Daniel Phillips Upham

Daniel Phillips Upham (more commonly known as D.P. Upham; December 30, 1832 – November 18, 1882) was an American politician, businessman, plantation owner, and Arkansas State Militia commander following the U.S. Civil War. He is best known for his effective and brutal acts as the leader of a successful militia campaign in 1868-1869 against Ku Klux Klan chapters in the state.[1] Upham organized a widespread retaliation after the Klan attempted to assassinate him on October 2, 1868. Its members were responsible for numerous attacks against Republican officeholders and freedmen. Later that year, Upham was designated a brigadier general and commanded a force that eventually numbered over 1,000 men.[2]

Early life

Upham was born on December 30, 1832 in Dudley, Massachusetts to Josiah Upham and Clarrissa Phillips. She was a descendant of Rev. George Phillips who settled Watertown, Massachusetts in 1630.[3] Clarissa died about a week after his birth. Josiah secondly married Betsy Larned in 1836, and the couple had four more sons. Upham received a public education in Dudley.

At the age of 27, he married Elizabeth K. Nash on February 15, 1860. The couple later adopted a daughter named Isabel.

Civil War

In 1863, Upham was either drafted or he enlisted in the Union Army. He left the army in 1865 at the end of the war and opened a building material business in New York City. However, this business quickly failed, leaving him in debt. Upham reached out to his former commanding officer and former business partner Brigadier General Alexander Shaler in July 1865. Shaler gave Upham the permits needed to pay off his debts. After generating finding profits from two saloons and two steamboats, Upham was able to pay off his debts by 1866.

Reconstruction

At the end of the Civil War, Upham traveled to Cotton Ridge, Arkansas to seek his fortune. He purchased and opening a cotton plantation in Augusta, which quickly thrived. His success, however, fueled resentment by the ex-Confederate populace, who considered him a Northern carpetbagger thriving off the South's defeat and impoverishment. As Upham's wealth grew, he became a leading Radical Republican. In 1867 he was elected to a seat in the Arkansas House of Representatives based on the votes of freedmen and white Unionists.

He became one of Republican Governor Powell Clayton's most powerful allies. Together, Upham and Clayton pushed to ratify the 14th Amendment during the 1868 elections. The Arkansas Ku Klux Klan gave a violent response, killing 12 people in 3 months, including free blacks, Republicans, and a Freedmen's Bureau agent. The amendment was ratified, but the violence prompted Governor Clayton to form state and local militias to combat the insurgents.

Militia war

Governor Clayton appointed Upham as the commander of the local Woodruff County militia, which quickly made him a marked man. On October 2, 1868, after numerous threats and reported Klan surveillance of his home, Upham and Woodruff County registrar F.A. McLure were ambushed and injured by insurgents under the command of former Confederate Colonel A.C. Pickett.

In early November 1868, Governor Clayton cancelled all elections and declared martial law, splitting the state into four military districts. Upham was put in charge of the Northeastern district, located within the Arkansas Delta. Its large African-American population was the target of frequent Klan attacks and intimidation. Upham gave his men a very free hand in subduing the Klan, and the militia's bloody and brutal tactics killed many Klansmen.

We will wail Hell out of the last one of them. Never allow one of them to return and live here. There is no other way. Nothing but good, healthy, square, honest killing would ever do them any good.

D.P. Upham

Enraged by his tactics, a force of about 30 Klansmen rode to Upham's hometown of Augusta and attempted to take over the town. On their way, they pillaged several plantations, including Upham's. They mercilessly beat the black workers, killing one of them. Upham and 100 militiamen arrived in time to prevent the Klan from taking the town. However, after learning that 300-400 Klan reinforcements were on their way, Upham tore through Augusta, beating and arresting suspected members. Four suspects died; they were reported killed while attempting to escape, but may have been summarily executed by Upham's forces. In response, 500 Klansmen under Colonel Pickett rode to Upham's plantation, intending to burn it to the ground. Upham was ready and waiting there with hundreds of well-trained, well-equipped militiamen. A fierce battle erupted on Upham's property, which ended in a crushing and demoralizing defeat for the Klan. After several more skirmishes, Upham was credited with suppressing the Klan throughout the entire state of Arkansas.

After the Militia War

Upham and his family left Woodruff County and settled in the city of Little Rock, Arkansas in 1869. He invested in real estate and continued to serve in the State Militia. In October 1870, he was appointed brigadier general in command of the Seventh District in central Arkansas.

He also served in a series of battles with Sheriff E.W. Dodson in Pope County, Arkansas in 1872, deploying the same brutal tactics used in the Militia War. In May 1873, Republican governor Elisha Baxter dismissed him from the Arkansas State Militia, along with other men with ties to Powell Clayton, in an attempt to win over ex-Confederates. After being voted out of office, Upham was tried in 1875 for the murder of the four suspected Klansmen in 1868 during the Militia War. Upham was acquitted, but was treated harshly by the now unrestrained ex-Confederate populace.

In July 1876, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Upham as U.S. Marshal for the Western District Court in Fort Smith. He served there with honor and distinction, winning massive public support despite early opposition. His Marshal's career ended when a Republican senator plotted for him to be removed in 1880. Upham's attempts to stay in office were thwarted by his former friend and ally, Powell Clayton.

Death

In November 1882, Upham visited family in Massachusetts. He died of tuberculosis at his father's house in Dudley, on November 18, 1882. His body was returned to Little Rock, and was buried in the city's Oakland Cemetery. His wife and daughter were later interred next to him.

Legacy

In the History Channel TV documentary Aftershock: Beyond the Civil War, Upham is featured prominently, and is portrayed by Brian Danner.

References

  1. "Daniel Phillips Upham (1832–1882)". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  2. Williams, Nancy A. (2000). Arkansas Biography: A Collection of Notable Lives. University of Arkansas Press. p. 298.
  3. Phillips genealogies; including the family of George Phillips, first minister of Watertown, Mass., also the families of Ebenezer Phillips, of Southboro, Mass., Thomas Phillips, of Duxbury, Mass., Thomas Phillips, of Marshfield, Mass., John Phillips, of Easton, Mass., James Phillips, of Ipswich, Mass., with brief genealogies of Walter Phillips, of Damariscotta, Me., Andrew Phillips, of Kittery, ME, Michael, Richard, Jeremy and Jeremiah Phillips, of Rhode Island; and fragmentary records, of early American families of this name. Auburn, MA: 1885
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