Richard Wilde Walker

Richard Wilde Walker (February 16, 1823 – June 16, 1874) was an American politician. During the American Civil War, Walker represented Alabama in the provisional C.S. Congress, from 1861 to 1862. He also served as a senator in the Second C. S. Congress, from 1864 to 1865.

Richard Wilde Walker in The Guns of the South
Senator Walker of Alabama was initially opposed Congressman Oldham's proposition to expel or reenslave all free Negroes in the Confederacy. However, the Rivington Men guaranteed his silence by showing him a photograph of himself in a compromising position with a woman who was not his wife, taken by a 21st-century camera. Robert E. Lee, upon hearing this from his son Custis, realized that the level of danger the Rivington Men posed was even higher than he had already thought.