'Joseph Smith Fowler' (
August 31,
1820 –
April 1,
1902) was a
United States Senator from
Tennessee from 1866 to 1871.
Fowler was born in
Steubenville, Ohio. He graduated from Grove Academy in that city and subsequently from Franklin College in New Athens, Ohio in 1843. He taught school in
Shelby County, Kentucky in 1844. He served as a
professor of
mathematics at Franklin College in
Davidson County, Tennessee from 1845 to 1849. He studied law in
Bowling Green, Kentucky and was subsequently admitted to the
bar and practiced in Tennessee until 1861. He also served as president of Howard Female College in
Gallatin, Tennessee from 1856 to 1861.
Fowler was an ardent Unionist. The ''
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress'' states that he was the State Comptroller of Tennessee from 1862 until 1865. The official ''Tennessee Blue Book'' states that the holder of that office during this period was "Joseph S. Foster". It is likely that the ''Biographical Directory'' is the correct source; the
Confederate state government of Tennessee was never very effective and largely disfunctional due to the early loss of much Tennessee territory to Union forces by the Confederates and also due to the fact that neither the Confederacy nor
slavery had ever had much public support in
East Tennessee. Most of the state was under the control of the Union military government of
Abraham Lincoln's appointed
governor,
Andrew Johnson, for most of the duration of the
American Civil War; his government was fairly functional and it is likely that Fowler served this regime as Comptroller and that the ''Blue Book'' records his name erroneously.
In 1866 Tennessee became the first former Confederate state to be readmitted to the Union; the
Tennessee General Assembly elected Fowler to the Senate, where his service began on
July 24,
1866. Fowler became a part of the majority
Republican caucus. In the
40th Congress he served as chairman of the Committee on Engrossed Bills.
During President
Andrew Johnson's impeachment trial, Fowler broke party ranks, along with six other Republican senators, and in a courageous act of political suicide, voted for acquittal. These seven Republican senators were disturbed by how the proceedings had been manipulated in order to give a one-sided presentation of the evidence. Senators
William Pitt Fessenden,
Joseph S. Fowler,
James W. Grimes,
John B. Henderson,
Lyman Trumbull,
Peter G. Van Winkle [1], and
Edmund G. Ross of Kansas, who provided the decisive vote
[2], defied their party and public opinion and voted against impeachment.
He did not seek a subsequent term in the Senate upon the expiry of his term in 1871. He also did not return to Tennessee to live, but remained in
Washington DC, practicing law there until shortly before his death in 1902.