Henry C. McWhorter

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Henry C. McWhorter
Justice of the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia
In office
January 1, 1897 – December 31, 1909
Preceded byHomer Holt
Succeeded byL. Judson Williams
Member of the West Virginia House of Delegates
In office
1885–1887
Speaker of the West Virginia House of Delegates
In office
1868–1869
GovernorArthur Boreman
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Personal details
Born
Henry Clay McWhorter

February 20, 1836
Ashley, Ohio, U.S.
DiedApril 15, 1913(1913-04-15) (aged 77)
Charleston, West Virginia, U.S.
Political partyRepublican

Henry Clay McWhorter (February 20, 1836 – April 15, 1913) was a lawyer, judge, and politician in West Virginia.[1]

McWhorter served in the Union Army, reaching the rank of captain. He resigned from active service in 1863 due to a wound and spent the remainder of the war as a clerk in the provost marshal's office. After the war he was admitted to the bar (1866) and spent four terms in the West Virginia House of Delegates, serving as Speaker 1868-9. He was again a Delegate from 1885-7. McWhorter attended the 1868 Republican Party convention as an at-large delegate from West Virginia. He was an unsuccessful Republican candidate for the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia in 1888, but in 1896 he was elected to the court for a twelve-year term.[2]

McWhorter served on the board of trustees of West Virginia Wesleyan College from the institution's founding in 1890 to his death in 1913; he served as president of the board from 1897 until 1913.[3]

McWhorter was married four times. He married Mary Hardman in 1857; she died in 1878. He married Eliza F. McWhorter in 1879; she died in 1881. He married Lucy M. Clark in 1885; she died in 1900. He married Caroline M. Gates in 1904.[4]

Henry C. McWhorter's brother Joseph M. McWhorter (1828–1913) was also a notable West Virginia lawyer, politician, and judge.[5]

References[]

  1. ^ The green bag: a useless but entertaining magazine for lawyers, Volume 12 (1900), p. 301-2
  2. ^ Bench and Bar of West Virginia, ed. George W. Atkinson, Charleston, WV: Virginian Law Book Co., 1919, p. 162
  3. ^ Murmurmontis, 1914 (West Virginia Wesleyan College yearbook), dedication to McWhorter
  4. ^ Who's Who in America, Sixth Edition (1910-1), p. 1252
  5. ^ History of Greenbriar County, entry "Judge Joseph Marcellus M'Whorter"
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