Jesse Burton Harrison

Jesse Burton Harrison (18051841) was an American anti-slavery lawyer and author.

Biography

Jesse Burton Harrison was born in 1805 in Lynchburg, Virginia. His father, Samuel Jordan Harrison (17711846), was a well-to-do tobacco merchant, friend of Thomas Jefferson, who had helped to build the University of Virginia.[1]:56 "As a young man he was a habitué at Monticello. James Madison was his patron." Jesse was educated at Hampden–Sydney College and later at the Harvard Law School, where he was influenced by George Ticknor. He practiced law in Lynchburg. Failing to obtain an appointment as professor at the University of Virginia, in 1828 he traveled to Europe with a letter of introduction from Secretary of State Martin Van Buren. He met Lafayette, Talleyrand, Benjamin Constant, Schlegel, and Goethe, and spent a year studying at the University of Göttingen. He later moved to New Orleans, Louisiana, where he helped to found the Louisiana Historical Society, and edited the Louisiana Law Reports and the Whig newspaper Louisiana Advertiser.

Writings

Harrison delivered a series of literary addresses[2][3] and then, in the late 1820s, began publicly supporting anti-slavery thought.[4] He published an appeal on behalf of the American Colonization Society in 1827. Most importantly, he wrote a response to Thomas Roderick Dew's pro-slavery essay, Review of the Debates in the Virginia Legislature, 1831-2.[5]

Death and legacy

Harrison died of yellow fever in 1841 in New Orleans.

He was the father of Burton Harrison, a Confederate official and lawyer, and the grandfather of Fairfax Harrison and Francis Burton Harrison. His wife was the former Frances Anne Brand (†1884).

Writing of Harrison

  • Harrison, Jesse Burton (1992) [First published 1982]. "English Civilization". In O'Brien, Michael (ed.). All Clever Men, Who Make Their Way: Critical Discourse in the Old South. University of Georgia Press. pp. 55–88. ISBN 9780820314907.
gollark: This is just a bad implementation of a "boost converter", so just look up that.
gollark: The capacitor smooths the very wobbly lines into nonwobbly lines.
gollark: The transistor switches the inductor between being connected to the voltage source's other end and being connected to it only through the diode and capacitor and resistor and such. The inductor "wants" to keep the current through it constant. When it's connected to the other end of the voltage source, it's "charging", and when it is disconnected there is a voltage across it slightly bigger than the voltage source's voltage, which causes a current through the left side of the circuit.
gollark: I could also use pronouns, but then I would have to mention HTech™ at least once to make it clear.
gollark: This is generally how language works.

References

  1. O'Brien, Michael (1992) [First published 1982.]. All Clever Men, Who Make Their Way: Critical Discourse in the Old South. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 9780820314907.
  2. Harrison, Jesse Burton (1917). "The Prospects of Letters and Taste in Virginia. A Discourse Pronounced before the Literary and Philosophical Society of Hampden-Sidney College, at their Fourth Anniversary in September, 1827". Six Addresses on the State of Letters and Science in Virginia (PDF). Roanoke. pp. 21–30.
  3. Harrison, Jesse Burton (1910). "English Civilization". In Harrison, Fairfax (ed.). Aris sonis focisque : being a memoir of an American family, the Harrisons of Skimino and particularly of Jesse Burton Harrison and Burton Norvell Harrison. pp. 301–336.
  4. Harrison, Jesse Burton (1910). "The Slavery Question in Virginia". In Harrison, Fairfax (ed.). Aris sonis focisque : being a memoir of an American family, the Harrisons of Skimino and particularly of Jesse Burton Harrison and Burton Norvell Harrison. pp. 337–400..
  5. Harrison, Jesse Burton (1833). Review of the slave question : Extracted from the "American Quarterly Review", Dec. 1832, based on the speech of Th. Marshall, of Fauquier, showing that slavery is the essential hindrance to the prosperity of the slave-holding states : with particular reference to Virginia, though applicable to other states where slavery exists. By a Virginian. Richmond, VA.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.