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190:, and ran it until 1869, when it was sold. The younger Brownlow served as his father's private secretary when he was in the U.S. Senate. In 1872, he married Fannie Fouché, daughter of Dr. John Fouché. John B. Brownlow then worked in the Post Office and the U.S. Treasury Departments in Washington, D.C. for about 27 years. At the Treasury Department, he was a special representative of the IRS responsible for investigating fraud. He also represented the U.S. government on the boards of directors at five American
165:. John B. Brownlow was credited with recruiting about 600 men, or six companies worth, to his regiment. According to one obituary, his official rank may have been lieutenant colonel, but "He commanded the regiment in all the engagements in which it participated, the colonel of the regiment not being with that unit during the war." Along with
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Johnson told young
Brownlow, "I thank you for all the trouble you've taken and your father and yourself for your kindness, but I own several thousand dollars in stock in this railroad and I will be damned if I will be driven from traveling on it by the damned traitors of the Cotton States!" (Johnson's traveling companions
129:
In June 1861 the Parson heard tell Andrew
Johnson, returning from a trip to Kingston, would inadvertently be boarding a train that carried 2,000 Confederate troops. He sent John Bell Brownlow to get a good horse and buggy and get Johnson out of Kingston before he encountered the rebels. Upon arrival,
125:
in
Virginia, where in 1860, he apparently accidentally killed a fellow student named James W. Reese. According to the Parson, the fatal blow to the head was in self-defense. He was acquitted at trial. Per W. G. Brownlow, the judge told the jury he "would have rendered the same verdict if he had been
437:
Vincent's Semi-annual United States
Register: A Work in which the Principal Events of Every Half-year Occurring in the United States are Recorded, Each Arranged Under the Day of Its Date. This Volume Contains the Events Transpiring Between the 1st of January and 1st of July,
233:
During his lifetime, Brownlow was often called upon for his recollections of politics and
Tennesseans in the years before, during and after the Civil War. For example, in 1920, he wrote a letter retelling his father's alignment with John Bell, his own meeting with
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to fire the assassin's bullet. He saw the wrapped hand as the anarchist carried it in a sling but thought the man merely had an injured hand, and thought he was anxious, like all the others, to see and shake the hand of
President McKinley."
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be granted a government pension of $ 5,000 per year despite the fact that many of the other committee members deemed Mrs. Lincoln a "curse to her husband."
93:(October 19, 1839 – October 26, 1922) was an American military officer, newspaper editor, government administrator, and real estate developer. The older of
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who served as colonel in the United States (Union) cavalry in the Civil War. After the war, he joined his father in editing
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Andrew
Johnson: a life in pursuit of the right course, 1808–1875: the seventeenth President of the United States
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287:"Col. Brownlow Passes Beyond: Soldier, Editor, Historian and Business Man Dies at Age of 83 (Part 1 of 2)"
121:. His nickname was "Belt." John was the second-born of the eight Brownlow children. He went to school at
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169:, John K. Miller, and W. H. Ingerton, he was one of the colonels who led the raid that killed
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337:. Publishing House of the M.E. Church, South, Smith & Lamar, agents. pp. 359–362.
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Born at
Elizabethton in Carter County, Tennessee, Brownlow was named for U.S. Senator
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newspapers, and in later life, he became a real estate developer in his hometown of
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762:"John B. Brownlow, 26 Oct 1922; Death, Knoxville, Knox, Tennessee, United States"
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222:. He then entered real estate in Knoxville in partnership with two of his sons.
649:. Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society. p. 386 – via
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768:, Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville – via FamilySearch
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The French Broad-Holston
Country; a history of Knox County, Tennessee
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archives.gov: Brownlow, John B - Age 24, Year: 1864 - Ninth
Cavalry
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Brownlow died in Knoxville, Tennessee at age 83 and was buried in
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84:
Army officer, bureaucrat, newspaper editor, real-estate investor
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eventually persuaded him to go with J. B. Brownlow by buggy.)
157:. Their maternal uncle Alfred J. O'Brien was a colonel in the
410:
Homegrown Yankees: Tennessee's Union Cavalry in the Civil War
266:
Moore, John Trotwood; Foster, Austin Powers (June 30, 1923).
270:. S. J. Clarke Publishing Company – via Google Books.
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in his father's stead, and his father's determination that
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Brownlow was discharged from federal service by President
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attempting to surge through the great crowd to get near
334:
Holston Methodism: From Its Origin to the Present Time
484:. Durham, N.C.: Seeman Printery. pp. 68–69.
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588:The Civil War in Southern Appalachian Methodism
196:1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis
180:Brownlow took over his father's newspaper, the
747:Intimate Character Sketches of Abraham Lincoln
249:. He was survived by two sons and a daughter.
818:People of Tennessee in the American Civil War
823:Military personnel from Knoxville, Tennessee
808:Southern Unionists in the American Civil War
305:"Col. Brownlow Passes Beyond (Part 2 of 2)"
268:"Tennessee: The Volunteer State, 1769-1923"
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31:
616:"John Bell Brownlow Is Dead at Age of 84"
591:. Univ. of Tennessee Press. p. 237.
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145:from June 1, 1863, until the end of the
525:"Col. John Bell Brownlow (Part 1 of 2)"
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373:"Parson Brownlow in Defence of his Son"
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349:"Col. John Belt Brownlow (1839-1922)"
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218:after criticizing Postmaster General
16:American military officer (1839–1922)
750:. J.B. Lippincott. pp. 228–236.
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701:. October 27, 1922. p. 11
643:Rothrock, Mary Utopia (1946).
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453:"Acquittal of Young Brownlow"
293:. October 27, 1922. p. 1
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97:'s two sons, Brownlow was a
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813:United States Army officers
766:Tennessee Deaths, 1914-1966
733:– via Newspapers.com.
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459:. April 17, 1860. p. 3
331:Price, Richard Nye (1908).
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720:"Col. J. B. Brownlow Dead"
441:. F. Vincent. p. 282.
353:Tennessee Portrait Project
670:"Col. John Bell Brownlow"
434:Vincent, Francis (1860).
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543:"Brownlow (Part 2 of 2)"
478:Brabson, Fay Warrington
309:The Journal and Tribune
291:The Journal and Tribune
163:Confederate States Army
123:Emory and Henry College
54:Elizabethton, Tennessee
565:Chattanooga Republican
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229:Brownlow in later life
149:. His younger brother
126:one of their number."
620:The Commercial Appeal
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188:governor of Tennessee
155:1st Tennessee (Union)
674:The Chattanooga News
547:The Chattanooga News
529:The Chattanooga News
107:Knoxville, Tennessee
73:Knoxville, Tennessee
457:The Courier-Journal
153:was colonel of the
724:Knoxville Sentinel
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377:The New York Times
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208:President McKinley
200:Buffalo Exposition
147:American Civil War
91:John Bell Brownlow
25:John Bell Brownlow
598:978-1-62190-016-0
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379:. March 8, 1860.
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651:HathiTrust
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253:References
202:, he saw "
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198:. At the
119:John Bell
113:Biography
506:4578789M
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480:(1972).
236:Douglas
161:of the
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593:ISBN
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438:1860
415:ISBN
381:ISSN
183:Whig
134:and
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.