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Oliver Hazard Perry Morton

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Oliver Hazard Perry Morton Summary

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Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton
Oliver Hazard Perry Morton

In office
March 4, 1867November 1, 1877
Preceded by Henry S. Lane
Succeeded by Daniel W. Voorhees

Born August 4, 1823
Salisbury, Indiana, USA
Died November 1, 1877
Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
Political party Republican
Spouse Lucinda Burbank Morton
Profession Politician, Lawyer, Judge
Oliver H. P. T. Morton with beard
Oliver H. P. T. Morton with beard
Oliver H. P. T. Morton in U.S Statuary Hall
Oliver H. P. T. Morton in U.S Statuary Hall

Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton (August 4, 1823November 1, 1877) was a U.S. Republican Party politician from Indiana. He served as governor of Indiana during the Civil War, and was a stalwart ally of President Abraham Lincoln. Many historians consider him the finest Civil War governor. Morton later served in the U.S. Senate for a decade.

Contents

Biography

Morton was a native Hoosier (born in Wayne County), but he spent most of his formative years in Ohio. He was named for Oliver Hazard Perry, victorious US admiral in the Battle of Lake Erie. His mother died when he was three, and he was raised by his maternal grandparents. As a teenager, he moved to Centerville, Indiana, which remained his home for the rest of his life. Despite finishing neither high school nor college (he briefly attended Miami University and Cincinnati College), Morton was able to train himself in law, and became a successful and wealthy attorney in Centerville. Morton entered politics as the Republican Party began, in the mid-1850s. Morton won the Republican nomination for governor of Indiana in 1856, but lost the election. The Republicans nominated Morton for lieutenant governor in 1860, and this time he was a winner. In January 1861, the newly elected governor, Henry Smith Lane, was immediately chosen by the Indiana legislature for a U.S. Senate seat thereby elevating Morton to the governor's chair. Morton served as governor of Indiana for six years (1861 - 1867) and strongly supported the Union during the Civil War. He raised men and money for the Union army, and demonized Indiana's Confederate sympathizers. He is the only governor honored by his state's veterans with a statue in Vicksburg National Military Park. In 1862, he attended the Loyal War Governors' Conference in Altoona, Pennsylvania, organized by Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Gregg Curtin, which ultimately gave Abraham Lincoln support for his Emancipation Proclamation. Oliver Morton was partially crippled by a paralytic stroke in late 1865. He suffered a second stroke while on a trip to Oregon investigating charges of bribery made against a newly elected senator from that state. He died shortly afterwards in Indianapolis. Morton married the former Lucinda Burbank in 1845. They had five children, three of whom survived to adulthood.

Policies and criticism

In 1862, Morton asked Henry B. Carrington for assistance organizing the state's levies for service. Morton established an intelligence network to deal with rebel sympathizers, Knights of the Golden Circle (Copperheads), Democrats, and anyone opposed to his rule, and Carrington was put at its head. While Carrington succeeded in keeping the state secure, his operatives also carried out arbitrary arrests, suppressed freedom of speech and freedom of association, and generally maintained a repressive regime. Morton called out the state militia in July 1863 during "Morgan's Raid." Although Morton was criticized for exceeding his authority as governor (he refused to call the Democrat-dominated legislature into session in either 1863 or 1864, and quietly passed the word for Republicans to absent themselves from the capital to deprive the Democrats of a quorum), he was popular in the state and was re-elected governor in 1864. From 1867 to 1877, Morton was a United States Senator, where he was noted for his intense partisanship. In the 1870s, he became a prominent member of the Stalwart faction of the Republican Party; a faction more concerned with building the party and its power than with any particular ideological stand. Morton's stand on paper money made him controversial. He was considered "soft" because he favored issuing paper money with no backing during difficult times. This view, combined with his failing health, hurt him in his unsuccessful bid for the Republican presidential nomination in 1876. He did, however, participate as a member of the Electoral Commission appointed to determine the outcome of that contested presidential election.

Legacy

Morton is memorialized in the United States Capitol as one of Indiana's two statues on the National Statuary Hall Collection. There are also two statues of him in downtown Indianapolis, in front of the Indiana Statehouse and as part of the Indiana Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument on Monument Circle. Morton Senior High School in Hammond, Indiana, home of the "Morton Governors," is named after him.

References

  • Garraty, John A. and Mark C. Carnes. American National Biography, vol. 13, "Morton, Oliver Perry". New York : Oxford University Press, 1999.

External links

Preceded by
Abram A. Hammond
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana
1861
Succeeded by
Conrad Baker
Preceded by
Henry S. Lane
Governor of Indiana
18611867
Succeeded by
Conrad Baker
Preceded by
Henry S. Lane
United States Senator (Class 3) from Indiana
March 4, 1867November 1, 1877
Succeeded by
Daniel W. Voorhees

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    Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton
    The American politician Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton (1823-1877), as governor of Indiana during the Civil War, ably organized support for the Union. Oliver Perry Morton was born on Aug. 4, 1823, in Salisbury, Ind., but grew up in Ohio. After 2 years... more


     
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    Oliver Hazard Perry Morton from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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