Senate Years of Service: 1872-1895
Party: Democrat
RANSOM, Matt Whitaker, (cousin of Wharton Jackson Green), a Senator from North Carolina; born in Warren County, N.C., October 8, 1826; attended a private academy; graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1847; studied law; admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Warrenton, N.C.; presidential elector on the Whig ticket in 1852; attorney general of North Carolina 1852-1855, when he resigned; member, State house of commons 1858-1861; peace commissioner to the Provisional Congress at Montgomery, Ala., in 1861; entered the Confederate Army and served throughout the Civil War, attaining the rank of major general; moved to Weldon, N.C., in 1866; planter and lawyer; elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 1872 to fill the vacancy in the term commencing March 4, 1871; reelected in 1876, 1883, and 1889 and served from January 30, 1872, to March 3, 1895; unsuccessful candidate for reelection; served as President pro tempore of the Senate during the Fifty-third Congress; chairman, Committee on Commerce (Forty-sixth and Fifty-third Congresses), Committee on Railroads (Forty-sixth Congress), Committee on Private Land Claims (Forty-ninth through Fifty-second Congresses); United States Minister to Mexico 1895-1897; engaged in agricultural pursuits; died near Garysburg, Northampton County, N.C., on October 8, 1904; interment in the private burying ground on his estate, “Verona,” near Weldon, Northampton County, N.C.
(Source: Biographical Directory of the United States 1774-present.)
RANSOM, MATHEW WHITAKER, soldier, lawyer, state legislator, United States senator, was born Oct. 8, 1826, in Warren County, N. C. He was elected attorney-general of North Carolina in 1852; was a member of the legislature in 185860; and was a peace commissioner from the state to the congress of southern states at Montgomery, Ala., in 1861. He entered the confederate army; was lieutenant colonel, brigadier-general, and major-general, and surrendered at Appomattox. He was elected to the United States senate in 1872 for the term ending in 1877, and was re-elected in 1876, 1883, and 1889.
Source: Herringshaw's encyclopedia of American biography of the nineteenth century; Edited by Thomas William Herringshaw; Publ. 1901; Donated and Transcribed by Andrea Stawski Pack.