Leroy Pope Walker -
- Born Feb 7, 1817 in Huntsville, Madison, Alabama, USA
- Died August 23, 1884
LeRoy Pope Walker was the first Confederate States Secretary of War and issued the orders
for the firing on Fort Sumter, which began the American Civil War. Resigning within the
year, he served briefly as brigadier general in the Confederate States Army, but saw no combat.
A lawyer by profession, Walker was born in Huntsville, Alabama, the son of John Williams
Walker and Matilda Pope, and a grandson of LeRoy Pope. He married Eliza Dickson Pickett on
July 29, 1850.
In March 1861, the Southern states that had seceded from the Union appointed special
commissioners to travel to those other Southern states that had yet to secede. Walker was
chosen as the Commissioner from Alabama to the Tennessee Secession Convention, where he
publicly read Alabama's Articles of Secession and tried to persuade Tennessee politicians
to vote to do likewise.
Walker was particularly ill-suited to be Secretary of War, as he stated that all of the
blood shed in the Civil War could be wiped up with a pocket handkerchief.
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