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Benjamin W Leigh

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Preceded by
  
William C. Rives

Resigned
  
July 4, 1836

Name
  
Benjamin Leigh

Succeeded by
  
Richard E. Parker

Profession
  
Lawyer, politician

Party
  
National Republican Party


Benjamin W. Leigh

Born
  
June 18, 1781 Chesterfield County, Virginia (
1781-06-18
)

Alma mater
  
College of William and Mary

Role
  
Former United States Senator

Died
  
February 2, 1849, Richmond, Virginia, United States

Education
  
College of William & Mary

Previous office
  
Senator (VA) 1834–1836

Political party
  
National Republican

Benjamin Watkins Leigh (June 18, 1781 – February 2, 1849) was an American lawyer and politician from Richmond, Virginia. He served in the Virginia House of Delegates and represented Virginia in the United States Senate.

Contents

Early and Family Life

Benjamin Watkins Leigh was born in Chesterfield County on June 18, 1781, the son of the Reverend William Leigh (d. 1787) and Elizabeth (Watkins) Leigh (d. 1799). He attended the College of William and Mary, studied law, and began practicing in Petersburg in 1802, as well as helped raise his younger brother William.

Benjamin Watkins Leigh married three times: on December 24, 1802, to Mary Selden Watkins; on November 30, 1813, to Susan Colston; on November 24, 1821, to Julia Wickham.

Career

After representing Dinwiddie County in the Virginia House of Delegates 1811-13, Leigh moved to Richmond, where he rose rapidly in his chosen profession. He prepared the revised Code of Virginia in 1819, was a delegate to the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1829-1830, a reporter of the Virginia Court of Appeals 1829-41, and was again elected to the Virginia legislature, representing Henrico County in the session of 1830-31. Leigh was appointed by the state legislature as a Whig to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of William Cabell Rives; he was reappointed to represent tidewater Virginia slaveholders in 1835.

During Leigh's time in the Senate, the controversy over slavery reached new levels of intensity. The House of Representatives passed a "gag rule" tabling all anti-slavery petitions, and a similar measure died in the Senate, though that body approved an alternate method of ignoring such petitions. President Jackson called on the Congress to censor anti-slavery publications from the federal mails, a bill the Senate defeated 25-19. Leigh proposed a statewide boycott of pro-emancipation newspapers, writing that Virginians had the right "to suppress to the utmost of our power what we deem inflammatory, dangerous, mischievous."

Every State had expressed the disapproval of South Carolina's nullification and it was Leigh who was sent to urge South Carolina to desist from carrying matters to extremities. Leigh served until his resignation on July 4, 1836. Thereafter he resumed the practice of law in Richmond.

Benjamin Watkins Leigh was a founding member (1831) of the Virginia Historical Society and first chairman of its standing committee.

Death and legacy

Leigh died in Richmond on February 2, 1849, and is buried in Shockoe Hill Cemetery.

His home at Richmond, the Benjamin Watkins Leigh House, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1969.

References

Benjamin W. Leigh Wikipedia