So much has
been
written, so many references have been made to my
grandmother's brother,
Colonel Campbell Slemp. What more is there to be told?
As a child, I
was
frequently taken to my grandmother's home and
permitted to visit for
days.
One day in 1901, my aunts dressed a little
six-year-old girl as they
felt
she should be dressed. The occasion - my grandmother's
brother would be
on the morning train which he had boarded at his home
in Big Stone Gap,
Virginia. At Clinchport, Virginia he
would
see his sister, Susan Slemp Pridemore's family and
Susan Slemp
Pridemore's
eldest grandchild would be exhibited.
Excited, yes,
but
the story I was told was more exciting! In 1901,
Uncle Campbell Slemp
went
to the White House with John Fox, Jr. to gain
Theodore Roosevelt's
promise
to appoint Henry C. McDowell as a Federal Judge in
the Western District
of Virginia. McDowell was appointed. Colonel Slemp
was designated the
Congressional
nominee by the district convention on September 3,
1902.
Now, other
than
a proud child's kinsman, who was this Colonel Slemp?
From the family
record
and from research made for generations to come, one
finds the will of
one
Frederick Slemp.
Will
of Frederick Slemp
In the name
of God,
Amen, I Frederick Slemp of the county of Wythe and
state of Virginia,
being
very sick and weak in body, but of perfect mind and
memory, thanks be
given
unto God, calling to mind the mortality of my body and
knowing that it
is appointed to all men once to die, do make and
ordain this my last
will
and testament, that is to say principally and first of
all I give and
recommend
my soul into the hands of almighty God that gave it,
and I recommend my
body to the earth to be buried in decent Christian
burial at the
discretion
of my executors, nothing doubting but at the general
resurrection I
shall
receive the same again by the mighty power of God and
as touching such
worldly estate wherewith it hath pleased God to bless
me with in this
life
I give and dispose of the same in the following manner
and form: First,
I give and bequeath to Mary, my dearly beloved wife,
the third part of
the plantation I now live on with all my household
furniture, my garden
and springhouse with my
dwelling house during her natural life
and
after her decease the said tract to be equally divided
between my two
youngest
sons, Frederick and John, with all my plantation tools
of all kinds
forever.
I give to my granddaughter, Caty Lou, one cow forever,
the residue of
my
stock to be divided equally between my three sons,
Michel, Frederick,
and
John forever. My part of the iron works on Roans Creek
which is one
third
part is to be sold and equally divided between my wife
and four sons
and
five daughters, Jacob, Michel, Frederick, John, my
sons, Elizabeth,
Ury,
Caty, Barbra, Mary, my daughters, forever.
I do
constitute
my wife Mary Slemp my executor with my son
Frederick, executors of this
my last will and testament as witness my hand and
seal this day and
year
of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and seven,
Signed sealed and published, pronounced
and
delivered by the said Frederick Slemp as his last
will and testament in
the presence of us, Michel Buster, Christian Reaser,
Robert Scott and
Margaret
Scott.
Frederick
Slemp (Seal)
Book one, page
380
Wythe County
Court
house, June term, 1807, this last will and testament
of Frederick
Slemp,
deceased, was presented in court and proved by the
oaths of Michel
Buster,
Christian Reaser, Robert Scott and Margaret
Scott, the witnesses thereto and
ordered
to be recorded. Teste, John P. Mathews, D. C.
A
Copy - Teste:
J.
E. Crockett, Clerk
By:
Emily J. Williams, Deputy Clerk. (1)
Note the
original
will is written in German Script.
John, my
great,
great grandfather, born April 8, 1781 - died July 4,
1858; married
Alpha
Smith, born in 1801 and died April 1866. They had
seven children:
Sebastian
Smith Slemp (my great grandfather) was born December
9, 1810 - died
April
22, 1859; married August 18, 1831 to Margaret Reasor
- born January 3,
1811 and died July 31, 1871. (2) Margaret Reasor was
the daughter of
Daniel
Reasor and Susanna Jackson, sister of Andrew
Jackson. Their children
were:
Henderson Clinton Slemp whose granddaughter, Eliza
Flanary Stone (Mrs.
