General Douglas Hancock Cooper was born November 1, 1815 in Amite County, Mississippi. His father wa

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Brev. Brig. Gen'l
Honored Fallen Comrade
Joined
Dec 3, 2011
Location
Laurinburg NC
Douglas Hancock Cooper was born November 1, 1815 in Amite County, Mississippi. His father was both a physician and a Baptist minister, and Cooper was encouraged to pursue a higher education. He attended the University of Virginia from 1832 to 1834, along with other future Confederate generals Lafayette McLaws and John B. Magruder. Cooper did not find studying to his liking, however, and he returned to Mississippi to take up farming.
By 1844 Cooper was married and the father of seven children. He was also involved in politics, serving in the Mississippi state legislature. In 1846, with the start of the Mexican-American War, Cooper raised a regiment of volunteers, the 1st Mississippi Rifles, and served as their captain. During the war he was cited for bravery and gallantry.
In 1853, Secretary of War Jefferson Davis, who had served with Cooper in the war, used his influence with President Franklin Pierce to have Cooper appointed as the Federal agent to the Choctaw tribe. Cooper worked well with the Native Americans and was able to have them relocated to Indian Territory without any conflict. His relations with local tribes were so amicable, that in 1856 he was also appointed the agent to the Chickasaw tribe, who officially adopted him as a member.
When the Civil War began in 1861, Confederate Secretary of War Leroy Pope Walker authorized Cooper to protect the local tribes from "Northern aggression." Cooper raised and commanded the 1st Choctaw and Chickasaw Mounted Rifles, which took part in the pursuit of the Creek Indian tribe, which had Union loyalties, to Kansas
http://www.civilwar.org/education/history/biographies/douglas-hancock-cooper-1.html
 
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