tence was remitted by President Johnson. This prosecution led to counter-suits by him against the government in the New York district.
LAMAR, José (lah-mar'), South American sol-
dier, b. in Guayaquil, Ecuador, in 1778 ; d. in San
Jose de Costa Rica in 1830. When young he went
to Madrid, and, entering the Spanish army as a
cadet, fought in the war against Prance in 1794.
At the beginning of the war of independence in
Spain he was a lieutenant-colonel, and was severely
wounded at the defence of the fort San Jose de
Zaragoza. After recovering he commanded 4,000
men at Valencia, and on 9 Jan., 1813, was taken
prisoner and sent to Dijon, but escaped and re-
turned to Spain in June, 1814. Soon afterward
Ferdinand VII. appointed him a general and sent
him in 1815 to Peru, where he joined the Independ-
ents. He assisted in all the campaigns and took
part in the final victory of Ayacucho. In 1827 he
was appointed grand marshal of Peru, took posses-
sion of the presidency, and in 1828 declared war
against Colombia. Being defeated in Tarqui, 27
Feb., 1829, he was deposed on 3 June of the same
year by the vice-president, Gutierrez de la Fuente,
and his army scattered by Gen. Agustin Gamarra,
who exiled him. Lamar arrived at Punta Arenas,
24 June, 1829, and then went to San Jose de Costa
Rica, where he died. His remains were, by order
of congress, transported to Lima in 1845.
LAMAR, Lucius (}n i nl us Cincinnatus, jurist,
b. near Eatonton, Ga., 15 July, 1797; d. in Mil-
ledgeville, Ga., 4 July, 1834. He was of Huguenot
descent. An eccentric brother of his mother
claimed the naming of her children, and called
them after his favorite historical heroes. Lucius
studied law at Milledgeville and in the law-school
at Litchfield, Conn., was admitted to the Georgia
bar in 1819, practising in Milledgeville. He revised
Augustine S. Clayton's "Georgia Justice" about
1819, and was commissioned by the legislature to
compile " The Laws of Georgia from 1810 to 1819 "
(Augusta, 1821). In 1830 he was elected to succeed
Thomas W. Cobb as judge of the superior court.
He was esteemed throughout the state as a learned
jurist, an eloquent speaker, and a man of fine per-
sonal qualities. A year or two before his death he
had a severe attack of dyspepsia, with high cere-
bral fever, from which he never entirely recov-
ered, and in a moment of delirium he died by
his own hand. — His son, Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus, statesman, b. in Putnam county, Ga.,
1 Sept., 1825, was
taken after his fa-
ther's death to Ox-
ford, Miss., where
he received part of
his education. He
was graduated at
Emory college, Ga.,
in 1845, studied
law in Macon, Ga.,
and was admitted
to the bar in 1847.
In 1849 he returned
to Oxford, Miss.,
and held the place
of adjunct profes-
sor of mathematics
in the University
of Mississippi for a
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year, when he resigned, and resumed the practice of the law in Covington, Ga. He was elected to the legislature in 1853, and in 1854 again returned to Mississippi and settled on his plantation in Lafayette. Lamar was shortly afterward elected to congress as a Democrat, and served from 1857 till 1860, when he resigned to take a seat in the Secession convention of his state. He then entered the Confederate army as lieutenant-colonel of the 19th Mississippi regi- ment, of which he afterward became colonel. Ho shared in many of the engagements of the Army of Northern Virginia, but was compelled to leave active service on account of his health, and was sent as commissioner to Russia ; but when he reached Europe, in 1863, circumstances had changed, and a successful mission was no longer possible. After the close of the war Col. Lamar returned to Mis- sissippi. He was elected professor of political economy and social science in the University of Mississippi in 1866, and in 1867 was transferred to the chair of law, but afterward returned again to the bar. He was elected again to congress in 1872, when for the first time in many years a Democratic house of representatives assembled, and he was selected to preside over the Democratic caucus, where he made a noteworthy address, outlining the policy of his party. He was re-elected in 1874, and then chosen to the U. S. senate, taking his seat, 5 March, 1877. In both the house and senate Col. Lamar spoke rarely, and not often at great length, but when he did it was usually on critical occasions, and with much power and effectiveness. He has insisted that, as integral members of the Federal Union, the southern states have equal rights with the other states, and hence that they were bound both by duty and interest to look to the general welfare, and support the honor and credit of a common country. He was also a zeal- ous friend of public improvements, especially the Mississippi river improvement and the Texas Pa- cific railroad. He has great independence of thought and action, and at one time, when he was instructed by the legislature of his state to vote on the currency question against his convictions, he refused to obey, appealed to the people, and was sustained. On 5 March, 1885, Mr. Lamar became secretary of the interior in President Cleveland's cabinet. His course since has been consistent with his previous career. — The elder Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus's brother, Mirabeau Buonaparte, president of Texas, b. in Louisville, Ga., 16 Aug., 1798; d. in Richmond, Tex., 19 Dec, 1859, was engaged in agricultural and mercantile pursuits until 1828, when he established the Columbus "Independent," a state-rights journal, and engaged in politics. His second wife was a daughter of the Rev. John N. Maffitt (q. v.). In 1835 he emigrated to Texas, and in the movement for independence was an active member of the revolutionary party. At San Jacinto he commanded a company of horse, leading a charge that broko the Mexican line, and decided the issue of the combat. He was commissioned as major-general, appointed attorney-general in the cabinet of Gov. Henry Smith, afterward made secretary of war, and in 1836 elected the first vice-president of the republic. In 1838 he was chosen president, which office he held till 1841. During his term of office the independence of Texas was recognized by the principal powers of Europe. At the beginning of hostilities between the United States and Mexico in 1846 he joined Gen. Zachary Taylor's army at Matamoras, took an active part in the battle of Monterey, and was appointed division-inspector, with the rank of lieutenant-colonel. In October, 1846, he took the command of an independent company of Texan rangers, and stationed himself at Laredo, where he was for two years engaged in checking the inroads of the Comanches.