Thomas Stokley Stone) is now living in Knoxville,
Tennessee; Campbell
Slemp
(two grandsons, Campbell Slemp and Campbell Edmonds
now living in or
near
Big Stone Gap, VA); Nervesta Overton Slemp Flanary
(a great, great,
great
granddaughter, Mrs. Nancy Ward Davis, now living
near Kingsport,
Tennessee);
Susan Slemp Pridemore (the writer's grandmother);
Alpha Slemp Habern;
Didamia
Slemp died in infancy.
After the
death
of my grandmother, Susan Slemp Pridemore, her
personal belongings were
drawn by lots by her children. My mother, Addie
Pridemore Johnson drew
the BIBLE containing the Slemp record. This Bible is
at this writing in
the possession of Addie Pridemore Johnson's youngest
daughter, Lillian
Gertrude Johnson Nidermaier, ________________,
Kingsport, Tennessee.
The following
names
and dates were taken from the above mentioned Bible.
Campbell Slemp,
son
of Sebastian Slemp and Margaret, was born December
2, 1839. Mary B.
Slemp,
first wife of Campbell Slemp, and daughter of
William B. and Ruth
Thomas,
was born March 20, 1843. Venus Slemp, daughter of
Campbell and Mary B.
Slemp, was born March 11, 1862 and married Joseph
Tate. (3)
My own
personal
note here: Mary B. Slemp died March 11, 1862, the
day the daughter was
born. A coincidence is that later in life Campbell
Slemp, her husband
and
Theodore Roosevelt became close friends; and each of
these men lost his
first wife at his first child's birth. Alice
Roosevelt Longworth was
born
on the night her mother died and Teddy Roosevelt's
mother also died in
the same house on the same night that Alice
Roosevelt's mother died.
Cambell Slemp
was
married the second time to Nannie B. Cawood
(daughter of Moses and
Emily
Cawood) on June 8, 1864, at the home of Captain
Jocelyn in Jonesville,
Virginia. Their children were: Emma, Henry, Susan
Jane, Campbell
Bascom,
William Moses, Laura Alpha Drucilla and Belle.
From the names
in
these records (4) can be traced the political,
religious, business and
commercial leanings as well as the prestige of
Colonel Slemp. For
example,
his grandfather and grandmother, John and Alpha
Smyth Slemp, gave the
land
for the Seminary Methodist Church approximately one
hundred ten years
ago.
His father was
born,
lived and died in Turkey Cove, Lee County. Sebastian
Slemp was a
leading
citizen of this community. He served one term as a
member of the House
of Delegates and was making a campaign for State
Senate when he died of
pneumonia at the age of 48. (5)
As a boy,
Campbell
Slemp attended school in Lee County and later he
attended Emory and
Henry
College where, it is said, he was a most popular and
diligent student.
His father died just three months before his
graduation and he was
called
home. His training here no doubt developed those
traits that later led
to his captaincy in the Confederate States of
America. He entered the
Confederate
Service at Camp Lane, in Lee County, Virginia, as
Captain, Company A,
Pound
Gap Battalion, Virginia Cavalry, Confederate States
Army. Slemp served
the Confederate cause as Captain, Lieutenant, Lt.
Colonel and Colonel.
Wore that gray!
This fact was
of
great concern to a small child. How could he be a
Republican? This
question,
the grown- ups in the family did not even attempt to
answer. The
situation
became acute when I was on another visit with
Grandmother now on
invalid
confined to her chair and room at Clinchport. I
overheard, as I often
did
when I was not supposed to be listening, Grandmother
asked her
daughter,
Hagan, please to call Carroll, her only son, at
once. She explained
that
there was a matter she must discuss with him now.
Aunt Hagan
went
for Uncle Carroll immediately. The naughty
grandchild disappeared
behind
the head of Grandmother's bed - a disappearing act
which she had
learned,
and by which knowledge not meant for one so young
could be obtained.
Grandmother's
request was due to the fact that she felt that her
son, who was
twenty-one,
and would cast his first vote in the upcoming
election, must hear from
her a fair appraisal of her brother, Campbell. The
decision, she told
her
son, was to be made by him and without any pressure
from the fact that
"your Uncle Cam is my brother, but your Father was a
Democrat - always
a Democrat - and your Uncle Cam has not always been
a Republican."
