This section contains 808 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
Lawyer
Emergence.
The career of William Wirt demonstrated the social, political, and literary paths by which countless young lawyers sought to achieve fame in the years following the War of 1812. The youngest son of Swiss and German immigrants who kept a tavern in Bladensburg, Maryland, he was orphaned in childhood but obtained some schooling through the assistance of his uncle and a family friend. At seventeen he took up the study of law in Montgomery County, Maryland, and upon learning of an opportunity in Culpeper County, Virginia, he moved there and after five months was admitted to the bar. In Culpeper he became attached to a genial and cultivated social circle, which included the son of Thomas Jefferson's close friend Dabney Carr. When Wirt's wife died in 1799 after four years of marriage, the twentyseven- year-old attorney moved to Richmond and began to participate in public...
This section contains 808 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |