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Horatio Seymour

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Horatio Seymour

[[{{{Cause of Death}}}]]

Fictional or Historical
Historical
Nationality

Horatio Seymour (1810-1886) was an American politician. He was Governor of New York State from 1853-1854 and from 1863-1864.

Seymour was born in Pompey Hill, Onondaga County, New York, educated at Geneva Academy (later Hobart College) and at Middletown (Conn) Military Academy, studied law at Utica, and in 1832 was admitted to the bar. He served as mayor of Utica, New York from 1842 to 1843.

He served as Governor of New York from 1853 to 1854 and again from 1863 to 1864. As governor of New York in 1863 to 1864, he became a leading Northern opponent of President Abraham Lincoln's administration during the American Civil War. Seymour protested Lincoln's restriction of civil liberties during the Civil War, as well as the Emancipation Proclamation and the Union's military draft. He advocated the vigorous prosecution of the war, but protested against the extensive use of war powers by Lincoln.

[edit] Horatio Seymour in The Guns of the South

Horatio Seymour defeated Abraham Lincoln in the 1864 presidential election after the Confederacy won the Second American Revolution.

[edit] Horatio Seymour in Southern Victory

In 1864, Horation Seymour was elected to succeed Abraham Lincoln as the seventeenth President of the United States after the Confederate States won the War of Secession. Although he advocated vigorous prosecution of the war while it was being fought, Seymour became a vocal critic of the Lincoln administration after the Camp Hill fiasco and his re-election as Governor of New York in 1863.

Seymour used his pulpit as governor of the nation's largest state to rail against Republican policies and the misconduct of the war and eventually became a leading voice of the party. A candidate for President in 1864, Seymour called for economic reforms in response to the economic crisis of the year. But his support for the war became a sticking point for many Democrats. He was forced to reverse his former support for the war. He eventually carried the nomination with the backing of Connecticut Governor Thomas H. Seymour. Thomas Seymour would run as Vice President on the ticket.

As president, Seymour took a concillatory stance towards the Confederacy during his first term, a stance that was maintained by the Democrats until 1880.

Note: This is speculative.

Preceded by
Abraham Lincoln
President of the United States (Southern Victory, The Guns of the South)
1865-1873?
Succeeded by
Unknown; next known is Samuel J. Tilden



Preceded by
Washington Hunt; Edward D. Morgan
Governor of New York (OTL, The Guns of the South, Southern Victory)
1853-1854; 1863-1864
Succeeded by
Reuben E. Fenton (OTL); Unknown (The Guns of the South, Southern Victory)
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