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TUCKER, John Randolph, (son of Henry St. George Tucker [1780-1848] and father of Henry St. George Tucker [1853-1932]),
a Representative from Virginia; born in Winchester, Frederick County, Va., on
December 24, 1823; attended a private school and Richmond Academy, and was graduated from the
University of Virginia at Charlottesville in 1844; was admitted to the bar in 1845 and commenced
practice in Winchester, Va.; attorney general of Virginia 1857-1865; professor of equity and public
law at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va., in 1870; elected as a Democrat to the
Forty-fourth and to the five succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1875-March 3, 1887); chairman,
Committee on Ways and Means (Forty-sixth Congress), Committee on the Judiciary (Forty-eighth and
Forty-ninth Congresses); declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1886; elected professor of
constitutional law at Washington and Lee University in 1888, and served until his death; president of
the American Bar Association in 1894; died in Lexington, Va., February 13, 1897; interment in
Mount Hebron Cemetery, Winchester, Va.
BibliographyDavis, J.W. John Randolph Tucker: The Man and His
Work. In John Randolph Tucker Lectures. Lexington, Va.: Washington and Lee
University, 1952, 11-36.
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