| David Bremmer Henderson |
When the Civil War broke out, Henderson joined the Union Army. He expected the war to be short. Most people did. It wasn’t. He was shot in the neck. Later he was shot again, this time in the leg. Part of that leg was taken off, and he walked with a limp for the rest of his life. Years later, he summed up the experience with characteristic restraint. “War is not a parade.” He didn’t elaborate. He didn’t need to.
After the war, he went back to Iowa. He became a
lawyer, married, and stayed involved in his community. He didn’t trade on his
injuries or his service. He believed that surviving carried responsibilities,
not privileges.
Politics eventually found him anyway.
Henderson entered Congress in the early 1880s and
stayed there for twenty years, representing Iowa’s 3rd District. Washington was
loud and combative in those days, but Henderson wasn’t interested in volume. He
listened more than he talked. A colleague said he had “the manner of a
man who had already seen the worst that could happen.”


