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Isaac Trimble Preston (1793 – July 4, 1852) was a 19th-century Louisiana lawyer, politician, and Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court.

Preston was born in Rockbridge County, Virginia, the son of Francis Preston. In a letter to James Madison, Francis Preston suggests Isaac's birth to have been illegitimate, describing the younger Preston to have been "the fruit of Youthfull (sic) folly." [1] He studied at Greenville College in Greene County, Tennessee and graduated from Yale College in 1812 as class valedictorian. He began studies as Litchfield Law School in Litchfield, Connecticut the same year, but put his education on hold to join the Army as a captain in the 35th Infantry during the War of 1812 on March 31, 1813. He received an honorable discharge in June 1815 and resumed his legal studies under William Wirt in Norfolk, Virginia.

Preston settled in New Orleans, Louisiana and began a law practice. He twice served terms as Attorney General of Louisiana from 1824 to 1828 and again from 1843 to 1846, and also served as land office register in New Orleans around 1829. [2] He was a member of the Louisiana Constitutional Convention in 1844 and served a term in the Louisiana House of Representatives in 1845. In 1850, he was appointed to the Louisiana Supreme Court where he remained until his death. [3]

Preston had a great interest in developing better transportation throughout the south and was a promoter of a railroad from New Orleans to Jackson, Mississippi. He also pursued charitable interests and gave land for the Methodist Episcopal Church in Carrollton in 1843.

Preston married Catherine Lawn Layton, daughter of Robert Layton and Susan Gilchrist, on November 20, 1828 and together they had six children, one of whom died in infancy. After Catherine's death in 1842, he married again to Margaret Hewes, the widow of his father-in-law, in 1845. He died in the explosion of the steamboat St. James on Lake Pontchartrain which was engaged in a race from Biloxi, Mississippi to New Orleans. [4]

Sources

References

  1. ^ Letter to James Madison from Francis Preston, 5 July 1812 National Archives. Received October 7, 2016.
  2. ^ Andrew Jackson; Harold D. Moser; Daniel Feller; Laura-Eve Moss (1 December 2007). The Papers of Andrew Jackson: 1829. Univ. of Tennessee Press. pp. 544–5. ISBN  978-1-57233-593-6.
  3. ^ Emily Clark (2013). The Strange History of the American Quadroon: Free Women of Color in the Revolutionary Atlantic World. UNC Press Books. pp. 112–5. ISBN  978-1-4696-0752-8.
  4. ^ Dodsley, J. "The Annual Register: Or a View of the History, Politics and Literature, for the Year 1852, Volume 20, (1853).
Legal offices
Preceded by Attorney General of Louisiana
1824–1828
Succeeded by
Preceded by Attorney General of Louisiana
1843–1846
Succeeded by