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FAULKNER, Charles James, (father of Charles James Faulkner [1847-1929]),
a Representative from Virginia and from West Virginia; born in
Martinsburg, Va. (now West Virginia), July 6, 1806; was graduated from
Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., in 1822; studied law; was admitted to
the bar in 1829 and practiced; member of the Virginia house of delegates
1829-1834, 1848, and 1849; commissioner of Virginia on the disputed boundaries
between that State and Maryland; member of the State senate from 1838 to 1842,
when he resigned; member of the State constitutional convention in 1850;
elected from Virginia as a Whig to the Thirty-second Congress and as a Democrat
to the Thirty-third, Thirty-fourth, and Thirty-fifth Congresses (March 4,
1851-March 3, 1859); chairman, Committee on Military Affairs (Thirty-fifth
Congress); appointed United States Minister to France by President Buchanan in
1859; returned to the United States in August 1861 and was detained as a
prisoner of state on charges of negotiating arms sales for the Confederacy
while in Paris; released in December 1861 and negotiated his own exchange for
Alfred Ely, a Congressman from New York who had been taken prisoner by the
Confederates at Bull Run; during the Civil War entered the Confederate Army and
was assistant adjutant general on the staff of Gen. Thomas J. (Stonewall)
Jackson; engaged in railroad enterprises; member of the State constitutional
convention of West Virginia in 1872; elected as a Democrat from West Virginia
to the Forty-fourth Congress (March 4, 1875-March 3, 1877); resumed the
practice of law; died on the family estate, Boydville, near Martinsburg,
W.Va., November 1, 1884; interment in the family lot on the estate.
BibliographyMcVeigh, Donald R. Charles James Faulkner: Reluctant Rebel.
Ph.D. diss., West Virginia University, 1955.
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