Note: This is just one of
1,325
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.
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.
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Hiram George Runnels (1796-1857) —
also known as Hiram G. Runnels —
Born in Hancock
County, Ga., December
17, 1796.
Mississippi
state auditor, 1822-30; member of Mississippi state legislature,
1830, 1841; Governor of
Mississippi, 1833-35; delegate
to Texas state constitutional convention, 1845.
Fought a duel
with Volney
E. Howard.
Died in Houston, Harris
County, Tex., December
17, 1857 (age 61 years, 0
days).
Interment at Glenwood
Cemetery, Houston, Tex.
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Hardin Richard Runnels (1820-1873) —
of Boston, Bowie
County, Tex.
Born in Mississippi, August
30, 1820.
Democrat. Member of Texas
state house of representatives, 1847-54; Speaker of
the Texas State House of Representatives, 1853-54; Lieutenant
Governor of Texas, 1855-57; Governor of
Texas, 1857-59; delegate to Democratic National Convention from
Texas, 1860;
delegate
to Texas secession convention, 1861; delegate
to Texas state constitutional convention, 1866.
Member, Freemasons.
Died December
25, 1873 (age 53 years, 117
days).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Bowie County, Tex.; reinterment in
1929 at Texas
State Cemetery, Austin, Tex.
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William Robinson Baker (1820-1890) —
also known as William R. Baker —
of Houston, Harris
County, Tex.
Born in Baldwinsville, Onondaga
County, N.Y., May 21,
1820.
Harris
County Clerk, 1841-57; railroad
executive; member of Texas
state senate 16th District, 1874-75; mayor
of Houston, Tex., 1880-86.
Died in Houston, Harris
County, Tex., April
30, 1890 (age 69 years, 344
days).
Interment at Glenwood
Cemetery, Houston, Tex.
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Benjamin Franklin Terry (1821-1861) —
also known as Frank Terry —
Born in Russellville, Logan
County, Ky., February
18, 1821.
Planter;
in 1844, he was attacked
by two rebellious slaves with knives and axes; railroad
builder; delegate
to Texas secession convention, 1861; colonel in the Confederate
Army during the Civil War.
Shot
and killed in
action while leading Terry's Texas Rangers at the battle of
Woodsonville (also called Rowlett's Station), in Hart
County, Ky., December
17, 1861 (age 40 years, 302
days).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Fort Bend County, Tex.; reinterment
in 1880 at Glenwood
Cemetery, Houston, Tex.
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David Smith Terry (1823-1889) —
also known as David S. Terry —
of Galveston, Galveston
County, Tex.; San
Francisco, Calif.; Stockton, San
Joaquin County, Calif.
Born in Christian County (part now in Todd
County), Ky., March 8,
1823.
Lawyer;
went
to California for the 1849 Gold Rush; advocated the extension of
slavery to California; justice of
California state supreme court, 1855-59; chief
justice of California state supreme court, 1857-59; killed U.S.
Senator David
C. Broderick in a duel
near San Francisco in 1859; tried
for murder,
but acquitted; served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War;
delegate
to California state constitutional convention, 1878-79; candidate
for Presidential Elector for California, 1880;
his wife Sarah Althea Hill claimed to be the widow and heir of
wealthy U.S. Senator William
Sharon; in September, 1888, when her claim was finally rejected
by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen
J. Field (acting as a Court of Appeals judge for California), she
and Terry caused an altercation in the courtroom and were jailed
six months for contempt
of court.
Five months after his release from jail, he encountered Justice Field
and slapped him in the face; he was then shot
through the heart and killed by
U.S. Deputy Marshal David Neagle, the justice's bodyguard, in the train
station dining
room at Lathrop, San Joaquin
County, Calif., August
14, 1889 (age 66 years, 159
days). Neagle was arrested by local authorities, but later
released on the demand of the U.S. government.
Interment at Stockton
Rural Cemetery, Stockton, Calif.
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