In 1853, Bruce married Elizabeth Sally Withers, and the couple had three children.[1] The following year, he and his uncle opened an iron furnace business near Terre Haute, Indiana.[1] In 1859, he sold his interest in the iron furnace company and purchased several pork packing plants along the Mississippi, Missouri, and Wabash Rivers.[1] These entrepreneurial endeavors left Bruce a wealthy young man.[3]
Civil War
Near the outbreak of the Civil War, Bruce sold all of his enterprises in the north and moved to the south.[1] A Confederate sympathizer, Bruce attended a secession convention in Russellville, Kentucky, in November 1861, and was elected to the legislative council of the Commonwealth's Confederate shadow government.[4] When Kentucky was admitted to the Confederacy in December 1861, Bruce was elected to one of the Commonwealth's ten congressional seats.[1]
He personally financed many of the supply needs of Kentucky's Orphan Brigade.[1] His work in negotiating prisoner exchanges for this unit led to his being asked to negotiate such exchanges for the entire Confederate States Army.[1]
Near the end of the war, Bruce and Jefferson Davis fled the Confederate capital at Richmond, Virginia.[1] He was later captured in Georgia, but with the end of the war, he was released and established an office in Augusta, Georgia, with the intent of helping Confederate soldiers return home.[1] On May 10, 1865, he published an open letter offering to pay the educational expenses of any Confederate soldier who had lost an arm or leg in the war.[1] All told, it was estimated that Bruce contributed $400,000 for the relief of Confederate soldiers.[1] He was pardoned of any wrongdoing with regards to his support of the Southern cause by PresidentAndrew Johnson.[1]
Later life and death
Bruce financed the merger of two Louisville, Kentucky, newspapers – The Courier and The Journal – into The Courier-Journal.[5] He later moved to New York City, New York, where he became a cotton broker and opened a hotel for the use of former Confederate soldiers.[1] He continued to augment his fortune through wise investments, and shortly after the war, an abandoned South Carolina gold mine in which he had invested struck a new vein.[1]
^Cantrell, Doug; Thomas D. Matijasic; Richard Holl; Lorie Maltby; Richard Smoot (2005). "George W. Johnson and Richard Hawes: The Governors of Confederate Kentucky". Kentucky Through the Centuries: A Collection of Documents & Essays. Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company. pp. 159–184. ISBN0-7575-2012-X.