Edward Bates
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- Born:
- Sept. 4, 1793, Goochland County, Va., U.S.
- Died:
- March 25, 1869, St. Louis, Mo. (aged 75)
- Political Affiliation:
- Republican Party
- Whig Party
Edward Bates (born Sept. 4, 1793, Goochland County, Va., U.S.—died March 25, 1869, St. Louis, Mo.) was a lawyer and Whig politician who joined the Republican Party before the U.S. Civil War and served as Abraham Lincoln’s attorney general.
Educated largely at home, Bates moved from Virginia to Missouri in 1814 and shortly thereafter began the study of law. By 1816 he was practicing law in St. Louis. Over the next decade he served in a number of territorial and state offices. Elected in 1826 to a term in the U.S. House of Representatives, Bates was defeated in a bid for a Senate seat by followers of Democrat Thomas Hart Benton. As a Whig in a strongly pro-Andrew Jackson state, Bates also lost his reelection attempt in 1828 for another term in the House.
Although his career in national politics was largely dormant for more than three decades, Bates served in the Missouri legislature, drew national attention as president of the River and Harbor Improvement Convention of 1847, and in 1850 declined appointment as secretary of war during the administration of Whig Millard Fillmore. After serving as president of the Whig convention of 1856, he broke with the party and joined the newly created Republican Party.
Bates had long been a free-soil advocate. He freed his own slaves, opposed the Kansas–Nebraska Bill, and spoke out against the admission of Kansas under the Lecompton constitution. As a Southern-born border-state politician, Bates attracted support for the 1860 Republican presidential nomination. His followers believed he could maintain party principles opposing the extension of slavery without alienating the South and provoking secession.
When Bates’s presidential bid failed, the triumphant Lincoln offered his erstwhile rival a choice of Cabinet positions. Bates chose the attorney generalship and for a time exercised some influence in the administration. But he opposed the admission of West Virginia as a state, the subjugation of constitutional rights to military control, and the increasing power of the Radical Republicans. On Nov. 24, 1864—weary of a position in which he wielded little authority—Bates resigned as attorney general.
He returned to Missouri and fought the Radical Republicans in his home state by writing newspaper articles and letters to prominent citizens.