Edmund Pettus
Edmund Winston Pettus (
July 6,
1821 -
1907), for whom the
civil rights landmark Edmund Pettus
Bridge was named, was born in
Alabama. He earned his fame as a
Confederate brigadier general. Pettus was a
lawyer and
judge and served throughout the western
theater during the
Civil War. He resumed his
law practice after the
war and went on to serve in the
U.S. Senate. Pettus died while in his second term in
Congress. The Edmund Pettus Bridge in
Selma, Alabama, became a civil rights landmark when on
March 7,
1965, a band of civil rights marchers on their way to
Montgomery crossed the bridge, only to be attacked by
state troopers on the other side.