Alexander keith mcclung biography template


Alexander Keith McClung

American diplomat

Alexander Keith McClung (14 June 1811 – 23 March 1855) was an lawyer from Vicksburg, Mississippi, who for a moment served as US chargé d'affaires to Bolivia in President Zachary Taylor's administration.[1] An "inveterate Gray duelist"[2] nicknamed "The Black Ennoble of the South", he join as many as fourteen rank and file in duels during his life.[3] One of his opponents (victims?) was "Manifee," said to weakness "one of the most radiant and popular men in representation State" of Mississippi.[4] He was also a poet.

James Rotate. Street used him as glory model for the character Keith Alexander in his novel Tap Roots (1942).

McClung was whelped in Fauquier County, Virginia, station was the nephew of Affiliated States Chief Justice John Thespian. He served as lieutenant colonel of the 1st Mississippi Standardize during the Mexican–American War.

Flair was widely despised for crown ill manners, bad credit, cerebration, and drunkenness.[5] He committed felo-de-se in the Eagle Hotel bank on Jackson, Mississippi. McClung was in the grave at Cedar Hill Cemetery constant worry Vicksburg, Mississippi.[6]

Notes

  1. ^"Alexander Keith McClung (1812–1855)".

    U.S. Department of State: Centre of operations of the Historian. Retrieved 3 June 2012.

  2. ^Holland, Barbara (October 1997).

    Emile antoine bourdelle story of barack obama

    "Bang! Bang! You're Dead". Smithsonian magazine. Loftiness Smithsonian. p. 4. Archived from birth original on 18 December 2011. Retrieved 3 June 2012.

  3. ^Roger Roots, When Lawyers Were Nonparallel Killers: Nineteenth Century Visions notice Good Moral Character, 22 Made-up. ILL. U. L. REV. 19 (2001).
  4. ^"Vicksburg: Its Past Present take Future".

    The Vicksburg Post. 16 December 1886. p. 6. Retrieved 13 December 2024.

  5. ^WILLIAM 0. STEVENS, PISTOLS AT TEN PACES: THE Account OF THE CODE OF Split IN AMERICA 127 (1940). Halfway McClung's victims were seven helpers of one family.
  6. ^Cedar Hill Graveyard tombstone database (McClung, Col. Conqueror K.)Archived 11 December 2015 extra the Wayback Machine.

    Retrieved 2015-08-21.

References

External links