Thus,
the young man casting his first vote was admonished
to weigh matters.
The
word "high tariff" was used and distinctly
remembered but a small
girl's
expectations had certainly been dampened.
Why was he a
Republican?
This question remained unanswered. The grown-ups in
the family simply
evaded
it. When Grandfather's brother, Auburn L.
Pridemore's record of
surrender
at Cumberland Gap was shown us - another question -
where was Uncle
Camp's
record of surrender? - Another unanswered question.
This was answered
by
Congressman Gaines of West Virginia in a much
cherished, thin, little
black,
very black, book which was sent to my Mother, mailed
directly from
Washington
in 1909 or 1910. I quote from his memorial address
on Col. Campbell
Slemp:
"It is a part of his history that when the troops,
of which his
regiment
was a part, were to be surrendered he secured
permission of the general
commanding to take his regiment and attempt escape.
Dividing what was
left
of the regiment into groups of seven, they made
their way along the
mountainside
to a place of safety and so were beyond the Union
lines when the
Confederate
troops were surrendered." (6)
The above
quote
was confirmed by a direct personal contact made in
April 1936-39. The
writer,
then teaching in the City School System of
Kingsport, Tennessee, was on
a mission for Campbell Slemp's son. Using some of
the untiring energy
inherited
from the Slemps, and in a small way being grateful
to the Colonel's
son,
Bascom, I complied with the Congressman's request
that pictures be
obtained
of some of the old homes in Scott and Russell
Counties.
This mission
resulted,
not only in obtaining the pictures, but being
presented with numerous
items,
such as a tailor's thimble, hoops worn in the olden
days in my lady's
skirt,
and a very old and cherished grey silk parasol. Also
the purchase was
made
of a dulcimer for the collection, which had not yet
been moved to the
stone
building which was to be used as a museum. The above
items are now
pointed
to with great pride to my own friends, children and
grandchildren.
On a bright
fall
Sunday, information was given to us that a Mrs. Gose
of Russell County,
then 90 years old, remembered that Colonel Slemp had
visited in her
home
when he returned from Kentucky while still evading
members of the Union
Army. Directions to the home of Mrs. Gose were
obtained. My husband and
I were graciously received and, after a lapse of
some minutes, we were
invited into the private room of our hostess, a
charming, aristocratic
woman; a woman to whom the years had been most kind.
She listened
intently
as to why we were there. A mission for Bascom Slemp
- yes, she knew of
him - but she had fond memories of his father, a
group of his soldiers
and a most attractive young lady who sat her saddle
well. Did I
remember
her? She was a young lady from Kentucky, who, too,
was evading either
malicious
stories or horrible memories. But, we were assured
by the cultured
voice
of our narrator that, be that as it may, this young
lady, if every word
of the hearsay story were true, had proven herself
as courageous as the
soldiers who were now protecting her. No braver act
was ever performed
in battle than that performed by this young lady who
sat her saddle
well.
She deserved, in the opinion of our hostess, a place
in history with
any
hero of any battle, and Mrs. Gose, a Virginian, most
happily accepted
her,
a Kentuckian, as an honored citizen of her state.
Then Mrs. Gose coyly
remarked, "That was your great aunt, for Colonel
Slemp later married
her."
The young
lady's
family was of the Union faction. Her brother had
been given leave to
visit
his home and while on leave became very ill. Mrs.
Gose suggested -
influenza.
Time had expired and he had not returned to his
regiment. Two
well-armed,
uniformed Union soldiers had gone to his home. One
waited on the
outside,
while the other entered from the back and demanded
his return. The
family
plead with him, explaining that the brother was
seriously ill, but
would
return as soon as she was able. The pleas were
unheeded and a stern
command
was given for him to arise and follow: whereupon,
the sick young Union
man raised his head slightly from the pillow and
fell back dead. In a
matter
of minutes, the soldier who gave the command left
the house, but before
he reached the yard gate, a shot rang out from the
window, and he fell
dead. Feelings ran high - Union forces were
threatening and hence, a
Confederate
Colonel came to the aid of a Kentucky belle, and be
it true or not, the
writer is so very, very proud of her great aunt Nan
Slemp. Who knows
that
marriage may account for the fact that my kinsman,
whether paroled on
May
2, 1865 at Cumberland Gap or whether he never
surrendered, spent no
time
repining nor whining, nor did he complain of ill
luck. He went to work
to build up the country that had been destroyed, to
restore the grand
old
Commonwealth to her former prosperity. Proof
sufficient to the writer
that
this man had the interest of Virginia, as well as
the interest of the
United
States, at heart.
