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1LT Joseph Trigg Campbell

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1LT Joseph Trigg Campbell

Birth
Abingdon, Washington County, Virginia, USA
Death
10 Apr 1876 (aged 48)
Warm Springs, Meriwether County, Georgia, USA
Burial
Abingdon, Washington County, Virginia, USA GPS-Latitude: 36.7098907, Longitude: -81.9835123
Memorial ID
View Source
Name: Joseph Twigg Campbell
Residence: Abingdon, Virginia
Age at Enlistment: 33
Enlistment Date: 22 Apr 1861
Rank at enlistment: 1st Lieutenant
Enlistment Place: Abingdon, Virginia
State Served: Virginia
Survived the War?: Yes
Service Record: Promoted to Full Adjutant on 03 Jun 1861.Commissioned an officer in Company K, Virginia 37th Infantry Regiment on 22 Apr 1861.Mustered out on 22 Mar 1862 at Mount Jackson, VA.
Birth Date: 28 Nov 1827
Death Date: 16 Apr 1876
Sources: The Virginia Regimental Histories Series
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Joseph T. Campbell (1827–1876)
Contributed by Mary B. Kegley, Brent Tarter, and the Dictionary of Virginia Biography
Joseph T. Campbell was a lawyer, commonwealth's attorney for Washington County (1863–1865), and a member of the Convention of 1867–1868. Born in Washington County and educated at the University of Virginia, Campbell practiced law in Abingdon. At the start of the American Civil War (1861–1865) he accepted a commission and served briefly in the 37th Virginia Infantry Regiment before falling ill. He returned home and served as commonwealth's attorney. After the war Campbell was elected to represent Smyth and Washington counties at a state constitutional convention and was a conservative voice during the proceedings. He voted against the constitution that was ratified in 1869. He died in 1876.

Joseph Trigg Campbell was born on November 28, 1827, in Washington County, the son of Edward Campbell, who served in the Convention of 1829–1830, and Rhoda Trigg Campbell. His brother John A. Campbell represented Washington County in the Convention of 1861, and his uncles included David Campbell, governor of Virginia, and John Campbell, who twice sat on the Council of State and served as treasurer of the United States. He grew up at Hall's Bottom in Washington County, in the large brick house his father had built near the log cabin in which his grandfather had lived when he first settled in the region in the 1770s. Campbell was educated at the Abingdon Male Academy and from 1846 to 1848 studied law at the University of Virginia.

Admitted to the bar in 1849, Campbell practiced law in Abingdon during the 1850s. On October 8, 1856, he married Mary Campbell Preston, who also lived in Abingdon. They had two sons and two daughters. Shortly after Virginia seceded from the Union, Campbell became a first lieutenant on April 22, 1861, and six weeks later was made adjutant of the 37th Virginia Infantry Regiment. After an attack of what was called "camp fever" produced an atrophy of the muscles in his left shoulder, he resigned on March 22, 1862, returned home, and served from 1863 to 1865 as commonwealth's attorney of Washington County.
In October 1867 Campbell was elected one of two delegates to represent the counties of Smyth and Washington in a convention called to write a new constitution for Virginia. On behalf of the conservative members he opened the convention by nominating Norval Wilson, a Methodist minister and delegate from Frederick County, to be president of the convention, but as anticipated the radicals and reformers elected John C. Underwood instead. Brigadier General John M. Schofield described both Campbell and Wilson as unreconstructed Confederates. Campbell sat on the Committee on the Judiciary, excepting County and Corporation Courts. Possibly in poor health during and following the convention, he sometimes did not attend its sessions and seldom spoke during the portion of the convention for which the debates were recorded. Campbell missed a number of the most important votes but when in attendance voted regularly against the reformers. On April 17, 1868, he voted against the constitution that the convention wrote, which was ratified in 1869.

