Hezekiah William Foote
Hezekiah William Foote | |
---|---|
Born | December 17, 1813 |
Died | January 29, 1899 Macon, Mississippi, U.S. | (aged 85)
Occupation(s) | Attorney, planter, politician |
Spouse | Lucinda Frances (Dade) Foote |
Children | Huger Lee Foote |
Relatives | Henry S. Foote (distant cousin) Shelby Foote (great-grandson) |
Hezekiah William Foote (a.k.a. Henry Foote) (1813–1899) was an American Confederate veteran, attorney, planter, slaveholder, and state politician from Mississippi.
Early life
[edit]Hezekiah William Foote was born on December 17, 1813, in Chester County, South Carolina.[1] He moved to Macon, Noxubee County, Mississippi as a teenager.[1][2][3] He studied the Law and passed the Mississippi Bar.[1]
Career
[edit]Foote raised cattle in Noxubee County, becoming the first settler to raise pedigree cattle in Mississippi.[3] Meanwhile, he started a newspaper called The Macon Intelligencer.[1] He then served as Chancery Clerk of Noxubee County and was elected as district judge.[2] He joined the Whig Party and later the Constitutional Union Party.[1] He ran and lost the election to the Mississippi House of Representatives in 1856.[1]
Foote became an ardent secessionist in favor of the Confederate States of America by 1860.[1] During the American Civil War of 1861–1865, he served as captain of the Noxubee Cavalry, 1st Mississippi Cavalry Battalion during the Battle of Belmont and the Battle of Shiloh, and later served as a colonel of a Mississippi State Troops cavalry regiment.[4]
Foote was elected as a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives and the Mississippi Senate.[2] He also served as president of the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Macon, Mississippi.[1]
Foote owned four plantations in the Mississippi Delta:
- the Mounds Plantation near Rolling Fork in Sharkey County, Mississippi.[2][5]
- the Egremont Plantation.[2][5]
- the Hardscramble Plantation.[2][5]
- the Mount Holly Plantation in Foote, Mississippi.[5] He acquired it in the early 1880s.[5]
Foote served as superintendent of the Methodist Sunday School in Macon, Mississippi, for fifty-six years.[1] He was one of the co-founders of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, founded as a Methodist institution, and served on its board of trustees.[1][3] He was related to Henry S. Foote, the governor of Mississippi from 1852 to 1854, who lived where the campus of Vanderbilt University was established.[3]
Personal life
[edit]Foote married Lucinda Frances Dade (1816–1856) in 1836.[1] She inherited 3,000 acres of land in Issaquena County, Mississippi.[1] They had a son, Huger Lee Foote.[5]
Death and legacy
[edit]Foote died on January 29, 1899, in Macon, Mississippi, where he was buried.[1][3] His great-grandson was Shelby Foote, the Civil War author.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Justin Glenn, The Washingtons: A Family History: Volume 1: Seven Generations of the Presidential Branch, Savas Publishing, 2014, p. 1895 [1]
- ^ a b c d e f Woody Woods, Delta Plantations - The Beginning, 2010, p. 40
- ^ a b c d e John Griffin Jones, Mississippi Writers Talking, Oxford, Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi, 1982, pp. 37-56 [2]
- ^ Rowland, Dunbar. (1908). The Official and Statistical Register of the State of Mississippi, Volume 2. Mississippi Department of Archives and History. pp. 762, 931.
- ^ a b c d e f Jim Fraiser, The Majesty of the Mississippi Delta, Pelican Publishing, 2002, p. 47 [3]
- 1813 births
- People from Chester County, South Carolina
- People from Sharkey County, Mississippi
- People from Washington County, Mississippi
- Confederate States Army officers
- Mississippi Whigs
- 19th-century American legislators
- 19th-century American lawyers
- 19th-century American planters
- American bankers
- Mississippi state senators
- Vanderbilt University people
- Methodists from Mississippi
- 1899 deaths
- Vanderbilt University faculty
- People from Macon, Mississippi