William Martin Walton

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William Martin Walton

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Canton, MS, United States
Death: July 01, 1915 (83)
Austin, Travis, Texas, United States
Place of Burial: Fort Worth, Tarrant, Texas, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Samuel Walker Walton and Mary Wilkerson Strange
Husband of Letitia Ann Walton
Father of Newton Samuel Walton; Early Watkins Walton; George Longstreet Walton and Sarah Parmelee
Brother of George Lowe Walton; Philip Walton; Jesse Newton Walton and Mary Louise Walton
Half brother of Susan Virginia Tilton; Emily St.Clair and Robert Strange

Occupation: Attorney General of Texas, Confederate veteran of the Civil War.
Managed by: Jukka
Last Updated:

About William Martin Walton

https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fwa47

William Martin (Buck) Walton, attorney, Confederate army officer, and politician, was born on in Canton, Mississippi, on January 17, 1832, the son of Samuel Walther and Mary (Wilkerson Loe) Walton. At an early age he moved with his parents to Carroll County, Mississippi, on the Indian frontier. Walton's father died in 1839, and in 1842 his mother married B. C. Strange. After a brief career as a school teacher Walton enrolled in the University of Virginia in 1849 but returned to Carroll County in 1851. There he studied law in the office of James Z. George, later a Confederate general and United States senator, and was admitted to the bar in 1852.

Walton then moved to Texas by way of Arkansas and Indian Territory, arriving in Austin on February 19, 1853. There, after a term as deputy district clerk, he established a partnership with Andrew Jackson Hamilton. This partnership lasted from 1853 until 1857, when Hamilton was elected to Congress. In addition to practicing law Walton, a slave owner, farmed and, for a while, prospected for gold on the Llano River.

In 1854 Walton married Letitia A. Watkins of Carrolton County, Mississippi. In the fall of 1858 he established a partnership with Sebron G. Sneed that lasted until the outbreak of the Civil War. An ardent secessionist, Walton served through the first year of the war as private secretary to Governor Francis R. Lubbock. On March 2, 1862, Walton enlisted as a private in Capt. William Rust's Company B of Col. George Washington Carter's Twenty-first Texas Cavalry (also known as the First Texas Lancers) and was soon elected first lieutenant. In Arkansas this regiment was united with two other regiments to become part of Parsons's Brigade, and Walton saw much service as commander of a picked band of scouts near Helena. "The expeditions I went on," he later wrote, "were at times full of danger-and the men had to have the eye of an eagle and the tread of a panther as well as the endurance of a camel." In the spring of 1863 he commanded the vanguard of Maj. Gen. John S. Marmaduke's Cape Girardeau [Missouri] raid. Walton was later promoted to major and attached to the staff of Lt. Gen. Theophilus Hunter Holmes, commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department, and stationed at Little Rock, Arkansas, until after the battle of Helena and the Confederate evacuation of Little Rock. Walton was then furloughed but returned to the army to take part in the Red River campaign. He arrived too late for the battle of Mansfield, but led his company at the battles of Pleasant Hill and Yellow Bayou. Walton spent the remainder of 1864 attached to Brig. Gen. Alexander Watkins Terrell's regiment in south Louisiana and then returned to Texas in the winter of 1865. That spring he learned of his wife's severe illness and left the army without leave. Although threatened with punishment, he was not arrested due to the breakup of the Confederacy.

Impoverished by the war and barred from the practice of law, Walton was, in his words, "in a bad row of stumps." At first he hunted and fished for a living, marketing his kill and catch. In 1866 he was elected attorney general of Texas but was removed from office by United States officials as "an impediment to Reconstruction." With the end of military rule, however, he returned to the practice of law. During this period Walton's partners included W. P. de Normandie, Jonathan A. Green, Robert J. Hill, and his son, Newton S. Walton, who later served as Austin city attorney. After 1899 Walton practiced alone until his retirement in 1904. "I suppose no lawyer in Texas or in the South has defended more men charged with murder than I have," he later wrote. From 1866 until 1872 he served as chairman of the state's Democratic executive committee. Walton's wife died in 1914, and he spent much of his last two years compiling his memoirs, which, in 1965, came into the possession of the Austin History Center.

Walton died in Austin on July 1, 1915, and was buried in Oakwood Cemetery. In 1965 the Friends of the Austin Public Library published Walton's memoirs as An Epitome of My Life. Walton's second son, Early, was a well known New York physician.

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_M._Walton

William Martin Walton (January 17, 1832 – July 1, 1915) was a prominent lawyer in Austin, Texas. During the Civil War, Walton was a Major in the Confederate Army. After the War, he was elected Attorney General of the state and also headed the state Democratic Party. At the time of his death, Walton was one of the most respected lawyers in Texas.

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Confederate veteran of the Civil War.

Attorney at Law.

He died of a heart attack while sitting on the front porch of the Walton home.

Son of Samuel Walker Walton and Mary Wilkerson Loe.

Husband of Letitia Ann Watkins Walton. They were married in 1854.

Father of Newton S. Walton, Early Watkins Walton, George Longstreet Walton and Sarah Walton Parmele.

Family links:

Children:
 Newton Samuel Walton (1855 - 1894)*
 Early Watkins Walton (1856 - 1888)*
 George Longstreet Walton (1860 - 1886)*

*Calculated relationship

Note: Texas Certificate of Death has his date of death listed as July 3, 1915.

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William Martin Walton's Timeline

1832
January 17, 1832
Canton, MS, United States
1855
March 12, 1855
Austin, Travis, Texas, United States
1856
September 1, 1856
Carroll, MS, United States
1860
September 6, 1860
1915
July 1, 1915
Age 83
Austin, Travis, Texas, United States
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Fort Worth, Tarrant, Texas, United States