William Walker Jr: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:William Walker Jr 1904.jpg|left|thumb|125px|William Walker, Jr in 1904]] | [[Image:William Walker Jr 1904.jpg|left|thumb|125px|William Walker, Jr in 1904]] | ||
After the war, Walker taught school and began to read law. He was admitted to the [[Alabama State Bar]] in [[1867]] and entered into practice with [[Burwell Lewis]]. He was elected [[Jefferson County Solicitor]] in [[1868]] and held that position until [[1876]]. He had previously joined the firm of [[Cobb, Lewis & Walker]] as a junior partner and left in [[1870]] to enter a partnership with [[ | After the war, Walker taught school and began to read law. He was admitted to the [[Alabama State Bar]] in [[1867]] and entered into practice with [[Burwell Lewis]]. He was elected [[Jefferson County Solicitor]] in [[1868]] and held that position until [[1876]]. He had previously joined the firm of [[Cobb, Lewis & Walker]] as a junior partner and left in [[1870]] to enter a partnership with [[Goldsmith Hewitt II]] in the firm that later became [[Hewitt, Walker & Porter]]. Walker later left to become a partner in the firm of [[Tillman, Campbell & Walker]]. | ||
Walker was married to [[Virginia Walker|Virginia Mudd]], daughter of Judge [[William Mudd]], on [[August 23]], [[1870]]. He built a [[William Walker, Jr residence|large log home]] at 200 [[Broad Street (Elyton)|Broad Street]] in Elyton. | Walker was married to [[Virginia Walker|Virginia Mudd]], daughter of Judge [[William Mudd]], on [[August 23]], [[1870]]. He built a [[William Walker, Jr residence|large log home]] at 200 [[Broad Street (Elyton)|Broad Street]] in Elyton. |
Revision as of 13:37, 26 May 2014
William Augustus Walker, Jr (born January 7, 1846 in Elyton; died July 10, 1904 in Birmingham) was a noted attorney.
Walker was the son of farmer and merchant William Walker and his wife Corilla. He attended public schools in Elyton and entered the University of Alabama as a 16-year-old cadet in 1861. He and his fellow cadets enlisted in the 7th Alabama Cavalry under Captain Charles Storrs in September 1863. During the Civil War he advanced to the rank of sergeant and was held as a captive of war in a Federal prison.
After the war, Walker taught school and began to read law. He was admitted to the Alabama State Bar in 1867 and entered into practice with Burwell Lewis. He was elected Jefferson County Solicitor in 1868 and held that position until 1876. He had previously joined the firm of Cobb, Lewis & Walker as a junior partner and left in 1870 to enter a partnership with Goldsmith Hewitt II in the firm that later became Hewitt, Walker & Porter. Walker later left to become a partner in the firm of Tillman, Campbell & Walker.
Walker was married to Virginia Mudd, daughter of Judge William Mudd, on August 23, 1870. He built a large log home at 200 Broad Street in Elyton.
Walker served one term in the Alabama State Legislature from 1878 to 1880, representing Jefferson County. He was a stockholder and director of the First National Bank of Birmingham and served briefly during 1885 as president of the bank. He was also one of the original investors in the Ensley Land Company.
References
- Dubose, John Witherspoon (1887) Jefferson County and Birmingham, Alabama: Historical and Biographical Birmingham: Teeple & Smith, Publishers; Caldwell Printing Works.
- Dubose, Joel Campbell (1904) Notable men of Alabama: Personal and Genealogical 2 Volumes. Atlanta, Georgia: Southern Historical Association
- Owen, Thomas McAdory and Marie Bankhead Owen (1921) History of Alabama and Dictionary of Alabama Biography. 4 volumes. Chicago, Illinois: S. J. Clarke Publishing Co.