John Bullock Clark

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Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters". John Bullock Clark Sr. (April 17, 1802 – October 29, 1885) was a militia officer and politician who served as a member of the United States Congress and Confederate Congress. Born in Kentucky, Clark moved with his family to Missouri in 1818 and studied law. He opened a legal practice in Fayette, Missouri, in 1824. He held several positions in the local government in the 1820s and 1830s. Clark was also involved in the state militia, serving as a colonel in the Black Hawk War in 1832 and eventually rising to the rank of major general. In 1838, during the Missouri Mormon War, Clark was the recipient of Governor Lilburn Boggs's infamous Mormon Extermination Order, and was involved in the ending stages of the conflict. He was the Whig candidate in the 1840 Missouri gubernatorial election. Clark was accused of conspiring to commit electoral fraud in the election and as a result almost fought a duel with Claiborne Fox Jackson, later a Governor of Missouri.

In 1850, Clark was elected as a Whig to the Missouri House of Representatives and served into 1851. He was elected in 1857 to fill a vacancy in one of Missouri's seats in the United States House of Representatives. With the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861, Clark, a wealthy owner of 160 slaves, became a leading secessionist in Missouri. After the pro-secessionist Missouri State Guard (MSG) was formed in May 1861, he was appointed by Jackson as a brigadier general commanding the MSG's 3rd Division. After leading his troops against Federal forces in the Battle of Carthage, Missouri on July 5, Clark was expelled from the House of Representatives for fighting against the United States. On August 10, he led his division in the Battle of Wilson's Creek, in which he was wounded.

After being appointed as a delegate to the Provisional Confederate Congress by the Confederate government of Missouri late in 1861, Clark resigned his military commission. He was appointed to the Confederate States Senate for the First Confederate Congress, serving from February 1862 to February 1864. During his time in Congress, he opposed the Jefferson Davis administration on some issues, but supported it on others. Confederate Governor of Missouri Thomas Caute Reynolds did not appoint him to a second senate term due to allegations of alcoholism, mendacity, and womanizing. After defeating Caspar Wistar Bell in an election for the Confederate House of Representatives for the Second Confederate Congress, Clark served in that role until March 1865. After the defeat of the Confederacy, he fled to Mexico, but was arrested upon his return to Texas in late 1865. He was released after several months, and returned to Missouri in 1870, where he practiced law for the rest of his life. His son, John Bullock Clark Jr., was a general in the Confederate States Army and later served in the United States Congress.

Early life and militia service

The child of Bennett and Martha Clark, John Bullock Clark was born in Madison County, Kentucky, on April 17, 1802. He was the nephew of James Clark, a governor of Kentucky, and Congressman Christopher Henderson Clark.Template:Sfn Clark was educated in local schools.Template:Sfn The family moved to Missouri in 1818, and Clark studied law.Template:Sfn The author Kenneth E. Burchett notes that his legal knowledge was self-taught;Template:Sfn He was admitted to the bar in 1824 while residing at Fayette, Missouri.Template:Sfn The historian Bruce S. Allardice refers to him as "a born politician".Template:Sfn He was taller than most of his peers at Script error: No such module "convert"., and had a reputation as a storyteller. Clark developed a colorful reputation for his legal demeanor; he once, knowing the evidence was stacked against a client he was defending, had a man canvass the county with petitions expressing support or opposition for his client, until the local jury pool had been depleted.Template:Sfn Clark was Howard County treasurer from 1823 to 1825, and clerk of the county's court system from 1824 to 1834.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He was also a member of the Methodist Church, and the historian Christopher Phillips describes him as devout.Template:Sfn In 1826 he married Eleanor Turner.Template:Sfn His son, John Bullock Clark Jr. was born in 1831.Template:Sfn

Clark was active in the Missouri militia.Template:Sfn In 1832, he served as a colonel of the Missouri Mounted Volunteers during the Black Hawk War.[1] From 1836 to 1838, Clark was a major general in the Missouri militia.Template:Sfn On October 26, 1838, during the Missouri Mormon War, Clark was ordered by Governor of Missouri Lilburn Boggs to deploy state troops into Daviess County, Missouri, in response to claims of atrocities.Template:Efn The next day, Boggs issued Clark the Mormon Extermination Order, which included the statement "The Mormons must be treated as enemies, and must be exterminated or driven from the State if necessary for the public peace".Template:Sfn The order instructed Clark to move with a force of troops to Richmond, Missouri, and there "operate against the Mormons".Template:Sfn

