Alabama Governor. He attended Airy Mount Academy, graduated from the University of Virginia in 1840, studied law, was admitted the bar in 1841 and began practicing law in Greenville, Alabama. Entering politics, he served in Alabama House of Representatives, (1842-61) and was a member of the Alabama Senate, (1853-56). At the onset of the Civil War, he was a member of the Alabama Secession Convention in 1861, organized the 17th Alabama Infantry, Confederate Army and became Attorney General of the Confederate Government, (1862-63). In 1863, he was elected as a Wing the 18th Governor of Alabama, serving until 1865. Due to the Civil War, his state faced an increasing number of sacrifices but he still supported the Confederate cause. He did not run for reelection and was arrested in Union Springs, Alabama, on May 1, 1865. After being released, he resumed his law practice in Montgomery, served in Alabama House of Representatives, (1880-81) and was president of the Alabama Bar Association, (1889-90).
Alabama Governor. He attended Airy Mount Academy, graduated from the University of Virginia in 1840, studied law, was admitted the bar in 1841 and began practicing law in Greenville, Alabama. Entering politics, he served in Alabama House of Representatives, (1842-61) and was a member of the Alabama Senate, (1853-56). At the onset of the Civil War, he was a member of the Alabama Secession Convention in 1861, organized the 17th Alabama Infantry, Confederate Army and became Attorney General of the Confederate Government, (1862-63). In 1863, he was elected as a Wing the 18th Governor of Alabama, serving until 1865. Due to the Civil War, his state faced an increasing number of sacrifices but he still supported the Confederate cause. He did not run for reelection and was arrested in Union Springs, Alabama, on May 1, 1865. After being released, he resumed his law practice in Montgomery, served in Alabama House of Representatives, (1880-81) and was president of the Alabama Bar Association, (1889-90).
Bio by: John "J-Cat" Griffith
Family Members
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Wyley Timothy Watts
1820–1855
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John Hughes Watts
1821–1850
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Elizabeth Sarah Watts Womack
1826–1912
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Franata Ann Watts Steen
1828–1860
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Prudence Hill Watts Steen
1830–1850
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Julia Franklin Watts Carter
1832–1852
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Amanda Watts Murphey
1834–1906
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Augustus Charles Watts
1836–1858
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Thaddeus Clements Watts
1839–1881
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Theodore Watts
1841–1858
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Margaret Anne Watts
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Florence Eleanor Watts Troy
1842–1922
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Katherine Watts Collins
1844–1913
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John Wade Watts
1846–1913
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Eliza Allen Watts
1848–1862
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Thomas Hill Watts
1853–1905
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Butler Watts
1855–1856
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Alice Watts Troy
1857–1918
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William Hunter Watts
1860–1875
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Grace Montgomery Watts
1863–1866
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Minnie Garrett Watts
1864–1929
Flowers
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See more Watts memorials in:
Records on Ancestry
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Thomas Hill Watts
Geneanet Community Trees Index
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Thomas Hill Watts
Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970
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Thomas Hill Watts
1880 United States Federal Census
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Thomas Hill Watts
1870 United States Federal Census
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Thomas Hill Watts
Alabama, U.S., Marriages, Deaths, Wills, Court, and Other Records, 1784-1920
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