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FLOYD, John, a Representative from Virginia; born at Floyds Station, near the
present city of Louisville, Jefferson County, Ky. (then a part of Virginia),
April 24, 1783; pursued an academic course; attended Dickinson College,
Carlisle, Pa., and was graduated from the medical department of the University
of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia in 1806; settled in Lexington, Va., the same
year, and soon thereafter moved to Christiansburg, Montgomery County, Va.,
where he practiced his profession; justice of the peace in 1807; major of
Virginia State Militia 1807-1812; served as surgeon with rank of major in the
War of 1812; subsequently became brigadier general of militia; member of the
State house of delegates in 1814 and 1815; elected as a Republican to the
Fifteenth through the Seventeenth Congresses, elected as a Crawford Republican
to the Eighteenth Congress, and reelected as a Jacksonian to the Nineteenth and
Twentieth Congresses (March 4, 1817-March 3, 1829); was not a candidate for
renomination in 1828; Governor of Virginia 1830-1834; received the electoral
vote of South Carolina for President in 1833; died near Sweetsprings, Monroe
County, Va. (now West Virginia), August 17, 1837; interment in an unmarked
grave in the cemetery at Sweetsprings.
BibliographyAmbler, Charles Henry.
The Life and Diary of John Floyd, Governor of Virginia, An Apostle of
Secession, and the Father of the Oregon Country. Richmond: Richmond
Press, 1918.
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