Clark was the only person to receive the order; he disseminated copies of it to the other relevant officers.Template:Sfn After receiving the Extermination Order, Clark mobilized a force to take to Richmond.Template:Sfn David Rice Atchison was already commanding Missouri troops in the field, but Boggs ordered Clark to take command over Atchison, who left the field.Template:Sfn On November 1, the Mormons surrendered.Template:Sfn Alexander William Doniphan refused orders to execute captured Mormon leaders on November 2; Mormon sources later claimed Clark had supported the idea of executing the Mormon leaders.Template:Sfn Clark's 1,500-man column arrived in Richmond on November 3, and enforced the terms of the surrender. He investigated claims of atrocities committed during the conflict, particularly using information provided by Sampson Avard. As a result of his investigation, 50 Mormons were arrested.Template:Sfn Clark then made a speech to local Mormon men, ordering them out of the state by early 1839. He warned them not to congregate in groups of more than four, or "the citizens [of Missouri] will be upon you and destroy you". The historian Stephen C. LeSueur describes Clark's speech as humiliating for the Mormons.Template:Sfn

United States political career

Politically, Clark was a Whig,Template:Sfn and was the party's nominee for the 1840 Missouri gubernatorial election. The historian Perry McCandless describes Clark as "not a top leader" in the party. The Whigs were a minority in Missouri at this time, and the Democrats performed well against the Whigs in the state elections that year.Template:Sfn During the election, Democratic newspapers spread claims that the Whigs had distributed false party ballots in parts of the state that substituted Clark for Thomas Reynolds, the Democratic candidate. The Democratic politician Claiborne Fox Jackson wrote a thinly pseudonymous letter accusing Clark of being complicit in the false ballots scheme. Jackson transcribed a letter (including deliberately reproducing a spelling error) purportedly sent between Clark and James H. Birch. The Democrats claimed the Clark letter had been found in a saddlebag and Clark claimed it had been stolen from his hat after he left it unattended.Template:Sfn Enraged, Clark sent letters back and forth to Jackson using third parties; the exchange culminated in Clark challenging Jackson to a duel in mid-September. Jackson responded with terms that put Clark at a disadvantage and may have actually been a bluff. No duel occurred, and Clark's reputation in the state was damaged.Template:Sfn Clark lost the election, 29,625 votes to 22,212.Template:Sfn In 1848, Clark was again appointed a major general in the state militia, a rank he held until 1861.Template:Sfn

Running as a Whig, Clark was elected to the Missouri House of Representatives in 1850, representing Howard County. In this election, he ran on a platform supporting states' rights and the Jackson Resolutions,Template:Sfn a series of pro-slavery resolutions put forward by Jackson in 1849.Template:Sfn Clark was considered for the Whig candidate for United States Senator that year, but his views were off-putting to moderate members of the party, who, in the words of McCandless, considered him the "most apt to disrupt the party and the Union"; the nomination went to Henry S. Geyer.Template:Sfn Clark remained in office until 1851.[1]

By 1857, Clark had switched allegiance from the Whigs to the Democrats due to his pro-slavery views.Template:Sfn That year, he was elected to fill the vacant United States House of Representatives seat left by the resignation of James S. Green;[1] being sworn in on December 7.Template:Sfn He was reelected in 1858 and 1860.[1] By 1861, Clark was wealthy and owned 160 slaves.Template:Sfn In April 1861, the American Civil War began, with states seceding from the Union and forming the breakaway Confederate States of America.Template:Sfn Clark was a leading Missouri secessionist.Template:Sfn On May 10, the United States Army officer Nathaniel Lyon dispersed a pro-secessionist militia gathering outside of St. Louis, Missouri; a riot occurred when he took his prisoners through the St. Louis streets. The Missouri state government responded by creating a pro-secession militia organization known as the Missouri State Guard (MSG).Template:Sfn

Confederate service

Missouri State Guard

Map of Missouri, showing geographical divisions. Division 1 is in the southeast, Division 2 in the northeast, Division 3 in the east north central, Division 4 in the west north central, Division 5 in the northwest, Division 6 in the central region, Division 7 in the South Central, Division 8 in the west central and southwest, and Division 9 in the east central
A map of the divisions of the Missouri State Guard. Clark commanded the 3rd Division in north-central Missouri.

