![]() |
||||
|
||||
|
Date Born: June 23, 1835 |
![]() |
Date Died: April 13, 1907 |
|||
Place Born: West Brookfield, MA |
Place Buried: Charlottesville, VA |
||||
Residence: Charleston District (now Berkeley County), SC |
Occupation: Planter, Lawyer, Author, Professor of Constitutional Law at Cornell University, 2nd Lieutenant in US Army |
||||
Yale University: Graduated 1862 with honors Attorney General of South Carolina: 1868-1872 1876 Governor Chamberlain was inaugurated for a second term after a count was taken that disregarded votes from Laurens and Edgefield counties 1877 A complete count of the votes revealed that Governor Chamberlain had been defeated by Wade Hampton 1877 Chamberlain left South Carolina during the withdrawal of federal troops Chamberlain authored Charles Sumner and the Treaty of Washington Daniel Henry Chamberlain was born in West Brookfield, Massachusetts, on June 23, 1835, the ninth of ten children born to Eli Chamberlain and Achsah (Forbes) Chamberlain. In 1849-1850, he spend a few months at the academy at Amherst, MA, and in 1854, spent part of the year at Phillips Academy in Andover, MA. He graduated from Worcester High School in 1857 and Yale University in 1862. The following year, he left Harvard Law School to serve as an officer with the Fifth Massachusetts Cavalry, a black regiment, and served until the end of the American Civil War. He came to South Carolina in 1866 to tend to the affairs of a deceased classmate. On December 16, 1867, he married Alice Ingersoll, daughter of George W. Ingersoll of Bangor, Maine. They had four children. Chamberlain entered South Carolina politics in 1868 as a delegate to the SC Constitutional Convention from the Berkeley District. From 1868 to 1872, he served as Attorney General in Governor Robert K. Scotts administration. He was also a member of the financial board, an agency tainted by corruption involving the state Land Commission and the sale of Blue Ridge Railroad bonds. Chamberlain vigorously denied benefiting from these scandals and publicly criticized Republican corruption. In 1871, he joined Democrats in organizing a state Taxpayers Convention to press for reform and limits to state appropriations. Failing to gain the Republican nomination for governor in 1872, Chamberlain practiced law in Charleston. In 1873 he was elected to the board of trustees of the University of South Carolina as the first black students and faculty joined the institution. In 1874, with the support of black leaders Francis L. Cardozo and Robert Brown Elliott, Daniel Henry Chamberlain became the Republican candidate for governor and won the general election that fall. Opposed to Republicans he regarded as corrupt and too radical, Chamberlain cultivated the support of moderate Democrats led by Charleston newspaper editor Francis W. Dawson. As governor, he vetoed twenty spending and patronage measures he considered reckless. In 1875 he alienated many Republicans when he refused to sign commissions that would have enabled William J. Whipper and Franklin J. Moses, Jr. to serve as circuit court judges. By 1876 it appeared that Chamberlains strategy to gain Democratic support for his re-election would pay political dividends as Dawson repeatedly praised the governor in the pages of the News and Courier. But when straight-out Democrats murdered several black militia members in the Hamburg Massacre of July 1876, Chamberlain condemned the killings and asked Washington for Federal troops to quell the violence. Moderate Democrats deserted Chamberlain and threw their support behind Wade Hampton, III. In the violent campaign that ensued, Hamptons supporters threatened and intimidated Republican candidates and black voters. Chamberlain and black leader Robert Smalls were hooted off the platform by an angry mob at Edgefield during the campaign. Both the Democrats and Republicans claimed victory in the 1876 election, and a prolonged controversy followed. For a time, Hampton and Chamberlain each insisted that he was the states chief executive. But in April 1877, President Rutherford B. Hayes informed Chamberlain that he supported Hampton and subsequently withdrew Federal troops from South Carolina. He was the last Republican to hold a high office in South Carolina until the late 1960s. Chamberlain departed South Carolina and became a successful Wall Street lawyer in New York City. Embittered by his experiences as governor, he vilified the Hayes administration for its treachery in abandoning black South Carolinians to white Democrats. In 1881 Chamberlain defended black West Point cadet Johnson C. Whittaker in his highly publicized court-martial case. However, in the years that followed, Chamberlain shifted in his racial attitudes. In a series of articles, Chamberlain described his increasing disillusionment with Reconstruction and criticized attempts to secure voting rights and political power for African Americans. From 1883 to 1897, he was a professor of constitutional law at Cornell University. Upon his retirement, he traveled extensively in Europe before settling in Charlottesville, Virginia, where he died of cancer on April 13, 1907. |
|||||
<< Last Governor - Franklin J. Moses, Jr. |
![]() |
![]() |