A speech Campbell made on the subject of Freemasonry and education at the laying of the cornerstone for a new building at the Abingdon Male Academy has been printed as representative of his oratory. He wrote his will in July 1871 during a stay at Warm Springs and appointed his wife and two brothers to act as his executors. Campbell died in Washington County on April 16, 1876, and was buried in the cemetery at Sinking Spring Presbyterian Church near Abingdon.
Name: Joseph Twigg Campbell
Residence: Abingdon, Virginia
Age at Enlistment: 33
Enlistment Date: 22 Apr 1861
Rank at enlistment: 1st Lieutenant
Enlistment Place: Abingdon, Virginia
State Served: Virginia
Survived the War?: Yes
Service Record: Promoted to Full Adjutant on 03 Jun 1861.Commissioned an officer in Company K, Virginia 37th Infantry Regiment on 22 Apr 1861.Mustered out on 22 Mar 1862 at Mount Jackson, VA.
Birth Date: 28 Nov 1827
Death Date: 16 Apr 1876
Sources: The Virginia Regimental Histories Series
------------------------------------------------
Joseph T. Campbell (1827–1876)
Contributed by Mary B. Kegley, Brent Tarter, and the Dictionary of Virginia Biography
Joseph T. Campbell was a lawyer, commonwealth's attorney for Washington County (1863–1865), and a member of the Convention of 1867–1868. Born in Washington County and educated at the University of Virginia, Campbell practiced law in Abingdon. At the start of the American Civil War (1861–1865) he accepted a commission and served briefly in the 37th Virginia Infantry Regiment before falling ill. He returned home and served as commonwealth's attorney. After the war Campbell was elected to represent Smyth and Washington counties at a state constitutional convention and was a conservative voice during the proceedings. He voted against the constitution that was ratified in 1869. He died in 1876.

Joseph Trigg Campbell was born on November 28, 1827, in Washington County, the son of Edward Campbell, who served in the Convention of 1829–1830, and Rhoda Trigg Campbell. His brother John A. Campbell represented Washington County in the Convention of 1861, and his uncles included David Campbell, governor of Virginia, and John Campbell, who twice sat on the Council of State and served as treasurer of the United States. He grew up at Hall's Bottom in Washington County, in the large brick house his father had built near the log cabin in which his grandfather had lived when he first settled in the region in the 1770s. Campbell was educated at the Abingdon Male Academy and from 1846 to 1848 studied law at the University of Virginia.

Admitted to the bar in 1849, Campbell practiced law in Abingdon during the 1850s. On October 8, 1856, he married Mary Campbell Preston, who also lived in Abingdon. They had two sons and two daughters. Shortly after Virginia seceded from the Union, Campbell became a first lieutenant on April 22, 1861, and six weeks later was made adjutant of the 37th Virginia Infantry Regiment. After an attack of what was called "camp fever" produced an atrophy of the muscles in his left shoulder, he resigned on March 22, 1862, returned home, and served from 1863 to 1865 as commonwealth's attorney of Washington County.
In October 1867 Campbell was elected one of two delegates to represent the counties of Smyth and Washington in a convention called to write a new constitution for Virginia. On behalf of the conservative members he opened the convention by nominating Norval Wilson, a Methodist minister and delegate from Frederick County, to be president of the convention, but as anticipated the radicals and reformers elected John C. Underwood instead. Brigadier General John M. Schofield described both Campbell and Wilson as unreconstructed Confederates. Campbell sat on the Committee on the Judiciary, excepting County and Corporation Courts. Possibly in poor health during and following the convention, he sometimes did not attend its sessions and seldom spoke during the portion of the convention for which the debates were recorded. Campbell missed a number of the most important votes but when in attendance voted regularly against the reformers. On April 17, 1868, he voted against the constitution that the convention wrote, which was ratified in 1869.

A speech Campbell made on the subject of Freemasonry and education at the laying of the cornerstone for a new building at the Abingdon Male Academy has been printed as representative of his oratory. He wrote his will in July 1871 during a stay at Warm Springs and appointed his wife and two brothers to act as his executors. Campbell died in Washington County on April 16, 1876, and was buried in the cemetery at Sinking Spring Presbyterian Church near Abingdon.


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