Daniel Bryan (Virginia politician)

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Daniel Bryan
Postmaster of Alexandria, Virginia
In office
April 8, 1821  1853
PresidentJames Monroe
John Quincy Adams
Andrew Jackson
Martin Van Buren
William Henry Harrison
James K. Polk
Zachary Taylor
Millard Fillmore
Preceded byJosiah Watson[1]
Succeeded byTurner W. Ashby[1][2][3]
Virginia State Senator
In office
1818–1821
Personal details
Born1789 (1789)
DiedDecember 22, 1866(1866-12-22) (aged 76–77)
Resting placeOak Hill Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
Spouse(s)
Rebecca Davenport
(m. 1815; died 1816)

Mary Thomas Barbour
(m. 1818; died 1852)
Children5 (including Thomas Barbour Bryan)
RelativesJames Barbour (brother-in-law)
Philip P. Barbour (brother-in-law)
Thomas Barbour (father-in-law)
Charles Page Bryan (grandson)
Barbour Lathrop (grandson)
Bryan Lathrop (grandson)
Florence Lathrop Field Page (granddaughter)
Jennie Byrd Bryan Payne (granddaughter)
Andrew Wylie (son-in-law)

Daniel Bryan (1789 – December 22, 1866) was an American politician, abolitionist, lawyer, poet, and postmaster who served in the Senate of Virginia from 1818 to 1820 and as postmaster of Alexandria, Virginia for more than three decades. Bryan married into the prestigious Barbour family in his second marriage.

Bryan was born in 1789 in rural Rockingham County, Virginia.[4] There is disagreement on whether Bryan's maternal uncle was Daniel Boone.[4][5][6][7] Boone had a nephew named Daniel Bryan; however, there is evidence to indicate that this was a different person. It is likely that the politician and poet Daniel Bryan was more distantly related to Boone.[8]) If he was Boone's nephew, then Bryan's father would have been William Bryan, one of the founders of Bryan Station, and his mother Mary Boone Bryan, sister of Boone.[9][10] Bryan attended Washington Academy (today's Washington and Lee University), but did not graduate.[4] He read law at home.[4]

Career

Personal life

References

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