Robert William Hughes

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Robert William Hughes
Judge of United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
In office
1874–1898
Nominated by Ulysses S. Grant
Preceded by John C. Underwood
Succeeded by Edmund Waddill, Jr.
Personal details
Born (1821-01-16)January 16, 1821
Powhatan County, Virginia
Died December 10, 1901(1901-12-10)
Abingdon, Virginia
Spouse(s) Eliza M. Johnston

Robert William Hughes (January 16, 1821 – December 10, 1901) was a Virginia newspaperman, lawyer, and federal judge.

Family and early life

Born at Muddy Creek Plantation in Powhatan County, Virginia, Hughes was of an old Virginia family, whose ancestors came to the area of Powhatan County before 1700,[1] when it was still Goochland County.

He attended Caldwell Institute, Greensboro, North Carolina, then studied law in Fincastle, Virginia.

In 1850, at the Governor's mansion, Hughes married Joseph E. Johnston's niece, Eliza M. Johnston, who was the adopted daughter of then-Governor John B. Floyd.

Hughes practiced law in Richmond from 1846-1853. Among his acquaintances in Richmond was Edgar Allan Poe.[2]

Hughes's son, Robert M. Hughes, was a distinguished Virginia lawyer, and one of the early presidents of the Virginia Bar Association.

Secessionist Democratic newspaperman

From 1850 to 1866, he contributed to a series of newspapers in Richmond and Washington, D.C., primarily the Richmond Examiner. He took over as editor of the Examiner when the regular editor, John M. Daniel, left the country as U.S. Minister to Sardinia.

In connection with the statewide elections of 1855, Hughes editorialized against the Know Nothing movement in Virginia, pointing out that Yankees and abolitionists, not immigrants and Roman Catholics, were the true threats to the Southern way of life. "Why are Northern Abolitionists and Know Nothings persecuting and proscribing foreigners and Catholics?" he wrote. "It is because they have always refused to join with them in their outcry against slavery and the South."[3]

In 1857, Hughes left Richmond at the invitation of President James Buchanan to edit the Democratic newspaper, the Washington Union. His papers at the College of William & Mary include, among other things, a receipt for the purchase of two slaves in 1862.[4] Hughes favored secession but was critical of the administration of Jefferson Davis.

Hughes served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War, then returned to his pre-war occupation as a newspaper editor in Richmond.

Post-War Republican politician

After the War, Hughes became "one of the first prominent Virginians to turn Republican during the Reconstruction period."[5] Earlier, he "was an extreme secessionist, but after the war he became a moderate Republican and a favorite of President Grant, causing many of his old friends to consider him 'worse than a carpetbagger' and a 'Judas.'"[6]

In June, 1869, he shot and wounded a rival newspaperman and future Governor of Virginia, William E. Cameron, in a duel, after Cameron had published a "scathing" editorial about the transformation of Hughes's political views.[7] According to one account, "the parties met at Chester Station, on the Petersburg Railroad; but, before they could exchange a shot, the police made their appearance, and caused a flight of the parties. They passed into North Carolina, where they fought on June 12 with pistols. Cameron was hit in the breast at the first fire, the ball striking a rib and glancing. Hughes demanded another fire, but the surgeons declared that Cameron could not deliver another shot, and the affair ended 'to the satisfaction of all parties.'"[8]

Before and after the War, Hughes practiced law for some periods in Abingdon, Virginia, and had some affiliation with some predecessors of the Norfolk & Western railroad.[9] He was appointed as the United States Attorney for the Western District of Virginia. He was an unsuccessful Republican candidate for Congress in 1870, losing to William Terry, and in 1872, losing to Tazewell County farmer Rees Bowen.[10]

He resigned as U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Virginia in 1873 for his unsuccessful campaign for Governor of Virginia, against James L. Kemper. At the Republican convention attended by white and black delegates, out of two candidates, "it was seen that Col. Hughes was the stronger man, especially among the colored delegates."[11] In accepting the Republican nomination, Hughes gave a speech applauding the fairness of the Reconstruction amendments, and condemned his opponents for running on the slogan of "Virginia for White Virginians."[12] "Colonel Robert W. Hughes, at the time of his nomination, was the strongest and most popular Republican in Virginia. . . . There are no Republicans in Virginia, and very few in the whole South, who can command the respect that Judge Hughes enjoys."[13]

Federal judge

Hughes was nominated by Ulysses S. Grant on December 15, 1873, to a seat on the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, to succeed the hated former abolitionist John Curtiss Underwood, who had died suddenly the previous week. The United States Senate confirmed his appointment on January 14, 1874.

In 1879, in the case of Ex parte Kinney, 3 Hughes 9, 14 F.Cas. 602, Judge Hughes denied habeas corpus relief to a black petitioner who had married a white woman in Washington, D.C., then returned to Virginia, and was convicted under Virginia law of traveling out-of-state to marry and sentenced to five years of hard labor.[14] "But the Kinney court went on to declare that Virginia could not enforce its law against nondomiciliaries nor exclude altogether interracial couples domiciled in the District of Columbia. 'That such a citizen would have a right of transit with his wife through Virginia, and of temporary stoppage, and of carrying on any business here not requiring residence, may be conceded, because these are privileges following a citizen of the United States . . . .'"[15]

The same year, in the Arlington Estate case, Judge Hughes addressed the jurisdictional issues raised by Custis Lee's ejectment action to recover the family property,[16] and concluded his opinion with these words: "If, then, it shall go up to the supreme court, as I doubt not it will do, I shall console myself with the memorable reflection of Lord Nottingham, in the case of the Duke of Norfolk: ‘I am not ashamed to have made this decision, nor will I be wounded if it should be reversed.'"[17]

In 1882, when a group of Republicans was seeking greater representation in governments, Hughes was mentioned as a possible member of a reconstituted Virginia Supreme Court.[18]

Judge Hughes sat mainly in Norfolk, but heard cases elsewhere in the district and also served as a visiting judge in the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia, in the interim between the retirement of Judge Alexander Rives in 1882 and the appointment of Judge John Paul in 1883.

Virginian, writer, patron of education

During his judicial career, Judge Hughes lived in the Mowbray Arch section of the Ghent neighborhood,[19] but kept a summer home near Abingdon.

His published works included five volumes of reports of federal court opinions.[20] In addition, Hughes published biographies of Generals Floyd and Johnston.[21] He was interested in economics, and published his comments on the American monetary system and matters of public finance in post-War Virginia. He also raised horses, including thoroughbreds registered with the American Jockey Club.

Hughes lectured on law at the University of Virginia, and served on its Board of Visitors from 1865-1872. He was also a trustee of the Hampton Institute, from 1870-1899.[22] At the graduation exercises in 1875,[23] Judge Hughes "said it was gratifying to put to rest the old belief that one race was inferior in capacity to the other."[24]

In 1881, the College of William & Mary conferred on Judge Hughes an honorary doctor of law degree.[25]

Judge Hughes retired in 1898. He died at the age of 80 and was buried in Sinking Springs Cemetery,[26] in Abingdon, Virginia.

Notes and references

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  17. Lee v. Kaufman, 3 Hughes 36, 15 F.Cas. 162 (C.C.Va. 1879).
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External links

Legal offices
Preceded by Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Virginia
1874–1898
Succeeded by
Edmund Waddill, Jr.