Taul Bradford (January 20, 1835 – October 28, 1883) was an attorney and politician from Talladega, Alabama, who served both in the State House and one term as U.S. Representative following the American Civil War.
During the war, he served as an officer in the Confederate States Army, commissioned in his second regiment as a lieutenant colonel.
His maternal grandfather Micah Taul had moved with his family from Tennessee to Alabama in 1846, where he bought and operated a cotton plantation near Mardisville.
[1] When the American Civil War broke out, Bradford was commissioned in the Confederate States Army as a major of the Tenth Regiment, Alabama Infantry.
[1] This article incorporates public domain material from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress