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Hugh Holmes (Virginia politician)

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Hugh Holmes
11th Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates
In office
1803–1805
Preceded byEdmund Harrison
Succeeded byPeter Johnston
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Frederick County
In office
December 6, 1802-late 1805
Preceded byJohn Lewis
Succeeded byCharles Brent
Member of the Virginia Senate from Frederick, Berkeley, Hampshire and Hardy Counties
In office
November 10, 1795-December 1, 1799
Preceded byJohn Smith
Succeeded byCharles Magill
Personal details
Born(1768-11-08)November 8, 1768
York County, Colony of Pennsylvania, British America
DiedJanuary 19, 1825(1825-01-19) (aged 56)
Winchester, Virginia
Resting placeMt. Hebron Cemetery, Winchester, Virginia
SpouseElizabeth Briscoe
ChildrenHilda
Professionattorney, politician, judge

Hugh Holmes (November 8, 1768–January 19, 1825) was a Virginia lawyer, politician and judge.[1]

Early life and education

Born in York County, Pennsylvania on November 8, 1768, the eldest son of Scots-Irish immigrant and merchant Joseph Holmes (1746-1808) and his wife Rebecca Hunter. His parents moved south to Winchester, Virginia, at the northern edge of the Shenandoah Valley by 1775, and Joseph Holmes would represent surrounding Frederick County (Winchester being the county seat) in the Virginia House of Delegates beginning in 1789. The family included two more brothers: future Congressman and Mississippi Governor David Holmes (1769-1832) and Major Andrew Hunter Holmes (who died in the Battle of Mackinac Island (1814)). All five daughters married: Elizabeth Holmes (b. 1877) married Edward McGuire of Frederick County, Rebecca Holmes (b. 1779) married Dr. David Conrad, Nancy Holmes married Gen. Elisha Boyd in Martinsburg; Gertrude Holmes married William Moss of Fairfax County.[2] In 1787, Joseph Holmes owned more than a dozen slaves in Frederick County.[3]

Career

In 1795, Hugh Holmes began his political career by winning election as mayor of Winchester, the Frederick County seat. He became a noted trial attorney in the area.[4] He also, like his father, owned enslaved people: seven in 1810[5] and either nine or ten in 1820, the last federal census before his death.[6]

In 1799, voters in northwestern Virginia (Frederick, Berkeley, Hampshire and Hardy Counties) elected Hugh Holmes to the Virginia Senate, then a part-time position.[7]

In 1802, Frederick County voters elected as Holmes one of their representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates, and re-elected him several times (but each time changed his co-delegate). Fellow legislators selected Holmes as their 11th Speaker in 1803, and he served until 1805, when they elected him as a state judge (so Holmes resigned his legislative positions). Attorney Charles Brent succeeded Holmes in representing Frederick County in the House of Delegates; Peter Johnston succeeded him as Speaker.[8][9] His brother David Holmes, who had become Commonwealth attorney for Rockingham County (further south in the Shenandoah Valley) early in his legal career, became a U.S. Congressman, and later the last governor of the Mississippi Territory and the first governor of Mississippi.

Hugh Holmes and fellow judge William Brockenbrough served together on the Rockfish Gap Commission that helped establish the University of Virginia and would also publish volumes of opinions issued by the General Court between its establishment in 1789 and 1826.[10][11]

Death and legacy

Holmes suffered a stroke in late January 1825, and died a week later.[12] His widow survived him by more than a decade. Virginia legislators selected Philip P. Barbour as Holmes' successor on the western Virginia bench, although he would only serve two years before winning election to the U.S. House of Representatives (and later served as an Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court). Although Hugh Holmes was buried in Winchester's Presbyterian Cemetery, his remains (and those of many others) were reinterred at now-historic Mount Hebron Cemetery in 1912.

References

  1. ^ Garland R. Quarles, Some Worthy Lives (Winchester, Virginia Winchester-Frederick County Historical Society 1988) pp. 127-128
  2. ^ Quarles p. 1290
  3. ^ Netti Schriener-Yantis and Florene Speakman Love, The 1787 Census of Virginia (Springfield, Virginia: Genealogical Books in Print 1987) p.
  4. ^ "House History".
  5. ^ 1810 U.S. Federal Census for Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia p. 12 of 12
  6. ^ 1820 U.S. Federal Census for Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia p. 7 of 7
  7. ^ Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 202, 206, 210, 214
  8. ^ "House History".
  9. ^ 227, 231, 235, 239, 240
  10. ^ "William Brockenbrough, March 1, 1834-December 10, 1838". 5 May 2014.
  11. ^ "Founders Online: To Thomas Jefferson from Hugh Holmes, 17 December 1801".
  12. ^ Obituary in the National Intelligencer, Jan. 31, 1825 gives his death date as January 27, 1825, after paralysis that began the preceding Friday and several more distant newspapers give his death date in February 1825.