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Powhatan Gordon

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Occupation
  
Politician

Parents
  
Dorothea Cross

Spouse(s)
  
Caroline Mary Coleman

Residence
  
John Gordon House

Born
  
November 15, 1802
Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.

Political party
  
Democratic Party Know Nothing

Died
  
29 January 1879, Bryan, Texas, United States

Children
  
William Osceola Gordon, R. H. Gordon

Political parties
  
Democratic Party, Know Nothing

People also search for
  
William Osceola Gordon, R. H. Gordon, Thomas Jefferson

Major Powhatan Gordon (1802-1879) was an American farmer and politician. He served in the Tennessee Senate in 1842 and 1845. During his tenure, he proposed a bill for the creation of Lewis County, Tennessee. By 1854, his bid for Congress as a member of the Know Nothing party was unsuccessful.

Contents

Early life

Powhatan Gordon was born on November 15, 1802 in Nashville, Tennessee. His father, John Gordon, built John Gordon House in Williamsport, Tennessee.

Career

Gordon was a corn farmer in Williamsport, Tennessee. He sold his corn in Louisiana.

During the Second Seminole War of 1835-1842, he served as a Major in the First Tennessee Mounted Militia. He subsequently served in the Mexican–American War of 1846-1848. When Veracruz was occupied by the United States, he sold goods in the city.

Gordon joined the Democratic Party. He served in the Tennessee Senate in 1842 and 1845. It was Gordon who proposed a bill for the creation of Lewis County, Tennessee out of parts of Hickman County, Lawrence County, Wayne County, and Maury County, naming it after explorer Meriwether Lewis.

Gordon joined the Know Nothing party and ran for the United States House of Representatives in 1854, but he lost the race.

Personal life and death

Gordon married Caroline Mary Coleman on June 26, 1828. They had eleven children, including Judge William Osceola Gordon and state representative R. H. Gordon. He died on January 29, 1879 in Bryan, Texas.

References

Powhatan Gordon Wikipedia