Why was he a
Republican?
- Uncle Cam, a Republican! As a child in school this
question was often
raised. School children can be cruel, and as school
children, we
suffered,
especially when those 9th Virginia District
campaigns were in full
swing.
Found in my reading were statements such as "He was
a Democrat in
1879."
(7) Prior to 1880, the debt question split the party
of the State. In
1879
Colonel Slemp was elected to the House of Delegates
of Virginia, where
he became an ardent advocate of the readjustment of
the State
indebtedness.
Numbered among his friends were General Mahone,
Senator H. H.
Riddleberger,
and Honorable John E. Massie. He was reelected to
the House of Delegate
by a greatly increased majority in 1880. Up to this
time, Colonel Slemp
was a Democrat. But, along with Malone and other
prominent Readjusters,
he became affiliated with the Republican party and
ever afterwards to
that
party gave his allegiance. In 1883, he was defeated
for State Senate.
In
1889, he received the Republican nomination for
Lieutenant Governor on
a ticket headed by Mahone - an unsuccessful ticket.
And in such a
short
while, he, like our present representatives, could
not make amends for
all that had happened over the years in the State of
Virginia. A review
of these happenings will explain the prevailing
conditions and problems
and also the length of time these conditions had
existed. W. C.
Pendleton,
in his book, Politics in Southwest Virginia, say:
"Virginia, when
relieved
from military rule, faced a serious problem. This
problem was the
result
of the fact that eight years after Virginia
proclaimed herself an
Independent
Commonwealth she began to contract a public debt."
(8)
Pearson takes
us
farther back and says that: "From the Revolution to
the Civil War, one
of the most
important economic and social
activities
of the State of Virginia was the furtherance of a
system of Public
Works.
He further stated that there were four main steps in
the legislation
under
which this system was developed. It was inaugurated
in 1784, when the
State
became, through purchase, a majority stockholder I
corporations created
for the improvement of the James and Potomac Rivers.
Among the sponsors
of this beginning were a Newton, a Taylor, an Ambler
and a Southall -
names
still honored in Virginia. A particular but
characteristic mingling of
business and sentiment appeared in the gift by the
Commonwealth of
shares
to George Washington, Esq. in appreciation of his
merits and his
interest
in enterprises which, the legislature thought, would
be the durable
monuments
of his glory.
To the policy
thus
begun, a decided impetus was imparted in 1816, when
all of the State's
holdings in such companies were converted into one
fund, pledged for 50
years to the sole purpose of improving traffic and
communication and
managed
by a special Board of Public Works. As the demands
on this fund were
greater
than could be met, the legislature in 1838 directed
the Board to obtain
money for all authorized improvements by selling
State bonds. This was
an important step for it meant that the State was
entering on credit, a
policy that was necessarily speculative. Twelve
years alter the fully
developed
policy was embodied in an act, still in force when
the Civil War began,
under which the Board might borrow from time to time
on the credit of
the
State of Virginia, such sums of money as may be
needed to redeem the
engagements
of the State; which, of course, included not only
new investments but
also
unearned interest." (9) This Board of Public Works
continued to borrow
and thereby enlarge the public debt so that by 1861,
Virginia owed 33
million
dollars. Bonds were sold and the proceeds used in
building railroads
and
other improvements. Perhaps all funds were used and
all business
transactions
were the best that could have been made at that
time, but
unfortunately,
all money spent by the Board prior to 1861 and all
improvements were
lost
as a result of the Civil War and by legislative
enactments after
Virginia
was restored to the Union. Interest from 1861 to
1871 on the debt, plus
the original debt, raised the amount owed to more
than 40 million
dollars.
Therefore, in
the
General Assembly elected were excellent Confederate
men determined to
do
two things: (1) Preserve for their State a full
representation in
Congress;
(2) Protect the financial honor of Virginia.
