Born on September 3, 1848, in Culloden, Monroe County, Georgia,[1] to Dr. Eustace Willouby Speer (1826 - 1899) and Annie Eliza King Speer (1827 - 1910),[2] Speer received an Artium Baccalaureus degree in classical studies in 1869 from the University of Georgia and read law.[1] He entered the Confederate States Army in 1864 at the age of sixteen as a volunteer in the Fifth Kentucky Regiment, Lewis brigade, and remained with that command throughout the American Civil War.[3] He was admitted to the bar and entered private practice in Athens, Georgia from 1869 to 1883.[1] He was Solicitor General for the State of Georgia from 1873 to 1876.[1]
Following his departure from Congress, Speer resumed private practice in Atlanta, Georgia from 1883 to 1885.[1] He was the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia from 1883 to 1885.[1]
During his tenure, Judge Speer heard civil rights cases, and became unpopular in the white community for holding that federal law permitted protection of African Americans.[4]
During his federal judicial service, Speer also served as dean of Mercer University Law School in Macon from 1893 to 1918.[1]
Publications
Removal of Causes from State to United States Courts, 1888.
Lectures on the Constitution of the United States before the law class of Mercer University, J.W. Burke Co., 1897.
Lincoln, Lee, Grant, and other biographical addresses, 1909.