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Braxton Bragg Comer

B. B. Comer
Braxton Bragg Comer.jpg
33rd Governor of Alabama
In office
January 14, 1907 – January 17, 1911
Lieutenant Henry B. Gray
Preceded by William D. Jelks
Succeeded by Emmet O'Neal
United States Senator
from Alabama
In office
March 5, 1920 – November 2, 1920
Appointed by Thomas Kilby
Preceded by John H. Bankhead
Succeeded by J. Thomas Heflin
Personal details
Born November 7, 1848
Barbour County, Alabama
Died August 15, 1927 (aged 78)
Birmingham, Alabama
Political party Democratic
Spouse(s) Eva Jane Comer
Children Sally Bailey Comer
John Fletcher Comer
James McDonald Comer
Eva Mignon Comer
Catherine Comer
Braxton Bevelle Comer
Eva Comer
Braxton Bragg Comer, Jr.
Hugh M. Comer
Alma mater University of Alabama
University of Georgia
Emory and Henry College

Braxton Bragg Comer (November 7, 1848 – August 15, 1927) was a planter, businessman, slave owner, and an American Democratic politician who was the 33rd Governor of Alabama from 1907 to 1911, and a United States Senator in 1920. As governor, he achieved railroad reform, lowering rates for businesses in Alabama to make them more competitive with other states. He increased funding for the public school system, resulting in more rural schools and high schools in each county for white students, and eventually a rise in the state's literacy rate.

In addition to interests in the Comer family's 30,000-acre (120 km2) plantation, devoted to corn and cotton production, he had an interest in the Comer mines near Birmingham known as the Eureka Mines. In 1897 he invested $10,000 with the Trainer family, who intended to develop textile mills in the state, and he was appointed president of Avondale Mills, which he developed in Birmingham, serving in that role until his death in 1927.

Comer was born in 1848 at old Spring Hill, Barbour County, Alabama, the fourth son of John Fletcher and Catherine (Drewry) Comer. As planters, Comer's parents had built their wealth based on slave labor for their cotton plantation. B.B. Comer began his education at the age of ten under the tutelage of E.N. Brown.

In 1864 Comer went to the University of Alabama, but in April 1865 was forced to leave when General John T. Croxton's troops burned the university. He enrolled at the University of Georgia in Athens, where he joined the Phi Kappa Literary Society. He transferred to Emory and Henry College in Virginia, where he graduated in 1869 with AB and AM degrees.


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