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  1. Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton (August 4, 1823 – November 1, 1877), commonly known as Oliver P. Morton, was a U.S. Republican Party politician from Indiana. He served as the 14th governor of Indiana during the American Civil War, and was a stalwart ally of President Abraham Lincoln.

  2. Oliver P. Morton, the man who became a symbol of the Civil War and Reconstruction, was born near Centerville, Indiana, in Wayne County, in 1823, and he later became the first native son to win the governor’s chair.

  3. 1 de dic. de 2018 · As Indiana's war governor and Reconstruction-era senator, Morton was a dynamic force for union amid rebellion and equally a champion of redefining what the United States meant in the wake of a war that ended slavery, freed millions of African Americans, and left a stark legacy of conflict and strife from battlefields to the halls of ...

  4. A skillful political opportunist, Morton emerged as the most powerful and, by some estimates, the best of the war governors. He answered Abraham Lincoln's call for troops by raising twice the number requested for Federal service.

  5. Civil War governor. (Aug. 4, 1823-Nov. 1, 1877). A Wayne County, Indiana native, Oliver P. Morton spent two years at Miami University (Ohio) and one term at Cincinnati College Law School. He read law and established his practice at Centerville.

  6. Oliver P. Morton was one of the seminal figures of mid-nineteenth-century U.S. political history. Thanks to A. James Fuller’s biography, Morton can now be placed wholly within the times he lived. Pennsylvania State University, University Park Gregory A. Peek The Thin Light of Freedom: The Civil War and Emancipation in the Heart of America.

  7. Oliver H. P. T. Morton was an American political leader and governor of Indiana during the American Civil War. After a brief attendance at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, Morton set up a law practice in Centerville, Ind., in 1845 and involved himself in Democratic politics.