- Eppa Hunton
Infobox Person
name=Eppa Hunton
caption=
birth_date=birth date|1822|9|24|mf=y
birth_place=Fauquier County,Virginia , U.S.
dead=dead
death_date=death date and age|1908|10|11|1822|9|24|mf=y
death_place=Richmond,Virginia , U.S.Eppa Hunton II (
September 24 ,1822 –October 11 ,1908 ) was a U.S. Representative and Senator fromVirginia and abrigadier general in theConfederate Army during theAmerican Civil War .Early years
Hunton was born near
Warrenton, Virginia onSeptember 24 ,1822 , to Eppa Sr. and Elizabeth Mary (Brent) Hunton (marriedJune 22 ,1811 , in Fauquier County), who had twelve children in all. After graduating from theNew Baltimore Academy , he taught school for three years, then studiedlaw and was admitted to the bar in 1843, commencing practice inBrentsville, Virginia . He became prominent as acolonel , and laterbrigadier general , in the Virginia militia and as a Commonwealthattorney for Prince William County (1849–1861).Family life
In 1848, Hunton was married to
Lucy Caroline Weir (February 20 ,1825 –September 4 ,1899 ), daughter of Robert and Clara Boothe Weir. They had two children::*Elizabeth Boothe Hunton (June 20 ,1853 –September 30 ,1854 ):*Eppa Hunton III (April 14 ,1855 –March 5 ,1932 )Their second child, Eppa Hunton III, went on to co-found the notable Richmond law firm "Hunton & Williams" in 1901. In 1977, the firm established the "Eppa Hunton IV Memorial Book Award" at the
University of Virginia 's School of Law, in honor of Hunton's grandson, who lived fromJuly 31 ,1904 toNovember 23 ,1976 . According to the University, the award is "presented annually to a third-year student who has demonstrated unusual aptitude in litigation courses and shown a keen awareness and understanding of the lawyer's ethical and professional responsibility."Hunton also appears to have had a child with a female slave, Henrietta. This child, John, was born on
November 5 ,1854 .Fridley, Beth. "Prince William County, Birth Registry, 1853-1877". Orem, UT: [http://www.ancestry.com/search/rectype/default.aspx?rt=34 Ancestry, Inc.] , 1998. (contents of source detailed at )]Civil War
In February 1861, Hunton was a delegate to the Virginia Secession Convention, and advocated
secession . With the outbreak of theAmerican Civil War , he was commissioned acolonel of the8th Virginia Infantry of theConfederate Army , participating in theFirst Battle of Bull Run in July. In October his regiment was part of Nathan G. Evans' brigade nearLeesburg, Virginia , where he led his command against a Union force at Ball's Bluff, driving it into thePotomac River .Afterward, Hunton held
brigade command in Lt. Gen.James Longstreet 's corps, Maj. Gen.George Pickett 's division, and the Department of Richmond, being promoted tobrigadier general in August 1863, after theBattle of Gettysburg . DuringPickett's Charge , Hunton was wounded in the leg. After service in the defenses of Richmond, he rejoined Pickett's division and fought at Cold Harbor and in the Richmond and Petersburg siege lines. In March 1865 his command fought a delaying action at Five Forks and again the following month atBattle of Sayler's Creek , where he was captured onApril 6 ,1865 . He was paroled at Fort Warren, Massachusetts, onJuly 24 .Post-war politics
After the war Hunton resumed his former law practice and became involved in politics. He was elected as a Democrat from
Virginia to the 43rd and the three succeeding Congresses (March 4 ,1873 –March 3 ,1881 ). During his years as a Representative, Hunton was chairman of theCommittee on Revolutionary Pensions (44th Congress), and of theCommittee on the District of Columbia (46th Congress). He was appointed to the 15-member Electoral Commission created by an act of Congress in 1877 to decide the contests in various States in the presidential election of 1876.Hunton was not a candidate for renomination in 1880, instead resuming the practice of law. He was appointed and subsequently elected as a Democrat to the
United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John S. Barbour, and served fromMay 28 ,1892 , toMarch 3 ,1895 . Hunton served as chairman of theU.S. Senate Committee to Establish a University of the United States from 1893-1895.On or about
April 1 ,1894 , Hunton became indirectly involved in voting bribery attempts.Charles W. Buttz , a lobbyist and claim agent originally fromNorth Dakota , but living inWashington, D.C. at the time, went to Hunton's house inWarrenton, Virginia , during the Senator's absence. Buttz told Hunton's son, Eppa III, that he would pay him a contingent fee of $25,000 if he would, by presenting arguments as to the pending tariff bill, induce his father to vote against it. Excerpts from the Senate investigating committee on this issue follow:This offer was declined at once and peremptorily by Eppa Hunton [III] , as set forth in his testimony, and the whole matter was communicated by him to his father. Senator Hunton availed himself of the first opportunity to disclose the matter to certain of his friends in the senate, as appears in the testimony, and was in no other way connected with the transaction.
