Remember!
For more than ten years I have visited this Cemetery in Crawford County, Georgia. It is a small one just West of Highway Marker 6 on U. S. Highway 80 This is also West of Roberta, Georgia. The Mailbox across the street indicates that it is 4333 U. S. Highway 80. During My visit today I observed a new Marker:
Civil
War Veterans in the Senate
In the years following the Civil War, more
than 150 Union and Confederate veterans served as United States senators,
helping to chart the nation’s course well into the 20th century.
The last Union
veteran, and the last Civil War veteran, to serve in the United
States Senate was Francis E.
Warren of Wyoming. Warren earned the Congressional
Medal of Honor for disabling a Confederate artillery as a young
soldier at the 1863 Seige of Port Hudson, La. In 1890 he became one of
Wyoming’s first two senators. Warren is credited as being the first senator to
hire a woman to a professional Senate staff position, as well as the first
senator to hire an African American to the Senate’s professional staff. He was
the Senate’s longest-serving
member when he died in office in 1929, at age 85.
Charles S.
Thomas of Colorado was the last Confederate veteran to serve in
the Senate. Born in Georgia, he served briefly as a teenager in the Confederate
Army. He settled in Denver after the war, where he built a law practice and
pursued a Senate career. Following three failed attempts to gain a Senate seat,
the 63-year-old Thomas finally became a U.S. senator in 1913, a position he
held until 1921. During his years in the Senate, Thomas became known for a
rather unconventional habit that marked the arrival of
springtime in the Senate Chamber.
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