Dabney Carr
Dabney Carr | |
---|---|
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court | |
In office February 24, 1824 – January 8, 1837 | |
Personal details | |
Born |
Goochland County, Virginia | April 27, 1773
Died |
January 8, 1837 63) Richmond, Virginia | (aged
Spouse(s) | Elizabeth Carr |
Alma mater | Hampden-Sydney College |
Profession | Lawyer, writer, judge |
Dabney Carr (April 27, 1773 – January 8, 1837) was a Virginia lawyer, writer and a justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals.
Biography
Carr was born at Spring Forest, a Goochland County, Virginia, plantation just three weeks before the death of his father, also named Dabney Carr, brother-in-law and close friend of Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson took an active role in the support and education of his nephew after his father's death. He attended Hampden-Sydney College and returned home to study law with William Wirt, who was just one year older. The two men remained friends for the rest of their lives. An extensive collection of their letters can be found in the Manuscripts Department, Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
He married his paternal cousin, Elizabeth Carr in June 1802. His nephew, Dabney Smith Carr, was a newspaper publisher and later was U.S. Minister to the Ottoman Empire (1843–49).
Carr started practice in Albemarle County and, in 1811, became Chancellor of the Winchester District. Using the pseudonym Obediah Squaretoes, Carr contributed an article to William Wirt's The Old Bachelor (1814). In 1824, he was elected a judge of the Supreme Court of Appeals and held this office until his death.
He is interred in Richmond's Shockoe Hill Cemetery.
Sources
- John T. Kneebone et al., eds., Dictionary of Virginia Biography (Richmond, 2006), 3:27-28.
External links
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