Thomas Swann (attorney)

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Preceded byJoseph Lane
Succeeded byWilliam Ellzey Jr.
Preceded byJohn Carlyle Herbert
Succeeded byHenry Rose
Thomas Swann
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates for Loudoun County
In office
November 11, 1794  December 27, 1794
Preceded byJoseph Lane
Succeeded byWilliam Ellzey Jr.
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates for Fairfax County
In office
December 2, 1799  December 6, 1801
Preceded byJohn Carlyle Herbert
Succeeded byHenry Rose
United States Attorney for the District of Columbia
In office
1821–1833
Preceded byWalter Jones Jr.
Succeeded byFrancis Scott Key
Personal details
BornJuly 21, 1765
DiedFebruary 2, 1840(1840-02-02) (aged 74)
Resting placeMorven Park Estate cemetery, Loudoun County, Virginia, U.S.
SpouseJane Byrd Page
ChildrenWilson Cary Swann, Thomas Swann Jr.
OccupationLawyer, politician

Thomas Swann (July 21, 1765 – February 2, 1840) was an American lawyer, businessman and politician who twice served in the Virginia House of Delegates and for more than a decade served as the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia.

Swann was born in Prince George's County, Maryland to the former Nancy Ann Naylor and her husband, Edward Swann Jr. He had several brothers (some of whom fought in the American Revolutionary War and William T. Swann who would follow him to Alexandria) and sisters. He received a private education suitable for his class. In January 1789 he settled in Loudoun County and on April 2, 1795 married Jane Byrd Page (1774-1812), who was descended from the First Families of Virginia. Her father Mann Page of Gloucester County had died in 1779, when she was a child, but left her 2000 pounds if she reached adulthood, as well as a personal estate including many slaves.[1] The new Swann family settled in Alexandria by the end of the year. Although three children died as infants and are buried (as is their mother) in the graveyard of Christ Church in Alexandria, theirs sons Wilson Cary Swann, Thomas Swann Jr., Edward Swann, John Swann, William Page Swann and Robert Page Swann and daughter Mary Swann survived their mother. W.C. Swann and Thomas Swann Jr. followed their father's path into politics, and the latter eventually became president of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, then Baltimore's mayor before the American Civil War and Maryland's governor and a U.S. Congressman after the war.

Their mother's legacy, several children and interconnected family relationships led this man to file a deed in 1818 dividing property among their children, as well as considerable additional probate litigation in the 1830s.[2] Although not listed in tax and census records for northern Virginia counties, the Swann household owned enslaved people, at least 40 when this Thomas Swann died in 1840.[3]

Career

Death and legacy

References

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