Joseph E. Brown Alfred H. Colquitt John B. Gordon
It was made up of three people all going for the same thing. They are: Joseph E. Brown Alfred H. Colquitt John B. Gordon
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Joseph E. Brown Alfred H. Colquitt John B. Gordon
It was made up of three people all going for the same thing. They are: Joseph E. Brown Alfred H. Colquitt John B. Gordon
The term "Bourbon Triumvirate" refers to Georgia's three most powerful and prominent politicians of the post-Reconstruction era. They were Joseph E. Brown, Alfred H. Colquitt, and John B. Gordon. This trio completely controlled Georgia's U.S. Senate seats and governor's office from 1872 to 1890.
Joseph E. Brown was born on 1821-04-15.
The term Bourbon Triumvirate refers to Georgia's three most powerful and prominent politicians of the post-Reconstruction era: Joseph E. Brown, Alfred H. Colquitt, and John B. Gordon. This trio practically held a lock on the state's U.S. Senate seats and governor's office from 1872 to 1890: Brown as senator from 1880 until 1890; Colquitt as governor from 1876 through 1882, and as senator from 1883 until 1894; and Gordon as senator from 1872 until 1880, governor from 1886 until 1890, and senator again from 1891 until 1897. The political careers of all three men benefited from their service during the Civil War (1861-65); Brown had served as the governor of Confederate Georgia, and Colquitt and Gordon had both risen to the rank of major general in the Confederate army by the war's end.
Joseph E. Brown
Jesse Livermore died on November 28,1940.
Alfred H. Colquitt
Joseph E. Brown has written: 'Argument of ex-Gov. Joseph E. Brown, on the unconstitutionality of the test oath as applied to attorneys-at-law in the United States District Court at Savannah, on the motion of Hon. William Law, who applied to be permitted to resume his practice in the court without taking the oath' -- subject(s): Lawyers, Loyalty oaths
Joseph E. Brown
David William Brown has written: 'Organizational problems of small watersheds [by] David W. Brown [and] Joseph E. Winsett' -- subject(s): Tennessee, Watersheds
Joseph E. Johnson died in 1990.