Jackson, who was now Missouri's governor, appointed Clark to command the 3rd Division of the MSG, which was located in the north-central part of the state.Template:Sfn The appointment carried with it the rank of brigadier general.Template:Sfn Overall command of the MSG went to Sterling Price.Template:Sfn Jackson and Price expected an offensive against the MSG by Lyon. Determining that the state capital of Jefferson City could not be held, they selected Boonville as the place to make a stand. Clark was ordered there with his division.Template:Sfn After Price had to relinquish command due to a case of severe diarrhea on June 13, Clark briefly commanded MSG forces at Boonville until Jackson and his relative Colonel John Sappington Marmaduke formed a joint command.Template:Sfn Lyon attacked on June 17 and routed the MSG force in the Battle of Boonville.Template:Sfn

Clark was at Carthage with Jackson and several divisions of the MSG by July 5. That day, he led his division in action against a Federal force commanded by Colonel Franz Sigel. The Battle of Carthage, Missouri, was a minor affair in which Sigel's troops were driven from the field with little loss to either side.Template:Sfn On July 13, Clark was expelled from his congressional seat,Template:Sfn for fighting against the United States, with an emphasis placed on his leading troops at Carthage.Template:Sfn The House of Representatives voted 94 to 45 to expel him.[2] He was replaced by William Augustus Hall.[3] Price consolidated MSG forces at Cassville beginning on July 25, and on July 29, the MSG began directly cooperating with a Confederate States Army force led by Brigadier General Ben McCulloch.Template:Sfn An action of Clark's increased McCulloch's distrust of the MSG troops. A large number of men in Clark's division were unarmed. Believing the unarmed men to be a waste of supplies, McCulloch wanted Clark to send them home, but Clark refused; McCulloch had no direct authority to order Clark to disperse the men.Template:Sfn

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In early August, the combined Confederate and MSG commands moved to a camp along Wilson's Creek.Template:Sfn Lyon had moved his army to Springfield, and Price wanted to attack. McCulloch demurred, but late on April 9, Price, backed by Clark and other MSG officers, pushed for an attack. McCulloch agreed to schedule one for the following morning after Price threatened to take command and lead an offensive himself.Template:Sfn Instead, Lyon attacked early on the morning on April 10, catching the Confederates and MSG by surprise and beginning the Battle of Wilson's Creek.Template:Sfn Once Price learned of the attack, he ordered Clark's division, along with those of William Y. Slack, James H. McBride, and Mosby Monroe Parsons, to bring up their infantry and artillery.Template:Sfn Clark later tried to order the cavalry portion of his division to support his infantry, but the cavalry became greatly disorganized by Union artillery fire and the few who entered the fighting at this time instead fought with McBride's men or the South Kansas-Texas Mounted Volunteers, as they were able to locate them in the chaos of battle quicker than Clark's men.Template:Sfn After the battle, McCulloch praised Clark in his after-action report.Template:Sfn Clark was wounded in the leg during the battle.Template:Sfn He resigned his commission in the MSG on December 6.Template:Sfn

Confederate Congress and later life

In October, Jackson and the deposed secessionist government voted to secede and join the Confederacy as the Confederate government of Missouri.Template:Sfn This government appointed Clark as a delegate to the Provisional Confederate Congress,Template:Sfn in which he served from December 7, 1861, to February 17, 1862.Template:Sfn During this time span, Clark was on the Foreign Affairs and Indian Affairs congressional committees.Template:Sfn In the First Confederate Congress, Missouri received seven seats in the Confederate House of Representatives and two in the Confederate States Senate. The historians Ezra J. Warner and W. Buck Yearns describe the members of this Missouri delegation as "congress[men] without a constituency".Template:Sfn Clark was selected to be one of the two senators.Template:Sfn The other Missouri senator was Robert L. Y. Peyton. One of the senators was to receive a four-year term, and the other a two-year term. Clark received the shorter term by lot.Template:Sfn The First Confederate Congress was in session from February 18, 1862, to February 17, 1864,Template:Sfn and Clark was in office for the entirety of that time span.Template:Sfn

