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Gerard Brandon

American politician

Gerard Brandon

Summary

American politician

FieldValue
nameGerard Brandon
imageGerard Chittocque Brandon.jpg
order4th and 6th
officeGovernor of Mississippi
term_startJuly 25, 1826
term_endJanuary 9, 1832
lieutenant
predecessorDavid Holmes
successorAbram M. Scott
term_start1November 17, 1825
term_end1January 7, 1826
lieutenant1Vacant
predecessor1Walter Leake
successor1David Holmes
order24th
office2Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi
term_start2January 7, 1826
term_end2July 25, 1826
governor2David Holmes
predecessor2Vacant
successor2Abram M. Scott
term_start3January 7, 1824
term_end3November 17, 1825
governor3Walter Leake
predecessor3David Dickson
successor3Vacant
office5Speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives
term51822
birth_nameGerard Chittocque Brandon
birth_date
birth_placeNatchez, Mississippi Territory
death_date
death_placeFort Adams, Mississippi, U.S.
restingplaceColumbian Springs Plantation, Wilkinson County, Mississippi
otherparty
partner
alma_mater
order54th
predecessor5B. R. Grayson
successor5Cowles Mead

| honorific-prefix = | honorific-suffix =

Gerard Chittocque Brandon (September 15, 1788March 28, 1850) was an American political leader who twice served as Governor of Mississippi during its early years of statehood. He was the first native-born governor of Mississippi. He was a delegate to the constitutional conventions of 1817 and 1832. He served as Speaker of the Mississippi House of Representatives in 1822. As Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi he served as President of the Mississippi Senate. When Walter Leake died in 1825 he became governor. He also succeeded David Holmes who resigned in 1826 due to ill health. He was elected to the office in 1827 and again in 1829. Brandon, Mississippi is named for him.

Early life and education

Gerard Brandon was the son of an Irish immigrant, Gerard Chittocque Brandon, who established and ran the Selma Plantation in Adams County, Mississippi, and Dorothy Nugent, the daughter of Irish immigrants Matthew Nugent and Isabel MacBray. The couple moved to Mississippi from South Carolina sometime in 1785.

Brandon was born September 15, 1788, in Natchez, in the Territory of Mississippi, the second child and first son of the family. He was educated at Princeton University and the College of William & Mary and served in the War of 1812. He later practiced law at Washington, Mississippi and was a successful planter, following his father's footsteps, in Adams County, Mississippi.

Windy Hill Manor, by Frances Benjamin Johnston, 1938.

He married Margaret Chambers on January 18, 1816, in Bardstown, Kentucky. In 1817 Gerard Brandon bought Windy Hill Manor. At his death, Windy Hill Manor was inherited by his daughter, Elizabeth, who married William Stanton. Elizabeth and William's descendants lived at Windy Hill Manor until the 1940s. The last in the line were three unmarried sisters, Elizabeth, Maude, and Beatrice. When the last sister died in 1945, the house sat abandoned until 1965, when it was demolished.

After Margaret Chambers's death in June 1820, Gerard Brandon married Betsy Stanton on July 12, 1824, in Adams County, Mississippi. The governor had a total of eight children with his two wives.

Brandon died at 61 on March 28, 1850, and was buried in a private family cemetery at his Columbian Springs Plantation in Wilkinson County, Mississippi.

A slaveholder himself, he said he considered slavery an evil; his son, however, possessed a fortune in human property, including the kidnapped Henrietta Wood.

Political life

Brandon, a delegate to the constitutional conventions of 1817 and 1832, helped draft Mississippi's first two constitutions. He served in the Mississippi Legislature and was elected Speaker of the House of Representatives in 1822.

In 1825, Brandon became governor of Mississippi for the first time upon the death of Walter Leake, serving from Leake's death on November 17, 1825, until January 7, 1826, when David Holmes, the last territorial governor and first governor of the State of Mississippi was again inaugurated as governor.

Brandon became acting governor of Mississippi again on July 25, 1826 when Governor David Holmes resigned due to ill health. Brandon served until January 9, 1832, being reelected in the 1827 election and 1829 election.

Gerard Brandon served as governor during an era known as the "Flush Times," an era of expanded settlement and development in Mississippi and the surrounding areas. During his administration, the finalization of two Indian land sessions opened millions of acres of land to settlement, beginning the development of the cotton industry that would define Mississippi's economy in the coming years. Governor Brandon oversaw the expansion of transportation in the infrastructure to connect the new agricultural land, as well as the construction of public schools and the chartering of Mississippi's first railroad.

During Brandon's administration, political and economic changes, including the creation of several new counties (Washington, Madison, Rankin, and Lowndes) and the expansion of suffrage to all white males, induced the populace to vote in favor of a constitutional convention to replace Mississippi's Constitution of 1817.

After his term as governor ended, Brandon served as a delegate to the 1831 Constitutional Convention for Adams County. He then lived as a private citizen until his death in 1850.

Brandon, Mississippi, the county seat of Rankin County, is named after Gerard Brandon.

References

References

  1. "Mississippi Governor Gerard Chittocque Brandon". National Governors Association.
  2. Lost Plantations of the South By Marc R. Matrana, pg 176
  3. McDaniel, W. Caleb. (2019). "Sweet Taste of Liberty: A True Story of Slavery and Restitution in America". Oxford University Press.
  4. Hawes, Ruth B.. (1913). "Slavery in Mississippi". [[The Sewanee Review]].
  5. r2WPadmin. "Flush Times Myth".
  6. "Gerard Chittocque Brandon, Fourth and Sixth Governor of Mississippi: 1825-1826; 1826-1832 - 2003-12".
  7. (2007-10-25). "NACo {{!}} Find a County".
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