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  1. 18 de nov. de 2016 · Durante la presidencia de Franklin Pierce (1853-1857), Jefferson Davis ejerció como secretario de Guerra y en los siguientes años radicalizó su discurso, siendo designado en el Senado portavoz ...

  2. 17 de mar. de 2024 · Jefferson Davis was inaugurated as provisional president of the Confederate States of America on February 18, 1861. In May 1861, Jefferson Davis moved the seat of the Confederate government to Richmond after Virginia seceded from the Union. On November 6, 1861, Jefferson Davis was elected to a six-year term as President of the Confederate ...

  3. Siblings. Joseph Emory Davis 1784-1870 Married October 4, 1827, Natchez, Adams Co., MS, to Eliza Van Benthuysen 1811-1864. Benjamin Davis 1787-1827. Samuel Davis ca 1794-. Isaac Davis 1796-1881. Lucinda Farrar Davis 1797-1873. Ann Davis ca 1800-. Mary Ellen Davis 1805-1824. Jefferson Finis Davis, Sen. 1808-1889 Married June 17, 1835, Beechland ...

  4. Jefferson Finis Davis (June 3, 1808 – December 6, 1889) was an American statesman. A member of the Democratic Party , he led the Confederacy during the American Civil War . He was President of the Confederate States of America for its entire history, from 1861 to 1865.

  5. 8 de may. de 2019 · Davis’s bride passed away three months after their marriage from marlia while she was traveling to the Jefferson family home. Ten years after the end of the Civil War, Jefferson Davis began to write the book, “The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government”. Jefferson Finis Davis in the 1890s.

  6. Davis, Jefferson Finis. Born in Kentucky, Jefferson Davis settled in Mississippi , and became a national political figure during the 1850s. He was a senator and secretary of war who was selected as president of the Confederacy. Richmond diarist (and Dickinson College attendee) Littleton Washington observed Davis closely during the war.

  7. Davis was the tenth and last child of Revolutionary War veteran Samuel Emory Davis and Jane Cook. In 1811, Davis's family relocated to St. Mary Parish, Louisiana, and the next year, the family moved to a small plantation named Rosemont in Wilkinson County, Mississippi. During his youth, Davis attended private schools in Mississippi and, Kentucky.