As a senator, Clark served on the Foreign Affairs, Indian Affairs, Post Offices & Post Roads, Printing, Public Lands, and Territories committees.Template:Sfn He was the chairman of the Public Lands committee.Template:Sfn Clark supported regional interests for the western portion of the Confederacy while in office. He sought to halt conscription in areas threatened by Federal forces, and supported the creation of partisan ranger units. While he usually opposed providing Confederate president Jefferson Davis with appointive powers, Clark generally voted pro-administration on matters that did not affect his region.Template:Sfn He supported a stronger prosecution of the war.Template:Sfn Davis viewed Clark as an enemy due to the times he opposed Davis's positions.Template:Sfn At the end of his term, Confederate Governor of Missouri Thomas Caute ReynoldsTemplate:Efn did not re-appoint Clark to the Senate.Template:Sfn By this time, the authority of the Confederate government of Missouri had waned to the extent that Warner and Yearns describe Reynolds's authority as extending "just so far as the spot upon which he was standing".Template:Sfn A number of allegations developed against Clark during his time in office, including alcoholism, disorderly behavior, mendacity, and in the words of Warner and Yearns, the "attempted seduction of Albert Pike's mistress".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Clark's strained relationship with Davis was also a factor in Reynolds's decision to not re-appoint Clark to his seat.Template:Sfn The Senate seat previously held by Clark then went to George Graham Vest.Template:Sfn

In May 1864, an election for the Confederate House of Representatives resulted in Clark defeating Caspar Wistar Bell. The electorate was composed of Confederate soldiers and Missouri refugees, and Warner and Yearns refer to it as a "farcical poll";Template:Sfn Clark had the support of Reynolds's adversary Price in the election.Template:Sfn As a result, he represented the 3rd Missouri Congressional District in the Second Confederate Congress.Template:Sfn He held this position from June 10, 1864, to March 18, 1865,Template:Sfn and served on the Elections and Military Affairs committees.Template:Sfn After the Confederate defeat in 1865, a $10,000 reward was issued for Clark's arrest, but he evaded capture by using a disguise and a fake name to flee to Mexico.Template:Sfn

Having heard he was no longer wanted by the authorities,Template:Sfn Clark re-entered the United States and was in San Antonio, Texas, by September 1865.Template:Sfn Once there, Clark was arrested and held at Fort Jackson in Louisiana. He was released by the then US President Andrew Johnson,Template:Sfn by late January 1866,Template:Sfn and returned to Missouri in 1870.Template:Sfn The requirement for the Ironclad Oath (a statement that one had been loyal to the US and had not participated in rebellion against it) to practice law was overturned by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1867,Template:Sfn but the Missouri Supreme Court issued a decision upholding a Missouri legal requirement to take the oath in order to hold political office.Template:Sfn The Ironclad Oath was not removed from the Missouri constitution until 1870.[4] Once his political rights were rehabilitated, Clark resumed practicing law,Template:Sfn at Fayette.Template:Sfn He practiced law for the remainder of his life.Template:Sfn In 1872, he ran for a seat in the United States Congress one final time, but the nomination went to his son, who had been a general in the Confederate service.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He died on October 29, 1885, in Fayette.Template:Sfn

See also

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Notes

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References

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Political offices
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Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Missouri's 3rd congressional district

1857–1861 Template:S-ttl/check
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New constituency Confederate States Senator (Class 1) from Missouri
1862–1864 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
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Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Member of the C.S. House of Representatives
from Missouri's 3rd congressional district

1864–1865 Template:S-ttl/check
Constituency abolished

Template:C.S. Senators Template:United States representatives from Missouri

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