American lawyer
Jesse Burton Harrison (1805–1841) was an American anti-slavery lawyer and author.
Biography
Jesse Burton Harrison was born in 1805 in Lynchburg, Virginia . His father, Samuel Jordan Harrison (1771–1846), was a well-to-do tobacco merchant, friend of Thomas Jefferson , who had helped to build the University of Virginia .[ 1] : 56 "As a young man he was a habitué at Monticello . James Madison was his patron." Jesse was educated at Hampden–Sydney College and later at the Harvard Law School , where he was influenced by George Ticknor . He practiced law in Lynchburg. Failing to obtain an appointment as professor at the University of Virginia, in 1828 he traveled to Europe with a letter of introduction from Secretary of State Martin Van Buren . He met Lafayette , Talleyrand , Benjamin Constant , Schlegel , and Goethe , and spent a year studying at the University of Göttingen . He later moved to New Orleans, Louisiana, where he helped to found the Louisiana Historical Society , and edited the Louisiana Law Reports and the Whig newspaper Louisiana Advertiser .
Writings
Harrison delivered a series of literary addresses[ 2] [ 3] and then, in the late 1820s, began publicly supporting anti-slavery thought.[ 4] He published an appeal on behalf of the American Colonization Society in 1827. Most importantly, he wrote a response to Thomas Roderick Dew 's pro-slavery essay, Review of the Debates in the Virginia Legislature, 1831-2 .[ 5]
Death and legacy
Harrison died of yellow fever in 1841 in New Orleans .
He was the father of Burton Harrison , a Confederate official and lawyer, and the grandfather of Fairfax Harrison and Francis Burton Harrison . His wife was the former Frances Anne Brand (†1884).
Writing of Harrison
References
^ O'Brien, Michael (1992) [First published 1982.]. All Clever Men, Who Make Their Way: Critical Discourse in the Old South . University of Georgia Press . ISBN 9780820314907 .
^ Harrison, Jesse Burton (1917). "The Prospects of Letters and Taste in Virginia. A Discourse Pronounced before the Literary and Philosophical Society of Hampden-Sidney College, at their Fourth Anniversary in September, 1827". Six Addresses on the State of Letters and Science in Virginia (PDF) . Roanoke. pp. 21– 30. {{cite book }}
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^ Harrison, Jesse Burton (1910). "English Civilization". In Harrison, Fairfax (ed.). Aris sonis focisque : being a memoir of an American family, the Harrisons of Skimino and particularly of Jesse Burton Harrison and Burton Norvell Harrison . pp. 301 –336.
^ Harrison, Jesse Burton (1910). "The Slavery Question in Virginia". In Harrison, Fairfax (ed.). Aris sonis focisque : being a memoir of an American family, the Harrisons of Skimino and particularly of Jesse Burton Harrison and Burton Norvell Harrison . pp. 337 –400. .
^ Harrison, Jesse Burton (1833). Review of the slave question : Extracted from the "American Quarterly Review", Dec. 1832, based on the speech of Th. Marshall, of Fauquier, showing that slavery is the essential hindrance to the prosperity of the slave-holding states : with particular reference to Virginia, though applicable to other states where slavery exists. By a Virginian . Richmond, VA.