Oliver Perry Morton

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Oliver Perry Morton

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Oliver Perry Morton 1823-77, American political leader, b. Salisbury, Ind. He was admitted (1847) to the bar and began practice in Centerville, Ind. Morton helped organize the Republican party in Indiana and was its unsuccessful candidate for governor in 1856. When Gov. Henry S. Lane went to the Senate in 1861, Morton, as lieutenant governor, succeeded him; he was elected to the office in his own right in 1864. Despite having to contend with a hostile Democratic legislature for part of his tenure, he was one of the ablest of the Civil War governors and a strong supporter of President Lincoln. In 1867 he resigned to enter the Senate, where he served till his death. There, as one of the leading radical Republicans, he fostered uncompromising Reconstruction legislation and was prominent in the impeachment of President Andrew Johnson. He was a member of the electoral commission in the disputed presidential contest of 1876.

Bibliography: See biography by W. D. Foulke (1899, repr. 1974); W. B. Hesseltine, Lincoln and the War Governors (1948).

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Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton

The American politician Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton (1823-1877), as governor of Indiana during the Civil War, ably organized support for the Union.

Oliver Perry Morton was born on Aug. 4, 1823, in Salisbury, Ind., but grew up in Ohio. After 2 years at Miami University in Ohio, he left in 1845 to read law in Centreville, Ind. He served briefly as a circuit judge in 1852. Although a strongly partisan Democrat, Morton broke with his party over the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854, which allowed the further extension of slavery into new territories, and he was expelled for disloyalty. Finding reconciliation impossible, he helped found the Indiana Republican party. In 1860 he was elected lieutenant governor and became governor when the incumbent went to the Senate.

Morton zealously favored the Civil War and energetically threw the resources of his state behind the national government. He quickly and effectively raised troops, money, and supplies. But the political situation in Indiana was touchy because the potent Democratic opposition believed the Republicans had provoked an unnecessary sectional conflict for their own partisan advantage. Morton assiduously worked to divide and intimidate the Democrats. He denounced them as traitors and Copperheads intent on destroying the Union, and he worked with military and judicial authorities to harass, weaken, and imprison the Democratic leadership.

Nevertheless, the Democrats secured control of the Indiana Legislature in 1862, primarily by playing on white racial fears aroused by President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation. The new legislative majority determined to limit Indiana's war activities as a means of appealing to the South to return to the Union. They tried to weaken Morton's authority over military matters, demanded a 6 months' armistice in the war, and threatened to withhold all state appropriations. Morton bitterly resisted. The Republican members withdrew from the legislature, leaving the body without a quorum and legally unable to transact business. Then Morton borrowed money from individuals and the national government to finance state operations and continued as before. The crisis ended when Morton was reelected with a Republican legislature in 1864.

Morton suffered a stroke in 1865. In 1866 he joined other Republicans in denouncing President Andrew Johnson's conservative Reconstruction policies. Morton was elected to the Senate in 1867, where he generally supported the Radical Republicans. He backed military reconstruction, the 14th and 15th Amendments, and Johnson's impeachment in 1868. He served as a member of the electoral commission to decide the Hayes-Tilden election controversy in 1876. He died in Indianapolis on Nov. 1, 1877, of another stroke.

Further Reading

William Dudley Foulke, Life of Oliver P. Morton (2 vols., 1899, 1974), is a complete, albeit partisan, biography. The Indiana political situation is well described in Kenneth M. Stampp, Indiana Politics during the Civil War (1949). Frank L. Klement, The Copperheads in the Middle West (1960), is an excellent analysis of Morton's opponents. Also useful is William Best Hesseltine, Lincoln and the War Governors (1948).

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Morton High name linked to state's Civil War governor
Newspaper article from: Post-Tribune (IN); 5/8/2007; ; 517 words ; ...according to a biography. Morton was also the first native Hoosier...Wayne County, near Richmond. Morton probably gained strength by carrying around the official name of Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton. He was orphaned at an early...
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Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 2/11/1996; 503 words ; ...was predeceased by his father, Oliver Perry Morton Brown; his mother, Georgie Krug...Feb. 12, 1996, at H.D. Oliver Funeral Apts., Laskin Road Chapel...Virginia Beach Rescue Squad. H.D. Oliver Funeral Apts., Laskin Road Chapel...
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Newspaper article from: The Kentucky Post (Covington, KY); 8/26/2000; 700+ words ; ...member of St. Stephen Episcopal Church, Latonia, the Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Oliver Perry Morton Chapter of Daughters of the Union and the American Ex-Prisoners of War Association. Survivors include her husband...
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Newspaper article from: Messenger-Inquirer (Owensboro, KY); 2/12/2007; 700+ words ; ...once -- on Sept. 12, 1861. In a telegram to Maj. Gen. John C. Fremont, Lincoln wrote that Indiana Gov. Oliver Perry Morton had sent him the following telegram: "'Colonel Lane, just arrived by special train, represents Owensborough...
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Newspaper article from: Post-Tribune (IN); 4/10/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...national leaders originated from Indiana. They include Benjamin Harrison, the only Hoosier to be our president, and Oliver Perry Morton, considered one of the finest governors of the Civil War era. Whenever your smarmy relatives from Illinois bring...
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Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 1/22/1995; 700+ words ; ...and placed the local government under federal control - a condition that lasted almost 100 years - Sen. Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton (R-Ind.) echoed the protests of local citizens, complaining that the plan was "anti- democratic...
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Newspaper article from: Concord Monitor; 3/8/2008; 700+ words ; ...Jennifer Peloquin, Nicole Perry, Martha Rasbridge...Zoe Mahan, Justin Morton, David Nickerson, Duncan Oickle, Owen Parker, Oliver Perillo, Joseph Perry, Nicholas Pinard, April...Samantha Mochrie, Madison Morton, Katelyn Piper, Jacob...
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Newspaper article from: Sun-Journal Lewiston, Me.; 4/3/2007; 700+ words ; ...McCann, Rebecca Moore, Jessica Nadeau, Oliver Perry, Mark Ross, Marie Russell, Jessie Sirois...Benjamin Matthews, Abby Mills, Andrew Morton, Ashley Pelletier, Kate Perry, Katie Perry, Diana Poirier, Kristi Richard, Annastasia...
Honor roll Alton Central School
Newspaper article from: Concord Monitor; 1/6/2005; 700+ words ; ...Joseph Monasky, Lydia Morton, Stephanie Moulton, Brittany...Monasky, BJ Morse, Emily Morton, Breanna Parades, Nicole Perry, Michelle Prior, Martha...Kristen Parker, Owen Parker, Oliver Parillo, Joe Perry, April Rieger, Mackenzie...
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Newspaper article from: Sun-Journal Lewiston, Me.; 6/16/2006; 700+ words ; ...M. Mejias, Jessica M. Nadeau, Oliver Perry, Ashley Poirier, Christina Puiia...Martin II, Benjamin Matthews, Andrew Morton, Edmond Joseph Muncey, Matthew Orr, Kerri Patneaude, John Perry, Nicholas Pingree, Diana Poirier...

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