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Hugh Alfred Garland (June 1, 1805 – October 14, 1854) was an American lawyer and politician. He served in the Virginia House of Delegates. In 1838 to 1841 he served as clerk of the United States House of Representatives. Garland, a slave owner, was a staunch supporter of slavery in the United States, and he led the defense for Dred Scott's owner, John F. A. Sanford, in the case of Dred Scott v. Sandford, but died three years before the case was argued before the United States Supreme Court.

Early life

Garland was born to Alexander Spotswood Garland and Lucinda Rose on June 1, 1805, in Nelson County, Virginia.[1] Lucinda Rose is daughter of Frances Taylor [Madison] Rose, who brother is James Madison. He is the father of Confederate Colonel Hugh A. Garland Jr., brother of Landon Garland, the uncle of Confederate Army General Samuel Garland Jr., and the great-nephew of United States Founding Father and fourth President of the United States James Madison.

He was educated at Hampden Sydney College, where he taught briefly. During his time at Hampden-Sydney College he delivered an address to the literary societies about the importance of classical education.[2] Garland then studied law at the University of Virginia.

Career

Garland practiced the law in Boydton, Virginia, where his brother Landon Garland was a professor at Randolph Macon College. During that time, Garland's wife, Anne Burwell Garland, ran a female seminary. The house where they lived and operated the school is still extant.[3]

In 1833, Garland was elected to the Virginia House of Delegates. Later in 1838 to 1841 he served as clerk of the United States House of Representatives, partly because of his staunch support of President Andrew Jackson's anti-bank policies while Garland was in the Virginia legislature. In 1839 he published a defense of the Democratic Party in the Democratic Review.[4]

In September 1840, Garland addressed a meeting of Democrats in Groton, Connecticut, and attacked abolitionists. After this he was known as the champion of the "Northern Man with Southern feelings." In 1845 he delivered an oration commemorating Andrew Jackson in Petersburg, Virginia, where he was practicing law.[5]

Changing fortunes following law practice in Petersburg, Virginia, led to a move in 1847 to St. Louis, where he was a lawyer for Dred Scott's owner.[6] He and Lyman Decatur Norris were retained by the pro-slavery owner, Irene Emerson.

Ten slaves were owned by Hugh Garland in federal census in 1850 in Missouri.[7] Anne Burwell Garland, his wife, owned her half-sister Elizabeth Keckley for some time. The widow Mrs. Garland allowed Elizabeth Keckley and her son to be emancipated in 1855 for $1,200 (~$39,240 in 2023).[8] The half-sister of Mrs. Garland, who later became close to Mary Todd Lincoln, and wrote a memoir about her time in slavery.[9] Keckley wrote about the brutal treatment she received from the Burwell family and its friends in her autobiography.

Statue of his wife's half-sister Elizabeth Keckley, who they enslaved, at the Virginia Women's Monument

Garland wrote a two-volume biography of John Randolph of Roanoke.[10] The southern intellectual historian Michael O'Brien interprets Garland's biography of Randolph as influenced by the Romantic tradition and suggests that Garland made Randolph into a figure of the Romantic era.[11] Garland also wrote Protestantism and Government (1852).[12]

Death and legacy

Garland died unexpectedly in St. Louis on October 14, 1854, at age 49. Garland's son, Hugh Alfred Garland Jr., (1837-1864) was appointed a colonel of the consolidated 1st-4th Missouri Infantry Regiment in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. He died in 1864 in the Battle of Franklin.[13][14]

Writings

  • A Discourse on the Importance of Classical Learning; pronounced before the Literary and Philosophical Society of Hampden Sydney College, at their fifth anniversary, in September, 1828. Thomas Willis White, Richmond (1828)
  • Oration in commemoration of the life and services of Andrew Jackson, delivered in Petersburg, Virginia, on the 12th. of July, 1845, Bernard, Richmond (1845)
  • "The second war of revolution; or The great principles involved in the present controversy between parties. By a Virginian" Office of the Democratic Review, Washington (1839)[15]
  • The Life of John Randolph of Roanoke D. Appleton & Company, New York (1851)
  • Protestantism and Government St. Louis (1852)

References

  1. ^ "Garland, Hugh A. | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives". history.house.gov. Retrieved 2016-11-13.
  2. ^ Hugh A. Garland, A Discourse on the Importance of Classical Learning; Pronounced before the Literary and Philosophical Society of Hampden Sydney College, at their Fifth Anniversary, in September, 1828 (Richmond, T.W. White 1828).
  3. ^ Garland House, Boydton, Va.
  4. ^ A Virginian (Hugh A. Garland), The Second War of Revolution (1839), reprinted from Democratic Review (May 1839).
  5. ^ Hugh A. Garland, Oration in commemoration of the life and services of Andrew Jackson, delivered in Petersburg, Virginia, on the 12th. of July, 1845 (Richmond: Bernard, 1845). See also Hugh A. Garland, An oration in celebration of the second Declaration of Independence, or, The passage of the Independent Treasury Bill: pronounced in Castle Garden, July 27th, 1840.
  6. ^ Missouri's Dred Scott Case, 1846-1857; Don E. Fehrenbacher, The Dred Scott Case: Its Significance in American Law and Politics 256 (1978) (discussing Garland as lawyer for Scott's owner, Sanford).
  7. ^ Jennifer Fleischner, Mrs. Lincoln and Mrs. Keckley 341 (2004).
  8. ^ "Elizabeth Hobbs Keckly (1818-1907)".
  9. ^ Edlie Wong, Neither Fugitive nor Free: Atlantic Slavery, Freedom Suits, and the Legal Culture of Travel (2009): 128-29.
  10. ^ "The Life of John Randolph of Roanoke (1851)". Retrieved 2016-11-13.
  11. ^ Michael O'Brien, Conjectures of Order: Intellectual Life and the American South, 1810-1860 (2005): 667.
  12. ^ Hugh Garland, A Course of Five Lectures, Delivered in St. Louis, on Protestantism and Government (1852).
  13. ^ "Garland, Hugh A. | Community and Conflict Photo Archive". ozarkscivilwar.org. Retrieved 2016-11-13.
  14. ^ Keckley, Elizabeth "Behind the scenes, or, Thirty years a slave and four years in the White House", by Elizabeth Hobbs Keckley; G.W. Carleton & Co.; New York, NY, US; 1868.]
  15. ^ The second war of revolution; or the great principles involved in the present controversy between parties. Office of the Democratic review. 1839.
Government offices
Preceded by Clerk of the United States House of Representatives
1838–1841
Succeeded by