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James Jones (Virginia politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician

James Jones
Member of theU.S. House of Representatives
fromVirginia's19th district
In office
March 4, 1819 – March 3, 1823
Preceded byJohn Pegram
Succeeded byWilliam McCoy
Member of theVirginia House of Delegates
from theNottoway County district
In office
December 3, 1827 – December 6, 1829
Serving with Hezekiah R. Anderson
Preceded byNathan Ward
Succeeded byArchibald A. Campbell
Member of theVirginia House of Delegates
from the Nottoway County district
In office
December 3, 1804 – December 3, 1809
Serving with Tyree G. Bacon, Griffin Lamkin, John Fitzgerald
Preceded byFreeman Epes
Succeeded byPeter Bland
Personal details
BornJames Jones
(1772-12-11)December 11, 1772
DiedApril 25, 1848(1848-04-25) (aged 75)
PartyDemocratic
SpouseCatherine Harris
Alma materHampden–Sydney College
Military service
AllegianceUnited States of America
Branch/serviceVirginia militia
Years of service1812–16


James Jones (December 11, 1772 – April 25, 1848) was a medical doctor, planter and politician who also served as an officer in theWar of 1812. Jones served several terms in theVirginia House of Delegates representingNottoway County as well asU.S. Representative fromVirginia's 19th congressional district.[1]

Early life

[edit]

Born to the former Mary Epes and her planter husband Richard Jones (Jr.) (d. 1817) in Nottoway Parish then inAmelia County in the Colony of Virginia. Nottoway County was created during this man's childhood due to increasing population, and the farm on which he grew up and later inherited was part of the new county. His great-grandfatherRichard Jones was one of the first two men to represent Amelia County in the House of Burgesses after its formation in 1735. His grandfather (also) Richard Jones died in 1778 during the American Revolutionary War (also during this boy's childhood), but his father would not die until 1817, after this man reached legal age. This Jones family, of Welsh ancestry, descended from three generations of traders named Peter Jones (whose trading post became the foundation forPetersburg considerably downstream on theAppomattox River, but the last Peter Jones moved to the then-frontier Amelia County where he died). His uncle Col. John Jones of Amelia County was prominent in that conflict as was this man's father, Major Richard Jones. In any event, young James Jones was born in comfortable economic circumstances and received an education appropriate for his class, then graduated fromHampden–Sydney College in 1791.[2] He had studied medicine with Dr. Joe Mettaur of nearbyPrince Edward County, then traveled north toBaltimore, Maryland to study with Dr. George Brown,[3] and then continued toPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania for medical education at theJefferson Medical College in December 1793. Finally, Jones traveled to Europe and earned a degree inmedicine from theUniversity of Edinburgh Medical School inScotland in June 1796.[4]

Career

[edit]

Upon returning to Amelia County in November 1796, Dr. Jones practiced medicine and also helped his father operate plantations using enslaved labor, as had his grandfather and great-grandfather. He built a plantation house in the Georgian style which is now a National Historic Landmark.[5] In 1820, the first census after his father's death, Jones owned 30 enslaved people in Nottoway County.[6] In the last federal census of his life, Jones owned 56 enslaved people in Nottoway County.[7] He supported education (serving on the Hampden-Sydney Board of Trustees for decades), opposed high tariffs and in 1822 was president of Nottoway's agricultural society when he wrote a paper published in theAmerican Farmer. In his will, he manumitted all his slaves and advised them to move to Liberia.[8]

Meanwhile, Nottoway County voters elected Jones as one of their representatives (part-time) in theVirginia House of Delegates in 1804, and re-elected him annually until 1809. Thus he served first alongside veteran Tyree G. Bacon, then twice alongside Griffin Lamkin, and twice alongside John Fitzgerald.[9] Then from 1809 until he resigned in 1811, Jones served on the Virginia Governor's Council. During theWar of 1812, Jones initially served as surgeon of the local militia led by his brother Capt. Richard Jones, but was promoted to become director general of hospital and medical stores.[10]

Jones failed to win election to theFifteenth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death ofPeterson Goodwyn, but two years later was elected as aDemocratic-Republican to theSixteenth and re-elected to theSeventeenth Congresses (March 4, 1819 – March 3, 1823). He announced his retirement following the redistricting caused by the 1820 census, and was succeeded by Congressman William McCoy of Pendleton County far to the west.