Buttz also attempted to bribe
South Dakota SenatorJames Henderson Kyle to vote against the same bill. Hunton and Kyle were eventually exonerated from all blame.Afterward, Hunton again resumed his law practice in
Warrenton, Virginia . OnOctober 11 ,1908 , Hunton died inRichmond, Virginia and was buried in the city'sHollywood Cemetery .Trivia
*In 1850, Hunton owned 6 slaves, 5 black: 2 males (ages 10, 5), 3 females (ages 33, 30, <1); 1
mulatto : female, age 14.
*In 1860, Hunton owned 8 slaves, all black: 5 males (ages 60, 50, 12, 6, 2), 3 females (ages 31, 14, 9).Notes
References
Books and newspapers
1. "The Trenton Times", Trenton, New Jersey,
26 May 1894 . ()Websites
* [http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/Staff-Rides/ballsbluff/biographical.htm U.S. Army selected biographical sketches]
*CongBio|H000999|name=HUNTON, Eppa|inline=1
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/huntly-hurlbut.html The Political Graveyard]
* [http://www.ronulrich.com/rfuged/fam03056.htm ULRICH family tree links]
* [http://www.virginia.edu/registrar/records/gradrec/chapter11/chapter11-8.htm University of Virginia School of Law: Annual Awards and Honors]
* [http://www.pwcgov.org/docLibrary/PDF/002509.pdf Prince William County, Virginia Reliquary]References
*Hunton, Eppa. "The Autobiography of Eppa Hunton." Richmond: William Byrd Press, 1933.
External links
* [http://members.aol.com/jweaver300/grayson/hunton.htm Detailed biography taken from "Confederate Military History", Vol. III.]
* [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llcr&fileName=005/llcr005.db&recNum=118 "Civil Rights–"The world is governed too much"] - speech given onFebruary 3 ,1875 , House of Representatives, 43rd Congress, 2nd Session
* [http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=mfd&fileName=38/38005/38005page.db&recNum=0&itemLink=/ammem/doughtml/dougFolder5.html&linkText=7 The Frederick Douglass Papers] - speech given onDecember 13 ,1894 , on the Bill (S. No. 1708) to Establish the University of the United States
* [http://www.hunton.com Hunton & Williams law firm]
* [http://usa-civil-war.com/Hollywood/hollywood_5.html Site with image of Hunton's tombstone] , listing the dates of birth and death.
* [http://www.generalsandbrevets.com/sgh/hunton.htm Photos of Eppa Hunton]Persondata
NAME= Hunton, Eppa
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Hunton, Eppa, II
SHORT DESCRIPTION=U.S. Representative and Senator fromVirginia and abrigadier general in theConfederate Army during theAmerican Civil War
DATE OF BIRTH=1822-9-24
PLACE OF BIRTH=Marion County,South Carolina , U.S.
DATE OF DEATH=1908-10-11
PLACE OF DEATH=Richmond,Virginia , U.S.
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