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    William Gannaway "Parson" Brownlow (August 29, 1805 – April 29, 1877) was an American newspaper publisher, Methodist minister, book author, prisoner of...
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  • William Brownlow may refer to: William Gannaway Brownlow (1805–1877), governor of Tennessee Sir William Brownlow, 1st Baronet (c. 1595–1666), English politician...
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  • Westminster Walter P. Brownlow (1851–1910), American politician William Brownlow (1726–1794), Anglo-Irish politician William Gannaway Brownlow (1805–1877), American...
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  • Hopkins Gallaudet (1787–1851) Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882) William Gannaway Brownlow (1805–1877) James Garfield (1831–1881) Eric Liddell (1902–1945)...
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  • Thumbnail for Andrew Johnson
    governments from abolishing slavery. He won a second term in 1845 against William G. Brownlow, presenting himself as the defender of the poor against the aristocracy...
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  • Thumbnail for Constitutional Union Party (United States)
    Congressman John P. Kennedy of Maryland, and newspaper editor William Gannaway Brownlow of Tennessee. In the North, the party drew support from conservative...
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  • Thumbnail for List of people from Tennessee
    Browning (1805–1879), maker of firearms; born in Sumner County William Gannaway Brownlow (1805–1877), editor and governor James M. Buchanan, economist...
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  • Thumbnail for Southern Unionist
    James Patton Brownlow John Bell Brownlow William Gannaway Brownlow Roderick R. Butler Alfred Cate James P. T. Carter Samuel P. Carter William B. Carter Andrew...
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  • and Treasury Secretary under President Grant from 1869 to 1873 William Gannaway Brownlow: publisher of the Knoxville Whig, Tennessee governor and senator...
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  • Thumbnail for Ku Klux Klan
    Republican state governments, people such as Tennessee governor William Gannaway Brownlow, and other "carpetbaggers" and "scalawags". He argued that many...
    222 KB (23,758 words) - 08:31, 25 May 2024
  • and author of The Impending Peril: Or, Methodism and Amusement William Gannaway Brownlow – Governor of Tennessee Byron Cage – gospel singer (African Methodist...
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  • Thumbnail for Brownlow's Whig
    Whig was a polemical American newspaper published and edited by William G. "Parson" Brownlow (1805–1877) in the mid-nineteenth century. As its name implies...
    27 KB (3,219 words) - 17:48, 27 December 2023
  • Association. Retrieved July 5, 2023. Sobel 1978, pp. 1481–1482. "William Gannaway Brownlow". National Governors Association. Retrieved July 5, 2023. Tennessee...
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  • Thumbnail for Elizabethton, Tennessee
    co-workers at American Glanzstoff, beginning the 1929 labor strikes William Gannaway Brownlow – governor of Tennessee, U.S. senator, Methodist minister, and...
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  • Thumbnail for Susan Brownlow Boynton
    County, the first of William Gannaway Brownlow and Eliza O'Brien's eight children. Susan Brownlow was twice married. Susan Brownlow married first in October...
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  • Thumbnail for Robert Johnson (Tennessee)
    Patton Brownlow, the 20-year-old son of Andrew Johnson's longtime nemesis, William Gannaway Brownlow, replaced Robert Johnson as colonel. Brownlow had joined...
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  • Thumbnail for Confederate oath of allegiance
    (later Governor of Tennessee and U.S. Senator from Tennessee) William Gannaway Brownlow was imprisoned in Confederate Tennessee on charges of treason...
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  • Thumbnail for Joseph Alexander Smith Acklen
    Joseph A.S. Acklen" quoted from "Ought Slavery Be Perpetuated," by William Gannaway Brownlow and Abram Pryne, pp. 95-96 Belmont Mansion - Joseph Acklen Find...
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  • Thumbnail for Frederick Augustus Ross
    quarreling with Methodist minister and Whig newspaper publisher William Gannaway Brownlow. Ross had earlier "declared war" on Methodism as a co-editor in...
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  • during the Civil War. He was a drummer boy for Brownlow at one time. "Years later, William Gannaway Brownlow, 17th Governor of Tennessee, wrote and wanted...
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  • Brownfield". politicalgraveyard.com. "BROWNLOW, William Gannaway – Biographical Information". bioguide.congress.gov. "BROWNLOW, Walter Preston – Biographical...
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  • Thumbnail for History of Knoxville, Tennessee
    William G. Brownlow: Fighting Parson of the Southern Highlands (Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press, 1999). William Gannaway Brownlow, Sketches...
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  • Thumbnail for David T. Patterson
    1866 – March 3, 1869 Preceded by Andrew Johnson Succeeded by William Gannaway Brownlow Personal details Born (1818-02-28)February 28, 1818 Greene County...
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  • Thumbnail for Ramsey House (Knox County, Tennessee)
    (Nashville, Tenn.: Tennessee Historical Commission, 1954), preface. William Gannaway Brownlow, Sketches of the Rise, Progress, and Decline of Secession (Philadelphia:...
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  • coercive policies towards former Confederates imposed by Governor William Gannaway Brownlow (1805-1877). Lindsley married Eliza Trimble Lindsley (1819-1893)...
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  • See: O.R., Series 1, Volume XXII, Part One, pp. 601-602. Possibly BG William Reading Montgomery; further research is needed Dr. Edwin Pomeroy Sheldon...
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  • Thumbnail for Isaac Roberts Hawkins
    until the close of the Civil War. He was commissioned by Governor William Gannaway Brownlow as one of the chancellors of Tennessee in 1865 but declined to...
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  • opposition to the Radical Republicans and the policies of Governor William Gannaway Brownlow. In June 1867, he launched the Knoxville Free Press to support...
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  • Thumbnail for Henry Cooper (Tennessee politician)
    August 22, 1827, in Columbia, Tennessee. He had three brothers, including William Frierson Cooper and Edmund Cooper, and two half-brothers, including Duncan...
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  • Thumbnail for J. G. M. Ramsey
    pp. 25, 78, 107, 211. Jonesborough Whig, 26 June 1844, e.g. William Gannaway Brownlow, Sketches of the Rise, Progress, and Decline of Secession (Philadelphia:...
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