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Home North Carolina Wake County City of Raleigh Historical Markers William W. Holden 1818-1892
     

William W. Holden 1818-1892

McDowell Street at Hargett Street, Raleigh, NC, USA
  North Carolina State Historical Marker
 
    North Carolina State
Historical Marker
    Marker Text:
"Editor. Appointed provisional governor, 1865. Elected governor, 1868; impeached and removed, 1871. Home stood here."
     The only Chief Executive in North Carolina history to be impeached and removed from office (and the first in the nation to endure that indignity), William Woods Holden (1818-1892) was a central figure in the state’s Civil War and Reconstruction era. He was born an illegitimate child near Hillsborough and, at age ten, was apprenticed as a printer’s devil to local publisher Dennis Heartt. The proximity to the press and to public issues of the day shaped Holden’s life and career from that point.

     In 1843 Holden gained control of the North Carolina Standard, a Democratic newspaper based in Raleigh. More than any other person, Holden revived the Democratic Party and led it to dominance during the decade of the 1850s. Holden used the Standard to promote a new Conservative Party, which in 1862 nominated Zebulon B. Vance for governor. With his paper spearheading the campaign, Holden led Vance to victory. In 1864 Holden and Governor Vance disagreed on how to conduct the war, however, and faced off as opponents in the election. Most citizens agreed with Vance that continuing the war was preferable to the dishonor of deserting sister states. Holden suffered a humiliating defeat.

     On May 20, 1865, President Andrew Johnson called Holden to Washington and appointed him provisional governor of North Carolina effective May 29. The 1865 convention called for a gubernatorial election on November 9. The Conservatives selected Jonathan Worth, whom Holden had appointed state treasurer, to oppose the provisional governor. Worth won the contest by almost 6,000 votes. Radical Reconstruction provided the perfect venue for William W. Holden to make another bid for governor and he successfully attained his goal in 1868. Holden vowed to destroy the Klan and made some ill-advised decisions capped by the “Kirk-Holden War” that ended his political career. Notified that he had been impeached by the House of Representatives, Holden turned over duties of his office to Lieutenant Governor Tod R. Caldwell on December 20. The trial began on January 30, 1871, and lasted nearly three months. On March 22, the North Carolina Senate found Holden guilty on the most serious charges and ordered him removed from office.

     For a while Holden edited a newspaper in Washington, D.C., then accepted the job of postmaster in Raleigh. A stroke on April 2, 1882, forced his retirement from public service. He died on March 1, 1892, and was buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Raleigh. Holden’s house, at the corner of Hargett and McDowell Streets in Raleigh, was razed in 1925 to make way for the Professional Building now on the site. The location is adjacent to the News and Observer’s offices. Standing two blocks away on Fayetteville Street is the post office building constructed during Holden’s tenure as postmaster.


References:
Michael Hill, ed., The Governors of North Carolina (2007)
William C. Harris, William Woods Holden: Firebrand of North Carolina Politics (1988)
Horace W. Raper, William W. Holden (1985)
Edgar Folk and Bynum Shaw, W. W. Holden (1982)
Horace W. Raper and Thornton W. Mitchell, eds., The Papers of William Woods Holden, Volume I (2000)
William K. Boyd, ed., Memoirs of W. W. Holden (1911)
William S. Powell, ed., Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, III, 169-171—sketch by Horace W. Raper
Samuel A. Ashe, ed., Biographical History of North Carolina, III, 184-206
“The Governor Holden Home,” The State, February 3, 1951
   
Related Themes: C.S.A., Confederate States of America, Confederacy
 
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