Alexandre Etienne DeClouet
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Alexandre Etienne de Clouet (June 9, 1812 – June 26, 1890), also known as Alexandre Etienne de Clouet, Sr., was an American politician and sugar planter who was active in Louisiana politics both before and after the Civil War. During Reconstruction, he violently opposed
Black suffrage Black suffrage refers to black people's right to vote and has long been an issue in countries established under conditions of black minorities. United States Suffrage in the United States has had many advances and setbacks. Prior to the Civil ...
, becoming a leader of the violent White League that attacked freedmen who attempted to vote.


Biography

Alexandre Etienne de Clouet — often rendered "DeClouet" in contemporary documents — was born on June 9, 1812, in
St. Martin Parish, Louisiana St. Martin Parish (french: Paroisse de Saint-Martin) is a parish located in the U.S. state of Louisiana, founded in 1811. Its parish seat is St. Martinville, and the largest city is Breaux Bridge. At the 2010 U.S. census, the population was 52 ...
. Before the Civil War, he was a Whig, serving as the party's candidate for governor in 1849. He also served in both houses of the Louisiana legislature. He was one of the state's largest slaveholders, enslaving 226 people in 1860. In 1860, he was elected by St. Martin Parish to the state's secession convention as a strong advocate for leaving the union. Later, he served as a deputy to the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States from 1861 to 1862 and was a signer of the
Constitution of the Confederate States The Constitution of the Confederate States was the supreme law of the Confederate States of America. It was adopted on March 11, 1861, and was in effect from February 22, 1862, to the conclusion of the American Civil War (May 1865). The Confede ...
. After the Confederacy's defeat, de Clouet worked to take away the rights, most prominently suffrage, granted to freed slaves during Reconstruction. In 1874, he became one of the first leaders of the White League, a violent paramilitary group formed to prevent freedmen from voting, including through an insurrection that temporarily overthrew the state's governor at the
Battle of Liberty Place The Battle of Liberty Place, or Battle of Canal Street, was an attempted insurrection and coup d'etat by the Crescent City White League against the Reconstruction Era Louisiana Republican state government on September 14, 1874, in New Orleans ...
. De Clouet described the league's goal as "consolidating the white race in another effort to restore our state to its rightful rulers" and taking power away from the "unscrupulous adventurers, knaves, and office-seekers" that influenced the "blind and ignorant negro voters." In August 1874, he was voted president of the "White People's Convention," a White League effort to nominate a whites-only ticket of candidates outside the Democratic Party. That same month, de Clouet led an armed mob of 200 to the St. Martin Parish tax collector's office, accusing him without evidence of favoring black voters in the collection of the poll tax. The mob, grown to 1,000 people, later drove the tax collector out of the parish. By October, the state of mob rule in St. Martin led the federal government to send armed forces into the parish, arresting de Clouet and several other leaders of what one newspaper called "the DeClouet rebellion." Witnesses testified to a Congressional committee that de Clouet's White Leaguers had run "many colored men...into the swamp" and lynched at least one black man in the lead-up to the November election: "White Republicans did not dare to go out unless with a soldier; no colored man could have registered or voted had not troops been there; a commissioner could not obtain a posse to assist him."


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Alexandre Etienne de Clouet
at The Political Graveyard
De Clouet Family Papers
at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette {{DEFAULTSORT:Clouet, Alexandre Etienne du 1812 births 1890 deaths 19th-century American legislators Burials in Louisiana Deputies and delegates to the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States Louisiana state senators Members of the Louisiana House of Representatives People from St. Martin Parish, Louisiana People of Louisiana in the American Civil War Signers of the Confederate States Constitution Signers of the Provisional Constitution of the Confederate States American slave owners White League 19th-century Louisiana politicians