To do this
some
unwise legislation was passed. Then, as is often the
case now,
speculators,
who had bought bonds at sacrifice figures, used
their influence to get
unwise legislation and thus boost the value of their
bonds. Gov.
Pierpont
not only approved these acts of the General Assembly
in 1865-66, but
also
an act by the same General Assembly in 1866-67. This
act provided that
the accounting officers of the Treasury pay on the
first day of July
1867,
and the first day of January, 1868, 2 percent
interest upon the public
debt of the State - that being the interest the
State felt obliged to
pay
until the settlement of accounts between Virginia
and West Virginia. It
was near the adjournment of this session that the
General Assembly
faced
the fact that they had undertaken to pay semi-annual
interest on the
public
debt without provision that the State would have
adequate revenue to
meet
its obligations.
Thereupon,
another
act was passed giving the second auditor power to
issue coupons,
showing
the amount of interest that would be payable under
the provisions of
the
Act of March 21, 1867. Thus did Virginia's problem
continue and grow.
Southwest
Virginia was confronted with the Whig inheritance of
opposition to
Democracy
and even the most conservative of the Clay Whigs had
to be graduated
into
the Democratic ranks through the name of
"Conservative Democrats." A
great
number refused to take the degree. So in 1878, a
third party, the
Readjuster
Party, swept the State, producing bitterness of
feeling and dividing
the
Democratic Party.
In 1875, the
men
elected to the House of Delegates from the counties
west of the New
River,
with the exception of two, Ira T. Robinette of Scott
County and James
L.
McElroy of Lee County, were Readjusters.
The Senatorial
District
composed of Lee, Buchanan and Wise Countie, elected
Henry C. Slemp;
Scott
and Russell Counties elected H. C. Wood; both were
Readjusters. But in
1876-77, the sessions of the Legislature were
dominated by debt-payers
who were afterwards called "Funders" and no
legislation was enacted in
either session.
The State's
indebtedness
was as follows: Old funded debts - 32,779,262.94;
New funded debts and
to be funded - 7,884,973.56; Interest due and unpaid
on old funded
debts
- 3,384,776.33; New funded debts - 1,611,335.17; to
this should be
added
the amount of the James River and Kanawha Companies
assumed by the
State
and authorized to be converted to bonds not yet
funded - 212,430.00.
Total
State debt - January 1, 1787 - 45,872,778.00.
Hence, after
long
debates and speeches, the Funding Bill came - one of
the most notable
made
by General Wise, to which the people listened and
concurred.
General
Walker,
due to his holdings, was personally interested in
the passage of the
Funding
Bill, and many, then and now, think he was
influenced by improper
motives.
However, as is always the case, the legislators
could easily have found
that the revenue for the State for the preceeding
year was only
1,500,000.00
and that the Governor was urging them to enact
legislation that would
create
a liability of 2,000,000.00. In spite of the fact
that members from the
Southwest were solidly against it, the act passed
and it was the
Funding
Bill that Governor Walker had so cunningly
advocated. One writer
stated,
"Truly a monster of graft and dishonesty."
Deplorable
results
followed the enactment of the Funding Act. Taxes
from every possible
source
were raised. Governor Walker very bravely made
demands, but since only
26 or the 132 members had been returned, the
legislators repudiated the
Governor's suggestions and passed a bill, 119 to 33,
suspending
operation
of the Funding Bill. This the Governor promptly
vetoed. Again the House
of Delegates did not accept his reasons, but the
Senate did and the
veto
was overridden. The case went to the Supreme Court
and remained
unsettled
for many years.
Finally, now
within
the House of Delegates, Russell County was
represented by Jack Carter;
Scott County by William B. Queen; and in the Senate
was A. L. Pridemore
from Lee, Wise and Buchanan Counties; John H. A.
Smith from Scott and
Russell
Counties; James S. Greever from Washington and Smyth
Counties. All
supported
the measure to obstruct the Funding Bill and after
the legislative
adjournment
in 1873, the Funding Bill became more and more
unpopular and the debt
question
continued a menace. Governor Kemper was inaugurated
January 1, 1874,
and
our counties were represented by Morgan T. Lipps
from Wise County; Jack
Carter from Russell County; James B. Richmond from
Scott County;
William
P. Cecil from Tazewell County; Abram Fulkerson from
Washington County.
