Andrew Jackson Faulk | |
---|---|
3rd Governor of Dakota Territory | |
In office 3 September 1866 – 10 May 1869 |
|
Preceded by | Newton Edmunds |
Succeeded by | John A. Burbank |
Personal details | |
Born |
Milford, Pike County, Pennsylvania |
November 26, 1814
Died | September 5, 1898 Yankton, South Dakota |
(aged 83)
Political party |
Democratic (before 1856) Republican (after 1856) |
Andrew Jackson Faulk (November 26, 1814 – September 5, 1898) was an American politician. He served as the third Governor of Dakota Territory.
Faulk was born at Milford, Pike County, Pennsylvania, the son of John Faulk and his wife Margaret Heiner, a descendant of General Daniel Brodhead IV. Faulk moved with his family to Kittanning, Pennsylvania, where he was educated. He learned the printing trade and later edited the "Armstrong County Democrat." He studied law and became involved with the Democratic party. Faulk served as county treasurer and then joined the Pennsylvania militia. Because of the slave issue, Faulk left the Democratic party to support John C. Frémont in 1856 and Abraham Lincoln in 1860.
Faulk was appointed chief clerk at the Yankton Agency in 1861 and worked for Dr. Walter A. Burleigh. After the Santee uprising in 1862, he and his daughters returned to Pennsylvania. Dakota Territory Governor, Newton Edmunds assisted the investigation by a congressional committee of Walter Burleigh's corrupt behavior on the Yankton Reservation from 1861 to 1864; and, Burleigh responded by presenting charges against Governor Edmunds to President Andrew Johnson. Burleigh recommended that Edmunds be replaced by Andrew J. Faulk. In August 1866, President Johnson dismissed Newton Edmunds and appointed Faulk as Governor of Dakota Territory. After arriving at Yankton, Dakota Territory on September 3, 1866, Faulk relieved Edmunds of his duties and served as the interim Governor until officially assuming the office on March 16, 1867.
Because of reports of pine timber and mineral wealth in the Black Hills, Faulk wanted to exclude that area from any future Indian reservation and to open it to white settlement. General William T. Sherman said that whites had no right to enter and occupy the Black Hills; since, the Indians had not ceded the area. In 1868, a group of entrepreneurs planned to invade the Black Hills without military protection. Officially, Governor Faulk said that he did not sanction this invasion; while, his rhetoric actually encouraged it. Because of his efforts to open the Black Hills to white settlement, Faulk was popular with entrepreneurs and adventurers in Dakota Territory.