Albert Taylor Bledsoe

Albert Taylor Bledsoe
Born(1809-11-09)November 9, 1809
DiedDecember 8, 1877(1877-12-08) (aged 68)
Alexandria, Virginia (another source says Baltimore, Maryland)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUnited States Military Academy
Kenyon College, Ohio
Occupation(s)educator, attorney, author, and clergyman
Political partyWhig Party (United States)
SpouseHarriet Coxe (married in 1836)
Children7, including Sophia Bledsoe Herrick
Parent(s)Moses Owsley Bledsoe and Sophia Childress Taylor
RelativesMargaret Coxe (sister-in-law)
Sophie Bledsoe Aberle (great-granddaughter)

Albert Taylor Bledsoe (November 9, 1809 – December 8, 1877) was an American Episcopal priest, attorney, professor of mathematics, and officer in the Confederate army and was best known as a staunch defender of slavery and, after the South lost the American Civil War, an architect of the Lost Cause. He was the author of Liberty and Slavery (1856), "the most extensive philosophical treatment of slavery ever produced by a Southern academic", which defended slavery laws as ensuring proper societal order.