Justice Samuel Drake Lockwood

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Justice Samuel Drake Lockwood

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Pound Ridge, Westchester County, New York, United States
Death: April 23, 1874 (84)
Batavia, Kane County, Illinois, United States
Place of Burial: Batavia, Kane County, Illinois, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Joseph Lockwood and Mary McCall Lockwood
Husband of Mary Virginia Lockwood
Father of Mary Elizabeth Coffin; Susan Ellen Porter; Martha Ann Officer and Anna Rebecca Merriman
Brother of Judge Jesse Close Lockwood; Rebecca Ann Potts and Cornelius Lockwood

Managed by: Andrew Quinn Champion
Last Updated:

About Justice Samuel Drake Lockwood

Samuel Drake Lockwood

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Samuel Drake Lockwood was an Illinois politician who served as the state's Attorney General, Secretary of State, and Supreme Court Justice.

Lockwood was born in Poundridge, New York. His father, Joseph, was an hotelier. His mother was Mark, née Drake. Samuel was the oldest of four. His siblings were Jesse (b.1791), Rebecca (b.1792), and Cornelius (b.1793). Joseph died of yellow fever in 1799, two days after Cornelius died of the same disease.[1] The following year, Mary married Duncan McCall and moved to Canada with Rebecca, leaving Samuel and Jesse at a private school in New Jersey for a few months before being taken in by their uncle, Francis Drake.[2] He studied law with Drake and was admitted to the bar in Batavia, New York in 1811.

Lockwood practiced law in Batavia for a year before relocating his practice to Sempronius, New York for about a year and a half. From 1815 until August 1818, he had a law partnership in Auburn, New York with George B. Throop. Lockwood ended that practice when he decided to move to the new state of Illinois.[1] In 1818, he and a friend, William H. Brown descended the Ohio River, disembarking at Shawneetown. They walked across the state to Kaskaskia and Lockwood eventually settled in Carmi.

In 1821, Lockwood was elected Attorney General. During his brief term as Attorney General, Lockwood successfully prosecuted the only known duel to come to trial in Illinois.[1] He resigned after only a year when Governor Edward Coles appointed him as Secretary of State when Illinois' first Secretary of State, Elias Kane, was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives.[1] Three months later, Lockwood received an appointment as the Receiver of Public Moneys from President James Monroe. One of the reasons Lockwood accepted the appointment from Madison was that it would afford him the time and money to ensure that Illinois would remain a free state.[1] Lockwood received an appointment to the First Board of Canal Commissioners. Lockwood was given the duty of contracting with engineers to survey the route of the Illinois and Michigan Canal. Also in 1824, The Illinois Supreme Court was reorganized by the legislature and Lockwood was appointed a judge on the Supreme Court and remained on the court until 1848.

In the 1820s, Lockwood resisted the adoption of a pro-slavery Constitution for Illinois, but he was one of the framers of Illinois' second Constitution, in 1848.[2]

In his retirement, he returned to Batavia, New York, where he died at age 85.

Bibliographic details for "Samuel D. Lockwood"

  • Page name: Samuel D. Lockwood
  • Author: Wikipedia contributors
  • Publisher: Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
  • Date of last revision: 28 April 2015 09:56 UTC
  • Date retrieved: 17 October 2015 12:16 UTC
  • Permanent link: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Samuel_D._Lockwood&oldid...
  • Primary contributors: Revision history statistics
  • Page Version ID: 659652020

Daughters of Samuel Drake Lockwood and Mary Nash

  • Mary Elizabeth Lockwood 1828
  • Susan Ellen Lockwood 1830
  • Martha Ann Lockwood 1833
  • Rebecca Ann Lockwood 1838

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Justice Samuel Drake Lockwood's Timeline

1789
August 2, 1789
Pound Ridge, Westchester County, New York, United States
1828
May 18, 1828
Springfield, Sangamon County, Illinois, United States
1830
October 10, 1830
1833
February 14, 1833
1838
June 7, 1838
Jacksonville, Morgan County, Illinois, United States
1874
April 23, 1874
Age 84
Batavia, Kane County, Illinois, United States
????
West Batavia Cemetery, Batavia, Kane County, Illinois, United States