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Laurence Massillon Keitt (1824-1864)
Congressman and
Confederate Colonel
KEITT, Laurence Massillon, a Representative from South Carolina; born in Orangeburg
District, S.C., October 4, 1824; pursued classical studies and was graduated from
South Carolina College (now the University of South Carolina) at Columbia in
1843; studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1845 and commenced practice in
Orangeburg; member of the state house of representatives, 1848-1853; elected as
a Democrat to the Thirty-third and Thirty-fourth Congresses and served from March
4, 1853, to July 16, 1856, when he resigned after the Thirty-fourth Congress
censured him on July 15, 1856, for his role in the assault made upon Senator
Charles Sumner on May 22, 1856; again elected to the Thirty-fourth Congress
to fill the vacancy caused by his own resignation; reelected to the Thirty-fifth
and Thirty-sixth Congresses and served from August 6, 1856, until his retirement
in December 1860; chairman, Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds
(Thirty-fifth Congress); delegate to the secession convention of South
Carolina; member of the Provisional Congress of the Confederacy in Montgomery, Ala.,
in February 1861 and in Richmond, Va., in July 1861; raised the Twentieth South
Carolina Regiment of Volunteers and was commissioned its colonel on January
11, 1862; subsequently promoted to the rank of brigadier general; wounded in
the Battle of Cold Harbor, near Richmond, Va., and died as a result of his
wounds the following day, June 4, 1864; interment in the family cemetery,
near St. Matthews, S.C.
Bio. Source: US Congressional Archives
This page last updated: 8/13/02 2:32 PM
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