Jonathan C. Gibson

Jonathan Catlett Gibson, Jr. (1833 after 1893) was a nineteenth-century Virginia lawyer, farmer and Confederate soldier who represented Fauquier County in the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868 and later Culpeper County in the Virginia House of Delegates.[1]

Jonathan Catlett Gibson, Jr.
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates
from the Culpeper County district
In office
December 4, 1879  December 6, 1881
Preceded byJames Barbour
Succeeded byJacob S. Eggborn
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates
from the Culpeper County district
In office
December 5, 1883  December , 1894
Preceded byJacob S. Eggborn
Personal details
Born1833 (1833)
Culpeper County, Virginia, U.S.
Alma materUniversity of Virginia
OccupationLawyer, farmer
Military service
Allegiance Confederate States of America
Branch/service Confederate States Army
Years of service1861-1865
Rank Colonel(CSA)
Unit49th Virginia Infantry

Early life

Gibson was born in Culpeper County, Virginia in 1833 to lawyer Jonathan Catlett Gibson, Sr. (1793-1849) and his second wife Mary Williams Shackleford, one of their five sons who later served in the Confederate States Army. The family was well-off, so that they could afford a private education for their sons. His father owned at least 23 enslaved persons in 1840, the last census during that Gibson's life.[2] Despite his father's death in 1849, this Gibson graduated from the University of Virginia, 1850-51.[3]

Like his father, J.C. Gibson Jr. would marry twice, in this case to Mary Georgia Shackelford in 1870 and to Florence Eastham Daniel in 1901.

Career

The Virginia Capitol at Richmond VA
where 19th century Conventions met

His father owned property in Culpeper and nearby Spotsylvania and Rappahannock counties. By 1860, Gibson had settled slightly to the north in nearby Fauquier County, Virginia and farmed.[4] He may have practiced law in Culpeper and nearby counties before as well as after the war.[3]

During the American Civil War, Gibson enlisted an infantry company known as the "Sperryville Rifles", after Sperryville, Rappahannock County, Virginia, and became its captain, with his brother Eustace as quartermaster. After the Sperryville Rifles became Company K of the Confederate 49th Virginia Infantry, Gibson received promotions to major, lieutenant colonel and colonel. His brother Eustace became a captain, and their youngest brother Ned left his studies at the Virginia Military Institute to become a sergeant in the unit before leaving regular army service to work with Mosby's Rangers after Federal troops occupied much of Northern Virginia.[5] This Gibson was reportedly wounded 11 times. His elder brother William St. George Gibson, a lieutenant of the "Little Fork Rangers" in the 4th Virginia Cavalry died at the Battle of Antietam, although his younger brother Eustace recovered from a severe abdominal wound received at the Battle of Gettysburg. Another brother, John W.S. Gibson, would remain a private with Crenshaw's Battery of the Virginia Light Artillery.

Following the war, Gibson returned to farming and the law, though his brothers Eustace and Ned moved to mountainous Giles County, Virginia and Eustace would later moveto Huntington, West Virginia and serve in the West Virginia House of Delegates as well as the U.H. House of Representatives.[5]

In 1867, Fauquier County voters elected Gibson to the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868. A Conservative, he was one of two delegates elected from the northern Piedmont constitutional convention district made up of Fauquier and Rappahannock Counties, with fellow Confederate and lawyer R. Taylor Scott being the other.[6]

The 1870 census records J.C. Gibson and his new wife as living at a hotel in Catalpa, the former home of veteran Virginia politician John Strode Barbour, whose sons John Strode Barbour, Jr. and James Barbour would revitalize the Democratic party in Virginia.[7] Culpeper County voters elected Gibson to succeed James Barbour as their representative in the Virginia House of Delegates for the 1879/80 sessions, and then again in 1883/84 when the Conservatives swept both the House of Delegates and state Senate with overwhelming majorities.[8][9] However, he was displaced for one term by Republican (and former Culpeper Sheriff) Jacob S. Eggborn, before Culpeper's voters returned this Gibson to the House of Delegate in 1889/90. Gibson won re-elected to the sessions of 1891/92 and 1893/94 during the Populist and Jim Crow era.[8]

Death

Jonathan Catlett Gibson, Jr. died Tuesday, January 29, 1907.[10]

gollark: In my opinion, the main reason for that is that companies don't exactly exist here.
gollark: No stock exchange ever actually *happened*, and a centralized one would be easier to do than this.
gollark: I'm not sure how many people would actually bother to develop complex exchange code and such.
gollark: Oh, I see, sure then.
gollark: Since those exist outside the realm of transaction processing and whatnot.

References

  1. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The General Assembly of Virginia 1619-1978 (Richmond, Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 533
  2. "Jonathan C. Gibson" in 1840 U.S. Federal Census, slave schedule for Culpeper County; also "John Gibson" owned 3 slaves in the St. Georges district of nearby Spotsylvania County in that census
  3. Pulliam 1901, p. 144
  4. 1860 U.S. Federal Census for Fauquier County Northeast revenue district and district 9, dwelling 208
  5. http://culpepertimes.com/2013/05/16/culpeper-currents-mrs-gibsons-boys
  6. Leonard, p. 504
  7. U.S. Federal Census for Catalpa district, Culpeper County, Virginia, dwelling 218
  8. Swem 1918, p. 377
  9. Leonard, p. 533
  10. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7590900/jonathan-catlett-gibson

Bibliography

  • Pulliam, David Loyd (1901). The Constitutional Conventions of Virginia from the foundation of the Commonwealth to the present time. John T. West, Richmond. ISBN 978-1-2879-2059-5.
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