These and
their
co-workers all stood for an honest readjustment of
the debt. This
adjustment
became a fact by the enactment of the Riddleburger
Bill.
The
Confederate
cult was in full swing in 1877, when a Governor had
to be elected.
Candidates
from several sections were announced when General
William Mahone
decided
to further his ambitions by declaring himself a
candidate for Governor.
This further incited the supporters of the chosen
candidates and the
contest
became a struggle of "Mahone Against the Field." His
declaration of
opposition
to the debt - paying policy of the Conservative
Party was bitterly
criticized
by the Funders and the press. When 1400 delegates
met in August in the
Richmond Theater, Mahone and his floor leaders, John
S. Wise, Abram
Fulkerson,
Harry Riddleburger and others made an effort to have
a platform adopted
before nominations were made. "Forceable
Readjusters" doctrines were
written
in this platform so that it would be impossible for
either of the
Funder
candidates to accept a nomination. This master
scheme was defeated by
Daniel
Holliday and Lee. It now became unmistakably clear
that Mahone would
not
win. John Wise withdrew Mahone's name and called for
support of the
"Sleveless
Hero of the Valley," and so F. W. M. Holliday was
the nominee of the
Conservative
Party for Governor of the State of Virginia. (10)
The preceeding
facts
are given, not to vindicate my kinsman for being a
Republican, but to
substantiate
the statement made earlier that what had happened
over the years in
Virginia
could not be ammended in a short period of time; and
to give a
background
for the grand entrance of Colonel Campbell Slemp and
Major C. Bascom
Slemp,
father and son, into active politics in the Ninth
Congressional
District
of the State of Virginia. Pendleton tells us that
this entrance was
"One
of the most interesting events in the political
history of the
Commonwealth."
This was in
1902,
just one year after the introduction of the
six-year-old grand niece to
Campbell Slemp, and just one year after his visit
with John Fox to the
White House. Incidentally, John Fox, in his book
Trail of the Lonesome
Pine, honored Colonel Slemp by calling him Black
Hawk of the Cumberland.
Campbell Slemp
wanted
to make this race well-known throughout the Ninth
District. He had
represented
Lee County for two terms in the House of Delegates;
was a presidential
elector on the Harrison ticket in 1888; and again on
the McKinley slate
in 1896. But he was perhaps best known to the voters
of the District as
the Republican Party nominee for Lieutenant Governor
in 1889, on the
same
ticket which offered General Mahone for Governor.
Judge Rhea was again
chosen by the Democrats to make the race. Campbell
Slemp's sons, Bascom
and Will, campaigned ardently for their father.
The writer met
Judge
Rhea at the age of three in Fairview, Virginia,
where, I have been told
on good authority, my father was the only active
Democrat for a period
of time. This was in 1902, but then as now, behind
the scenes and
condemned
by fairminded Democrats and Republicans, fraudulent
methods were too
often
used. That Colonel Slemp was courageous is found in
an editorial from
the
Tazewell Republican with the lead -
To
Your Tents
"Under
existing conditions
it seems to us a useless expenditure of time and
energy for the
Republicans
of the Ninth Congressional District, or even of
Virginia, to make any
contest
in National or State elections." (11)
The newspaper
cited
the Walton Act and stated that it would be worse than
folly for the
Republicans
to undertake and expect to win in any Congressional
District in
Virginia.
We have it from W. C. Pendleton when he says: "A
courageous spirit was
found to confront and conquer the obnoxious political
conditions in the
Ninth District, and on September 3, just two months
before the election
in November, Slemp as nominated and elected by a
majority which was not
considered as great as it really was. Yet, it was said
of the election
that it was the fairest election that had been held in
the State for 20
years." (12)
After this
victory,
Slemp's political foes made numerous and vicious
attacks upon him. His
opponents and vicious attacks upon him. His opponents
sneered at his
intellectual
qualifications. He was too often condemned in his home
territory -
this,
primarily because he had, at the worst possible time,
turned Republican.
