Lucas, Daniel Bedinger, 1836-1909

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Lucas, Daniel Bedinger, 1836-1909

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Lucas, Daniel Bedinger, 1836-1909

Lucas, Daniel B.

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Lucas, Daniel B.

Daniel Bedinger Lucas

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Daniel Bedinger Lucas

Daniel B. Lucas

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Daniel B. Lucas

Lucas, Daniel Bediger, fl. 1853.

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Lucas, Daniel Bediger, fl. 1853.

Lucas, Daniel B. 1836-1909 (Daniel Bedinger),

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Lucas, Daniel B. 1836-1909 (Daniel Bedinger),

Lucas, Daniel B. 1836-1909

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Lucas, Daniel B. 1836-1909

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1836-03-16

1836-03-16

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1909-06-24

1909-06-24

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Biographical History

Daniel Bedinger Lucas, lawyer and poet, was born March 16, 1836, at "Rion Hall" in Charleston, Virginia (now West Virginia). He attended the University of Virginia, and then studied law under Judge John W. Brockenbrough of Lexington, Virginia. In 1859 he began practicing law at Charleston but moved the next year to Richmond. At the beginning of the Civil War in 1861 he joined the staff of General Henry A. Wise and took part in the Kanawha Valley campaign, but his physical disability from a childhood spine injury kept him from active service in the last years of the war. Toward the end of the war he ran the blockade to defend his friend John Yates Beall, accused of being a Confederate spy, but was unable to defend him against the charges. Beall was executed on Governors Island, New York.

In 1869, Lucas married Lena Tucker Brooke, of Richmond. Their only child, Virginia, was born in 1873. Barred from the practice of law until 1871, due to restrictions on the service of ex-Confederates, Lucas turned to literature and became co-editor of the Baltimore Southern Metropolis . Many of his poems were published in this magazine. He reentered the practice of law in 1871 and took a prominent role in the Democratic party politics of West Virginia, acting as Democratic elector in the elections of 1872 and 1876, to the legislature in 1884 and 1886, and as a member of the supreme court of appeals from 1889 to 1893.

Lucas's volumes of poetry include The Wreath of Eglantine (1869) and Ballads and Madrigals (1884). He wrote three plays about the Civil War. His books include The Memoir of John Yates Beall (1865) and Nicaragua, War of the Filibusters (1896). He was known as the "poet of the Shenandoah Valley." He died at Rion Hall on June 24, 1909.

From the guide to the Daniel Bedinger Lucas Papers, 1812-1924, n.d., (Special Collections, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Va.)

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https://viaf.org/viaf/8733790

https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q5216456

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n82102546

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n82102546

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