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Conway Robinson AI simulator
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Conway Robinson
Conway Robinson (September 15, 1805 – January 30, 1884) was a Virginia lawyer, author, slaveholder and politician aligned with the Democratic Party who represented Richmond, Virginia during the 1852-1853 session of the Virginia House of Delegates. He also served many years on Richmond's City Council and like his brother Moncure Robinson headed the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Petersburg railroad.
Conway Robinson was born in Richmond, Virginia to Agnes Conway Moncure (1780 – November 15, 1862), whose husband, John Robinson III (February 13, 1773 – April 26, 1850), was clerk and later judge of the circuit court. Both parents were from the First Families of Virginia. The Robinson family presence in Virginia dates to 1688 at New Charles Parish. His mother's father, Peyton Conway, was the clerk of the court in Stafford County, Virginia, and her family also descended from Scots immigrant—Rev. John Moncure (1709-1764), longtime priest of Aquia parish and friend of founding fathers George Washington, George Mason and others. His brothers were Moncure, Cary, Edwin, Conway, Eustace and Moore Robinson, sisters Octavia (1813? – 1880?) and Cornelia.
He married Mary Susan Selden, daughter of Benjamin Watkins Leigh, who bore several children.
Admitted to the Virginia bar, Robinson would argue 100 cases before the Supreme Court, as well as publish many treatises. In the 1840 federal census, a free black woman lived in his household, as well as four slaves. A decade later, Robinson owned eight enslaved people in Richmond.
In 1826, Robinson published his first legal treatise, "Forms Adapted to the Practice in Virginia", which he republished in 1841. Between 1832 and 1839 he published "The Practice in the Courts of Law and Equity in Virginia". In February 1840, he published in the Southern Literary Messenger "An Essay of the Constitutional Rights to Slave Property."
From 1842 until 1844, Robinson succeeded his father-in law as the official reporter of the Supreme Court of Appeals (now the Virginia Supreme Court), publishing two volumes of decisions (volumes 40 and 41 of Virginia Reports), and was in turn succeeded by Peachy Grattan. In 1849 Robinson and former Congressman John M. Patton published "The Code of Virginia, with the Declaration of Independence and Constitution of the United States, and the Declaration of Rights and Constitution of Virginia'. In 1850 Robinson published his "Views of the Constitution of Virginia" in anticipation of the Virginia Constitutional Convention of that year (which ultimately wrote slaveholding as a state constitutional right, thus requiring a new constitution following the American Civil War).
Meanwhile, in 1836, Robinson became the second president of the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railway, and served for two years, when service was extended to Fredericksburg. His engineer brother Moncure Robinson helped construct that railroad and would become its president (1840-1847), when service extended to Aquia harbor, so passengers could then catch a ferry to Washington, D.C.
Following adoption of the Virginia Constitution of 1850, voters in Richmond (who had previously only had one delegate) elected Robinson and three other men to represent them in the Virginia House of Delegates, although William C. Carrington died before the session began and A. Judson Crane resigned during the session.
Conway Robinson
Conway Robinson (September 15, 1805 – January 30, 1884) was a Virginia lawyer, author, slaveholder and politician aligned with the Democratic Party who represented Richmond, Virginia during the 1852-1853 session of the Virginia House of Delegates. He also served many years on Richmond's City Council and like his brother Moncure Robinson headed the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Petersburg railroad.
Conway Robinson was born in Richmond, Virginia to Agnes Conway Moncure (1780 – November 15, 1862), whose husband, John Robinson III (February 13, 1773 – April 26, 1850), was clerk and later judge of the circuit court. Both parents were from the First Families of Virginia. The Robinson family presence in Virginia dates to 1688 at New Charles Parish. His mother's father, Peyton Conway, was the clerk of the court in Stafford County, Virginia, and her family also descended from Scots immigrant—Rev. John Moncure (1709-1764), longtime priest of Aquia parish and friend of founding fathers George Washington, George Mason and others. His brothers were Moncure, Cary, Edwin, Conway, Eustace and Moore Robinson, sisters Octavia (1813? – 1880?) and Cornelia.
He married Mary Susan Selden, daughter of Benjamin Watkins Leigh, who bore several children.
Admitted to the Virginia bar, Robinson would argue 100 cases before the Supreme Court, as well as publish many treatises. In the 1840 federal census, a free black woman lived in his household, as well as four slaves. A decade later, Robinson owned eight enslaved people in Richmond.
In 1826, Robinson published his first legal treatise, "Forms Adapted to the Practice in Virginia", which he republished in 1841. Between 1832 and 1839 he published "The Practice in the Courts of Law and Equity in Virginia". In February 1840, he published in the Southern Literary Messenger "An Essay of the Constitutional Rights to Slave Property."
From 1842 until 1844, Robinson succeeded his father-in law as the official reporter of the Supreme Court of Appeals (now the Virginia Supreme Court), publishing two volumes of decisions (volumes 40 and 41 of Virginia Reports), and was in turn succeeded by Peachy Grattan. In 1849 Robinson and former Congressman John M. Patton published "The Code of Virginia, with the Declaration of Independence and Constitution of the United States, and the Declaration of Rights and Constitution of Virginia'. In 1850 Robinson published his "Views of the Constitution of Virginia" in anticipation of the Virginia Constitutional Convention of that year (which ultimately wrote slaveholding as a state constitutional right, thus requiring a new constitution following the American Civil War).
Meanwhile, in 1836, Robinson became the second president of the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railway, and served for two years, when service was extended to Fredericksburg. His engineer brother Moncure Robinson helped construct that railroad and would become its president (1840-1847), when service extended to Aquia harbor, so passengers could then catch a ferry to Washington, D.C.
Following adoption of the Virginia Constitution of 1850, voters in Richmond (who had previously only had one delegate) elected Robinson and three other men to represent them in the Virginia House of Delegates, although William C. Carrington died before the session began and A. Judson Crane resigned during the session.
