Arkansas Encyclopedia of Arkansas History - Encyclopedia Arkapedia

Powell Clayton

Powell Clayton (7 August 1833 – 23 August 1914) was the first carpetbag Governor of the State of Arkansas and Ambassador to Mexico during the administrations of William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt.

In 1868 he was elected the second Reconstruction governor of Arkansas and the first under the Congressional reconstruction plan. He succeeded Isaac Murphy who had lead Arkansas under Abraham Lincoln's more conciliatory policy.

Clayton remained the Republican boss of Arkansas until he was defeated in the election of 1876 by re-enfranchised ex-Confederates. With his absence the carpetbagger government was soon replaced by a redeemer government.

Clayton returned to Arkansas and in 1882 established a home at Eureka Springs, Arkansas where he managed hotels and railroads and worked for development of the area. A memorial to Clayton is still in place in downtown Eureka Springs

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Arkansas' gross domestic product for 2005 was $87 billion. Its per capita household median income (in current dollars) for 2004 was $35,295, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The state's agriculture outputs are poultry and eggs, soybeans, sorghum, cattle, cotton, rice, hogs, and milk. Its industrial outputs are food processing, electric equipment, fabricated metal products, machinery, paper products, bromine, and vanadium.

Several global companies are headquartered in the northwest corner of Arkansas, including Wal-Mart (the world's largest public corporation by revenue in 2007), J.B. Hunt and Tyson Foods. This area of the state has experienced an economic boom since the 1970s as a result.

In recent years, automobile parts manufacturers have opened factories in eastern Arkansas to support auto plants in other states. Additionally, the city of Conway is the site of a school bus factory.

Tourism is also very important to the Arkansas economy; the official state nickname "The Natural State" was originally created (as "Arkansas Is A Natural") for state tourism advertising in the 1970s, and is still regularly used to this day.

Powell Clayton was born in Bethel, Pennsylvania to John and Ann Glover Clayton. His father was an orchard keeper and carpenter and parents had ten children in all, although six died in infancy. He attended a private military academy in Bristol, Pennsylvania and later attended engineering school at Wilmington, Delaware.

Clayton moved to Kansas in 1855 and served as an engineer at Leavenworth, Kansas. On 29 April 1861 he is recorded as having a company of militia at Fort Leavenworth. By May of 1861 he was formally mustered into the Union Army as a Captain of the 1st Kansas Infantry.

In December of 1861, he was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel of the 5th Kansas Cavalry and later to Colonel in March of 1862. He was made a Brigadier General of U.S. Volunteers on 1 August 1864.

During the American Civil War he served primarily in Arkansas and Missouri and fought in several battles in those States. He was assigned as commander of occupation forces in Pine Bluff, Arkansas and successfully defended the city from Confederate attacks.

In 1868 he was elected the second Reconstruction governor of Arkansas and the first under the Congressional reconstruction plan. He succeeded Isaac Murphy who had lead Arkansas under Abraham Lincoln's more conciliatory policy.

Clayton remained the Republican boss of Arkansas until he was defeated in the election of 1876 by re-enfranchised ex-Confederates. With his absence the carpetbagger government was soon replaced by a redeemer government.

Clayton returned to Arkansas and in 1882 established a home at Eureka Springs, Arkansas where he managed hotels and railroads and worked for development of the area. A memorial to Clayton is still in place in downtown Eureka Springs.

Clayton's administration made progress in getting the University of Arkansas on its feet, establishing a system of education, and bringing railroads into the State. However his administration was also accused of corruption, was personally accused of criminal conduct and was the target of numerous attacks on his character. During his term he declared martial law and organized a State Militia and conducted military operations against the Ku Klux Klan.

His brother, John Middleton Clayton was assassinated in 1889 in Plumerville, Arkansas in Conway County while attempting to dispute the outcome of his failed Congressional candidacy to Democrat Clifton R. Breckinridge.

Powell Clayton was appointed as Ambassador to Mexico in 1897 by President William McKinley and served in that position until 1905. In 1912 he moved to Washington, D.C..

Clayton died in Washington and is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

As president of the Eureka Springs Improvement Company (ESIC), Clayton worked to bring the railroad to Eureka Springs, a pivotal event in Eureka's development as one of the premier healing resorts of the Victorian Era. The ESIC also built one of Eureka's most famous landmarks, the Crescent Hotel, and the poem which is written on the fireplace in the Crescent Hotel lobby is attributed to Governor Clayton:

"Although, upon a summer's day,
You'll lightly turn from me away;
When autumn leaves are scattered wide,
You'll often linger by my side;
But when the snow the earth doth cover,
Then you'll be my ardent lover."


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Powell Clayton's Full Biography
Clayton's Poem


since statehood.