Note: This is just one of
1,130
family groupings listed on
The Political Graveyard web site.
These families each have three or more politician members,
all linked together by blood, marriage or adoption.
This specific family group is a subset of the
much larger Three Thousand
Related Politicians group. An individual may be listed
with more than one subset.
These groupings — even the names of the groupings,
and the areas of main activity — are the
result of a computer algorithm working with the data I have,
not the choices of any historian or genealogist.
|
John Witherspoon (1723-1794) —
of Princeton, Somerset County (now Mercer
County), N.J.
Born in Gifford, Haddingtonshire, Scotland,
February
5, 1723.
Presbyterian
minister; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New Jersey, 1776; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; member of New
Jersey state house of assembly from Somerset County, 1783, 1789;
delegate
to New Jersey convention to ratify U.S. constitution from
Somerset County, 1787.
Presbyterian.
Scottish
ancestry.
Became blind
in 1792.
Died near Princeton, Mercer
County, N.J., November
15, 1794 (age 71 years, 283
days).
Interment at Princeton
Cemetery, Princeton, N.J.
|
|
William Fleming (1729-1795) —
of Staunton,
Va.; Botetourt
County, Va.
Born in Jedburgh, Roxburghshire, Scotland,
February
19, 1729.
Physician;
Governor
of Virginia, 1781; delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Botetourt
County, 1788.
Scottish
ancestry.
Died August
5, 1795 (age 66 years, 167
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
William Preston (1729-1783) —
Born in County Donegal, Ireland,
December
25, 1729.
Member of Virginia
House of Burgesses, 1765-68, 1769-71.
Died while attending a muster of
the militia, in Botetourt
County, Va., June 28,
1783 (age 53 years, 185
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Daniel Carroll (1730-1796) —
of Maryland.
Born in Upper Marlboro, Prince
George's County, Md., July 22,
1730.
Member of Maryland
state senate, 1781-90; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Maryland, 1781-83; signer,
Articles of Confederation, 1781; member,
U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1787; U.S.
Representative from Maryland at-large, 1789-91.
Catholic.
Member, Freemasons.
Died in Rock Creek, Montgomery
County, Md., May 7,
1796 (age 65 years, 290
days).
Interment at St.
John's Catholic Cemetery, Forest Glen, Md.
|
|
William Cabell (1730-1798) —
of Amherst County (part now in Nelson
County), Va.
Born in Goochland
County, Va., March
13, 1730.
Member of Virginia
House of Burgesses, 1765-75; member of Virginia
state senate, 1776; delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Amherst
County, 1788.
Died in Amherst County (part now in Nelson
County), Va., March
23, 1798 (age 68 years, 10
days).
Interment at Union Hill Cemetery, Near Wingina, Nelson County, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of William Cabell (1699-1774) and Elizabeth (Burks) Cabell
(1705-1756); married 1756 to
Margaret Meredith Jordan (1742-1812); father of William
Cabell, Jr.; uncle of William
Henry Cabell; grandfather of Paulina Cabell Rives (1796-1858; who
married Richard
Pollard); granduncle of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge and Edward
Carrington Cabell; great-granduncle of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), William
Lewis Cabell, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr., William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge and George
Craighead Cabell; second great-granduncle of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Benjamin
Earl Cabell, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; third great-granduncle of Earle
Cabell. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
William Russell (1735-1793) —
Born in Culpeper
County, Va., March 6,
1735.
General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1785; member of Virginia
state senate, 1788-91.
Died in Shenandoah
County, Va., January
14, 1793 (age 57 years, 314
days).
Original interment in unknown location; reinterment at Arlington
National Cemetery, Arlington, Va.
|
|
Patrick Henry (1736-1799) —
of Prince
Edward County, Va.
Born in Studley, Hanover
County, Va., May 29,
1736.
Lawyer;
planter;
member of Virginia
House of Burgesses, 1765; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1774; general in the
Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; Governor of
Virginia, 1776-79, 1784-86; delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Prince
Edward County, 1788; member of Virginia
state senate, 1799.
Scottish
and English
ancestry.
Elected to the Hall
of Fame for Great Americans in 1920.
Died near Brookneal, Campbell
County, Va., June 6,
1799 (age 63 years, 8
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Charlotte County, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John Henry (1704-1773) and Sarah (Syme) Henry (1710-1784); brother
of Anne Henry (1738-1790; who married William
Christian) and Elizabeth Henry (1749-1825; who married William
Russell and William
Campbell); married 1754 to Sarah
Shelton (died 1775); married, October
25, 1777, to Dorothea Dandridge (1755-1831); father of Anne Henry
(who married Spencer
Roane); uncle of Priscilla Christian (who married Alexander
Scott Bullitt) and Sarah Buchanan Campbell (1778-1846; who
married Francis
Smith Preston); grandfather of William
Henry Roane; granduncle of Valentine
Wood Southall, William
Campbell Preston and John
Smith Preston; great-granduncle of Stephen
Valentine Southall (1830-1913), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; second great-granduncle of Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; third great-grandfather of Robert
Lee Henry; cousin *** of Isaac
Coles. |
| | Political family: Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Henry counties in Ala., Ga., Ill., Ind., Ky., Mo., Ohio, Tenn. and Va. are
named for him. |
| | Other politicians named for him: Patrick
H. Davis
— Patrick
Henry
— Patrick
H. Roche
— Patrick
H. McCarren
— Patrick
H. McGarry
— Patrick
Henry
— Patrick
Henry McCarthy
— Patrick
Henry Callahan
— Patrick
H. Kelley
— Patrick
H. O'Brien
— P.
H. Moynihan
— Patrick
H. Quinn
— Patrick
H. Drewry
— Patrick
Henry Kennedy
— J.
H. Culkin
— Dat
Barthel
|
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Books about Patrick Henry: Harlow Giles
Unger, Lion
of Liberty: Patrick Henry and the Call to a New
Nation — Thomas S. Kidd, Patrick
Henry: First Among Patriots |
| | Image source: The South in the Building
of the Nation (1909) |
|
|
Charles Carroll of Carrollton (1737-1832) —
of Maryland.
Born in Annapolis, Anne
Arundel County, Md., September
19, 1737.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from Maryland, 1776-81; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; member of Maryland
state senate, 1777-1800; U.S.
Senator from Maryland, 1789-92.
Catholic.
Died in Baltimore,
Md., November
14, 1832 (age 95 years, 56
days).
Interment at Doughoregan
Manor Chapel, Ellicott City, Md.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Charles Carroll (1702-1783) and Elizabeth (Brooke) Carroll
(1709-1761); married, June 5,
1768, to Mary Darnell (1749-1782); father of Catharine 'Kitty'
Carroll (1778-1861; who married Robert
Goodloe Harper); grandfather of Louisa Carroll (1797-1870; who
married Isaac
Rand Jackson), Mary Sophia Carroll (1804-1886; who married Richard
Henry Bayard) and Harriet Julianna Carroll (1808-1881; who
married John
Lee); great-grandfather of John
Lee Carroll; second great-grandfather of John
Howell Carroll; third great-grandfather of Suzanne Howell Carroll
(who married John
Boynton Philip Clayton Hill); third great-granduncle of John
Duffy Alderson (1896-1975); first cousin of Daniel
Carroll; second cousin of Charles
Carroll, Barrister; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Sim Lee, Alexander
Contee Hanson and Alexander
Contee Magruder; second cousin thrice removed of John
Read Magruder; third cousin twice removed of Reuben
Handy Meriwether; third cousin thrice removed of Carter
Henry Harrison and Levin
Irving Handy. |
| | Political families: Lee-Randolph
family of Maryland and Virginia; Carroll-Hanson
family of Maryland; Eisenhower-Nixon
family (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Carroll counties in Ark., Ga., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Ky., Md., Miss., Mo., N.H., Ohio and Va., East Carroll
Parish, La. and West Carroll
Parish, La., are named for him. |
| | Other politicians named for him: Charles
C. Walcutt
— Charles
C. Fitch
— Charles
C. Frick
— Charles
Carroll Glover, Jr.
|
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article |
|
|
William Christian (c.1743-1786) —
Born in Staunton,
Va., about 1743.
Lawyer;
member of Virginia
House of Burgesses, 1773-75; colonel in the Continental Army
during the Revolutionary War.
Manx
ancestry.
Killed
while fighting Indians in what is now Clark
County, Ind., April 9,
1786 (age about 43
years).
Interment at Bullitt Family Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
|
|
William Campbell (1745-1781) —
Born in Augusta
County, Va., 1745.
Justice of the peace; general in the Continental Army during the
Revolutionary War; member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1781.
Died in Hanover
County, Va., August
22, 1781 (age about 36
years).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Hanover County, Va.; reinterment in
1823 at Aspenvale
Cemetery, Seven Mile Ford, Va.
|
|
Isaac Coles (1747-1813) —
of Halifax
County, Va.; Pittsylvania
County, Va.
Born in Richmond,
Va., March 2,
1747.
Colonel in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of Virginia
state house of delegates from Halifax County, 1780-81, 1783-88;
delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Halifax
County, 1788; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1789-91, 1793-97 (at-large 1789-91,
6th District 1793-97).
Died near Chatham, Pittsylvania
County, Va., June 3,
1813 (age 66 years, 93
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Pittsylvania County, Va.
|
|
Wade Hampton (1752-1835) —
Born in Virginia, 1752.
Democrat. Colonel in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary
War; member of South
Carolina state house of representatives, 1779-86, 1791; U.S.
Representative from South Carolina 4th District, 1795-97,
1803-05; Presidential Elector for South Carolina, 1800;
general in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812.
