80th Georgia General Assembly

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80th Georgia General Assembly
Senate
Members44
Party controlRepublican Party
House of Representatives
Members153
Party controlRepublican Party

The 80th

H.I. Kimball
.

The new General Assembly contained 153 House members and 44 Senators. It was the first General Assembly in Georgia history to have African-American members. All of the African-American men were temporarily expelled by the General Assembly by September 1868, and were reinstated by Act of Congress in 1870 shortly before the end of the 1870 session. The 80th Assembly was succeeded by the 81st Assembly, in which Democrats won a majority in both chambers and began to pursue harsh recriminations against Republicans in general and African-Americans in particular.

Members of the Georgia State Senate, 1868–1870

1st Aaron Alpeoria Bradley.
2d
Tunis G. Campbell, Sr.
3d E. D. Graham
4th J. M. Coleman
5th A. Corbitt
6th Joshua Griffin
7th M. C. Smith
8th B. F. Brutton
9th R. T. Nisbet
10th F. O. Welch
11th C. B. Wooten
12th C. R. Moore
13th William B. Jones
14th John J. Collier
15th W. T. McArthur
16th H. Hicks.
17th McWhorter Hungerford.
18th Benjamin Conley.
19th Joseph Adkins.
20th George Wallace.
21st William Griffin.
22d T. J. Speer.
23d W. J. Anderson.
24th B. B. Hinton.
25th E. J. Higbee.
26th A. D. Nunnally.
27th John Harris.
28th W. F. Jordan.
29th Josiah Sherman.
30th J. H. McWhorter.
31st William F. Bowers.
32d Jno. C. Richardson.
33d A. M. Stringer.
34th Milton A. Candler.
35th William T. Winn.
36th W. C. Smith.
37th W. W. Merrell.
38th Walker Brock.
39th A. W. Holcombe.
40th C. J. Wellborn.
41st John Dickey.
42d John T. Burns.
43d Joel C. Fain[1]
44th B. R. McCutchen.

