John Wickham, Jr.

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John Wickham, Jr.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: New York, United States
Death: January 22, 1839 (75)
Place of Burial: Shockoe Hill Cemetery Richmond Richmond City Virginia
Immediate Family:

Son of John Wickham, Sr. and Hannah Wickham
Husband of Elizabeth Selden Wickham and Mary Smith Wickham
Father of Julia Leigh; James McClurg Wickham; George Wickham; William Fanning Wickham and Edmund Fanning Wickham
Brother of Nancy Davids; William Wickham; Abigail Wickham; James Wickham and Henry Wickham

Managed by: Michael Joseph Gerst
Last Updated:

About John Wickham, Jr.

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jwickham/letter.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wickham_(attorney)

John Wickham (June 6, 1763 - January 22, 1839) was a American Loyalist and attorney. He was one of the very few Loyalists to achieve any sort of national prominence in the United States after the American Revolution, and is best remembered for his role in the treason trial of former Vice President Aaron Burr in 1807.

Early life and family

Wickham was the oldest son of John Wickham Sr. and his wife Hannah Fanning. Wickham was born in the colony of New York in the village of Cutchogue. His father was a minister in the Anglican Church and a Loyalist, while his uncle Parker Wickham was also a Loyalist, and was active in the local government.

After the American Revolution, Parker Wickham was banished from New York State under an act of attainder. Despite vigorously declaring his innocence, Parker Wickham was never granted a trial and was sentenced to death if he returned to New York. The unfairness of this bitter event gave John Wickham a lifelong appreciation of the sanctity of a person's legal rights, regardless of their political affiliation.

Although John Wickham was a first cousin of Revolutionary War hero Nathaniel Fanning, he was heavily influenced by his uncle Edmund Fanning, a colonel (later a general) in the British Army. Fanning raised a unit called the King's American Regiment, which Wickham served in as an ensign. While traveling through Virginia, Wickham was captured and put on trial as a spy, but acquitted.

Career

After the Revolutionary War, Wickham earned a degree in law from the College of William and Mary, where he became a close friend of John Marshall, later fourth Chief Justice of the U.S.. Wickham moved to Richmond and experienced tremendous financial success helping British merchants collect debts from American businessmen. He married his first cousin Mary Smith Fanning and had two children. After her early death, he married Elizabeth Seldon McClurg and had seventeen more children. McClurg was the daughter of Dr. James McClurg, Richmond Mayor, U.S. Congressman,[citation needed] and a delegate to the Philadelphia Convention, which framed the Constitution of the United States in 1787.

In 1807, Wickham was lead counsel for Aaron Burr in his trial for treason. Although Thomas Jefferson took an active role in trying to have his former Vice President executed, Burr was found innocent. Wickham's old friend John Marshall was the presiding judge.

Wickham bred racehorses. The best and most famous of them all was Boston, which he lost in a card game. Boston became one of the greatest horses of his time, and sired the greatest stud, Lexington.

Legacy

His interment was located in Richmond's Shockoe Hill Cemetery. Wickham's numerous descendants continued to be active in Virginia affairs. His grandson Williams Carter Wickham was a Confederate general, and served as the first president of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway. His granddaughter Charlotte Wickham was married to William Henry Fitzhugh Lee, the son of General Robert E. Lee. Wickham's residence, Wickham House, is now part of the Valentine Richmond History Center.



Attorney. He was a respected Virginia lawyer for many years. Raised in New York City by a British Loyalist family, he studied at the Military Academy in Arras, France, before returning to America. During the American Revolution he was arrested as a British spy on orders from Governor Thomas Jefferson and tried but acquitted. After the war he settled in Williamsburg, Virginia, and received a law degree from William and Mary College; Wickham moved to Richmond, Virgina, in 1790 and quickly established himself as the leading attorney of the city and as a Federalist political figure.

For a time the law partner of future Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall he was associated in several cases with Marshall and with Patrick Henry, in the process becoming quite wealthy. Wickham's most noted case was as counsel for the defense in the trial of former United States Vice President Aaron Burr for treason in 1807.

His successful defense won him wide renown and the wrath of Thomas Jefferson, with whom he may well have been settling an old score by becoming involved. Once during the trial Wickham hosted a dinner party for Burr his home; one of his guests was Chief Justice Marshall who was sitting as Judge in the case and who remained at the party even after finding Burr there. Despite Marshall's status as a friend and neighbor of the attorney this incident caused much comment at the time. Indeed, the propriety of the Chief Justice accepting such an invitation, as well as the question of Burr's innocence or guilt and whether Marshall rigged the trial to hurt Jefferson politically, is still debated in historical circles.

Wickham continued his legal practice until his death. His house on Clay Street is now the Valentine Museum and has been maintained much as it was during his lifetime.

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John Wickham, Jr.'s Timeline

1763
June 6, 1763
New York, United States
1793
November 23, 1793
Richmond, Virginia, United States
1796
July 30, 1796
1801
1801
1802
1802
1817
April 1, 1817
Richmond, Virginia, United States
1839
January 22, 1839
Age 75
????
Shockoe Hill Cemetery Richmond Richmond City Virginia