Reputed to be the wealthiest planter in America; owned more than
3,000 slaves in 1830.
Died in Columbia, Richland
County, S.C., February
4, 1835 (age about 82
years).
Interment at Trinity
Episcopal Cathedral Cemetery, Columbia, S.C.
|
|
Robert Breckinridge (1754-1833) —
of Kentucky.
Born in Virginia, 1754.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; Speaker of
the Kentucky State House of Representatives, 1792-95.
Died in 1833
(age about
79 years).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Jefferson County, Ky.
|
|
John Brown (1757-1837) —
of Frankfort, Franklin
County, Ky.
Born in Staunton,
Va., September
12, 1757.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; lawyer;
member of Virginia
state senate, 1784-88; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1787-88; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1789-92 (at-large 1789-91, 2nd
District 1791-92); U.S.
Senator from Kentucky, 1792-1805.
Scotch-Irish
ancestry. Member, Freemasons.
Died in Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., August
29, 1837 (age 79 years, 351
days).
Interment at Frankfort
Cemetery, Frankfort, Ky.
|
|
William Russell (1758-1825) —
of Fayette
County, Ky.
Born in Culpeper
County, Va., March 6,
1758.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1790-91; member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1792, 1796-1800, 1802, 1823;
colonel in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812.
Died in Fayette
County, Ky., July 3,
1825 (age 67 years, 119
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
|
|
William Cabell, Jr. (1759-1822) —
Born March
25, 1759.
Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1789-97; sheriff.
Died November
22, 1822 (age 63 years, 242
days).
Interment at Union Hill Cemetery, Near Wingina, Nelson County, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of William
Cabell; married, November
20, 1780, to Ann 'Nancy' Carrington (1760-1838; daughter of Paul
Carrington); uncle of Paulina Cabell Rives (1796-1858; who
married Richard
Pollard); first cousin of William
Henry Cabell; first cousin once removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge (1800-1871) and Edward
Carrington Cabell; first cousin twice removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), William
Lewis Cabell, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr., George
Craighead Cabell and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; first cousin thrice removed of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Benjamin
Earl Cabell, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; first cousin four times removed of Earle
Cabell. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Grayson-Breckinridge-Smallwood
family of Virginia and Kentucky (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Breckinridge (1760-1806) —
of Kentucky.
Born near Staunton, Augusta
County, Va., December
2, 1760.
Democrat. Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary
War; lawyer; U.S.
Attorney for Kentucky, 1793-94; Kentucky
state attorney general, 1793-97; member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1798-1801; Speaker of
the Kentucky State House of Representatives, 1799-1801; delegate
to Kentucky state constitutional convention, 1799; U.S.
Senator from Kentucky, 1801-05; U.S.
Attorney General, 1805-06; died in office 1806.
Presbyterian.
Died, from a stomach
infection, in near Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., December
14, 1806 (age 46 years, 12
days).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Fayette County, Ky.; reinterment at
Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Robert Breckenridge (1712-1772) and Letitia 'Lettice' (Preston)
Breckenridge (1729-1798); half-brother of Robert
Breckinridge; brother of James
Breckinridge; married, June 28,
1785, to Mary Hopkins Cabell (1769-1858); father of Letitia
Preston Breckinridge (1786-1831; who married Peter
Buell Porter and Alfred
William Grayson), Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge (1800-1871); nephew of William
Preston; uncle of James
Douglas Breckinridge; grandfather of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Mary Cabell Breckinridge (1826-1854; who
married Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864)), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; great-grandfather of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; second great-grandfather of John
Bayne Breckinridge; cousin *** of John
Brown and James
Brown; first cousin of Francis
Smith Preston and James
Patton Preston; first cousin once removed of William
Campbell Preston, James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd, John
Smith Preston and George
Rogers Clark Floyd. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Grayson-Breckinridge-Smallwood
family of Virginia and Kentucky (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Breckinridge
County, Ky. is named for him. |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Alexander Scott Bullitt (1761-1816) —
of Kentucky.
Born near Dumfries, Prince
William County, Va., 1761.
Delegate
to Kentucky state constitutional convention, 1792, 1799; member
of Kentucky
state senate, 1792-99; Lieutenant
Governor of Kentucky, 1800-04.
Died in Jefferson
County, Ky., April
13, 1816 (age about 54
years).
Interment at Oxmoor-Bullitt
Family Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
|
|
Spencer Roane (1762-1822) —
Born in Tappahannock, Essex
County, Va., April 4,
1762.
Lawyer;
member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1783-84; member of Virginia
Governor's Council, 1785-86; Judge, Virginia Court of Appeals,
1794-1822; died in office 1822.
Presbyterian.
Scottish
ancestry. Member, Phi
Beta Kappa.
Died in Warm Springs, Bath
County, Va., September
4, 1822 (age 60 years, 153
days).
Interment a private or family graveyard, Bath County, Va.
|
|
James Breckinridge (1763-1833) —
of Virginia.
Born near Fincastle, Botetourt
County, Va., March 7,
1763.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1789-1802, 1806-08, 1819-21, 1823-24;
U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1809-17 (4th District 1809-11, 5th
District 1811-13, 4th District 1813-15, 5th District 1815-17);
general in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812.
Died in Botetourt
County, Va., May 13,
1833 (age 70 years, 67
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Botetourt County, Va.
|
|
Jabez Leftwich (1765-1855) —
of Liberty (now Bedford), Bedford
County, Va.
Born in Bedford
County, Va., September
22, 1765.
Member of Virginia state legislature, 1801; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 7th District, 1821-25; member of Alabama
state house of representatives, 1830.
Died in Huntsville, Madison
County, Ala., June 22,
1855 (age 89 years, 273
days).
Interment at Maple
Hill Cemetery, Huntsville, Ala.
|
|
Francis Smith Preston (1765-1836) —
also known as Francis Preston —
of Virginia.
Born in Greenfield, Botetourt
County, Va., August
2, 1765.
Democrat. Lawyer;
member of Virginia
state senate, 1788-89, 1816-20; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 5th District, 1793-97; member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1812-14; general in the U.S. Army
during the War of 1812.
Died in Columbia, Richland
County, S.C., May 26,
1836 (age 70 years, 298
days).
Interment at Aspenvale
Cemetery, Seven Mile Ford, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of William
Preston (1729-1783) and Susanna (Smith) Preston (1740-1823);
brother of James
Patton Preston (1774-1853) and Letitia Preston (1776-1852; who
married John
Floyd); married, January
10, 1793, to Sarah Buchanan Campbell (1778-1846; daughter of William
Campbell; niece of Patrick
Henry); father of William
Campbell Preston, John
Smith Preston and Margaret Buchanan Frances Preston (1818-1852;
who married Wade
Hampton III); uncle of James
McDowell, William
Ballard Preston, John
Buchanan Floyd, George
Rogers Clark Floyd and William
Preston (1816-1887); grandfather of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; great-grandfather of Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; cousin *** of John
Brown, James
Breckinridge and James
Brown; first cousin of John
Breckinridge; first cousin once removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864); first cousin thrice removed of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925); second cousin once removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge. |
| | Political families: Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
James Brown (1766-1835) —
of Kentucky; New Orleans, Orleans
Parish, La.
Born near Staunton, Augusta
County, Va., September
11, 1766.
Lawyer;
U.S.
Attorney for Kentucky, 1791; secretary
of state of Kentucky, 1792-96; secretary
of Orleans Territory, 1804; U.S.
Attorney for Louisiana, 1805-08; U.S.
Senator from Louisiana, 1813-17, 1819-23; resigned 1823; U.S.
Minister to France, 1823-29.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., April 7,
1835 (age 68 years, 208
days).
Interment at Christ
Church Burial Ground, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
|
Joseph Desha (1768-1842) —
of Mayslick, Mason
County, Ky.
Born in Monroe
County, Pa., December
9, 1768.
Democrat. Member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1797; member of Kentucky
state senate, 1803; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky, 1807-19 (6th District 1807-13,
at-large 1813-15, 4th District 1815-19); Governor of
Kentucky, 1824-28.
Died in Georgetown, Scott
County, Ky., October
12, 1842 (age 73 years, 307
days).
Interment at Georgetown
Cemetery, Georgetown, Ky.
|
|
William Henry Cabell (1772-1853) —
also known as William H. Cabell —
of Virginia.
Born in Cumberland
County, Va., December
16, 1772.
Lawyer;
member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1796-1805; Presidential Elector for
Virginia, 1800,
1804;
Governor
of Virginia, 1805-08; state court judge in Virginia, 1808-11;
Judge, Virginia Court of Appeals, 1830-51.
Died in Richmond,
Va., January
12, 1853 (age 80 years, 27
days).
Interment at Shockoe
Hill Cemetery, Richmond, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Col. Nicholas Cabell (1750-1803) and Hannah (Carrington) Cabell
(1751-1817); married 1795 to
Elizabeth Cabell (1774-1801; his first cousin); married 1805 to Agnes
Sarah Bell Gamble (1783-1863; sister-in-law of William
Wirt); father of Edward
Carrington Cabell; nephew of William
Cabell and Paul
Carrington; first cousin of William
Cabell, Jr.; first cousin once removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862) and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), William
Lewis Cabell, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr., William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge and George
Craighead Cabell; first cousin thrice removed of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Benjamin
Earl Cabell, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; first cousin four times removed of Earle
Cabell; second cousin once removed of Cameron
Erskine Thom; second cousin twice removed of Erskine
Mayo Ross. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Cabell County,
W.Va. is named for him. |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Image source: Huntington Through
Seventy-Five Years (1947) |
|
|
Peter Buell Porter (1773-1844) —
also known as Peter B. Porter —
of Canandaigua, Ontario
County, N.Y.; Niagara Falls, Niagara
County, N.Y.
