John Cabell Breckinridge One day I was walking around the grounds at the capitol building in Frankfort. There sitting alone in the First Lady’s rose garden on a bench was a solemn looking fellow. He looked very distressed and confused. So, I inquired if he was feeling well or needed something. He replied that he had just discovered everyone he had ever loved was gone and for some odd reason he was all that was left.
I wasn’t sure what he meant by that so I sat down beside him. He was dressed quit dapper in a dark suit with an upturned collar and some sort of fanciful scarf wrapped around his neck very tightly like a tie. I also noticed his shoes appeared to fit either foot and he had a bright gold watch chain. I thought all this was very odd, and assumed he may have been a reenact er at the capitol building. I began to inquire about his behavior the following is the account of this bizarre conversation. I started by introducing myself, he said his name was Gen.
John Breckinridge and he was in search of Gov. Leslie. I thought this was odd because Leslie was governor in the late 1800″s (1871-75).
At first I told him Paul Patton was the governor this seemed to confuse him greatly. He asked me where I procured my clothing, I told him in Carrollton. He then asked if I knew Gen.
Butler. I replied that I had only known his name and who he was and that I had never met him. As he began to tell me about Butler, his own life and some of the places he had been, I could do nothing but sit and listen in awe. He told me that he was born Jan. , 21 st 1821 and during his younger years he had studied law at several colleges. These included Transylvania University were he earned his Associates in Arts degree, then continued studying law at Centre College and graduated from Princeton University in 1839.
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He had gone to Iowa to practice law with a partner Thomas Bullock who was also from the Lexington area. I asked why he went so far to practice, his answer was that this was about as far west you could go and still be “civilized.” Also he speculated in land and owned several plots in this northwestern state. In 1843 he had return to Kentucky for a rest and to visit with family and old friends. The unforeseen happened that he met and fell in love with Mary Cyrene Burch.
They were married in December of 1844. After that he opened a practice in Lexington which did very well. That is until the Mexican War came about in 1847. The Mexican War is when Gen. Butler comes into this story.
John had went to Carrollton to seek a commission in the Army in Butler’s staff. Gen Butler stated that to be a member of a general’s staff he had to be taken from “officers of the line” and that since no one in his family had been an officer he couldn’t help there. On the other hand he could offer him a place as an un salaried volunteers aide and to advise against his accepting it. Of course he took it and was sent to Mexico City to aide in its capture.
By the time he got there with a regiment the conflict was over. He spend several months there and then returned home as Major Breckinridge. When the Major returned home he went straight to work in his law firm. Around the same time he was elected to represent his local district at Frankfort (1849).
With great pleasure he ran for state rep and won so he was sent to Washington to serve in the House of Representatives (1851-55).
While he was there he was approached by President Pierce. Pierce offered him a position he couldn’t say no to. That was to be Minister of Spain, but he couldn’t leave his fellow Kentuckians so he turned it down. In 1856 he was elected to the second highest position in the land. That was the vice presidency of the U.
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In November 1960, at the age of 43, John F. Kennedy became the youngest man ever elected president of the United States. Theodore Roosevelt had become president at 42 when President William McKinley was assassinated, but he was not elected at that age. On Nov. 22, 1963, Kennedy was shot to death in Dallas, Tex. , the fourth United States president to die by an assassin's bullet. Kennedy was the ...
S. , that was a big step from a field major. He told me that he and President Buchanan had a very cold relationship. The biggest honor he had was to be the President of the Senate. Ironically when he ran for president himself he was defeated by a tall lanky man from Illinois, Abraham Lincoln. Because he presided over the senate that meant he had to count the electoral votes.
Some radical people thought he might try to alter the vote to favor him. So he had to post armed soldiers inside and outside of the Senate chambers. The irony was that he had to announce the winner which of course wasn’t him (1860).
After his defeat he succeeded John Crittenden as US Senator from Kentucky (1861) even though Kentucky didn’t even carry him as president. In December of 1861 he was expelled from the senate for being a Confederate. Thus beginning the bloody Civil War.
During the Civil War he was promoted to brigadier-general. After his bravery at Shiloh which was a big defeat he was promoted to major-general. After several engagements and losses at Baton Rouge, Chattanooga, and Winchester. He finally won a few too at Chickamauga, New Market and Stone River he joined Gen. Lee to lose at Cold Harbor. There at Cold Harbor his horse “Old Sorrel” was shot and killed while he was mounted.
The accident forced Gen. B. to take a train car were ever he went until his injuries healed. After all the losses and wins he was promoted once again in hope that he could turn the tide and win the war, President Davis made him Secretary of War. After the war the Union put a warrant out for his arrest. This forced John to flee to Cuba and in hopes to make it to Canada.
Prior to this he had helped secure the remains of the Confederate treasury. When all hope faded the armed guards that provided protection to the gold and silver demanded payment. John was forced to pay out $26 to every CSA soldier that came forward. When most of the money was gone he and some other confederates retreated to Florida hoping to find some insurgence there to aid in his escape to Cuba.
Once in Florida he procured a small life boat and started for Cuba with five other men. When they reached the tip of Florida they obtained a larger craft by means of gun point. John felling sorry for the chaps gave them the life boat and a twenty dollar gold piece. Finally he made it to Cuba were he sold the larger craft and bought a steamer ticket to Europe. While he was in Europe he lived in Paris.
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He was held as a dignitary even though he was wanted by the US. He traveled to England and met the Royal Family, then off to Rome to see the ruins and visit with Pope Pius XI. After the attitudes cool off in the US he made his way to Toronto (1868) were he reunited with his wife and family. Eventually to make his way back to the bluegrass state for which he longed for so long to see. Once home locals requested that he speak at various engagements, to majority to which he turned down. Except to provide a eulogy at Clay’s funeral and other prominent places which supported him during his run for president.
Once everything cooled off he resumed practice as a lawyer and lives a happy life. Never resentful to the Union or the Confederacy. As I realized this man was ether crazy or I was losing it this man just vanished. I stud up in a very bewildered state and proceeded to the capitol building. Once inside I saw a memorial and portrait of the same man I had been talking to. It stated that he had died May 17 th 1875.
This did answer many questions about his dress and his curiosity in the way I dressed. But did I really talk to this man or had I fallen asleep and dreamed it. Time will only tell and write this as a testament to the power of human nature to carry on no matter what happens.