Finis H. Little was a state legislator in Mississippi. A Republican, he served during the Reconstruction era.[1] He served with F. M. Abbott from the 22nd District.[2] He served as president pro tem of the state senate and chaired its finance committee.[3][4]

He served as an officer with a unit of the Union Army from Kentucky during the American Civil War.[5][6]

According to one account, he was part of a planned march of African American Republicans that was faced down by armed white supremacists allied with the Democratic Party.[7] In 1875 he wrote seeking protection for Republican voters in areas where they were a great majority, expressing his expectation of intimidation and Democratic Party control over polling.[8] In 1875 he also conveyed a message from the Republican Caucus of Mississippi to President Ulysses Grant seeking a change in the federal official overseeing U.S. Marshals in the area.[9] He described how whites in Aberdeen, Mississippi in Monroe County welcomed Klansmen home as heroes and lawyers offered them their services in defense against federal prosecution.[10]

See also

References

  1. "Members Elected to the Legislature". The Clarion-Ledger. Jackson, Mississippi. 1869-12-09. p. 2. Retrieved 2022-11-27.
  2. "Members elect to the Legislature". Mississippi Pilot. 1870-02-19. p. 4. Retrieved 2022-11-27.
  3. Journal of the Senate of the State of Mississippi. Jackson, Mississippi: Kimball, Raymond & Co. 1874. p. 192.
  4. Watson, Michael (2021). Mississippi Official & Statistical Register – Blue Book 2020 - 2024 (PDF). Jackson, Mississippi: Mississippi Secretary of State. p. 553.
  5. "Legislative Document No. 13 – Adjutant General's Report". Kentucky Public Documents. Frankfort, Kentucky: Kentucky General Assembly. 1862.
  6. Battle, J. H.; Perrin, William Henry; Kniffin, G. C. (1885). Kentucky: A History of the State, Embracing a Concise Account of the Origin and Development of the Virginia Colony; Its Expansion Westward, and the Settlement of the Frontier Beyond the Alleghanies; the Erection of Kentucky as an Independent State, and Its Subsequent Development. F. A. Battey Publishing Company. p. 623.
  7. Browne, F. Z. (1913). "Reconstruction in Oktibbeha County". Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society. 13: 288 via Google Books.
  8. Reports of Committees of the Senate of the United States for the First Session of the Forty-Fourth Congress, 1875–'76. Washington: Government Printing Office. 1876. pp. 54–55.
  9. Grant, Ulysses Simpson (2003). The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant: 1874. SIU Press. p. 309. ISBN 978-0-8093-2498-9.
  10. Hargrove, David M. (2019-01-17). Mississippi's Federal Courts: A History. Univ. Press of Mississippi. p. 100. ISBN 978-1-4968-1951-2.
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