The New York
World,
May 14, 1913, commented, "The North can scarcely
comprehend how bitter
was the abuse visited upon Wise, Longstreet and other
Southern leaders
when they became Republicans." And for some of those
men this new
political
faith closed their public careers. From the article
quoted above one
finds
said of Mr. Wise, "No braver act was ever performed in
battle than Wise
performed in the Virginia of the new era when he
turned from all of his
friends and took his post in politics by the side of
his freed slaves
to
seek the right as he saw the right." In the opinion of
the writer, this
quotation could as well be applied to Colonel Campbell
Slemp.
Therefore, the following record is
included:
Slaves: From
Bill
of Sale of Estate of Sebastian S. Slemp (November
24, 1859): 1 Black
man
Hubbard - 1200.00; 1 Black woman and child - 900.00;
1 Black woman
Louisa
- 500.00; 1 Black girl Jane - 850.00; 1 Yellow girl
Winnie - 950.00; 1
Black boy Jacob - 750.00; 1 Yellow girl Jane -
700.00; 1 Black boy Bill
- 750.00; 1 Black girl Alsa - 550.00; 1 Black boy
Franklin - 550.00; 1
Yellow girl Caroline - 450.00 (13)
Further
evidence
that Colonel Slemp, too, sought the right and took
his post in politics
by the side of his family's freed slaves.
Other
editorials
could see no possible good in a Confederate veteran
who turned
Republican.
Wise, Longstreet, Mosby and Mahone had all suffered
from this
imputation
of dishonesty.
Let it be
clearly
understood that no one need plead a brief for
Colonel Campbell Slemp!
It is a
significant
historical fact that at a convention held in Norfolk
on the 3rd day of
March, 1905 Colonel Slemp was backed by the Ninth
District delegation;
also by the Fifth District and other Counties. Slemp
was nominated and
elected. After he had taken his seat, the then "Big
Three" (Allen,
Agnew
and Bowden), began to thwart any chances of Slemp's
gaining any control
of federal patronage accredited to Virginia. This
struggle was not
effective.
The President, Teddy Roosevelt, proved a staunch and
dependable friend,
a friendship which exited during the lifetime of
both Campbell Slemp
and
his son, Bascom. This is attested, and note of same
is made in the
autobiography
of Calvin Coolidge. It is attested further by the
fact that the
complete
set of Disraeli's plates, which were presented to
the Queen, are not in
the Southwest Virginia Museum; some were presented
to Alice Roosevelt
Longworth
by Congressman C. Bascom Slemp. But getting back to
the bitterness of
the
"Big Three":
The "Big
Three"
failed to convince Teddy Roosevelt that they were
the real force in the
Republican Party in Virginia; hence, their first
scheme was to make
Colonel
Slemp an insignificant figure in the State
Convention that would elect
delegates to the National Convention of 1904 in
Chicago. Agnew's
chairmanship
failed. The "Big Three" weakened and named Campbell
Slemp as one of the
delegates-at-large. Slemp refused to accept, and may
I give you what he
had to say in an interview in Washington, D. C.
Quote: "The Republican
Party can never become strong and deserving of
support from the best
men
of the State until it is purged of people whose only
purpose in being
in
the party is to secure offices. This
office-grabbing, selfish class of
Republicans has been the disgrace of the Republican
Party of the South
for years and it must get out. We made a fight
against that element in
the convention. We put up Judge L. L. Lewis, a
high-minded, able man,
for
chairman of the convention and the office holders
defeated him. Then
they
tried to smooth things over by electing me a
delegate-at-large to
Chicago
- I don't care a rap about a petty little place as
delegate to Chicago
- President Roosevelt's nomination is assured anyhow
- We are going to
continue the fight for the organization of the Party
in Virginia and we
will win."
This man whom
I
have just quoted served his State for almost four
score years. It has
been
said that Colonel Campbell Slemp was one of the
ablest, most patriotic
and most successful members of the United States
Congress and State of
Virginia ever had.
If the
quotation
is true that "Man lives again in those to whom he
has given being,"
Campbell
Slemp truly lived again when he, from the spirit
land, beheld his son,
C. Bascom Slemp, taking his seat in Congress, as
well as carving for
himself
a place in the political activities of his district
ad in the hearts of
her people. With such a son, Colonel Slemp needed no
office to round
out
the fullness of his life. Of C. Bascom Slemp and
what his leadershp has
meant, not just to our State, I could write most
volubly. The writer is
convinced, that given time enough, it could be
proved that the Slemp
and
Roosevelt friendship did not stop at Teddy's death,
but carried over to
the term of Franklin D. Roosevelt. This is evident
by correspondence on
exhibit in the now Southwest Virginia Museum of Big
Stone Gap,
Virginia.
