The Confederate surrender in 1865 was followed by
Reconstruction of state governments. Secessionist officials and military officers were forbidden to hold public office in the United States unless pardoned. Benjamin Humphreys was unpardoned when he announced his candidacy for Mississippi governor as a
Democrat.
President Andrew Johnson did not want him elected and refused to pardon him. Humphreys persisted in his candidacy, won
the election on October 2, 1865, and was inaugurated and sworn in as Governor on October 16. On October 26, provisional Governor
William L. Sharkey received from President Johnson a pardon for Humphreys. Humphreys
won re-election to a second term in 1868. However,
Republicans in Congress took control of Reconstruction, and on June 15, he was physically removed from office by soldiers of the
U.S. Army. As a Democratic Governor of the State of Mississippi, he professed the ideology of
White supremacy. In his own words: After he retired from politics, Humphreys entered a career in insurance in
Jackson, Mississippi. He continued there until his retirement in 1877, when he moved to his plantation in
Leflore County, Mississippi, where he died in 1882. He is buried in Wintergreen Cemetery,
Port Gibson, Mississippi.
Humphreys County, Mississippi, is named after him. His son,
Benjamin G. Humphreys II, was a
United States representative from Mississippi. ==See also==