American politician
Colin J. McRae (born Colin John McRae ; October 22, 1812 – February 1877) was an American politician who had served as a Deputy from Alabama to the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States from 1861 to 1862.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3]
Biography
Colin J. McRae was born on October 22, 1812, in Anson County, North Carolina .[ 4] His brother, John J. McRae , served as the 21st Governor of Mississippi (1854–1857).[ 1] Before the Civil War , McRae was a merchant from Mobile, Alabama .[ 1] He co-owned a foundry in Selma, Alabama , which made ammunition and iron plate for gunboats.[ 5] Some of these gunboats were used during the war.[ 6]
McRae served as Confederate States Financial Agent in Europe from 1862 to 1865.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3]
In 1867, McRae moved to Puerto de Caballos, British Honduras (present-day Puerto Cortés , Belize ), where he purchased land and ran a plantation and mercantile business centered on mahogany .[ 1] [ 2] McRae died there in February 1877.[ 4] [ 7] He bequeathed the plantation and mercantile business to his sister and her husband.[ 1] They leased the plantation to tenants until 1894.[ 8] The location of his grave, in Belize, is unknown.[ 4]
In October 2011, a college student at the University of New Hampshire found relics of his Belize plantation house on an archeological expedition in the middle of the Belize Valley.[ 2] His records were found in Monterey Place in Mobile, Alabama.[ 1] They are held at the South Carolina Confederate Relic Room and Military Museum , in Columbia, South Carolina .
See also
References
^ a b c d e f g The Colin J. McRae Papers , Columbia : South Carolina Confederate Relic Room and Military Museum
^ a b c d Wright, Lori (October 2011). "Uncovering History: Student Helps Discover Confederate Soldier's Homestead in Belize" . The College Letter: Newsletter of the College of Liberal Arts . Archived from the original on July 19, 2013.
^ a b Andrew Lambert, Colin J. McRae, Confederate Financial Agent: Blockade Running in the Trans-Mississippi South as Affected by the Confederate Government's Direct Procurement of European Goods Borderland Smuggling: Patriots, Loyalties and Illicit Trade in the North East, 1783–1820 , The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology , August 2009
^ a b c The Political Graveyard
^ William F. Donnelly, American Economic Growth: The Historic Challenge , Ardent Media, 1973, 152 [1]
^ Edwin Layton, Colin J. McRae and the Selma Arsenal, Alabama Review , XVIII (1966), 132-133
^ General Officers of the Confederate Army, Officers of the Executive Departments of the Confederate States, Members of the Confederate Congress by States . Neale Publishing Company. 1911. p. 157.
^ Donald C. Simmons, Jr. , Confederate Settlements in British Honduras , Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2001, p. 91 [2]
Further reading
Charles S. Davis, Colin J. McRae: Confederate Financial Agent (Tuscaloosa, Alabama: Confederate Publishing, 1961).
Ray J. Fletcher, Colin J. McRae, Confederate Agent in Europe (Tallahassee, Florida: Florida State University Press, 1956).
External links
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