William Little Brown | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | February 28, 1830 Near
Nashville, Tennessee | (aged 40)
William Little Brown (August 9, 1789 – February 28, 1830) was a justice of the Tennessee Supreme Court from 1822 to 1824. [1]
Brown was born near Cheraw, South Carolina, to Morgan Brown and Elizabeth Little who laid out Palmyra, Tennessee. [2] After attending Transylvania University, he studied law under John Haywood and Joseph H. Hawkins and was admitted to the bar in 1812. [2]
He was appointed solicitor general by Governor Willie Blount in 1814, and elected as a member of the state senate in 1819. [1] During his term in the senate, he negotiated a treaty regarding the Kentucky/Tennessee boundary line. [3] He was elected to a judgeship on the state's Supreme Court in 1822, but resigned in July 1824 [1] and died in his home called "Rose Cliff" near Nashville on February 28, 1830. [2] The state supreme court ordered the publication of a "Tribute of Respect" for Brown a month thereafter, lauding his legal acumen. [4]