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John Lawrence Manning

American politician


Summary

American politician

FieldValue
imageJohn-lawrence-manning.jpg
officeUnited States Senator-elect
from South Carolina
term*Not seated*
predecessorJames Chesnut
James Hammond
successorThomas Robertson
Frederick Sawyer
order1Governor of South Carolina
lieutenant1James Irby
term_start1December 9, 1852
term_end1December 11, 1854
predecessor1John Means
successor1James Adams
birth_nameJohn Lawrence Manning
birth_date
birth_placeClarendon County, South Carolina, U.S.
death_date
death_placeCamden, South Carolina, U.S.
restingplaceTrinity Episcopal Cathedral
partyDemocratic
spouseSusan Frances Hampton
Sally Bland Clarke
educationPrinceton University
University of South Carolina (BA)
allegianceConfederate States
branchConfederate States Army
battlesAmerican Civil War
rankColonel

from South Carolina James Hammond Frederick Sawyer Sally Bland Clarke University of South Carolina (BA) John Lawrence Manning (sometimes spelled John Laurence Manning) (January 29, 1816October 24, 1889) was the 65th Governor of South Carolina, from 1854 to 1856, and, though elected to the U.S. Senate in 1865, was refused a seat there because of his former Confederate allegiance.

Background and career

He was born in Clarendon County, son of Richard Irvine Manning and Elizabeth Peyre (Richardson) Manning. His father was the Governor of South Carolina from 1824 to 1826. John Manning attended Princeton University and obtained a degree from South Carolina College, where he was a member of the Euphradian Society. A Democrat, he was a member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from 1842 to 1846 and of the South Carolina Senate from 1846 to 1852. After his single term as governor, the state constitution made him ineligible for immediate re-election. He was a signer of South Carolina's ordinance of secession in 1860. During the American Civil War, while serving again in the South Carolina Senate from 1861 to 1865, Manning was also a colonel on the staff of P.G.T. Beauregard, a Confederate general. In 1865, after the war, the state General Assembly elected him to the United States Senate but, because of his prominent role in South Carolina's secession and the ensuing war, the Senate refused him a seat. He served again in the state house of representatives from 1865 to 1867 and, after the withdrawal of Union troops, in the state senate from 1877 to '78.

In an elite planter society that prided itself on its social grace, Manning was noted for his appealing appearance and demeanor, which possessed one observer to ask, "Who that has ever met him can be indifferent to the charms of manner and of personal appearance, which render the ex-Governor of the state so attractive?" In her famous diary, Mary Chesnut called Manning "the handsomest man alive."

Marriages and children

In 1838, John L. Manning married Susan Frances Hampton (1816–1845), daughter of General Wade Hampton I and his wife, Mary Cantey, and half-sister of Colonel Wade Hampton II, who though he alone inherited their father's considerable fortune, shared it equally with her and another sister. She died giving birth to their third child. In 1848 Manning married Sally Bland Clarke and had four children by her. During his term in office, he resided at the Preston C. Lorick House.

Millford Plantation

John Manning and his wife, Susan, had Millford Plantation built in 1839 near Pinewood, South Carolina. It is now a National Historic Landmark.

Slave owner

According to the 1860 United States Slave Census Schedule, John Manning owned 670 enslaved African-Americans, making him the 6th largest American slave owner at the time.

Burial

He is interred in the churchyard at Trinity Episcopal Church in Columbia, South Carolina.

Honors

The town of Manning, South Carolina was named for him.

References

References

  1. "South Carolina SC - John Lawrence Manning - 1852 - 1854". SCIway.net.
  2. Meckler Books]], 1978).
  3. [[William Howard Russell]], ''My Diary North and South'', [https://archive.org/details/mydiarynorthand01russgoog/page/n163/mode/1up?view=theater Vol.1, p.141] (London: [[Bradbury and Evans]] 1863).
  4. [[C. Vann Woodward]], ed., ''Mary Chesnut's Civil War'', p.35 (New York: [[Book of the Month]] Club 1994).
  5. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1026/is_n5_v151/ai_19997797 Smith, Thomas Gordon, ''Living with antiques: Millford Plantation in South Carolina'', Antiques Magazine, May, 1997] {{webarchive. link. (2007-02-03)
  6. "Preston C. Lorick House, Richland County (1727 Hampton St., Columbia)". South Carolina Department of Archives and History.
  7. "American slave owners".
  8. [http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~scsumter/places/places.html Names in the Old Sumter District]
Wikipedia Source

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