Hon. Wood Bouldin

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Hon. Wood Bouldin

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Charlotte County, Virginia, United States
Death: October 10, 1876 (65)
Charlotte County, Virginia, United States
Place of Burial: John Randolph Plantation, Randolph, Charlotte County, Virginia, USA
Immediate Family:

Son of Judge Thomas Tyler Bouldin and Ann Bickerton Bouldin
Husband of Louisa Louisa Bouldin and Martha Bouldin
Father of Wood Bouldin, Jr.; William Daniel Bouldin; Anne Lewis Overbey; Charles Ellet Bouldin; Briscoe Baldwin Bouldin and 8 others
Brother of Benjamin Lewis Bouldin; Thomas Tyler Bouldin, Jr.; Joanna Tyler Carrington; Martha Bickerton Cabell; Anne Barksdale and 1 other

Managed by: Paula Gayle King
Last Updated:

About Hon. Wood Bouldin

Judge Wood Bouldin

Bouldin was a prominent attorney, member of the Convention of 1861, and a judge of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals from 1872 until his death.

Born in Charlotte County, Virginia to the former Ann Lewis and her husband, Congressman Thomas Bouldin (1781-1834), he was named for his grandfather Wood Bouldin, who had married Joanna, the aunt of U.S. President John Tyler. Thus among the First Families of Virginia even in his early youth, Bouldin was sent to Richmond to receive a private education from Mr. Turner. He then was sent to Bedford County, Virginia to attend the New London Academy conducted by Rev. Nicholas H. Cobbs, later the bishop of Alabama. After teaching school for a year, Bouldin moved to Halifax County, Virginia and studied law under William Leigh.

He married Maria Louisa Barksdale on December 22, 1837 in Charlotte County, and they had a son, Major Wood Bouldin (1838-1911). After her death he married Martha Baldwin Daniel (1819-), sister of judge William Daniel of Lynchburg, who would bear daughters Elvina, Martha, Ann, Alice and Virginia, as well as sons Charles Ellett, Briscoe Baldwin and Frank Deane Bouldin.

Career

After admission to the Virginia Bar, Bouldin moved to Charlotte Courthouse to begin practice, but discovered the estate of his father was greatly embarrassed. In 1840, his household of four white males (including his brothers William and Thomas and one boy) also included 13 slaves. Seeking a larger practice, Bouldin moved to Richmond in 1842 and entered a law partnership with Robert Stanard, who soon became a Judge of the Virginia Court of Appeals.

In 1853 Bouldin purchased a plantation on Staunton River formerly owned by John Randolph of Roanoke as well as practiced law in Charlotte, Halifax and Mecklenburg Counties. By 1860, Bouldin owned more than 69 enslaved people in Charlotte County.

American Civil War

Elected to the Virginia Secession Convention of 1861, Boulden favored secession on the second vote, which resolution passed. His son Wood Bouldin, a recent University of Virginia graduate, would suspend their legal partnership in order to become a Confederate artillery lieutenant with the Staunton Hill artillery throughout the war.

During the Civil War, Charlotte County voters elected Boulden to the Virginia House of Delegates, and he served in that part-time position throughout the war.

Pardoned by U.S. President Andrew Johnson, Bouldin failed to win election to the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868, losing to freed slave Joseph R. Holmes. Bouldin was present to hear the decision of the Virginia Supreme Court concerning the contested Richmond, Virginia mayoral election of 1870 when the overcrowded balcony collapsed and killed several men and injured many more. Severely shocked but sustaining no serious injury, Bouldin took a short rest.

In 1872, Virginia legislators elected Bouldin to fill a vacant seat on the Court of Appeals but his judicial career was relatively short as he died on October 10, 1876.

Death and Legacy

Bouldin died on his plantation and was buried there. His son of the same name (1838-1911) became active in the state Democratic party and was elected and re-elected Commonwealth's attorney for Halifax County. He would represent it at the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1902, and play a key role in disenfranchising African Americans.


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Hon. Wood Bouldin's Timeline

1811
January 20, 1811
Charlotte County, Virginia, United States
1838
September 28, 1838
Charlotte, , VA, USA
1848
March 19, 1848
Charlotte County, Virginia, United States
1850
1850
Charlotte County, Virginia, United States
1852
January 11, 1852
Luneburg, , VA, USA
1853
September 27, 1853
Charlotte County, Virginia, United States
1855
January 18, 1855
Charlotte County, Virginia, United States
1856
April 6, 1856
Charlotte County, Virginia, United States