Born in Salisbury, Litchfield
County, Conn., August
4, 1773.
Democrat. Member of New York
state assembly, 1801-02, 1828 (Ontario and Steuben counties
1801-02, Erie County 1828); U.S.
Representative from New York, 1809-13, 1815-16 (15th District
1809-13, 21st District 1815-16); general in the U.S. Army during the
War of 1812; fought a duel
with Gen. Alexander Smyth; secretary
of state of New York, 1815-16; candidate for Governor of
New York, 1817; U.S.
Secretary of War, 1828-29.
Died in Niagara Falls, Niagara
County, N.Y., March
20, 1844 (age 70 years, 229
days).
Interment at Oakwood
Cemetery, Niagara Falls, N.Y.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Joshua Porter (1730-1825) and Abigail (Buell) Porter (1734-1797);
brother of Augustus
Seymour Porter (1769-1849); married, October
16, 1818, to Letitia Preston Breckinridge (1786-1831; daughter of
John
Breckinridge; sister of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; widow of Alfred
William Grayson); father of Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864); uncle of Augustus
Seymour Porter (1798-1872) and Peter
Buell Porter, Jr.; grandfather of Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925); first cousin twice removed of Ulysses
Simpson Grant; first cousin thrice removed of Frederick
Dent Grant and Ulysses
Simpson Grant, Jr.; second cousin twice removed of Benjamin
Huntington; second cousin thrice removed of Asa H.
Otis and Alvred
Bayard Nettleton; second cousin four times removed of Daniel
Frederick Webster, Lovel
Davis Parmelee and Theron
Ephron Catlin; third cousin of John
Davenport, Joshua
Coit, James
Davenport, Henry
Huntington, Gurdon
Huntington, Samuel
Lathrop and Abel
Huntington; third cousin once removed of Samuel
Huntington, Henry
Scudder, Ebenezer
Huntington, Gaylord
Griswold, Benjamin
Trumbull, Parmenio
Adams, Elisha
Phelps, Lancelot
Phelps, Theodore
Davenport, Abijah
Blodget and Benjamin
Nicoll Huntington; third cousin twice removed of Jabez
Williams Huntington, Abiel
Case, Samuel
George Andrews, Harrison
Blodget, John
Hall Brockway, Jairus
Case, Lorenzo
Burrows, Norman
A. Phelps, Anson
Levi Holcomb, George
Smith Catlin, Waitman
Thomas Willey, Lyman
Trumbull, William
Dean Kellogg, John
Smith Phelps, William
Gleason, Jr., Almon
Case, James
Phelps, Robert
Coit, Jr., Samuel
Lathrop Bronson, Abial
Lathrop, Roger
Wolcott and Allen
Jacob Holcomb; third cousin thrice removed of Charles
Creighton Stratton, Edmund
Holcomb, Ira
Chandler Backus, Calvin
Tilden Hulburd, Albert
Asahel Bliss, Philemon
Bliss, Charles
Jenkins Hayden, John
Leake Newbold Stratton, Bushrod
Ebenezer Hoppin, Judson
B. Phelps, Edwin
Carpenter Pinney, Timothy
E. Griswold, Erskine
Mason Phelps, William
Walter Phelps, William
Patrick Willey, Charles
A. Hungerford, Walter
Harrison Blodget, William
Barret Ridgely, George
Harrison Hall, Clayton
Hyde Lathrop, Phineas
Orange Small, Clement
Phineas Kellogg, William
Brainard Coit, Lafayette
Blanchard Gleason (1863-1937), Arthur
Eugene Parmelee, Austin
Eugene Lathrop and Hiram
Bingham; fourth cousin of Samuel
H. Huntington; fourth cousin once removed of William
Woodbridge, Isaac
Backus, Eli
Thacher Hoyt, Nathaniel
Huntington, Caleb
Scudder, James
Huntington, Charles
Phelps Huntington, John
Arnold Rockwell, Elisha
Mills Huntington, Henry
Titus Backus, Bailey
Frye Adams and Henry
Joel Scudder. |
| | Political family: Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
James Patton Preston (1774-1853) —
also known as James P. Preston —
of Richmond,
Va.
Born in Montgomery
County, Va., June 21,
1774.
Colonel in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; crippled
by injuries received in the war; member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1816; Governor of
Virginia, 1816-19; postmaster at Richmond,
Va., 1824-37.
Died in Montgomery
County, Va., May 4,
1853 (age 78 years, 317
days).
Interment at Preston Cemetery at Smithfield Plantation, Blacksburg, Va.
|
|
Alfred William Grayson (1780-1810) —
of Fayette
County, Ky.
Born in Prince
William County, Va., April
16, 1780.
Member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1809.
Died October
10, 1810 (age 30 years, 177
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
|
|
James Douglas Breckinridge (1781-1849) —
of Kentucky.
Born in Woodville, Jefferson
County, Ky., 1781.
Lawyer;
member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1809-11; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 8th District, 1821-23; defeated,
1822.
Died in Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky., May 6,
1849 (age about 67
years).
Original interment at St.
John's Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.; reinterment in 1867 at St.
Louis Catholic Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Alexander Breckinridge (1752-1801) and Jane (Buchanan)
Breckinridge (1760-1812); half-brother of John
Floyd; married to Mary Elizabeth Grayson (1795-1830; sister of Frederick
William Spence Grayson and Peter
William Grayson); married 1832 to Lucy
Fry Speed (1811-1893); nephew of John
Breckinridge; uncle of John
Buchanan Floyd and George
Rogers Clark Floyd; first cousin of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; first cousin once removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of William
Preston, Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge (1867-1935), Henry
Skillman Breckinridge and Joseph
Weldon Bailey, Jr.; second cousin once removed of Francis
Smith Preston and James
Patton Preston; third cousin of William
Campbell Preston, James
McDowell and John
Smith Preston. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Desha-Breckinridge
family of Lexington, Kentucky (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Thomas Hart Benton (1782-1858) —
also known as "Old Bullion" —
of Franklin, Williamson
County, Tenn.; St.
Louis, Mo.
Born near Hillsborough, Orange
County, N.C., March
14, 1782.
Lawyer;
newspaper
editor; member of Tennessee
state senate, 1809; U.S.
Senator from Missouri, 1821-51; U.S.
Representative from Missouri 1st District, 1853-55; Benton
Democrat candidate for Governor of
Missouri, 1856.
Fought a duel
with Andrew
Jackson, who later became a political ally. In April, 1850, he
caused a scandal
with his attempt to assault
Sen. Henry
Stuart Foote, of Mississippi, during debate on the Senate floor;
he was restrained by other senators. Foote had a cocked pistol in his
hand and undoubtedly would have shot him.
Died in Washington,
D.C., April
10, 1858 (age 76 years, 27
days).
Interment at Bellefontaine
Cemetery, St. Louis, Mo.
|
|
John Floyd (1783-1837) —
of Newbern, Pulaski
County, Va.
Born in Jefferson
County, Ky., April
24, 1783.
Democrat. Member of Virginia state legislature, 1810; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1817-29 (5th District 1817-21, 20th
District 1821-29); Governor of
Virginia, 1830-34; received 11 electoral votes for President, 1832.
Died in Sweetsprings, Monroe
County, Va (now W.Va.), August
17, 1837 (age 54 years, 115
days).
Interment at Lewis
Family Cemetery, Sweetsprings, W.Va.
|
|
Frederick William Spence Grayson (1786-1827) —
also known as Frederick W. S. Grayson —
of Kentucky.
Born in Bardstown, Nelson
County, Ky., October
10, 1786.
Served in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; Kentucky
state attorney general, 1825.
Died in Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky., October
27, 1827 (age 41 years, 17
days).
Original interment at City
Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.; reinterment at Eastern
Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
|
|
William Henry Roane (1787-1845) —
also known as William H. Roane —
of Virginia.
Born in Virginia, September
17, 1787.
Democrat. Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1812-15; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 22nd District, 1815-17; U.S.
Senator from Virginia, 1837-41.
Died in Tree Hill, Henrico
County, Va., May 11,
1845 (age 57 years, 236
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Hanover County, Va.
|
|
Peter William Grayson (1788-1838) —
also known as Peter W. Grayson; Peter Wagener
Grayson —
of Texas.
Born in Bardstown, Nelson
County, Ky., 1788.
Delegate
to Texas Consultation of 1835 from District of Goliad, 1835; Attorney
General of the Texas Republic, 1836, 1837; candidate for President
of the Texas Republic, 1838.
Died from self-inflicted
gunshot,
at Bean Station, Grainger
County, Tenn., July 9,
1838 (age about 50
years).
Interment at Eastern
Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
|
|
Joseph Cabell Breckinridge (1788-1823) —
also known as Cabell Breckinridge —
of Kentucky.
Born in Albemarle
County, Va., July 24,
1788.
Speaker
of the Kentucky State House of Representatives, 1817-18; secretary
of state of Kentucky, 1820-23; died in office 1823.
Presbyterian.
