
U.S. Senator Jackson Morton (Whig-Florida)
'Jackson Morton' (
August 10,
1794 -
November 20,
1874) was a
United States Senator from
Florida.
Early life
Morton was born in
Fredericksburg, Virginia and was the brother of
Jeremiah Morton, a
U.S. Representative from
Virginia.
Jackson Morton graduated from Washington College (now
Washington and Lee University) of
Lexington, Virginia in 1814 and from
College of William and Mary of
Williamsburg, Virginia in 1815. Morton moved to
Pensacola, Florida in 1820, engaging in the lumber business.
American government
In 1836, Morton became a member of the
Florida Territorial Legislative Council and served as its president in 1837. In 1838, he was a delegate to the state constitutional convention for the first
Florida Constitution. Morton was a
United States Navy agent in Pensacola from 1841 to 1845. In 1848, he was a
presidential elector on the
Whig Party ticket.
Morton was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1848. He served in the Senate from 1849 to 1855 and was not a candidate for reelection. Morton resumed activity in the lumber business after his senate service.
Confederate government
As the
slavery division grew between the north and south United States, Morton became active in the development of the
Confederacy. On
November 30,
1860, he was chosen to represent
Santa Rosa County as a delegate of the Florida Secession Convention in
Tallahassee. On
January 7,
1861, Morton was appointed to be part of a twelve-person committee to prepare an
Ordinance of Secession for Florida
[1]. Morton and
George Taliaferro Ward attempted to have the ordinance amended so that Florida would not secede until
Georgia and
Alabama seceded and so that popular ratification would be required. They were overruled on
January 8,
1861 and the ordinance went to a vote as planned
[2]. Morton voted in favor of secession and, on
January 10,
1861, by a vote of 62-7, Florida became the third state to leave the United States.
On
January 17,
1861, Morton was appointed to be a delegate to the
Montgomery, Alabama convention for constructing a provisional Confederate government. On
February 4,
1861, the delegates met and drafted the
Provisional Confederate States Constitution which was signed by Morton and the rest of the delegates four days later. The delegates at this convention became the
Provisional Confederate Congress. Morton served for the duration of the provisional congress and, in the month following the provisional constitution, he also signed its successor, the
Confederate States Constitution [3].
Jackson Morton returned to Santa Rosa County and died at his home, "Mortonia", near
Milton, Florida on November 22, 1874. Morton was interred there in a private cemetery.
Interesting fact
★ Jackson Morton and
Augustus Maxwell were the only people to represent Florida in both the United States Congress and the
Confederate Congress in their lifetimes.
See also
★
List of United States Senators from Florida
★
U.S. Congressional Delegations from Florida
References
★ ISBN 1-882695-00-3.
External links
★
Congressional Biography
★
PoliticalGraveyard.com
★
FamousAmericans.net
★
CivilWarHome.com