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Friday, March 18, 2011

George W. Walker



From Wikipedia:
George Wythe Randolph (March 10, 1818 – April 3, 1867) was a lawyer and the Confederate States Secretary of War during the American Civil War. He was also Thomas Jefferson's grandson.

Biography
Randolph was born at Monticello in Charlottesville, Virginia, to Martha Jefferson Randolph, the daughter of U.S. President Thomas Jefferson, and Thomas Mann Randolph Jr., a descendant of Pocahontas and John Rolfe. Named in honor of George Wythe, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, he was a relative of Edmund Randolph, who served in George Washington's cabinet as the first Attorney General of the United States, as well as colonist William Randolph through both his mother and father's sides of the family.

Randolph briefly attended school in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and served as a midshipman in the United States Navy. He attended the University of Virginia before moving to Richmond. He read the law until he passed the bar and became a lawyer.

Marriage and family
On April 10, 1852, he married Mary Elizabeth Adams (1830–1871).

Career
As the Confederacy was established and the United States divided into two hostile camps, both sides moved toward open conflict. A special delegation, composed of Randolph, William B. Preston and Alexander H.H. Stuart, travelled to Washington, D.C. where they met President Abraham Lincoln on April 12, 1861. Finding the President firm in his resolve to hold the Federal forts then in the South, the three men returned to Richmond, Virginia on April 15.

Randolph joined the Confederate Army, serving as a major in the Battle of Big Bethel. He was promoted to brigadier general on February 12, 1862. Randolph was appointed by Jefferson Davis as Secretary of War on March 18, 1862, and he took office on March 24, 1862, but resigned on November 17, 1862.

After the Confederacy fell, he chose exile in Europe. He later returned to Virginia, where he died in 1867 from pneumonia. He is buried in the Jefferson family graveyard at Monticello.

Randolph was pictured on the $100 bill of the Confederate States of America.

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