Died in an epidemic,
in Frankfort, Franklin
County, Ky., September
1, 1823 (age 35 years, 39
days).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Fayette County, Ky.; reinterment at
Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John
Breckinridge and Mary Hopkins (Cabell) Brecinridge (1769-1858);
brother of Letitia Preston Breckinridge (1786-1831; who married Peter
Buell Porter and Alfred
William Grayson) and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; married to Mary Clay Smith (1787-1864);
father of John
Cabell Breckinridge; uncle of Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; grandfather of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge; grandnephew of William
Preston and William
Cabell; granduncle of Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; first cousin of James
Douglas Breckinridge and Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862); first cousin once removed of
William
Cabell, Jr., Francis
Smith Preston, William
Henry Cabell, James
Patton Preston, Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; first cousin twice removed of Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; first cousin thrice removed of Earle
Cabell; second cousin of William
Campbell Preston, James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd, John
Smith Preston, George
Rogers Clark Floyd and Edward
Carrington Cabell; second cousin once removed of John
William Leftwich. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Epitaph: "The Righteous Shall Be In
Everlasting Remembrance." |
| | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Walter Coles (1790-1857) —
of Virginia.
Born in Coles Ferry, Halifax
County, Va., December
8, 1790.
Democrat. Member of Virginia state legislature, 1830; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1835-45 (4th District 1835-37, 3rd
District 1837-39, 4th District 1839-41, 6th District 1841-43, 3rd
District 1843-45).
Died near Chatham, Pittsylvania
County, Va., November
9, 1857 (age 66 years, 336
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Pittsylvania County, Va.
|
|
George McDuffie (1790-1851) —
of Edgefield, Edgefield
County, S.C.
Born in Columbia
County, Ga., August
10, 1790.
Democrat. Member of South
Carolina state house of representatives, 1818-20; U.S.
Representative from South Carolina, 1821-34 (6th District
1821-23, 5th District 1823-34); Governor of
South Carolina, 1834-36; U.S.
Senator from South Carolina, 1842-46.
Died in Sumter District (now Sumter
County), S.C., March
11, 1851 (age 60 years, 213
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Sumter County, S.C.
|
|
Valentine Wood Southall (1793-1861) —
of Albemarle
County, Va.
Born in Goochland
County, Va., 1793.
Delegate
to Virginia secession convention, 1861.
Died in Charlottesville,
Va., August
22, 1861 (age about 68
years).
Interment somewhere
in Charlottesville, Va.
|
|
Benjamin William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862) —
also known as Benjamin W. S. Cabell —
of Danville,
Va.
Born in Buckingham
County, Va., May 10,
1793.
Served in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1820; delegate
to Virginia state constitutional convention, 1829-30.
Died in Pittsylvania
County, Va., March
19, 1862 (age 68 years, 313
days).
Interment at Grove
Street Cemetery, Danville, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Pocahontas Rebecca (Bolling) Cabell (1754-1803) and Joseph Cabell
(1762-1831); married 1816 to Sarah
Epes 'Sallie' Doswell (1802-1874); father of William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; grandfather of Benjamin
Earl Cabell (1858-1931); grandnephew of William
Cabell; great-grandfather of Earle
Cabell; great-granduncle of Carter
Henry Harrison II; first cousin of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; first cousin once removed of William
Cabell, Jr., William
Henry Cabell, John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; first cousin thrice removed of Henry
De La Warr Flood and Joel
West Flood; first cousin four times removed of Harry
Flood Byrd; first cousin five times removed of Harry
Flood Byrd, Jr.; second cousin of Edward
Carrington Cabell; second cousin once removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke and John
William Leftwich; second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland and Beverley
Randolph; third cousin once removed of John
Wayles Eppes and Henry
St. George Tucker; fourth cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Jones Hardeman, Bailey
Hardeman, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge and Douglass
Townshend Bolling. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
William Campbell Preston (1794-1860) —
also known as William C. Preston —
of Columbia, Richland
County, S.C.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., December
27, 1794.
Lawyer;
member of South
Carolina state house of representatives, 1828-34; U.S.
Senator from South Carolina, 1833-42; resigned 1842.
President
of South Carolina College 1845-51.
Died in Columbia, Richland
County, S.C., May 22,
1860 (age 65 years, 147
days).
Interment at Trinity
Episcopal Cathedral Cemetery, Columbia, S.C.
|
|
James McDowell (1795-1851) —
of Rockbridge
County, Va.
Born in Rockbridge
County, Va., October
13, 1795.
Democrat. Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1831-35, 1838; Governor of
Virginia, 1843-46; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 11th District, 1846-51.
Died in Rockbridge
County, Va., August
24, 1851 (age 55 years, 315
days).
Interment at Stonewall
Jackson Memorial Cemetery, Lexington, Va.
|
|
Francis Thomas (1799-1876) —
of Frederick, Frederick
County, Md.; Frankville, Garrett
County, Md.
Born in Frederick
County, Md., February
3, 1799.
Democrat. Member of Maryland
state house of delegates, 1822, 1827-29; Speaker of
the Maryland State House of Delegates, 1829; U.S.
Representative from Maryland, 1831-41, 1861-69 (4th District
1831-33, 7th District 1833-35, 6th District 1835-41, 5th District
1861-63, 4th District 1863-69); Governor of
Maryland, 1842-45; delegate
to Maryland state constitutional convention, 1850; U.S. Minister
to Peru, 1872-75.
Episcopalian.
Killed
by a locomotive while walking on railroad tracks near Frankville,
Garrett
County, Md., January
22, 1876 (age 76 years, 353
days).
Interment at St.
Mark's A. F. Church Cemetery, Petersville, Md.
|
|
Robert Jefferson Breckinridge (1800-1871) —
of Kentucky.
Born near Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., March 8,
1800.
Lawyer;
member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1825-28; ordained
minister; president,
Jefferson College (now Washington and Jefferson College), 1845-47; Kentucky
superintendent of public instruction, 1849-53; candidate for delegate
to Kentucky state constitutional convention, 1849.
Presbyterian.
Member, Freemasons.
Died in Danville, Boyle
County, Ky., December
22, 1871 (age 71 years, 289
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John
Breckinridge and Mary Hopkins (Cabell) Breckinridge (1769-1858);
brother of Letitia Preston Breckinridge (1786-1831; who married Peter
Buell Porter and Alfred
William Grayson) and Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge; married, March
11, 1823, to Ann Sophronisba Preston (1803-1844); married, April 1,
1847, to Virginia Hart Shelby (1809-1859); married, November
5, 1868, to Margaret F. White; father of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; uncle of John
Cabell Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864); grandfather of Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; grandnephew of William
Preston and William
Cabell; granduncle of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925); first cousin of James
Douglas Breckinridge and Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862); first cousin once removed of
William
Cabell, Jr., William
Henry Cabell, James
Patton Preston, Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; first cousin twice removed of Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; first cousin thrice removed of Earle
Cabell; second cousin of William
Campbell Preston, James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd, John
Smith Preston, George
Rogers Clark Floyd and Edward
Carrington Cabell; second cousin once removed of John
William Leftwich. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Albert Sidney Johnston (1803-1862) —
of Texas.
Born in Washington, Mason
County, Ky., February
2, 1803.
Served in the U.S. Army during the Black Hawk War; served in the
Texas Army during the Texas War of Independence; wounded in a duel
with Texas Gen. Felix Huston, Februay 7, 1837; Texas
Republic Secretary of War, 1838-40; general in the Confederate
Army during the Civil War.
Shot
and killed
while leading his forces at the Battle of Shiloh, Hardin
County, Tenn., April 6,
1862 (age 59 years, 63
days). He was the highest-ranking officer on either side killed
during the war.
Original interment at St.
Louis Cemetery No. 1, New Orleans, La.; reinterment in 1867 at Texas
State Cemetery, Austin, Tex.; statue at South Mall, University of Texas, Austin, Tex.
|
|
Thomas Hart Clay (1803-1871) —
also known as Thomas H. Clay —
of Kentucky.
Born in Fayette
County, Ky., September
22, 1803.
Farmer;
U.S. Minister to Nicaragua, 1863; Honduras, 1863.
Died near Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., March
18, 1871 (age 67 years, 177
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
|
|
William Ballard Preston (1805-1862) —
of Virginia.
Born in Montgomery
County, Va., November
25, 1805.
Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1830-32, 1844-45; member of Virginia
state senate, 1840-44; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 12th District, 1847-49; U.S.
Secretary of the Navy, 1849-50; delegate
to Virginia secession convention, 1861; Delegate
from Virginia to the Confederate Provisional Congress, 1861-62;
Senator
from Virginia in the Confederate Congress, 1862; died in office
1862.
Died in Montgomery
County, Va., November
16, 1862 (age 56 years, 356
days).
Interment in private or family graveyard.
|
|
John Buchanan Floyd (1806-1863) —
also known as John B. Floyd —
of Virginia.
Born in Smithfield, Isle of
Wight County, Va., June 1,
1806.
Lawyer;
member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1847-48; Governor of
Virginia, 1849-52; U.S.
Secretary of War, 1857-60; general in the Confederate Army during
the Civil War.
Died near Abingdon, Washington
County, Va., August
26, 1863 (age 57 years, 86
days).
Interment at Sinking
Spring Cemetery, Abingdon, Va.
|
|
John Smith Preston (1809-1881) —
also known as John S. Preston —
of Columbia, Richland
County, S.C.
Born in Abingdon, Washington
County, Va., April
20, 1809.
Democrat. Lawyer; planter;
member of South
Carolina state senate, 1848-56; delegate to Democratic National
Convention from South Carolina, 1860;
delegate
to South Carolina secession convention from Richland, 1861-62;
general in the Confederate Army during the Civil War.
Died in Columbia, Richland
County, S.C., May 1,
1881 (age 72 years, 11
days).
Interment at Trinity
Episcopal Cathedral Cemetery, Columbia, S.C.
|
|
George Rogers Clark Floyd (1810-1895) —
also known as George R. C. Floyd —
of Logan
County, W.Va.
Born in Christiansburg, Montgomery
County, Va., September
10, 1810.
Democrat. Member of West
Virginia state house of delegates from Logan County; elected 1872.
