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  1. Blair was born at Abingdon, Virginia to a Scottish-American named James Blair, a lawyer who became an Attorney General of Kentucky, and Elizabeth Smith. Raised in Frankfort, Kentucky and referred to as "Preston" by the family members, he graduated from Transylvania University with honors in 1811.

  2. Francis Preston Blair Jr. (February 19, 1821 – July 8, 1875) was a United States Senator, a United States Congressman and a Union Major General during the Civil War. He represented Missouri in both the House of Representatives and the Senate, and was active in preventing the State of Missouri from being absorbed into the Confederacy at the ...

  3. Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (born Feb. 19, 1821, Lexington, Ky., U.S.—died July 9, 1875, St. Louis, Mo.) was a Missouri politician of the antebellum, Civil War, and Reconstruction eras who opposed slavery and secession but later came out against Radical Reconstruction and black suffrage.

  4. Francis P. Blair (born April 12, 1791, Abingdon, Va., U.S.—died Oct. 18, 1876, Silver Spring, Md.) was a journalist and longtime Democratic politician who helped form the Republican Party in the 1850s in an effort to stem the expansion of slavery.

  5. May 11, 2018 · Francis Preston Blair. The American journalist and politician Francis Preston Blair (1791-1876) was a close adviser of President Andrew Jackson. Blair joined the antislavery movement and was active in the newly created Republican party throughout the Civil War.

  6. Mar 16, 2024 · Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (more commonly known as Frank Blair) was born on February 19, 1821, in Lexington, Kentucky. He was the youngest child of Francis Preston and Eliza Gist Blair. His older brother, Montgomery Blair, served as Postmaster General of the United States during the American Civil War.

  7. Mar 16, 2024 · Francis Preston Blair, Jr. is more commonly known as Frank Blair. Frank Blair was the youngest child of Francis Preston and Eliza Gist Blair. Frank Blair’s older brother, Montgomery Blair, served as Postmaster General of the United States during the American Civil War.

  8. The collection principally documents the careers of patriarch Francis Preston Blair (1791-1876), journalist and presidential advisor, and his sons Francis Preston Blair (1821-1875), soldier and politician, generally identified as Frank P. Blair, and Montgomery Blair (1813-1883), lawyer and cabinet officer in the Lincoln administration.

  9. Francis Preston Blair, Junior (1821-75) was a member of prominent political family with ties to the border states of Missouri and Maryland but which opposed slavery and stood with Lincoln during the Civil War.

  10. Frank Blair Jr. died in July 1875 and is buried at Bellefontaine Cemetery. In-Depth. As the Civil War began to loom, Frank Blair Jr. became the center of the emerging Republican Party in Missouri. Although not opposed to slavery where it existed, he saw its expansion as a hindrance to economic growth.