Memoir of John Howe Peyton / in sketches by his contemporaries, together with some of his public and private letters, etc., also a sketch of Ann M. Peyton
IN SKETCHES BY HIS
There was little of incident or stirring adventure in the life of Mr. Peyton, and this is the case generally, as to literary and professional men, but the life of such a man should not be permitted to sink into oblivion. He is represented by his contemporaries to have been a great and truly good man, who pursued his profession, not merely to gain a subsistence, but to do good, to advance justice and humanity, to promote the well being of his fellow creatures, and the general interests of society. Not his eloquence alone, but all of his powers were ever exerted for the cause of right and justice. And thus his gifts became a public benefit and blessing. If such a man does not deserve to be remembered, we might well ask, who does?
During the two brief episodes in his professional life, when a member first of the lower and then the upper House of the General Assembly, he labored to improve the Criminal laws, the Land laws, the laws relating to the rights of person and the rights of property; in fact, our whole system of jurisprudence, and to advance the cause of popular education and of internal improvements.
He was a man of large and progressive ideas, ready to accept any and all improvements, if persuaded that the remedies proposed were, indeed improvements, but while always ready to correct abuses, he was far from believing that all change meant reform—was too sagacious and far seeing, too much alive to the public interests, to encourage rash and ill advised men or measures, was wise and firm enough to oppose all fanatics and doctrinaires , in their excesses. In fact he stood in the way of these men and opposed their measures, as tending to the subversion of existing laws and the Constitution, and the introduction of anarchy and confusion. As a Public Prosecutor, it was both his duty and ambition to see the laws faithfully executed, and an example made of evil doers. In a word, he was a man who sought to do his duty, not to gain the applause of men, but to meet the approval of his God. At all times, and on all occasions, he was zealous for the common weal; and such was his goodness and magnanimity, that he desired to conceal, rather than display his deeds, and derive fame from them. If his course was beneficial to mankind—advanced the interest and prosperity of society and his country—he was content. For himself, he asked nothing, and always derived happiness from the preferment of others. Public honors were often bestowed upon others, which were looked upon as his due. So far from regretting it, or envying those who got them, he enjoyed seeing competent men promoted and when incompetent men were advanced, he would say, let us make the most of them, so far was he from and above the littleness of vanity and jealousy. In a word he belonged to the class which finds tongues in trees, books in running brooks, sermons in stones, and good in everything. Of ambition for noisy honors, newspaper notoriety, or office, he had none. If ambition he had, it was gratified by the general recognition of the purity of his motives, the inflexibility of his personal integrity, by the evidences he constantly received that his labors to alleviate human suffering and to cure social disorders, were understood and appreciated. If he had ambition, it was to do good to his forlorn fellow creatures, to excel in his profession, and this latter he did so eminently that the great lawyers in every part of the State consulted him on many if not all important cases and abstruse points, and for years no law was passed, nor any important change made in existing laws, by the Legislature of Virginia, without members of the body, especially of the judiciary committee, asking his opinion and advice. That he had true ambition, loved honorable fame, we doubt not, and thus this exalted passion was, as we opine, the source of those noble actions and life-long labors, which caused him to be so much honored while living, and to be so venerated now that he is dead. And it is the duty of posterity to bestow on him that praise, after his death, which he declined while living.
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Transcriber's note:
MEMOIR OF
JOHN HOWE PEYTON,
CONTEMPORARIES,
ANN M. PEYTON.
PREFACE.
MR. PEYTON'S REPORT IN 1810.
VIRGINIA LEGISLATURE.
DISEASE LEADS TO HIS CHANGE OF HOME.
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY.
MILITARY SCHOOLS.
THE WAR OF 1812.
ANECDOTE OF THE FIGHTING MAJOR.
A WESTERN TRIP IN 1815.
DECLINES AN APPOINTMENT.
OLD FAMILY LETTERS.
SPEECH OF JOHN H. PEYTON 72 YEARS AGO.
MAJOR JOHN LEWIS.
ANECDOTE OF JOHN H. PEYTON IN A CRIMINAL CASE.
MR. PEYTON DECLINES A JUDGESHIP.
MR. PEYTON'S LETTER ON THE CONVENTION OF 1829-30.
MRS. ANNE PEYTON.
AFRICAN COLONIZATION.
RETIRES FROM THE BAR AND IS ELECTED TO THE SENATE.
MR. PEYTON'S LETTER CONSENTING TO RUN FOR THE SENATE. HIS POLITICAL SENTIMENTS.
MORE OLD LETTERS.
JEFFERSON, STUART, PEYTON.
MR. PEYTON'S WELCOME TO HENRY CLAY.
CAMPAIGN OF 1840.
MR. PEYTON'S SPEECH IN THE CANVASS OF 1840.
MR. PEYTON'S SPEECH IN CHARLOTTESVILLE.
VISITOR TO WEST POINT.
MR. PEYTON'S LETTER ON BEHALF OF THE BAR TO JUDGE TUCKER.
NOMINATED FOR JUDGE TUCKER'S JUDGESHIP.
JOHN H. PEYTON FOR THE COURT OF APPEALS.
AN INTERESTING REMINISCENCE OF JOHN H. PEYTON AND THOMAS J. MICHIE.
PROTECTS A WEAK MINDED GIRL.
LETTER FROM JOHN HOWE PEYTON, ESQ., TO THE COMMITTEE OF THE AMHERST FESTIVAL.
A DEPLORABLE ACCIDENT.
A BUNDLE OF MISCELLANEOUS LETTERS.
MR. PEYTON'S RESIGNATION OF OFFICE OF ATTORNEY FOR THE COMMONWEALTH.
SKETCH OF JOHN HOWE PEYTON,
SKETCH OF JOHN HOWE PEYTON,
SKETCH OF JOHN HOWE PEYTON,
SKETCH OF JOHN HOWE PEYTON,
D. S. YOUNG'S IMPRESSIONS OF JOHN HOWE PEYTON.
LETTER FROM HON. GEO. W. THOMPSON,
PRESENTATION OF MR. PEYTON'S PORTRAIT TO THE COUNTY OF AUGUSTA.
THE STOUT AND PEYTON CORRESPONDENCE.
THE PUBLIC MEETING.
MAJOR ELDER'S ADDRESS.
COL. JOHN L. PEYTON'S REMARKS.
EDITORIALS FROM THE STAUNTON PAPERS.
JOHN HOWE PEYTON.
PORTRAIT OF HON. JOHN HOWE PEYTON.
PRESENTATION OF A PORTRAIT.
LETTERS.
FROM GEN. ECHOLS.
LETTERS FROM CONTEMPORARIES AT THE BAR.
FROM JUDGE ALEXANDER RIVES.
FROM JOHN B. MINOR, LL. D.,
PROF. JOHN B. MINOR, LL. D.
FROM MRS. LOUISA DUPUY.
MRS. JOHN H. PEYTON.
to the memory of
MRS. ANNE MONTGOMERY PEYTON.
APPENDICES.
THE DESCENDANTS OF JOHN H. AND ANN M. PEYTON.
MRS. SUSAN M. BALDWIN.
CONTENTS OF A PIGEON HOLE.
ANECDOTE OF GEN. PEYTON OF KENTUCKY.
COL. HENRY PEYTON—A HERO OF 1776.
OLD LETTER OF COL. JOHN L. PEYTON.
LETTER OF COL. JOHN LEWIS PEYTON.
INDEX.
FOOTNOTES:
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