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Walter Leake, Third Governor of Mississippi: 1822-1825
By David G. Sansing
Although his term began January 7, 1822, Governor Leake did not deliver
his inaugural address until June 24 because the capital city was being
relocated from Natchez. When he finally gave his address, the capital
was temporarily situated at Columbia in Marion County. Five days later,
the Mississippi Legislature located the state capital at the new town
of Jackson, which was near a trading post on the Pearl River known as
LeFleur’s Bluff. In December 1822 members of the legislature and
other state officials moved to Jackson. During Governor Leake’s
first year in office the state’s first capitol, a small two-story
brick building on Capitol Street, was constructed at a cost of $3,000.
Walter Leake was born in Albermarle County, Virginia, on May 25, 1762,
and came to the office of governor with a great deal of experience in
political and governmental affairs. He was a Revolutionary War veteran
and had served in the Virginia Legislature. After President Thomas Jefferson
appointed him judge of the Mississippi Territory in 1807, Leake moved
to Claiborne County. He represented that county in the Constitutional
Convention of 1817.
Following Mississippi’s admission to statehood, Leake was appointed
one of the state's first two United States senators. In 1820, after he
resigned his Senate seat, Leake was appointed to the Mississippi Supreme
Court to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Judge John Taylor. He
served on the high court until his inauguration as governor in January
of 1822.
During his first administration, Governor Leake signed a law abolishing
imprisonment for debt, making Mississippi one of the first states in America
to enact such a law. Governor Leake also tried unsuccessfully to persuade
the legislature to pass a law prohibiting dueling in Mississippi.
Governor Leake arranged for the formal transfer of the federal land grant
that had been given to Mississippi in 1819 to support a state university,
and the state’s first major road system was begun during his term,
with roads leading out from Jackson to Natchez, Vicksburg, Winchester
(Yazoo City), Holmesville, Liberty, and to other points. The towns of
Jackson (1823) and Vicksburg (1825) were incorporated during his administration.
In 1823, Governor Leake became Mississippi’s first governor to
be re-elected for a second term. But in the second year of his second
term, Governor Leake became ill and died November 17, 1825, at his home
in Mt. Salus, now known as Clinton. He was succeeded by Lieutenant Governor
Gerard C. Brandon.
Leake County and Leakesville, the county seat of Greene County, are named
in honor of Governor Leake.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted December 2003
Sources:
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress (1950),
1446.
Mississippi Official and Statistical Register (1912), 50.
Rowland, Dunbar. Mississippi Comprising Sketches in Cyclopedic Form
II. 63-67.
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