20 . December 14, 2022.
  7. News: Ex-Governor Jarvis Dies at Greenville . . Greenville, North Carolina . 1 . 1915-06-18 . 2022-04-28 . Newspapers.com.
  8. Web site: Jarvis Memorial UMC - Home . 2022-11-26 . www.jarvis.church.