Biography of Colonel
William Clark Falkner
compiled by Bill
Gurney
edited by Tommy Covington |
A search in the files of the Ripley
Public
Library and the Tippah County Historical Society will reveal numerous
contradictory
facts and legends that even members of the late Colonel's family do not
agree on. On the other hand, a great many facts, stories and anecdotes
have been preserved and documented without any attendant doubts. If a
history
buff's curiosity prevails, the story of Falkner's trek to Mississippi
wait
in Donald Duclos' biography, SON OF SORROW, and in THE HISTORY OF
TIPPAH
COUNTY by Andrew Brown.
Falkner was born in Knox County, Tennessee,
in 1825, as his parents were migrating from North Carolina to St.
Genevieve,
Missouri. After passing his early years with his family, Falkner came
to
Tippah County about 1842. Several reasons for his leaving the family
shelter
are recorded. J. W. Thompson adopted his nephew upon his arrival.
Still in his teens Falkner expressed a desire to read law in his
uncle's
office, but this did not occur immediately. Thompson told his nephew
that
he would have to acquire first a basic education, such as the academies
of Tippah county then provided. Falkner accepted this decision and
spent
several years attending classes when they were in session and doing odd
jobs the remainder of the time.
The Mexican War came along and this provided
young Falkner with his first opportunity to gain public attention, a
trait
manifested many times during his life. Leaving Ripley as one of the
Tippah
Guards, this volunteer group was absorbed into the Second Mississippi
Infantry
which mustered at Vicksburg and New Orleans.
Although never in combat in the Mexican "affair," Falkner gained a
lieutenants commission and, after much correspondence with the War
Department,
a pension for wounds received while in northern Mexico. Two widely
different
stories survive as to how Falkner received his wounds. One, advanced by
the young soldier himself, claims that he was ambushed by Mexican
guerrillas
and was attacked as he attempted to defend himself. The other, true or
not, is the more amusing. Even as his public career was being launched,
Falkner had managed to make enemies at home and they advised the War
Department
that Falkner was injured in a brawl with Mexican civilians while AWOL
from
his company.
The fact that Falkner's account of his
misfortune
was accepted by officials in the War Department is an indication that
the
man possessed unusual persuasive powers.
Returning to Ripley, Falkner began to read law in his uncle's office
and soon entered practice. He also took time to attend to a personal
matter;
he married Miss Holland Pearce. Soon their first child arrived, a son
whom
they dutifully named John Wesley Thompson Falkner - for the uncle who
had
given Falkner a home after his trip from Missouri. But Falkner's joy at
having an heir was soon dulled by the death of his wife, either in
childbirth
or a few weeks afterward from the complications attending her having a
child.
Frequently mentioned by his biographers was
Falkner's temper, which often got out of control and a contrasting
trait;
his unflagging determination to reach the goals he set for himself in
his
lifetime.
Violence and Falkner walked hand in hand many
times. Before the start of the Civil War, Falkner had killed two men in
separate encounters in Ripley. He was acquitted of charges in both
cases
but the aftermath of the tragedies produced more enemies for the rising
young lawyer.
One of Falkner's victims, Robert
Hindman,
a member of a very prominent local family was buried in the family plot
on the outskirts of town with the tombstone inscription: "Killed by W.
C. Falkner....."
While making enemies, Falkner was not without
his supporters, and in a small community like Ripley it was impossible
for any thinking person to maintain a neutral opinion of Falkner.
While in Mexico, Falkner had begun to write
little noticed prose and poetry, some of which did appear in the Ripley
newspaper. Concurrently with his other interests - the law, politics,
and
farming - Falkner continued to write and accurately forecast ten years
in advance of Secession, and bloodletting that history has labeled the
Civil War.
This conflict provided yet another showcase for W. C. Falkner's diverse
talents. Acting on his own initiative early in 1861, this man organized
in Tippah county a company of volunteers to serve the South's cause and
which he named the "Magnolia Guards." Soon a merger of this unit with
others
from north Mississippi took place and then men of the 2nd Mississippi,
as it became known, elected Falkner as Colonel.
The 2nd Mississippi was sent to Virginia to
join forces of General Joseph E. Johnston's Army of the Shenandoah At
the
first battle of Manassas, Colonel Falkner's conduct was sufficiently
noteworthy
to warrant the following comment from his general, "Col. Wm. C.
Falkner...
is one of the most distinguished volunteer officers now at this seat of
war. He has his regiment in the most perfect drill, and though
exceedingly
strict with his men, is universally popular.."
