Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Miles Benjamin McSweeney

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Preceded by
  
W.H. Timmerman

Party
  
Democratic Party

Name
  
Miles McSweeney

Political party
  
Democratic


Miles Benjamin McSweeney httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Lieutenant
  
Robert B. Scarborough James H. Tillman

Preceded by
  
William Haselden Ellerbe

Governor
  
William Haselden Ellerbe

Born
  
April 18, 1855 Charleston, South Carolina (
1855-04-18
)

Alma mater
  
Washington and Lee University

Died
  
July 4, 1921, Balti, Maryland, United States

Education
  
Washington and Lee University

Succeeded by
  
Duncan Clinch Heyward

Miles Benjamin McSweeney (April 18, 1855 – September 29, 1909) was the 87th Governor of South Carolina from June 2, 1899, to January 20, 1903.

Miles Benjamin McSweeney Governor of the State of South Carolina Miles Benjamin McSweeney

McSweeney was born in Charleston and was forced to become a paperboy at the age of 10 in order to help support his family when his father died. He went to Lexington, Virginia to attend Washington and Lee University upon being awarded the Typographical Union of Charleston Scholarship, but later had to withdraw due to lack of funds. He published the Ninety-Six Guardian at the age of 22 and he moved to Hampton two years later to start the Hampton County Guardian.

In 1894, McSweeney was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives and additionally served as the chairman of the Hampton County Democratic Party. He successfully ran for Lieutenant Governor in 1896 and was elevated to the governorship following the death of Governor William Haselden Ellerbe on June 2, 1899. A proponent of the Dispensary and backed by Senator Ben Tillman, McSweeney won a term on his own in the gubernatorial election of 1900. However, many in Hampton were in favor of prohibition and the Hampton County Guardian lost advertising revenue and subscriptions because of McSweeney's support of the Dispensary.

Upon the completion of his term as governor in 1903, McSweeney returned to Hampton and continued as editor of the Hampton County Guardian. He died in Baltimore on September 29, 1909, and was buried at Hampton Cemetery in Hampton.

References

Miles Benjamin McSweeney Wikipedia