Members of the Georgia State House of Representatives, 1868–1870

District Representative Party Residence
Appling Isham Raddish Republican
Baker A. M. George
Baldwin Peter O'Neal Republican
Banks William R. Bell
Bartow F. M. Ford
Bartow M. J. Crawford
Berrien Thomas Paulk
Bibb Henry McNeal Turner Republican Macon
Bibb J. Fitzpatrick
Bibb J. E. J. Franks
Brooks W. A. Lane
Bryan N. S. Houston Republican
Bullock W. M. Hall
Burke Malcolm Claiborne Republican
Burke John Warren Republican
Burke John A. Madden
Butts T. M Harkness
Calhoun Franklin L. Pepper
Camden Virgil Hillyer
Campbell W. S. Zellars
Carroll John Long
Catoosa A. S. Fowler
Charlton F. M. Smith
Chatham C. K. Osgood
Chatham James Porter Republican
Chatham James M. Sims Republican
Chattahoochee W. A. McDougald
Chattooga C. O. Cleghorn
Cherokee N. J. Perkins
Clarke Madison Davis Republican
Clarke Alfred Richardson Republican
Clay R. A. Tumipseed
Clayton A. E. Cloud
Clinch G. Lastinger
Columbia J. M. Rice
Columbia Romulus Moore Republican
Coffee J. R.Smith
Coweta F. M. Scroggins
Coweta P. Sewell
Cobb W. D. Anderson
Cobb N. N. Gober
Colquitt W. W. Watkins
Crawford W. G. Vinson
Dade Jas. C. Nisbet
Dawson Joseph L. Perkins
Decatur B. F. Powell
Decatur John Higdon
DeKalb W. H. Clarke
Dooly Hiram Williams
Dougherty Philip Joiner Republican
Dougherty A. R. Reed
Early H. C. Fryer
Echols R. W. Phillips
Effingham Morgan Rawls
Elbert U. 0. Tate
Emanuel J. A. Brinson
Fannin Alexander Hearn
Fayette P. H. Brassel
Floyd Dunlap Scott
Floyd M. Ballanger
Forsyth H. C. Kellogg
Franklin James A. Harrison
Fulton E. M. Taliaferro
Fulton J. E. Gullatt
Fulton V. P. Sisson
Gilmer Jas. M. Ellis
Glasscock J. H. Nunn
Glynn R.B.Hall
Gordon R. A. Donaldson
Greene Robert L. McWhorter Republican Woodville
Greene Abram Colby Republican
Gwinnett Louis Nash
Gwinnett R. M. Parkes
Habersham W . S. Erwin
Hall David Whelchel
Hancock William Henry Harrison Republican
Hancock Eli Barnes Republican
Haralson W. N. Williams
Hancock W. H. Harrison
Hart James Allen
Harris W. J. Hudson
Harris Samuel Williams Republican
Heard M. Shackleford
Henry J. A. Maxwell
Houston J. W. Mathews
Houston C. C. Duncan
Houston M. R. Felder
Jackson A. T. Bennett
Jasper
Thomas M. Allen
Republican
Jefferson Benjamin Ayre
Jefferson Alexander Stone Republican
Johnson J. W. Meadows
Jones W. T. McCullough
Laurens George Linder Republican
Lee Samuel Lindsay
Lee G. Page
Liberty W. A. Golden Republican
Lincoln Piatt Madison
Lowndes John W. O'Neal
Lumpkin W. P. Price
Macon
Robert Lumpkin
Republican
Macon F. H. Fyall Republican
Madison J. B. Moon
Marion
William M. Butt
Mcintosh Tunis Campbell Republican
Meriwether P. W. Chambers
Meriwether W. H. F. Hall
Monroe W. A. Ballard
Monroe George H. Clower Republican
Miller F. M. D. Hopkins
Milton G. M. Hook
Mitchell J. M. Burtz
Montgomery John J. McArthur
Morgan A. J. Williams
Morgan Monday Floyd Republican
Murray J. N. Harris
Muscogee James G. Maull
Muscogee Abraham Smith Republican
Newton A. H. Lee
Newton John F. Harden
Oglethorpe James W. Adkins
Oglethorpe James Cunningham
Paulding S. F. Strickland
Pickens S. A. Darnell
Pierce R. W. Carpenter
Pike R. A. Seale
Polk L. H. Walthall
Pulaski J. M. Buchan
Pulaski S. F. Saulter
Putnam S. C. Prudden
Quitman L. C. A. Warren
Rabun McKinzey Fincannon
Randolph W. M. Tumlin
Randolph David GofF
Richmond E. Tweedy
Richmond J. E. Bryant
Richmond Thomas P. Beard Republican
Schley Thomas F. Rainey
Scriven W. D. Hamilton
Spalding J. T. Ellis
Stewart C. C. Humberand
Stewart J. K. Barnum
Sumter G. N. Harper
Sumter John A. Cobb
Talbot Marion Bethune
Talbot
J. T. Costin
Republican
Taliaferro W. F. Holden
Tatnall Robert C. Surrency
Taylor Frank Wilchar
Terrell F. M. Harper
Thomas J. R. Evans
Thomas W. C. Carson
Towns George W. Johnson
Troup J. H. Caldwell
Troup J. T. McCormick
Twiggs Haywood Hughes
Union John H. Penland
Upson John C. Drake
Walker W. B. Gray
Walton John B. Sorrels
Warren John Neal
Warren
S. G. Gardner
Republican
Ware Joseph D. Smith
Washington R. W. Flournoy
Washington William G. Brown
Wayne G. W. Rumph
Webster G. S. Rosser
White C. H. Kytle
Whitfield J.E.Shumate
Wilcox Darling Johnson
Wilkes Richard Bradford
Wilkes Edwin Belcher Republican
Wilkinson C. H. Hooks
Worth James M. Rouse

African-American members

This was the first time in Georgia that African-Americans, including former slaves, were voted into office in large numbers.[2]

Public education

The House passed a bill to establish a system of public school system on August 25, 1870 on a 70-29 vote. Bills had been filed by J. E. Bryant of Richmond, J. Mason Rice of Columbia, S. A. Darnell of Pickens, James Ward Porter of Chatham and Tunis Campbell Jr of Mcintosh. It was signed into law on October 13, 1870.

See also

References

  1. ^ Henry Wilkes Jones Ham (1887). Representative Georgians: Biographical Sketches of Men Now in Public Life ... Morning News Print. pp. 222–224.
  2. ^ Sanford, Paul Laurence (August 1, 1947). "The negro in the political reconstruction of Georgia, 1866-1872". ETD Collection for AUC Robert W. Woodruff Library. Paper 2110.