Person:Louis Wigfall (1)

Watchers
Sen. Louis Trezevant Wigfall, from Texas
d.18 Feb 1874 Texas
  1. Hamden WigfallBef 1816 -
  2. Bishop Arthur WigfallBef 1816 -
  3. Sen. Louis Trezevant Wigfall, from Texas1816 - 1874
m. 1841
  1. Francis Halsey WigfallAbt 1842 -
  2. Louise Sophie WigfallAbt 1845 -
Facts and Events
Name Sen. Louis Trezevant Wigfall, from Texas
Gender Male
Birth[1] 21 Apr 1816 Edgefield, South Carolina, United States
Marriage 1841 South Carolina[2nd cousins]
to Charlotte Maria Cross
Residence? Baltimore City, Maryland, United States
Death[1][2] 18 Feb 1874 Texasdied while visiting
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Biography, in Barringer, Paul Brandon; James Mercer Garnett; and Rosewell Page. University of Virginia: its history, influence, equipment and characteristics, with biographical sketches and portraits of founders, benefactors, officers and alumni. (New York: Lewis Publishing Co., 1904)
    1:367.
  2. Louis Wigfall, in Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia
    Last retrieved Feb 2016.

    Louis Trezevant Wigfall (April 21, 1816 – February 18, 1874) was an American politician from Texas who served as a member of the Texas Legislature, United States Senate, and Confederate Senate. Wigfall was among a group of leading secessionists known as Fire-Eaters, advocating the preservation and expansion of an aristocratic agricultural society based on slave labor. He briefly served as a Confederate Brigadier General of the Texas Brigade at the outset of the American Civil War before taking his seat in the Confederate Senate. Wigfall's reputation for oratory and hard-drinking, along with a combative nature and high-minded sense of personal honor, made him one of the more imposing political figures of his time.