Speculation is that it is highly possible that, if
not the author of
the
Lend Lease Bill, C. Bascom Slemp was a contributor.
And regardless of
the
fact that there were those who did say and will say
that Campbell Slemp
was wrong when he cast his fortune with the
Confederacy, and there were
surely those who did say that he was wrong when he
cast his political
fortunes
with the party to which he had been a long time
opposed, the writer
feels
that, from the brief discussion of the Readjusters
and Funder Era, it
is
plain, very plain that he did right. And as to the
Confederacy, I feel
that God vindicated him.
May I give you
a
ghost story or perhaps you will call it a Mortal
Phenomena of the sick
room. This story was told to me by C. Bascom Slemp
in his home in Big
Stone
Gap, Virginia, on the day of the funeral of his
sister, Janie Slemp
Newman.
While final arrangements were being made in the
downstairs drawing room
for the last rite, Cousin Bascom called me aside and
said, "Come, I
have
a story to tell you." Whereupon, we went up to his
room and, tired and
grieved as he was, he painstakingly reviewed the
long siege of illness,
the various travels and efforts to combat the long
and fatal illness of
Mrs. Newman, who had been constantly attended by a
faithful nurse. This
nurse had known that both Janie's father and
brother, in fact, the
entire
family were ardent Republicans. Therefore, she was
astonished by
seeing,
standing at the foot of Janie's bed, a man in full
Confederate uniform.
The nurse, knowing Janie was asleep, hesitated to
move and admitted
that
she was stunned and speechless. Janie, arousing from
the stupor or
sleep,
asked, "Did you see my father? He came for me."
On the
brother's
early visit the following morning the nurse asked,
"Mr. Slemp, who in
your
family ever wore a Confederate uniform?" To which he
answered, "My
father."
Thus have
questions,
which arose and puzzled me as a child, been most
convincingly answered.
Research and the admonition, "Ye shall know the
truth and the truth
shall
make you free," and the stories, unique and
heretofore unpublished have
been a stimulant. These, together with the Firing
Line of Memory, are
cherished,
as is the memory, of my maternal grandmother, Susan
Slemp Pridemore,
who
in the first place, is solely responsible for my
pride in the Slemp
kinship.
With such a
record,
such a fullness of life, Colonel Campbell Slemp was
further privileged
to die at home while asleep. His death was a
distinct shock to his
relatives
and a host of friends. His death occurred on Sunday,
October 13, 1907.
Colonel Slemp
and
his entire family are buried in the old Slemp
cemetery, located on a
hill
just beyond the old homestead in Turkey Cove, Lee
County, Virginia.
Footnotes:
(1) Book One, page 380, Wythe County,
Virginia
Court House, Wytheville, Virginia. (A copy of which is
now in the
writer's
possession.);
(2) Book I, Lee County Marriage
Records,
Lee County Court House, Jonesville, Virginia;
(3) Slemp record from the family Bible
of
Susan Slemp Pridemore;
(4) Chart compiled by Janie Slemp
Newman,
now in the Southwest Virginia Museum in Big Stone
Gap, Virginia;
(5) From paper on Slemp family written
by
Janie Slemp Newman about 1930 and distributed to
some of her
kinsmen.
(6) Address of Mr. Gaines of West
Virginia,
page 15, Campbell Slemp, Memorial Addresses, printed
in Washington, DC,
1909;
(7) History of Southwest Virginia, L.
P.
Summers;
(8)W. C. Pendleton - Political History
of
Appalachian Virginia;
(9) The Readjuster Movement in Virginia
by
Charles Chilton Pearson;
(10) Political History of Appalachian
Virginia,
page 318 - W. C. Pendleton;
(11) From a newspaper editorial in
Tazewell
Republican.
(12) Political History of Appalachian
Virginia,
by W. C. Pendleton;
(13) Will Book No. 2, page 233,
Jonesville,
Virginia, Courthouse.
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