Died in Logan
County, W.Va., May 7,
1895 (age 84 years, 239
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Edward Carrington Cabell (1816-1896) —
also known as Edward C. Cabell —
of Jefferson
County, Fla.; Tallahassee, Leon
County, Fla.
Born in Richmond,
Va., February
5, 1816.
Lawyer;
delegate
to Florida state constitutional convention from Jefferson County,
1838-39; U.S.
Representative from Florida, 1845-46, 1847-53 (at-large 1845-46,
1847-51, 1st District 1851-53); colonel in the Confederate Army
during the Civil War; member of Missouri
state senate 32nd District, 1879-82.
Died in St.
Louis, Mo., February
28, 1896 (age 80 years, 23
days).
Interment at Bellefontaine
Cemetery, St. Louis, Mo.
| |
Relatives: Son
of William
Henry Cabell and Agnes Sarah Bell (Gamble) Cabell (1783-1863);
married to Anna Marie Wilcox (1830-1873); grandnephew of William
Cabell and Paul
Carrington; first cousin once removed of William
Cabell, Jr. and John
Wirt Randall; first cousin twice removed of Hannah
Parker Lowndes; second cousin of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862) and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; second cousin once removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), William
Lewis Cabell, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr., William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin twice removed of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Benjamin
Earl Cabell, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; second cousin thrice removed of Earle
Cabell; third cousin of Cameron
Erskine Thom; third cousin once removed of Erskine
Mayo Ross. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
William Preston (1816-1887) —
of Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky.
Born near Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky., October
16, 1816.
Lawyer;
delegate to Whig National Convention from Kentucky, 1839 (speaker);
colonel in the U.S. Army during the Mexican War; delegate
to Kentucky state constitutional convention, 1849; member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1850, 1868-69; member of Kentucky
state senate, 1851-53; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 7th District, 1852-55; defeated,
1854; delegate to Democratic National Convention from Kentucky, 1856,
1880
(speaker);
U.S. Minister to Spain, 1859-61; general in the Confederate Army during the
Civil War.
Died in Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky., September
21, 1887 (age 70 years, 340
days).
Interment at Cave
Hill Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
|
|
Wade Hampton III (1818-1902) —
also known as "Savior of South
Carolina" —
of Columbia, Richland
County, S.C.; Charleston, Charleston
County, S.C.
Born in Charleston, Charleston
County, S.C., March
28, 1818.
Democrat. Member of South
Carolina state senate, 1858; general in the Confederate Army
during the Civil War; Governor of
South Carolina, 1876-79; defeated, 1865; U.S.
Senator from South Carolina, 1879-91; delegate to Democratic
National Convention from South Carolina, 1880;
U.S. Railroad Commissioner, 1893-97.
Episcopalian.
Awarded the Confederate Medal of Honor by the Sons of Confederate
Veterans. Lost a
leg in an accident in 1878.
Died in Columbia, Richland
County, S.C., April
11, 1902 (age 84 years, 14
days).
Interment at Trinity
Episcopal Cathedral Cemetery, Columbia, S.C.; statue at State
House Grounds, Columbia, S.C.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Wade Hampton (1791-1858) and Ann (FitzSimons) Hampton; married, October
10, 1838, to Margaret Buchanan Frances Preston (1818-1852;
daughter of Francis
Smith Preston; sister of William
Campbell Preston (1794-1860)); married 1858 to Mary
Singleton McDuffie (1830-1874; daughter of George
McDuffie); grandson of Wade
Hampton (1752-1835). |
| | Political families: Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Hampton County,
S.C. is named for him. |
| | The town
of Hampton,
South Carolina, is named for
him. — Wade Hampton High
School (built 1960, rebuilt 2006), in Greenville,
South Carolina, is named for
him. — The Wade Hampton State
Office Building (opened 1940), in Columbia,
South Carolina, is named for
him. |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier |
| | Books about Wade Hampton: Walter Brian
Cisco, Wade
Hampton: Confederate Warrior, Conservative
Statesman |
| | Image source: William C. Roberts,
Leading Orators (1884) |
|
|
Walter Preston (1819-1867) —
of Virginia.
Born in Abingdon, Washington
County, Va., 1819.
Candidate for Virginia
state attorney general, 1857; Delegate
from Virginia to the Confederate Provisional Congress, 1861-62;
Representative
from Virginia in the Confederate Congress, 1862-64.
Died in Abingdon, Washington
County, Va., 1867
(age about
48 years).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Reuben Handy Meriwether (b. 1820) —
also known as R. H. Meriwether —
of Decatur, Macon
County, Ill.
Born in Howard
County, Md., June 20,
1820.
Mayor
of Decatur, Ill., 1876.
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
John Cabell Breckinridge (1821-1875) —
also known as John C. Breckinridge —
of Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky.
Born near Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., January
16, 1821.
Democrat. Lawyer;
major in the U.S. Army during the Mexican War; member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1849-51; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 8th District, 1851-55; delegate to
Democratic National Convention from Kentucky, 1856;
Vice
President of the United States, 1857-61; Southern Democratic
candidate for President
of the United States, 1860; U.S.
Senator from Kentucky, 1861; general in the Confederate Army
during the Civil War; Confederate
Secretary of War, 1865.
Presbyterian.
Member, Freemasons.
Expelled
from the U.S. Senate on December 4, 1861 for his participation in the
Confederate
military. Fled
to Cuba at the end of the war, and lived in England and Canada until
1869.
Died, from lung
disease and liver
cirrhosis, in Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., May 17,
1875 (age 54 years, 121
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Mary Clay (Smith) Breckinridge (1787-1864) and Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge; married 1840 to
Elizabeth Lucas (1825-1889); married, December
12, 1843, to Mary Cyrene Burch (1826-1907); father of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge; nephew of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; grandson of John
Breckinridge; great-grandson of John
Witherspoon; great-grandnephew of William
Preston and William
Cabell; first cousin of Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; first cousin once removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862), Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of William
Cabell, Jr., Francis
Smith Preston, William
Henry Cabell and James
Patton Preston; second cousin of Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin once removed of William
Campbell Preston, James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd, John
Smith Preston, George
Rogers Clark Floyd, Edward
Carrington Cabell, Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin twice removed of Earle
Cabell; third cousin of John
William Leftwich. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | The city
of Breckenridge,
Missouri, is named for
him. — The city
of Breckenridge,
Colorado, is named for
him. |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — BillionGraves
burial record |
| | Books about John C. Breckinridge:
William C. Davis, An
Honorable Defeat: The Last Days of the Confederate
Government — Frank Hopkins Heck, Proud
Kentuckian, John C. Breckinridge, 1821-1875 — William
C. Davis, Breckinridge
: Statesman, Soldier, Symbol |
|
|
Robert William Hughes (1821-1901) —
of Virginia.
Born in Powhatan
County, Va., January
16, 1821.
Republican. Lawyer; newspaper
editor; served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; U.S.
Attorney for the Western District of Virginia, 1871-73; candidate
for Governor of
Virginia, 1873; U.S.
District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, 1874-98;
retired 1898.
In a duel
in 1869, he shot and wounded William
E. Cameron.
Died near Abingdon, Washington
County, Va., December
10, 1901 (age 80 years, 328
days).
Interment at Sinking
Spring Cemetery, Abingdon, Va.
|
|
Carter Henry Harrison (1825-1893) —
of Chicago, Cook
County, Ill.
Born near Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., February
15, 1825.
Democrat. U.S.
Representative from Illinois 2nd District, 1875-79; mayor
of Chicago, Ill., 1879-87, 1893; died in office 1893; delegate to
Democratic National Convention from Illinois, 1880,
1884;
candidate for Governor of
Illinois, 1884.
Shot
and killed at
his home, by Patrick Eugene Prendergast, in Chicago, Cook
County, Ill., October
28, 1893 (age 68 years, 255
days). Prendergast, who was defended by famed trial lawyer Clarence
Darrow, was tried for murder, convicted, sentenced to death, and
hanged.
Interment at Graceland
Cemetery, Chicago, Ill.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Carter Henry Harrison (1796-1825) and Caroline Evaline (Russell)
Harrison (1797-1875); married to Sophonisba Grayson Preston
(1833-1876; great-grandniece of William
Smallwood); father of Carter
Henry Harrison II; grandson of William
Russell (1758-1825); great-grandson of William
Russell (1735-1793); great-grandnephew of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and William
Cabell; second great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862) and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Cabell, Jr., William
Henry Cabell and William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841); first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland, Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775) and Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); second cousin of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), William
Lewis Cabell, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr., William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin once removed of Dabney
Carr, John
Scott Harrison, Edward
Carrington Cabell, Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Benjamin
Earl Cabell, Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, George
Nicholas, Beverley
Randolph, Wilson
Cary Nicholas, John
Nicholas, John
Randolph of Roanoke and Earle
Cabell; third cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, John
William Leftwich and Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901); third cousin once removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph, Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857), Stanley
Matthews, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Russell
Benjamin Harrison and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin twice removed of Burwell
Bassett, John
Gardner Coolidge and William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990); third cousin thrice removed of Charles
Carroll of Carrollton; fourth cousin of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Peter
Myndert Dox, Edmund
Randolph and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; fourth cousin once removed of John
Wayles Eppes, Fitzhugh
Lee, Connally
Findlay Trigg, John
Augustine Marshall, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Harry
Bartow Hawes, William
Welby Beverley and James
Harlan Cleveland, Jr.. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Cross-reference: Robert
E. Burke |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article |
|
|
John William Leftwich (1826-1870) —
also known as John W. Leftwich —
of Memphis, Shelby
County, Tenn.