Before embarking on his military career,
Falkner
had remarried, his second wife being Elizabeth Vance of Pontotoc. Also,
his second son, Henry, was born in 1853; Willie, the Colonel's first
daughter
arrived in 1856. Two other children, Vance, named for his mother, and
Elizabeth
Manassas were added to the family by 1861. Vance died at the age of two
in 1861 and Elizabeth died the same year as an infant.
When news of the children's death reached
the father in Virginia, he wished to be home and his return came about
shortly thereafter.
Col. W. C. Falkner and his men, initially
mustered in for a one year period, returned to Tippah County on
furlough
after the Manassas battle and after having re-enlisted for the duration
of the war. Despite his having been commended for his leadership in
battle,
an election of officers of the 2nd Mississippi held in 1862 resulted in
Falkner's displacement as Colonel by John M. Stone of Iuka, later to be
governor.
Despite this setback to his ambition to be
a general in the Confederate Army, the peripatetic Falkner was to serve
the South in its "lost cause."
In 1862, the Confederate Military hierarchy in Richmond authorized
the formation of "partisan regiments" and this decision afforded
Falkner
an opportunity to perform in the area where his talents bore the most
results:
recruiting. From the able-bodied men still left in Tippah County, named
the "First Mississippi Partisan Rangers." The Partisans were expected
to
wage what in modern parlance is known as guerrilla warfare.
The Colonel must have reasoned that, as leader of a force not strictly
accountable to a host of superior officers, he could enjoy more freedom
of movement and perhaps render some spectacular service which would
bring
to him the coveted prize he still sought - a rank of general in the
Confederate
Army.
Recognition of Falkner's "Rangers" was not
to last long in coming, but from an unexpected source, Union General
Philip
Sheridan. Sheridan found it necessary to use some of his men to pursue
the Partisans as they destroyed his points of provisions and his
communications
lines. Falkner's unit provided the sorely pressed Confederates in north
Mississippi with some relief by harassing Union Army post at Rienzi,
Iuka,
and Ripley. His success was more apparent, however, in his destruction
of the vital rail line between Federally held Memphis and Corinth. And
during this time, when the ordinary man would have been fully occupied
with leading an aggregation such as the Partisan Rangers, Falkner's pen
was not idle. He dispatched numerous letters to friends and
acquaintances
who he thought might help aid his still burning ambition to obtain a
commission
as a general.
This pen waving had an effect, to be sure,
but not the prime one Falkner had in mind. Instead authorities at
Richmond
elevated the Rangers to a position in the regular Confederate forces.
At
the same time, the Partisans were assigned picket duty along the
railroad
in the vicinity of Hernando, where Falkner and his men were attached by
Union forces and soundly defeated.
This debacle ended Col. Falkner's
participation
in Civil War combat because the defeat in 1863 caused his men to be
scattered.
In his own mind, Falkner's setback of his forces were not entirely his
own fault, and resigned his commission about two months later.
A chronological account of Falkner's action
is difficult because he was engaged in so many widely divergent
activities
simultaneously. At any rate, after his setback in 1863, Falkner dropped
from public view for several years.
The late Andrew Brown's book, HISTORY OF
TIPPAH
COUNTY, contains an account of the remainder of Col. Falkner's career
and
from that source mention is made of Falkner's status in 1888: He had
built
up a large law practice, had successfully run, with Richard Thurmond,
the
Federal blockade at Memphis between 1863-1865, owned and operated a
2,000
acre farm near Ripley, played the part of a philanthropist in the
re-establishment
of Ripley's only school worthy of note - Stonewall College, and had
attained
fame as a railroad builder and writer.
Brown's assertion that Falkner was the most
prominent man of Tippah County and one of the leading citizens of the
state,
cannot be seriously questioned.
Falkner's extraordinary talents and almost superhuman efforts spelled
the difference which caused Ripley Railroad to grow and prosper through
a maze of mergers and often mysterious juggling of the road's finances
into the highly successful and innovative Gulf, Mobile, and Ohio
system.
Without Falkner's guiding genius, the original 25 mile long narrow
gauge
line from Ripley to Middleton, Tennessee, could very well have
succumbed
to any one of the several crises which it faced.
Falkner's writings, which date from his
Mexican
War experiences and which took form in poetry, a popular course for all
literary hopefuls of his era, burst beyond the bounds of Tippah County
when his novel, THE WHITE ROSE OF MEMPHIS (the "White Rose" was the
name
of a steamboat on the Mississippi River) was republished in 1953, an
introduction
accompanying this republication said that 160,000 copies of the book
had
been sold between 1881-1909. The revived novel did not match its
earlier
success.
