Abner Lawson Duncan
Abner Lawson Duncan (died 1823) was a prominent Louisiana attorney, businessman, politician and aide-de-camp to General Andrew Jackson during the Battle of New Orleans.[1]
Abner Lawson Duncan | |
---|---|
Born | Abbottstown, Adams County, Pennsylvania |
Died | December 27, 1823 New Orleans, Louisiana |
Occupation | Attorney businessman politician |
Spouse(s) | Esther Eldridge Frances Sophia Mather |
Children | John Nicholson, b: c. 1799 Frances Sophia, b: 1809 Hannah Eliza, b: 1815 Abner Lawson Hamilton |
Parent(s) | Seth Duncan Elizabeth McCleary |
Duncan was a member of the "New Orleans Association" which included attorneys Edward Livingston and John R. Grymes, merchant John K. West, smuggler Pierre Laffite, and pirate Jean Laffite.[2][3]
Duncan ran for governor as a Democratic-Republican during the Louisiana gubernatorial election of 1820, losing to Thomas B. Robertson.
Notes
- The Saunders Family History
- Davis, pp. 261–64, 276–78, 303, 310–15, 232: "They found ardent support in what Morphy and others referred to as an "association" of men in New Orleans bent on gaining personal profit through encouraging assaults on Spanish property. Never a formal organization, the "association" had a fluid membership in which the constants were Livingston, Davezac, Grymes, Abner Duncan, Nolte, Lafon, merchant John K. West, and of course the Laffite brothers."
- Head, p. 135, The author identifies Abner L. Duncan, John R. Grymes and Edward Livingston as members of the New Orleans Association.
gollark: HTML, that is.
gollark: I think you could do it more neatly with a JSON-based syntax like this:```json["html", [ ["body", [ ["h1", "Some header"], ["p", [["em", "A thing"], " some text or whatever"]], ["a", { href: "https://internet" }, "click this very safe link"] ]]]]```
gollark: Ugh, I know. Even the actual HTML standard is irritating.
gollark: I see.
gollark: How well does your parser handle stuff like `<br>`?
References
- Davis, William C. (2006). The pirates Laffite: the treacherous world of the corsairs of the Gulf. New York: Harcourt Publishing Co., First Harvest edition, 706 pages.
- Head, David (2015). Privateers of the Americas: Spanish American privateering from the United States in the early republic. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 224 pages.
- The Saunders Family History; Chapter 11, The Chinn Family, pp. 61, 69–74. Internet link: http://www.saundersfamilyhistory.com/pages/chapter11.html
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.