Born in Liberty (now Bedford), Bedford
County, Va., September
7, 1826.
Democrat. Merchant;
U.S.
Representative from Tennessee 8th District, 1866-67; mayor
of Memphis, Tenn., 1868-69, 1869-70.
Died in Lynchburg,
Va., March 6,
1870 (age 43 years, 180
days).
Interment at Elmwood
Cemetery, Memphis, Tenn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Joel Leftwich (1801-1866) and Mary L. (Thorpe) Leftwich
(1809-1857); married, December
17, 1854, to Gertrude Aurelia Wendle (1832-1908);
great-grandnephew of Jabez
Leftwich; second cousin once removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; third cousin of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), William
Lewis Cabell, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr., William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge and George
Craighead Cabell; third cousin once removed of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Benjamin
Earl Cabell (1858-1931), Carter
Henry Harrison II, Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; third cousin twice removed of Earle
Cabell. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Waller Redd Staples (1826-1897) —
of Virginia.
Born in Patrick Court House (now Stuart), Patrick
County, Va., February
24, 1826.
Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1853-54; Delegate
from Virginia to the Confederate Provisional Congress, 1861-62;
Representative
from Virginia in the Confederate Congress, 1862-65; justice of
Virginia state supreme court, 1870-82.
Died in Christiansburg, Montgomery
County, Va., August
20, 1897 (age 71 years, 177
days).
Interment at Fair
View Cemetery, Roanoke, Va.
|
|
William Lewis Cabell (1827-1911) —
also known as "Old Tige" —
of Dallas, Dallas
County, Tex.
Born in Danville,
Va., January
1, 1827.
Democrat. General in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; mayor of
Dallas, Tex., 1874-76, 1877-79, 1883-85; defeated, 1876; delegate
to Democratic National Convention from Texas, 1884,
1892.
Member, United
Confederate Veterans.
Died in Dallas, Dallas
County, Tex., February
22, 1911 (age 84 years, 52
days).
Interment at Greenwood
Cemetery, Dallas, Tex.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862); brother of George
Craighead Cabell; father of Benjamin
Earl Cabell; grandfather of Earle
Cabell; great-grandnephew of William
Cabell; first cousin once removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of William
Cabell, Jr., William
Henry Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; second cousin once removed of Edward
Carrington Cabell, Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; second cousin twice removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke, Henry
De La Warr Flood and Joel
West Flood; second cousin thrice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Beverley
Randolph and Harry
Flood Byrd; second cousin four times removed of Harry
Flood Byrd, Jr.; third cousin of John
William Leftwich; third cousin twice removed of John
Wayles Eppes and Henry
St. George Tucker; fourth cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Peter Augustus Porter (1827-1864) —
also known as Peter A. Porter —
of Niagara Falls, Niagara
County, N.Y.
Born in Black Rock (now part of Buffalo), Erie
County, N.Y., July 17,
1827.
Member of New York
state assembly from Niagara County 2nd District, 1862; colonel in
the Union Army during the Civil War.
Episcopalian.
Killed
by enemy gunshot
while leading troops in battle, Cold Harbor, Hanover
County, Va., June 3,
1864 (age 36 years, 322
days).
Interment at Oakwood
Cemetery, Niagara Falls, N.Y.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Peter
Buell Porter and Letitia Preston (Breckinridge) Porter
(1786-1831); married, March
30, 1852, to Mary Cabell Breckinridge (1826-1854; granddaughter
of John
Breckinridge); married, November
9, 1859, to Josephine Morris (1832-1892); father of Peter
Augustus Porter; nephew of Augustus
Seymour Porter (1769-1849), Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; great-grandnephew of William
Preston and William
Cabell; first cousin of Augustus
Seymour Porter (1798-1872), Peter
Buell Porter, Jr., John
Cabell Breckinridge, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; first cousin once removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862), Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of William
Cabell, Jr., Francis
Smith Preston, William
Henry Cabell and James
Patton Preston; second cousin of Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin once removed of William
Campbell Preston, James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd, John
Smith Preston, George
Rogers Clark Floyd, Edward
Carrington Cabell, Ulysses
Simpson Grant, Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin twice removed of Frederick
Dent Grant, Ulysses
Simpson Grant, Jr. and Earle
Cabell; second cousin thrice removed of Benjamin
Huntington; third cousin of John
William Leftwich; third cousin once removed of John
Davenport, Joshua
Coit, James
Davenport, Henry
Huntington, Gurdon
Huntington, Samuel
Lathrop and Abel
Huntington; third cousin twice removed of Samuel
Huntington, Henry
Scudder, Asa H.
Otis and Alvred
Bayard Nettleton; third cousin thrice removed of Daniel
Frederick Webster, Lovel
Davis Parmelee and Theron
Ephron Catlin; fourth cousin of Ebenezer
Huntington, Gaylord
Griswold, Benjamin
Trumbull, Parmenio
Adams, Elisha
Phelps, Lancelot
Phelps, Theodore
Davenport, Abijah
Blodget and Benjamin
Nicoll Huntington; fourth cousin once removed of Samuel
H. Huntington, Jabez
Williams Huntington, Abiel
Case, Samuel
George Andrews, Harrison
Blodget, John
Hall Brockway, Jairus
Case, Lorenzo
Burrows, Norman
A. Phelps, Anson
Levi Holcomb, George
Smith Catlin, Waitman
Thomas Willey, Lyman
Trumbull, William
Dean Kellogg, John
Smith Phelps, William
Gleason, Jr., Almon
Case, James
Phelps, Robert
Coit, Jr., Samuel
Lathrop Bronson, Abial
Lathrop, Roger
Wolcott and Allen
Jacob Holcomb. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Stephen Valentine Southall (1830-1913) —
also known as S. V. Southall —
of Charlottesville,
Va.
Born in Charlottesville,
Va., April
27, 1830.
Democrat. Lawyer;
served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; delegate to
Democratic National Convention from Virginia, 1876;
delegate to Gold Democrat National Convention from Virginia, 1896.
Died in Lynchburg,
Va., March
20, 1913 (age 82 years, 327
days).
Interment at Maplewood
Cemetery, Charlottesville, Va.
|
|
Robert Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. (1833-1915) —
also known as Robert J. Breckinridge, Jr. —
of Kentucky.
Born in Baltimore,
Md., September
14, 1833.
Colonel in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; delegate
to Kentucky secession convention, 1861; Representative
from Kentucky in the Confederate Congress, 1862-64; common pleas
court judge in Kentucky, 1876.
Died March
13, 1915 (age 81 years, 180
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge and Ann Sophonisba (Preston) Breckinridge
(1803-1844); brother of William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; nephew of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, William
Campbell Preston and John
Smith Preston; uncle of Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; grandson of John
Breckinridge and Francis
Smith Preston; grandnephew of James
Patton Preston; great-grandson of William
Preston and William
Campbell; great-grandnephew of William
Cabell and Patrick
Henry; first cousin of John
Cabell Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864); first cousin once removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862), James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd, George
Rogers Clark Floyd, Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925); first cousin twice removed of William
Cabell, Jr. and William
Henry Cabell; second cousin of Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin once removed of Valentine
Wood Southall, Edward
Carrington Cabell, Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin twice removed of Earle
Cabell; third cousin of John
William Leftwich and Stephen
Valentine Southall. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
William Campbell Preston Breckinridge (1837-1904) —
also known as William C. P. Breckinridge —
of Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky.
Born in Baltimore,
Md., August
28, 1837.
Democrat. Colonel in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; lawyer;
delegate to Democratic National Convention from Kentucky, 1876,
1880;
U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 7th District, 1885-95; defeated
(Gold Democratic), 1896.
Member, Freemasons;
Knights
Templar.
In 1894, he was successfully sued for breach of promise by a former
mistress; he acknowledged the affair, affair, but the scandal
ended his political career.
Died, of apoplexy,
in Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., November
18, 1904 (age 67 years, 82
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge and Ann Sophonisba (Preston) Breckinridge
(1803-1844); brother of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr.; married, March
17, 1859, to Lucretia Hart Clay (1839-1860; daughter of Thomas
Hart Clay); married, September
19, 1861, to Issa Desha (1843-1892; granddaughter of Joseph
Desha); married to Louisa Rucks (Scott) Wing (1845-1920); father
of Desha
Breckinridge; nephew of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, William
Campbell Preston and John
Smith Preston; uncle of Levin
Irving Handy and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; grandson of John
Breckinridge and Francis
Smith Preston; grandnephew of James
Patton Preston; granduncle of John
Bayne Breckinridge; great-grandson of William
Preston and William
Campbell; great-grandnephew of William
Cabell and Patrick
Henry; first cousin of John
Cabell Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864); first cousin once removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862), James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd, George
Rogers Clark Floyd, Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925); first cousin twice removed of William
Cabell, Jr. and William
Henry Cabell; second cousin of Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin once removed of Valentine
Wood Southall, Edward
Carrington Cabell, Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin twice removed of Earle
Cabell; third cousin of John
William Leftwich and Stephen
Valentine Southall. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
George Craighead Cabell (1837-1906) —
also known as George C. Cabell —
of Danville,
Va.
Born in Danville,
Va., January
25, 1837.
Democrat. Lawyer;
served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 5th District, 1875-87.
Died in Baltimore,
Md., June 23,
1906 (age 69 years, 149
days).