It is obvious that the reprinting of the first Falkner novel was an
attempt by the publishing world to capitalize on the worldwide
recognition
so recently heaped upon the novels published by his great-grandson,
William
Faulkner. The younger writer's fame caused several family members to
follow
his addition of a "u" to the spelling of the family surname.
Genealogists
say that Falkner and Faulkner are variant spellings of the original,
which
was Falconer.
The addition of the "u" to the spelling of
Falkner has caused its share of confusion and it has not been clearly
established
whether the change occurred by accident or design.
Undoubtedly a rich man, as a result of his
success at writing and as president of the solvent rail line, Colonel
W.
C. Falkner undertook an exploration of new horizons by embarking on a
tour
of Europe in 1883, taking along his daughter Effie.
While abroad, the Colonel's pen was again busy and soon detailed
accounts
of his journey began to arrive at the newspaper office in Ripley where
they were dutifully published by his friend Capt. Thomas Spight. In
1884,
the Colonel published in book form the account of his European sojourn
under the title RAPID RAMBLINGS IN EUROPE, the last of his popular
literary
efforts. Perhaps Colonel Falkner was copying the course another
American
writer, Mark Twain, had followed under similar circumstances that
resulted
in Twain's INNOCENTS ABROAD. Both books had similar themes. THE LITTLE
BRICK CHURCH had appeared in print in 1882, prior to his trip to
Europe.
Falkner's first novel, THE WHITE ROSE OF MEMPHIS, proved to be the best
seller of all his books..
Aside from his RAPID RAMBLINGS, another inspiration came to Falkner
as a result of his contact with Europe. He decided to emulate European
architecture and remodel his home into an ostentatious residence in
Ripley.
It may appear unbelievable that Co. Falkner,
so often cited for his many talents applied to varied pursuits, stayed
out of the political arena for so many years. It is known that he did
appear
in the grandstand of politics as a cheerleader for the Whig and
Know-nothing
parties before and after the Civil War, and he finally became a staunch
Democrat, like many Tippah County residents.
In 1889, his supporters prevailed upon Falkner
to run for the state legislature. Falkner feigned disinterest in the
contest
but soon saw that, if elected, he would have another avenue open to
obtain
support for his still expanding railroad venture.
His entry into politics produced a tragic climax for Falkner's colorful
and eventful career.
The final episode, undoubtedly the most dramatic of his life, had its
start many years before his demise when his path crossed that of
another
Tippah citizen of great wealth, R. J. Thurmond. Although lacking
Falkner's
flamboyance and devoid of ambition for public acclaim, Thurmond was an
astute business man and respected citizen of Ripley.
A rift between Thurmond and Falkner, smoldering for a long period,
once erupted in a "cussing match" on the town square, a harbinger of
more
serious trouble ahead. This verbal encounter, records show, resulted in
both men being hailed into court and each fined $7. for their public
display
of strong language. It is also recorded that other prominent men in
Ripley
often attempted to mediate the differences between Thurmond and
Falkner,
but all efforts failed.
Falkner became obsessed with the idea that
Thurmond was out to get him and in late October, 1889, had an elaborate
will drawn, naming trustees to administer his considerable estate upon
his death. Prophetic or not, the executing of the will occurred only 10
days before Falkner was fatally shot by Thurmond on Ripley's courthouse
square. But it must be added here that Falkner won the election easily
and the hand of fate prevented his ever occupying the legislative seat
he won the day of his encounter with Thurmond.
Falkner lived until the following day,
succumbing
to his fatal wound while surrounded by his family and faithful friends.
His funeral was held before what was probably
the largest crowd ever assembled in Tippah county and concluded with
full
Masonic graveside rites. What further glory might have come to old
Colonel
had he been spared his enemy's bullet will forever be a matter of
speculation.
But Col. Falkner's exploits will linger in the minds of the people of
Tippah
county and his admirers elsewhere, as he sleeps beside his statue, the
figure relaxed, yet commanding, the right arm extended forward from the
elbow, the left hand fingers maimed in the Mexican War inserted into a
pocket of the waistcoat spanned by a heavy watch chain. Behind the
figure,
merging into the long coat, is a stack of books. It was that scene in
Ripley
Cemetery William Faulkner thought of as he described Col. John
Sartoris'
statue in his novel, SARTORIS.
Other Falkner Links:
William
Clark Falkner- Mississippi Writers Page - Ole Miss
William
Falkner -A Critical Study - University of Chicago
"Old
Colonel" (1826-1889) William Clark Falkner - Starkville High School
Strangers
to Us All -Lawyers and Poetry - University of West Virginia
Back
to Rapid Ramblings in Ripley
Melissa McCoy-Bell
Tippah County MSGENWEB Coordinator
© 2004, by Melissa McCoy-Bell. All rights reserved.