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ROBERT TOOMBS (1810-1885)

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 47 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ROBERT TOOMBS (1810-1885)  ,
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American
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political leader, was born near Washington, Wilkes county,
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Georgia, on the 2nd of
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July 181o . He was educated at Franklin College (university of Georgia), at Union College,
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Schenectady, New York, from which he graduated in 1828, and at the law school of the university of Virginia . He was admitted to the bar in 1830, and served in the Georgia House of Representatives (1838, 1840-1841 and 1843-1844), in the Federal House of Representatives (1845-1853), and in the
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United States Senate (1853-1861) . He opposed the annexation of
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Texas, the Mexican War, President Polk's
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Oregon policy, and the Walker Tariff of 1846 . In
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common with Alexander H . Stephens and Howell Cobb, he supported the Compromise
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Measures of 185o, denounced the
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Nashville Convention, opposed the secessionists in Georgia, and helped to
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frame the famous Georgia platform (185o) . His position and that of
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Southern Unionists during the decade 1850-186o has often been misunderstood . They disapproved of
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secession, not because they considered it wrong in principle, but because they considered it inexpedient . On the dissolution of the Whig party Toombs went over to the Democrats . He favoured the Kansas-
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Nebraska
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Bill, the
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admission of Kansas under the Lecompton Constitution, and the
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English Bill (1858), and on the 24th of
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June 1856 introduced in the Senate the Toombs Bill, which proposed a constitutional convention in Kansas under conditions which were acknowledged by various anti-
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slavery leaders as
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fair, and which mark the greatest
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con-47 cessions made by the
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pro-slavery senators during the Kansas struggle . The bill did not 'provide for the submission of the constitution to popular
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vote, and the silence on this point of the territorial law under which the Lecompton Constitution of Kansas was framed in 1857 was the crux of the Lecompton struggle (see KANSAS) . In the presidential
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campaign of 1860 he supported John C .

Breckinridge, and on the 22nd of December, soon after the election of Lincoln, sent a telegram to Georgia which asserted that " secession by the 4th of March next should be thundered forth from the ballot-box by the united voice of Georgia." He delivered a farewell address in the Senate (
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Jan . 7, 1861), returned to Georgia, and with Governor Joseph E . Brown led the fight for secession against Stephens and Herschel V . Johnson (1812-188o) . His influence was a most powerful factor in inducing the " old-
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line Whigs " to support immediate secession . After a short
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term as secretary of state in President Davis's
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cabinet, he entered the army (July 21, 1861), and served first as a brigadier-general in the Army of
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Northern Virginia and after 1863 as adjutant and inspector-general of General G . W . Smith's division of Georgia militia . He then spent two years in exile in Cuba, France and England, but returned to Georgia in 1867, and resumed the practice of law . Owing to his refusal to take the oath of allegiance, he was never restored to the full rights of citizenship . He died at his home in Washington, Georgia, on the 15th of December 1885 . See Pleasant A .

Stovall,

Robert Toombs, Statesman,
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Speaker, Soldier, Sage (New York, 1892) .

End of Article: ROBERT TOOMBS (1810-1885)
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