Interment at Green
Hill Cemetery, Danville, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell and Sarah Epes (Doswell) Cabell
(1802-1874); brother of William
Lewis Cabell; married to Mary Harrison Baird (1838-1891); uncle
of Benjamin
Earl Cabell; granduncle of Earle
Cabell; great-grandnephew of William
Cabell; first cousin once removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge (1800-1871); first cousin twice removed of
William
Cabell, Jr., William
Henry Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; second cousin once removed of Edward
Carrington Cabell, Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; second cousin twice removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke, Henry
De La Warr Flood and Joel
West Flood; second cousin thrice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Beverley
Randolph and Harry
Flood Byrd; second cousin four times removed of Harry
Flood Byrd, Jr.; third cousin of John
William Leftwich; third cousin twice removed of John
Wayles Eppes and Henry
St. George Tucker; fourth cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Grayson-Breckinridge-Smallwood
family of Virginia and Kentucky (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page |
|
|
Clifton Rodes Breckinridge (1846-1932) —
also known as Clifton R. Breckinridge —
of Pine Bluff, Jefferson
County, Ark.; Fort Smith, Sebastian
County, Ark.
Born in Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., November
22, 1846.
Democrat. Served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; planter; U.S.
Representative from Arkansas, 1883-89, 1890-95 (at-large 1883-85,
2nd District 1885-89, 1890-95); U.S. Minister to Russia, 1894-97; delegate
to Arkansas state constitutional convention, 1917.
Died in Wendover, Leslie
County, Ky., December
3, 1932 (age 86 years, 11
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John
Cabell Breckinridge and Mary Cyrene (Burch) Breckinridge
(1826-1907); married, November
21, 1876, to Catherine B. Carson (1853-1921); grandson of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge; grandnephew of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; great-grandson of John
Breckinridge; second great-grandson of John
Witherspoon; second great-grandnephew of William
Preston and William
Cabell; first cousin once removed of Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge and Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862); first cousin thrice removed
of William
Cabell, Jr., Francis
Smith Preston, William
Henry Cabell and James
Patton Preston; second cousin of Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; second cousin once removed of Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin twice removed of William
Campbell Preston, James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd, John
Smith Preston, George
Rogers Clark Floyd and Edward
Carrington Cabell; third cousin of Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin once removed of John
William Leftwich and Earle
Cabell. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — U.S. State Dept career summary — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Peter Augustus Porter (1853-1925) —
also known as Peter A. Porter —
of Niagara Falls, Niagara
County, N.Y.
Born in Niagara Falls, Niagara
County, N.Y., October
10, 1853.
Banker;
newspaper
editor; village
president of Niagara Falls, New York, 1878; member of New York
state assembly from Niagara County 2nd District, 1886-87; U.S.
Representative from New York 34th District, 1907-09.
Died in Buffalo, Erie
County, N.Y., December
15, 1925 (age 72 years, 66
days).
Interment at Oakwood
Cemetery, Niagara Falls, N.Y.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Mary Cabell (Breckinridge) Porter (1826-1854) and Peter
Augustus Porter; married 1887 to Alice
Adele Taylor (1853-1934); grandson of Peter
Buell Porter; grandnephew of Augustus
Seymour Porter (1769-1849), Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; great-grandson of John
Breckinridge; second great-grandnephew of William
Preston and William
Cabell; first cousin once removed of Augustus
Seymour Porter (1798-1872), Peter
Buell Porter, Jr., John
Cabell Breckinridge, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge and Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862); first cousin thrice removed
of William
Cabell, Jr., Francis
Smith Preston, William
Henry Cabell and James
Patton Preston; second cousin of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; second cousin once removed of Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin twice removed of William
Campbell Preston, James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd, John
Smith Preston, George
Rogers Clark Floyd and Edward
Carrington Cabell; second cousin four times removed of Benjamin
Huntington; third cousin of Ulysses
Simpson Grant, Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin once removed of John
William Leftwich, Frederick
Dent Grant, Ulysses
Simpson Grant, Jr. and Earle
Cabell; third cousin twice removed of John
Davenport, Joshua
Coit, James
Davenport, Henry
Huntington, Gurdon
Huntington, Samuel
Lathrop and Abel
Huntington; third cousin thrice removed of Samuel
Huntington and Henry
Scudder; fourth cousin once removed of Ebenezer
Huntington, Gaylord
Griswold, Benjamin
Trumbull, Parmenio
Adams, Elisha
Phelps, Lancelot
Phelps, Theodore
Davenport, Asa H.
Otis, Abijah
Blodget, Benjamin
Nicoll Huntington and Alvred
Bayard Nettleton. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Benjamin Earl Cabell (1858-1931) —
also known as Ben E. Cabell —
of Dallas, Dallas
County, Tex.
Born in Fort Smith, Sebastian
County, Ark., November
18, 1858.
Mayor
of Dallas, Tex., 1900-04.
Died in Dallas, Dallas
County, Tex., February
8, 1931 (age 72 years, 82
days).
Interment at Greenwood
Cemetery, Dallas, Tex.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Harriette (Rector) Cabell (1827-1887) and William
Lewis Cabell; father of Earle
Cabell; nephew of George
Craighead Cabell; grandson of Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell; second great-grandnephew of William
Cabell; first cousin twice removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge (1800-1871); first cousin thrice removed
of William
Cabell, Jr. and William
Henry Cabell; second cousin once removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr., William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge and Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin twice removed of Edward
Carrington Cabell; second cousin thrice removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke; second cousin four times removed of Theodorick
Bland and Beverley
Randolph; third cousin of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; third cousin once removed of John
William Leftwich, Henry
De La Warr Flood and Joel
West Flood; third cousin twice removed of Harry
Flood Byrd; third cousin thrice removed of John
Wayles Eppes, Henry
St. George Tucker and Harry
Flood Byrd, Jr.. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Grayson-Breckinridge-Smallwood
family of Virginia and Kentucky (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Carter Henry Harrison II (1860-1953) —
also known as Carter H. Harrison —
of Chicago, Cook
County, Ill.
Born in Chicago, Cook
County, Ill., April
23, 1860.
Democrat. Lawyer; real estate
business; newspaper
editor and publisher; mayor
of Chicago, Ill., 1897-1905, 1911-15; delegate to Democratic
National Convention from Illinois, 1900,
1916,
1920,
1932,
1936;
U.S. Collector of Internal Revenue for the 1st Illinois District,
1933-44.
Member, Freemasons;
Knights
Templar; Sons of
the American Revolution; Sons of
the Revolution; Society
of the Cincinnati; Veterans of
Foreign Wars; American
Legion; Society
of Colonial Wars; Society
of the War of 1812; Military
Order of the World Wars.
Died in Chicago, Cook
County, Ill., December
25, 1953 (age 93 years, 246
days).
Interment at Graceland
Cemetery, Chicago, Ill.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Carter
Henry Harrison and Sophonisba Grayson (Preston) Harrison
(1833-1876); married to Marguerite Stearns (1858-1887); married, December
14, 1887, to Edith Ogden (1862-1955; author); great-grandson of
William
Russell (1758-1825); great-grandnephew of Alfred
William Grayson and Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862); second great-grandson of William
Russell (1735-1793) and William
Grayson; second great-grandnephew of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791), William
Cabell and William
Smallwood; third great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin twice removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; first cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Cabell, Jr., William
Henry Cabell, William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841) and Beverly
Robinson Grayson; first cousin four times removed of Richard
Bland, Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775) and Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); second cousin once removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr., William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge and Benjamin
Earl Cabell; second cousin twice removed of Dabney
Carr, John
Scott Harrison and Edward
Carrington Cabell; second cousin thrice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, George
Nicholas, Beverley
Randolph, Wilson
Cary Nicholas, John
Nicholas and John
Randolph of Roanoke; third cousin of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge, Henry
Skillman Breckinridge and Earle
Cabell; third cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, John
William Leftwich and Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901); third cousin twice removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph, Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857) and Stanley
Matthews; third cousin thrice removed of Burwell
Bassett and Samuel
Nicholls Smallwood; fourth cousin of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, Henry
De La Warr Flood, John
Brady Grayson, Frederick
Madison Roberts and Joel
West Flood; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, John
Strother Pendleton, Albert
Gallatin Pendleton, Peter
Myndert Dox, Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, John
Gardner Coolidge, Harry
Flood Byrd and William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990). |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Cross-reference: Robert
E. Burke |
| | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Image source: Library of
Congress |
|
|
Levin Irving Handy (1861-1922) —
also known as L. Irving Handy —
of Newark, New Castle
County, Del.
Born in Berlin, Worcester
County, Md., December
24, 1861.
Democrat. School teacher
and principal; Kent
County Superintendent of Free Schools, 1887-90; lawyer; Delaware
Democratic state chair, 1892-96; newspaper
editorial writer; lecturer;
U.S.
Representative from Delaware at-large, 1897-99; delegate to
Democratic National Convention from Delaware, 1900,
1904,
1908;
candidate for Delaware
state attorney general, 1904.
Died in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., February
3, 1922 (age 60 years, 41
days).
Interment at Glenwood
Cemetery, Smyrna, Del.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Rev. William Collins Handy (1835-1909) and Marie (Breckinridge)
Handy (1836-1905); married, January
25, 1887, to Mary Corbit Bell (1857-1930); nephew of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; grandson of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; grandnephew of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, William
Campbell Preston and John
Smith Preston; great-grandson of John
Breckinridge and Francis
Smith Preston; great-grandnephew of James
Patton Preston; second great-grandson of William
Preston and William
Campbell; second great-grandnephew of William
Cabell and Patrick
Henry; first cousin of Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; first cousin once removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864); first cousin twice removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell (1793-1862), James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd and George
Rogers Clark Floyd; first cousin thrice removed of William
Cabell, Jr. and William
Henry Cabell; second cousin of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925); second cousin once removed of Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin twice removed of Valentine
Wood Southall and Edward
Carrington Cabell; third cousin of Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin once removed of John
William Leftwich, Stephen
Valentine Southall and Earle
Cabell; third cousin thrice removed of Daniel
Carroll and Charles
Carroll of Carrollton; fourth cousin once removed of Reuben
Handy Meriwether. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Walker-Bolling
family of Huntsville, Alabama (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Image source: Autobiographies and
Portraits of the President, Cabinet, etc. (1899) |
|
|
Joseph Weldon Bailey (1862-1929) —
also known as Joseph W. Bailey —
of Gainesville, Cooke
County, Tex.; Dallas, Dallas
County, Tex.
