Austin Blair
Michigan's
13th governor
(1818-1894)
By
Frederick D. Williams
Austin
Blair, lawyer, Civil War governor, and United States congressman, was
born on February 8, 1818, in Tompkins County, New York. He attended
Cazenovia Seminary and Hamilton College, graduated Phi Beta Kappa at
Union College in 1839, studied law, and was admitted to the Tioga County
bar in 1841. In June of the latter year he moved to Jackson, Michigan,
and began practicing law. Following a residence in Eaton Rapids,
1842-1844, he returned to Jackson, where he became a successful attorney
and made his home there the rest of his life.
Blair
entered actively into politics as an antislavery Whig, supported Henry
Clay for president in 1844, and was a member of the Michigan House of
Representatives in 1846. He joined the Free Soil party in 1848 and was a
delegate to the Buffalo convention that nominated Martin Van Buren for
president. In 1854 he was a leader of the gathering under the oaks at
Jackson which formed the Republican party, and, as a Republican, he was
a Michigan senator, 1855-1856, governor of Michigan, 1861-1865, and a
member of the United States House of Representatives, 1867-1873. He
never realized his longtime ambition to be a United States senator. His
last public service was as regent of the University of Michigan,
1882-1890.
Influenced
by his parents, George and Rhoda (Blackman) Mann, who long advocated the
abolition of slavery, and by the liberalism of western New York, where
he was reared, Blair became a zealous champion of humanitarian reform.
He compensated for what he lacked in political acumen with persuasive
oratory, hard work, devotion to principles, and faith in a brighter
future. As a state representative he introduced legislation to
enfranchise adult male Negroes, was a leading supporter of the law of
1846 which abolished capital punishment in Michigan, and advocated
statewide prohibition of the manufacture and sale of spirituous liquor.
His immediate purpose as a Free Soiler and as a Republican was to put
slavery on a path to extinction by preventing its expansion in the
territories. A foe of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, he sought to
obstruct its enforcement by voting for Michigan’s Personal Liberty Law
of 1855, which, with his help, remained in effect when the slaves were
emancipated.
At
the Republican National Convention in 1860, Blair was chairman of the
Michigan delegation which worked assiduously to nominate William H.
Seward for the presidency. Following Seward’s defeat, Blair declared
that he and Michigan still favored that "great statesman," and
would now follow him "in the grand column which shall go out to
battle for Abraham Lincoln of Illinois."
In
that same year Blair was elected governor of Michigan, and less than
four months after he took office the nation plunged into civil war.
Intense state pride, fervid nationalism, and hostility to slavery moved
him to identify with radical Republicans who took an extremist position
against the South. He denounced secession as treason, advocated
confiscation of the property, including slaves, of every rebel, and
supported a vigorous prosecution of the Civil War. Typical of his
wartime efforts was his swift and effective response to Lincoln’s call
for troops on April 15, 1861. Because the state treasury had been
pilfered by the previous treasurer, Blair sought money from private
sources, mostly Detroit bankers and businessmen, and raised about
$100,000 for the organization and equipment of the First Michigan
Infantry Regiment, the first western regiment to report for duty at
Washington. Although he was at times critical of Lincoln, his support of
the president was inestimable. When hostilities ceased Blair noted
approvingly that the war had virtually destroyed the doctrine of state
sovereignty. "There is," he declared, "and can be, under
the Constitution of the United States, only one paramount sovereign
authority." Blair’s leadership in providing prudent and honest
government, and his contribution to the Union cause entitle him to be
ranked among the most able and effective Civil War governors.
During
his three terms in Congress Blair’s position changed from support to
criticism of radical reconstruction, his principal concerns being
political and civil rights for Negroes, sectional reconciliation, and
the development of the nation’s economy. In 1871 he was offended when
Michigan Republicans failed to nominate him for the United States
Senate. By that time he was openly criticizing President Ulysses S.
Grant and his administration, and advocating, among other things, civil
service reform and a return to honest government. In 1872 he joined the
Liberal Republicans, campaigned for Horace Greeley for president, and
was himself overwhelmingly defeated as the gubernatorial candidate on a
fusion ticket backed by Liberal Republicans and Democrats. Through the
1870s he denied that he belonged to either major political party. In
1876 he voted for the Democratic presidential candidate, Samuel J.
Tilden, but by 1880 he was back in the Republican fold. Five years later
he was an unsuccessful candidate for the Michigan supreme court.
Blair’s
private life had a full share of tragedy. His first two wives died after
giving birth to infants who also perished. In 1849 he married Sarah
Louise Ford, a widow from Seneca, New York. They had one daughter, who
died in childhood, and four sons who survived their parents. Blair’s
last years were marred by a declining law practice, lack of money, and
failing health. He died in Jackson on August 6, 1894.
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