Horace Maynard Politician

Horace Maynard (August 30, 1814 – May 3, 1882) was an American educator, attorney, politician and diplomat active primarily in the second half of the 19th century. Initially elected to the House of Representatives from Tennessee's 2nd Congressional District in 1857, Maynard, an ardent Union supporter, became one of the few Southern congressmen to maintain his seat in the House during the Civil War. Toward the end of the war, Maynard served as Tennessee's attorney general under Governor Andrew Johnson, and later served as ambassador to Turkey under President Ulysses S. Grant and Postmaster General under President Rutherford B. Hayes.Maynard left his teaching position at East Tennessee College in the early 1840s to pursue a career in law, and quickly developed a reputation among his peers for his reasoning ability and biting sarcastic style. He spent much of his first two terms in Congress fighting to preserve the Union, and during the Civil War he consistently urged President Abraham Lincoln to send Union forces to free East Tennessee from its Confederate occupiers. Maynard returned to Congress after the war, but being a Republican in a Democrat-controlled state, he struggled in statewide elections.

Personal facts

Horace Maynard
Birth dateAugust 30, 1814
Birth place
Westborough Massachusetts , United States
Religion
Presbyterianism
Date of deathMay 03, 1882
Place of death
Knoxville Tennessee , United States
Education
Amherst College
Profession
Lawyer , Politician , Professor

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Office holder

office
United States Minister to the Ottoman Empire
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Tennessee's 2nd district
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Tennessee's At-large district
party
Republican Party (United States)
Whig Party (United States)
Opposition Party (United States)
Know Nothing
Unionist Party (United States)
Unconditional Union Party
successor

Horace Maynard on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.lib.utk.edu/spcoll/manuscripts/0415.html