Gubernatorial Profile
Governor Henry Horatio Wells
Henry Horatio Wells served as Governor of Virginia.
Profile Timeline
- Entered office.
- Left office.
- 1868 - 1869 Time in office.
HENRY HORATIO WELLS was born in Rochester, New York. Educated in Michigan, he studied law and served as a member of the Michigan House of Representatives from 1854 to 1856. He was appointed Lieutenant Colonel of the Twenty-sixth Michigan Infantry in 1862. When his unit was ordered to Virginia, Wells was detached as provost marshal of Alexandria and then provost marshal general of the defense south of the Potomac River. After Lincoln’s assassination, Wells played a significant role in the manhunt for John Wilkes Booth and was brevetted a brigadier general as a reward for his services. He settled in Richmond, Virginia in 1865 and began a law practice. Appointed provisional governor of Virginia when the Civil War ended, his administration was marked by efforts toward passage of a constitution under which in its initial form blacks would have been given the right to vote while former Confederate soldiers would have been disenfranchised. Through President Ulysses S. Grant’s intervention, disenfranchisement of former Confederate soldiers was prevented, and Wells was defeated for a full gubernatorial term to begin in 1870. He was then appointed U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, serving in that capacity until 1872, when he returned to his law practice. He later moved to Washington, D.C. and served as U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. He retired from public office in 1880 and resumed the practice of law. In 1900, he died in Palmyra, New York.
