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[[Category:Furniture makers|Manship, Charles H.]]
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[[Category:People of Mississippi in the American Civil War|Manship, Charles H.]]
[[Category:People of Mississippi in the American Civil War|Manship, Charles H.]]
[[Category:Mayors of Jackson, Mississippi|Manship, Charles]]

Revision as of 02:22, 30 April 2007

Charles Henry Manship (July 31, 1812June 21, 1895) was a mayor of Jackson, Mississippi, during the American Civil War. He was also a chairmaker and ornamental painter.

Manship was born in Talbot County, Maryland. When his father died, the family moved to Baltimore, where Manship learned the trade of ornamental chair painting and opened his own shop. In 1836, he moved to Jackson, at the time a relatively new town with many public construction projects underway. In 1836, he married Adeline Daley. The couple had fifteen children, five of whom died in infancy.

For his large family, Manship built a Gothic Revival home in 1857. The house was built at 412 East Fortification Street, a location which, at that time, was on the very outskirts of Jackson. Other notable Manship projects included the Jackson City Theatre (1839) and the window reglazing and painting of the Mississippi Governor’s Mansion (1856-1858)

In 1862 Manship became the mayor of Jackson. He had to surrender his city to General Sherman during the Civil War, in May 1863 following the Battle of Jackson.

Charles Manship died in Jackson in 1895 and is buried there. His house has been restored and serves as a museum.