Clinton Bowen Fisk

When the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands was established under the U.S. War Department by the Congress in 1865, President Abraham Lincoln proposed General Clinton B. Fisk as an appointee. The appointment was not made prior to Lincoln's assassination, but Andrew Johnson as seventeenth president appointed Fisk as senior officer in charge of the bureau in Kentucky and Tennessee. Fisk's commitment to securing civil rights for the emancipated African Americans during Reconstruction resulted in, among other things, Nashville's Fisk University, which he endowed with thirty thousand dollars and which bears his name.

Fisk, born December 8, 1828, in Clapp's Corner, New York, was the son of Benjamin and Lydia Fisk. His youth in Michigan was divided between voracious reading and boating with his father on Lake Michigan. In 1848 he married Geanette Crippins, the daughter of a Missouri business associate.

Fisk's military career began with the Missouri Home Guard, a private army organized to oppose the secession movement during the late 1850s. After America became embroiled in civil war, Fisk joined the U.S. Army on July 26, 1862, and was commissioned a colonel on September 5. After the war and Tennessee's full restoration to the Union in 1866, General Fisk, working through the Freedmen's Bureau (1865-72) and the American Missionary Association, helped establish the first free schools in the South for both white and African American children.

Suggested Reading

Alphonso A. Hopkins, The Life of Clinton Bowen Fisk (1882); Reavis L. Mitchell Jr., Fisk University Since 1866: Thy Loyal Children Make Their Way (1995)

Citation Information

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  • Article Title Clinton Bowen Fisk
  • Author
  • Website Name Tennessee Encyclopedia
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  • Access Date November 21, 2024
  • Publisher Tennessee Historical Society
  • Original Published Date
  • Date of Last Update March 1, 2018