Born near Crystal Springs, Copiah
County, Miss., October
6, 1862.
Democrat. Lawyer;
Presidential Elector for Texas, 1888;
U.S.
Representative from Texas 5th District, 1891-1901; U.S.
Senator from Texas, 1901-13; delegate to Democratic National
Convention from Texas, 1904;
candidate in primary for Governor of
Texas, 1920.
Died, from a coronary
embolism, in a courtroom
while defending a client, in the Grayson County
Courthouse, Sherman, Grayson
County, Tex., April
13, 1929 (age 66 years, 189
days).
Interment at Fairview
Cemetery, Gainesville, Tex.
|
|
Robert Lee Henry (1864-1931) —
also known as Robert L. Henry —
of Texarkana, Bowie
County, Tex.; Waco, McLennan
County, Tex.
Born in Linden, Cass
County, Tex., May 12,
1864.
Democrat. Lawyer; mayor
of Texarkana, Tex., 1890-91; U.S.
Representative from Texas, 1897-1917 (7th District 1897-1903, 1st
District 1903-05, 11th District 1905-17); delegate to Democratic
National Convention from Texas, 1912
(member, Committee
on Rules and Order of Business; speaker).
Died from the accidental
discharge of a pistol,
in Houston, Harris
County, Tex., July 9,
1931 (age 67 years, 58
days).
Interment at Rose
Hill Cemetery, Texarkana, Tex.
|
|
Desha Breckinridge (1867-1935) —
of Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky.
Born in Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., August
5, 1867.
Democrat. Lawyer; newspaper
editor and publisher; director, the First National Bank of
Lexington; director, Fayette Home Telephone
Company; director, Phoenix Hotel
Company; delegate to Democratic National Convention from Kentucky, 1920,
1928,
1932.
Presbyterian.
Died in Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., February
18, 1935 (age 67 years, 197
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge and Issa (Desha) Breckinridge
(1843-1892); married, November
17, 1898, to Madeline McDowell (1872-1920; social reformer);
nephew of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr.; grandson of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; grandnephew of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge, William
Campbell Preston and John
Smith Preston; great-grandson of John
Breckinridge, Francis
Smith Preston and Joseph
Desha; great-grandnephew of James
Patton Preston; second great-grandson of William
Preston and William
Campbell; second great-grandnephew of William
Cabell and Patrick
Henry; first cousin of Levin
Irving Handy and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; first cousin once removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864); first cousin twice removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd and George
Rogers Clark Floyd; first cousin thrice removed of William
Cabell, Jr. and William
Henry Cabell; second cousin of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925); second cousin once removed of Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin twice removed of Valentine
Wood Southall and Edward
Carrington Cabell; third cousin of Benjamin
Earl Cabell (1858-1931) and Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin once removed of John
William Leftwich, Stephen
Valentine Southall and Earle
Cabell. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Epitaph: "Our boast of you is that we
found you brave." |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
William Henry Prague (1867-1935) —
also known as William H. Prague —
of Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto
County, Tex.; Lewisville, Denton
County, Tex.
Born in Parker
County, Tex., November
18, 1867.
Carpenter;
hotel
manager; mayor
of Lewisville, Tex., 1931-32.
Died in Aubrey, Denton
County, Tex., February
17, 1935 (age 67 years, 91
days).
Interment at Springtown Cemetery, Springtown, Tex.
|
|
Henry Skillman Breckinridge (1886-1960) —
also known as Henry Breckinridge; Henry
Breckenridge —
of Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky.; Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.; Fresh Meadows, Queens, Queens
County, N.Y.
Born in Chicago, Cook
County, Ill., May 25,
1886.
Democrat. Assistant Secretary of War, 1913-16; served in the U.S.
Army during World War I; lawyer;
attorney for Charles A. Lindbergh, 1932; Constitutional candidate for
U.S.
Senator from New York, 1934; candidate for Democratic nomination
for President, 1936.
Presbyterian.
Member, American Bar
Association; Sons of
the American Revolution; Military
Order of the World Wars; American
Legion; Loyal
Legion; Navy
League.
Died, in St. Vincent's Hospital,
Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., May 3,
1960 (age 73 years, 344
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Joseph Cabell Breckinridge (1842-1921) and Louise Ludlow (Dudley)
Breckinridge (1849-1911); married, July 7,
1910, to Ruth (Bradley) Woodman (divorced 1925); married, August
5, 1927, to Aida (de Acosta) Root (divorced 1947); married, March
27, 1947, to Margaret Lucy Smith; nephew of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; grandson of Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge (1800-1871); grandnephew of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge (1788-1823), William
Campbell Preston and John
Smith Preston; great-grandson of John
Breckinridge and Francis
Smith Preston; great-grandnephew of James
Patton Preston; second great-grandson of William
Preston and William
Campbell; second great-grandnephew of William
Cabell and Patrick
Henry; first cousin of Levin
Irving Handy and Desha
Breckinridge; first cousin once removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864); first cousin twice removed of James
Douglas Breckinridge, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, James
McDowell, John
Buchanan Floyd and George
Rogers Clark Floyd; first cousin thrice removed of William
Cabell, Jr. and William
Henry Cabell; second cousin of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge and Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925); second cousin once removed of Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; second cousin twice removed of Valentine
Wood Southall and Edward
Carrington Cabell; third cousin of Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin once removed of John
William Leftwich, Stephen
Valentine Southall and Earle
Cabell. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Grayson-Breckinridge-Smallwood
family of Virginia and Kentucky (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Joseph Weldon Bailey, Jr. (1892-1943) —
also known as Joseph W. Bailey, Jr. —
of Dallas, Dallas
County, Tex.
Born in Gainesville, Cooke
County, Tex., December
15, 1892.
Democrat. Served in the U.S. Army during World War I; lawyer; U.S.
Representative from Texas at-large, 1933-35; served in the U.S.
Marine Corps during World War II.
Presbyterian.
Died
in military service, of pneumonia
following injuries he suffered in a collision,
in the military hospital
at Camp Howze, near Gainesville, Cooke
County, Tex., July 17,
1943 (age 50 years, 214
days).
Original interment at Fairview
Cemetery, Gainesville, Tex.; reinterment in 1958 at Sparkman
Hillcrest Memorial Park, Dallas, Tex.
|
|
May Preston Davie (1895-1975) —
also known as Eugénie Mary Ladenburg; Mrs. Preston
Davie —
of Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., January
31, 1895.
Republican. Delegate
to New York convention to ratify 21st amendment, 1933; delegate
to Republican National Convention from New York, 1936,
1960
(alternate).
Female.
Died, of heart
failure, in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., September
19, 1975 (age 80 years, 231
days).
Interment at Cave
Hill Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
|
|
Earle Cabell (1906-1975) —
of Dallas, Dallas
County, Tex.
Born in Dallas
County, Tex., October
27, 1906.
Democrat. Mayor of
Dallas, Tex., 1961-64; U.S.
Representative from Texas 5th District, 1965-73; defeated, 1972.
Episcopalian.
Member, Elks.
Died in Dallas, Dallas
County, Tex., September
24, 1975 (age 68 years, 332
days).
Interment at Restland
Memorial Park, Dallas, Tex.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Sadie (Earle) Cabell (1869-1921); married, February
22, 1932, to Elizabeth Holder (1906-1991); grandson of William
Lewis Cabell; grandnephew of George
Craighead Cabell; great-grandson of Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell; third great-grandnephew of William
Cabell; first cousin thrice removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge (1800-1871); first cousin four times
removed of William
Cabell, Jr. and William
Henry Cabell; second cousin twice removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Carter
Henry Harrison, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, Jr. and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; second cousin thrice removed of Edward
Carrington Cabell; second cousin four times removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke; second cousin five times removed of Theodorick
Bland and Beverley
Randolph; third cousin of Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin once removed of Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; third cousin twice removed of John
William Leftwich; fourth cousin of Henry
De La Warr Flood and Joel
West Flood; fourth cousin once removed of Harry
Flood Byrd. |
| | Political families: Marshall-Harrison-Randolph-Cabell
family of Virginia; Breckinridge-Preston-Cabell-Henry
family of Virginia; Kellogg-Seymour-Chapin-Adams
family of Connecticut and New York; Grayson-Breckinridge-Smallwood
family of Virginia and Kentucky (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
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John Bayne Breckinridge (1913-1979) —
also known as John B. Breckinridge —
of Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky.
Born in Washington,
D.C., November
29, 1913.
Democrat. Lawyer;
colonel in the U.S. Army during World War II; member of Kentucky
state house of representatives 49th District, 1956-59; Kentucky
state attorney general, 1960-64, 1968-72; delegate to Democratic
National Convention from Kentucky, 1960;
Lieutenant
Governor of Kentucky, 1971; defeated, 1963; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 6th District, 1973-79; defeated in
primary, 1978.
Member, American Bar
Association; American
Judicature Society; Veterans of
Foreign Wars; American
Legion; Kappa
Alpha Order.
Died in Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., July 29,
1979 (age 65 years, 242
days).
Cremated;
ashes interred at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
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