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Charles Clark (governor) : ウィキペディア英語版
Charles Clark (governor)

|serviceyears = 1861–1863
|rank = 30px Brigadier General
|commands = 1st Division, I Corps,
Army of Mississippi
|battles = American Civil War
}}
Charles Clark (May 24, 1811December 18, 1877) was Governor of Mississippi from November 16, 1863 until May 22, 1865.
==Early life and career==
Clark was born in Lebanon, Ohio, near Cincinnati, on May 24, 1811 and subsequently moved to Mississippi. He is the great grandfather of Judge Charles Clark who served on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit from 1969 to 1992 and was the chairman of the United States Judicial Conference.
In the late 1830s and early 1840s, Clark, a lawyer, represented a settler in a dispute with some Choctaw Native Americans over land in the Mississippi Delta. The dispute led to a series of lawsuits before the Mississippi Supreme Court. The settler ultimately prevailed, and gave Clark a large tract of land between Beulah, Mississippi and the Mississippi River as his legal fee. In the late 1840s, Clark formed a plantation on the land, naming it Doe-Roe, pseudonyms commonly used in the legal profession to represent unnamed or unknown litigants (e.g., John Doe, Roe v. Wade). The state of literacy being what it was at the time, however, the plantation came to be known by its phonic representation, Doro. According to archives at Delta State University, "The plantation grew to over and became the most prosperous in the region, operating until 1913. It was prominent in the social, political and economic affairs of Bolivar County."〔
*(Doro Plantation Archaeological Artifacts and Reports, Delta State University )〕

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