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Richard Spaight Donnell

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campaign against fellow Americans was unexpected and his family's finances and wealth which had developed when the state was a mere colonial frontier outpost suffered heavily. Several properties were burned by invading and looting Union soldiers. At the end of the war he was hunted by Union army
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With the establishment of peace North Carolina was invited back into the Union. Due to his historical leadership in the state he was elected to the State constitutional convention of 1865. He was subsequently elected to the 1866 Congress but was refused entrance by the Radical Republican Rump
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Originally supportive of maintaining union, as a delegate to the State secession convention in 1861 Donnell was a proponent of a national constitutional convention to resolve that crisis. When that proposal was shot down by the Republican Party and Abolitionists, and following orders of U.S.
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During the war he was elected as a Whig to the Thirtieth Congress (March 4, 1847 – March 3, 1849). However, his support for the war cost him the support of other Whigs and he was not a candidate for renomination in 1848. After the war he resumed the practice of law in
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He later joined the North Carolina militia and raised a force for the state as was the practice and socially required responsibility of gentlemen of his age. His militia unit organized volunteers for the
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When the Republican coup d'Γ©tat of 1867 was launched he was arrested by the Army along with the rest of the North Carolina State leadership. His health and wealth broken he died under Army detention in
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A scion of a pioneering and aristocratic family, he was raised on his father's plantation and town homes and was taught by tutors before attending the elite
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starting in 1839 and studied law. Subsequently, he was admitted to the bar in 1840 and commenced practice in New Bern, N.C.
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and became involved in state politics until the controversies of abolition and the election of 1860.
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where he gained further education in civil and church law and history. Subsequently, he attended the
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Along with others of his generation, the war was costly to his family's standing. The Union's
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war. As commanding officer Donnell trained and hired the captains and lower ranking officers.
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which called up the militia to occupy the southern states, he voted in support of secession.
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Whig Party members of the United States House of Representatives from North Carolina
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Members of the North Carolina House of Representatives
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Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
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Index


Congressional Representative
North Carolina
New Bern, North Carolina
United States Founding Father
Richard Dobbs Spaight
New Bern Academy
Yale College
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Mexican-American
Washington, North Carolina
Abraham Lincoln
American Civil War
North Carolina General Assembly of 1862–1864
speaker
total war
New Bern, North Carolina
Founding Father
Cedar Grove Cemetery
Thirtieth United States Congress
"Richard Spaight Donnell"
Find A Grave: Cedar Grove Cemetery
Works by or about Richard Spaight Donnell
Internet Archive
"Richard Spaight Donnell (id: D000415)"
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
U.S. House of Representatives
Henry S. Clark
U.S. House of Representatives
North Carolina's 8th congressional district

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