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Thomas Pendleton Burnett

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Thomas Pendleton Burnett

Birth
Pittsylvania County, Virginia, USA
Death
5 Nov 1846 (aged 46)
Mount Hope, Grant County, Wisconsin, USA
Burial
Mount Hope, Grant County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Sub-Agent in the Indian Department at Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin; District Attorney for western Michigan Territory; Member of the Wisconsin Territory House of Representatives; Member of the Wisconsin Constitutional Convention.
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From 'Fifty Years in the Northwest' by W. H. C. Folsom, 1888, pg 30:

"Thomas Pendleton Burnett was born in Virginia in 1800. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in Paris, Kentucky. He was appointed sub-Indian agent under J. M. Street, in 1829. He came to Prairie du Chien in 1830 and entered upon the duties of the agency. He also practiced law.

In 1835 he was a member of the Michigan territorial council and its president. In 1836, after his term of office expired, he married a daughter of Alfred Brunson and, continuing the practice of law, became quite eminent for his skill, and acquired an extensive practice. He was a fluent speaker, well skilled in the management of the cases intrusted [sic] to his care. In 1840 he removed to a farm at Patch Grove, Grant county. He was a member of the Wisconsin constitutional convention which met in 1846.

He served but a few weeks when he was called home by the death of his mother and the sickness of his wife. The fatigue of a twenty-four hours' ride of eighty-five miles in a rude lumber wagon was too much for his not very rugged constitution, and four days after his mother's death he followed her to the world of spirits. His devoted wife survived him but three hours. Under circumstances of such unusual sadness did this brilliant and promising lawyer and citizen take his departure from earth. His death created a profound sensation throughout the entire Northwest, where he was so well and favorably known."


Sub-Agent in the Indian Department at Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin; District Attorney for western Michigan Territory; Member of the Wisconsin Territory House of Representatives; Member of the Wisconsin Constitutional Convention.
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From 'Fifty Years in the Northwest' by W. H. C. Folsom, 1888, pg 30:

"Thomas Pendleton Burnett was born in Virginia in 1800. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in Paris, Kentucky. He was appointed sub-Indian agent under J. M. Street, in 1829. He came to Prairie du Chien in 1830 and entered upon the duties of the agency. He also practiced law.

In 1835 he was a member of the Michigan territorial council and its president. In 1836, after his term of office expired, he married a daughter of Alfred Brunson and, continuing the practice of law, became quite eminent for his skill, and acquired an extensive practice. He was a fluent speaker, well skilled in the management of the cases intrusted [sic] to his care. In 1840 he removed to a farm at Patch Grove, Grant county. He was a member of the Wisconsin constitutional convention which met in 1846.

He served but a few weeks when he was called home by the death of his mother and the sickness of his wife. The fatigue of a twenty-four hours' ride of eighty-five miles in a rude lumber wagon was too much for his not very rugged constitution, and four days after his mother's death he followed her to the world of spirits. His devoted wife survived him but three hours. Under circumstances of such unusual sadness did this brilliant and promising lawyer and citizen take his departure from earth. His death created a profound sensation throughout the entire Northwest, where he was so well and favorably known."




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