Early life and career Sneed was born in rural
Davidson County, Tennessee on August 27, 1812. After completing preparatory studies, he moved with his father's family to
Rutherford County. He studied law, was admitted to the
bar in 1834, and commenced practice in Murfreesboro. After his senate term, he moved briefly to
Greeneville, where he formed a law partnership with Robert J. McKinney. By the end of 1845, Sneed had relocated to Knoxville to practice law. He formed a law partnership with powerful attorney
Oliver Perry Temple (1820–1907), In 1856, he purchased the Lamar House Hotel from
William Montgomery Churchwell, who had renovated and expanded it in the early 1850s. Sneed served in the United States House of Representatives from March 4, 1855 to March 3, 1857. Originally a
Whig, By the end of the decade, Sneed had aligned himself with the
Democratic Party.
Civil War Sneed initially opposed the idea of secession, but by the late 1850s, his sentiments had shifted. This brought him into conflict with his long-time friend,
William "Parson" Brownlow, radical publisher of the pro-Union
Knoxville Whig. On February 2, 1861, Sneed published a circular in the
Whig arguing that secession was already a fact, and that East Tennesseans should avoid bloody conflict against fellow Southerners. Realizing that mountainous East Tennessee would not be sympathetic to complaints of Southern planters, Sneed went to great lengths to show how the abolition of slavery would harm poor Southern whites, arguing that emancipation would lead to higher taxes and greater competition for manual labor jobs. Sneed remained in Knoxville through the first half of the war. On June 20, 1863, he helped thwart an attempted raid of the city by General
William P. Sanders. When Union forces occupied Knoxville later that year, however, Sneed was forced to flee to
Bristol, and remained in exile until the end of the war. Burnside's successor as commander of Knoxville's Union forces, Joseph Foster, used Sneed's house at the corner of Cumberland Avenue and Market Street as his headquarters. In early 1864, Brownlow, who was initially cordial toward Sneed on account of their pre-war friendship, had turned outright hostile. Sneed's name was among those enumerated by Brownlow as "Imps of Hell" who deserved to "die the deaths of traitors." Brownlow also filed a lawsuit against Sneed, leading to the seizure and auctioning off of the Lamar House Hotel. In 1865, when it was rumored Sneed was going to take the Oath of Allegiance and return to Knoxville, Brownlow's son and successor as
Whig editor, John Bell Brownlow, called on Union soldiers to assassinate Sneed.
Later life Sneed returned to Knoxville in 1867. He resumed the practice of law, and managed to recover some of his property, including the Lamar House Hotel. He died suddenly on September 18, 1869, and was
interred in
Old Gray Cemetery. His children continued to operate the Lamar House until the 1890s. In the
Standard History of Knoxville, edited by Brownlow protégé
William Rule, Sneed was described as "one of the most painstaking, laborious and able lawyers of his time." ==References==