Robert L. Owen Sr.

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Preceded byn/a
BornRobert Latham Owen
(1825-07-03)July 3, 1825
DiedJune 2, 1873(1873-06-02) (aged 47)
Robert L. Owen Sr.
Member of the Virginia Senate
from the Campbell County district
In office
October 5, 1869  December 5, 1871
Preceded byn/a
Succeeded byThomas J. Kirkpatrick
Personal details
BornRobert Latham Owen
(1825-07-03)July 3, 1825
DiedJune 2, 1873(1873-06-02) (aged 47)
SpouseNarcissa Chisholm Owen
ChildrenRobert Latham Owen Jr.
OccupationRailroad executive

Robert Latham Owen Sr. (1825–1873) was a civil engineer and surveyor, Virginia plantation owner, member of the Virginia Senate and President of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad.

Robert Latham Owen was born to Dr. William Owen of Lynchburg, Virginia and his wife Jane Latham Owen. His Owen ancestors had emigrated from Wales, and the family had a record of public service as politicians, doctors and teachers. His brother Dr. William Otway Owen Sr. (1820–92), like their father practiced medicine in Lynchburg, and became Surgeon-in-Chief supervising thirty Confederate hospitals in Lynchburg during the American Civil War.[1]

As a young civil engineer, Owen surveyed for various railroads. In Jonesborough, Tennessee, he met schoolteacher Narcissa Clark Chisholm, orphaned daughter of Cherokee chief Thomas Chisholm. A granddaughter of Chief John D. Chisholm who led an expedition along the Arkansas River, she had been born in Arkansas before the Trail of Tears.[2] Rev. David Sullins married them. They had two sons: Maj. William Otway Owen M.D. (1854-1924, born in Tennessee and who became a U.S. Army doctor) and Robert Latham Owen Jr. (1856-1947, born after they moved back to Lynchburg, and who became one of the first two U.S. Senators from Oklahoma).

The family lived in Lynchburg's best-known mansion, Point of Honor, until 1870, and Dr. Owen Sr. operated the Vista Acres plantation in Campbell County.

Career

Death and legacy

References

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