Upon leaving Congress, Jones resumed farming and his educational advocacy. Nottoway County voters again elected Jones to the Virginia House of Delegates in 1827 and re-elected him once, before replacing both him and veteran legislator Hezekiah Anderson in late 1829.[11] Anderson owned and adjacent plantation, as well as worked with Capt. Richard Jones, as president of the Bellefonte Jockey Club.[12] In 1825, Virginia's legislature had allowed incorporation of a company to create a canal to make Deep Creek navigable from Nottoway County until its drainage into the Appomattox River, allowing stock valued at $8300. Jones and his probable relative Robert Jones were among the 14 landowners who signed a right-of-way and release of damage claims to the Deep Creek Company.[13]

Personal life

[edit]

Jones had become a free thinker during his time in Scotland, and joined a local Amelia County philosophic society and debating group that called themselves the "Tom Paine Infidel Club." (Paineville, Virginia, named for that same freethinker is in western Amelia County near at least one of the Jones family plantations)[14] He had two daughters, one dying in 1799 and the other in 1810 (aged 11). When the second daughter died, Jones first sought comfort from that philosophy, but about 1810 assembled the club and gave a speech extolling Christianity, which soon thereafter led to the club's disbandment. He then became an elder in the Presbyterian Church, and facilitated a great moral reformation in Southside Virginia in 1825.[15] He also was one of ten physicians who petitioned the legislature to create a "Jefferson College," and in 1817 was elected an honorary member of the Philadelphia Medical Society.[16]

Jones married Catherine Harris of Surry County, whose sister married Mr. Campbell who owned "Blendon" plantation in Nottoway County.[17] Another sister married Mr. Fletcher of "Somerset" plantation.[18]

Death and legacy

[edit]

Jones was opposed to slavery (as finally would be his Amelia andCharlotte county neighbor CongressmanJohn Randolph) and in his will set free all his slaves, advising them to settle in Liberia.[19] Jones died at his home, "Mountain Hall," nearNottoway, Virginia on April 25, 1848. He was interred there in the family burying ground, and his widow carried out his request before her death in 1860. Mountain Hall was purchased after the conflict by CSA Col. Calvin Jeffress (who would be buried in what had been the Jones graveyard), and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.[20][21] A portrait is displayed at the Nottoway library.[22]

Sources

[edit]
  1. ^Lyon Gardiner Tyler, Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography (1915) vol. 2, p. 115 available at hathitrust.org
  2. ^"Lacy, Drury".The National Cyclopædia of American Biography. Vol. II. New York: James T. White & Company. 1921. p. 22.
  3. ^Kathleen Halverson Hadfield, Historical Notes on Amelia County, Virginia (Amelia County Historical Committee, 1982) p. 409
  4. ^Hadfield p. 409
  5. ^W.R. Turner, Old Homes and Families in Nottoway (Nottoway Publishing, 1932) pp. 176-178
  6. ^1820 U.S. Federal Census for Nottoway County, Virginia p.6 of 16
  7. ^1840 U.S. Federal Census for Nottoway County, Virginia p.8 of 29
  8. ^A.B. Cummins, Nottoway County Virginia: Founding and Development with Biographical Sketches (Nottoway Publishing Co., 1970) pp. 236-237
  9. ^Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 236, 141, 245. 249, 253
  10. ^Cummins pp. 76-77
  11. ^Leonard pp. 340, 345
  12. ^Turner, pp. 68, 181
  13. ^Hadfield p. 192
  14. ^Cummins, p. 17
  15. ^Hadfield p. 409
  16. ^Hadfield p.409
  17. ^Cummins pp. 17, 126
  18. ^Turner pp. 177-178
  19. ^Cummins p. 126
  20. ^Turner pp. 178-180
  21. ^Roy Holte (September 2001)."National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Mountain Hall". Virginia Department of Historic Resources.
  22. ^Cummins p. 76
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
fromVirginia's 19th congressional district

March 4, 1819 – March 3, 1823 (obsolete district)
Succeeded by

Public Domain This article incorporatespublic domain material fromBiographical Directory of the United States Congress.Federal government of the United States.

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