James Sanders Wheat
James Sanders Wheat | |
---|---|
Unionist Attorney General of Virginia | |
In office 1861–1863 | |
Preceded by | John Randolph Tucker (contested) |
Succeeded by | Thomas Russell Bowden |
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from the Ohio County district | |
In office December 3, 1849 – December 1, 1850 | |
Preceded by | William Pitts |
Succeeded by | Charles Wells Russell |
Personal details | |
Born | Prince George's County, Maryland, US | May 8, 1810
Died | September 24, 1874 Wheeling, West Virginia, US | (aged 60)
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Elizabeth Johnson Dorsey |
Children | 5 |
Occupation | lawyer |
James Sanders Wheat (May 9, 1810 – September 24, 1874) was the Attorney General of Virginia in Union held territory from 1861 to 1863.[1][2]
Early and family life
[edit]James Wheat was born on May 10, 1810, the fourth son of merchant Thomas Wheat and his wife Mary Chatham, at Cool Spring Plantation, Prince George's County, Maryland. Although his father lived in Washington, D.C. during the War of 1812 and had some connection with the Washington Navy Yard, James lived most of his adult life in Wheeling, Ohio County in what became West Virginia during the American Civil War. His father and uncle Benoni Wheat were West Indies traders with a dock and warehouses in Alexandria, Virginia. His elder brothers were John Thomas Wheat (1801-1888), Samuel Wheat who moved to St. Louis, Missouri and Henry; his sisters were Mary E. and Josephine.[3]
He married Elizabeth Johnson Dorsey (b. 1820) and by the 1850 census lived in Wheeling (then still in Virginia) and supported his parents and sister and her child, as well as his children James Cheatham Wheat (1840-1915), Julia Wheat (b.1843), Stanley Hulliken Wheat (1842-1932) and Eli D. Wheat (b. 1849).[4][5]
Career
[edit]James Sanders Wheat was admitted to the Virginia bar and practiced law in Wheeling. Ohio County voters elected him to represent them in the Virginia House of Delegates in 1849, and he served in that single session which began on December 3, succeeding William Pitts and was succeeded by Charles W. Russell in the legislative session that began on December 2, 1850.[6]
When Virginia seceded from the Union in early April 1861, West Virginians disagreed, and many met in Clarksburg on April 22, 1861 and called for a convention to decide their status. The first Wheeling Convention (with representatives from 24 Unionist counties including Frederick County which chose not to join them), met beginning on May 13, 1861, but could not decide whether to secede from the Commonwealth of Virginia. Wheat was a member of the moderate faction which believed that open resistance to Virginia authorities so soon after their secession vote would invite disturbance and bloodshed. Other members of that faction included fellow attorney Francis H. Pierpont of Fairmont (with whom Wheat disagreed on other matters), John J. Jackson Sr. of Parkersburg, and Waitman T. Willey of Morgantown.[7]
The delegates called for elections for a second convention, which met at Wheeling beginning June 4, with representatives from 32 counties. General John J. Jackson and Waitman T. Willey were conspicuously absent; Arthur I. Boreman was elected the convention's president. On June 19 the delegates decided to enact an ordinance to re-establish a loyal state government, and by evening had elected Francis H. Pierpont the governor and Daniel Polsley as lieutenant governor. James S. Wheat, who had been acting as adjutant-general in the Unionist territory for a month, was elected the state's attorney general on June 21.[8][9] Meanwhile, John Randolph Tucker continued as Virginia's Attorney General in Confederate sections of the state.
President Abraham Lincoln acknowledged Pierpont as Virginia's governor and soon named fellow Wheeling attorney A. Bolton Caldwell as the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Virginia, to handle federal matters (and the U.S. Senate concurred). After West Virginia voters seceded from Virginia, and approved their new Constitution in the summer of 1863, they selected Caldwell to become their first Attorney General (and Boreman to become their first Governor). Caldwell had run unopposed.[10]
Meanwhile, Virginia voters in Union-held territory (known as the Restored Government of Virginia, which had expanded to include Alexandria and much of northeastern Virginia), elected Thomas Russell Bowden to succeed Wheat.
Wheat returned to what had become West Virginia, and was a member of its state Constitutional Convention in 1872.[11]
Death and legacy
[edit]James Sanders Wheat died in 1874 and was buried in Wheeling's Peninsula cemetery.
References
[edit]- ^ Lewis, Virgil Anson (1896). History and Government of West Virginia. Werner School Book Company. pp. 183–. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
- ^ Virginia (1873). Code of Virginia. James E. Goode. pp. 197–. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
- ^ North American family history 1500-2000 database; Wheat Genealogy: a History of the Wheat family in America, with a brief account of the name, pp. 347-348
- ^ 1850 U.S. Federal Census for District 44, Ohio County, Virginia, family 1908 in residence 1834
- ^ 1860 U.S. Federal Census for family 2357 in Ward 4, Wheeling, Ohio County disagrees with some of spelling, showing his wife as Mary L. Wheate, his 21 year old son as civil engineer James S. Wheat, their eldest daughter as Elizabeth J. Wheate and youngest child as daughter Ella D. Wheat; two Irish-born domestics also lived with the family
- ^ Cynthia Miller Leonard, Virginia General Assembly, 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library 1978) p. 437 His last name was spelled "Wheate" as in some 1860 census documents, but they appear the same person. By contrast, although they had the same initials, he was not related to Unionist farmer and legislator Joseph Shaw Wheat of Berkeley Springs in what became Morgan County, West Virginia, because that J.S. Wheat was the son of an English emigrant (and innkeeper).
- ^ George E. Moore, A Banner in the Hills (New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts 1963) pp. 58-60
- ^ Moore, pp. 80-83
- ^ Lewis pp. 181-183
- ^ Lewis, pp. 187-188
- ^ Virgil A. Lewis, The Soldiery of West Virginia (reprinted from the 3rd biennial report of the Department of Archives and History of the state of West Virginia) (Baltimore; Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc 1972) p.200n