Robert Potter

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Robert Potter (c. 1800–1842) was a Congressional Representative from North Carolina.

Potter was born in Granville County, North Carolina near Williamsboro (now part of Vance County, North Carolina) His early education was within the common schools. He served as a midshipman in the United States Navy from 1815 to 1821.

Potter subsequently studied law, was admitted to the Bar, and practiced in Halifax, North Carolina and Oxford, North Carolina.

His political career spanned from 1826 to. He was a member of the North Carolina house of commons in 1826 and 1828. He was elected as a Jacksonian to the Twenty-first Congress and the Twenty-second Congress. He served from March 4, 1829, until his resignation in November 1831 after maiming two men. He again served as a member of the State house of commons from 1834 until his expulsion in January 1835 either for "cheating at cards" or "for brandishing a gun and knife during a fight over a card game" [1].

Potter moved to Harrison County, Texas, in 1835 and settled on a farm overlooking Lake Soda, near Marshall, Texas. In Texas, he continued his political career, becoming a member of the convention that declared the independence of Texas March 2, 1836. During the Texas Revolution Potter was Secretary of the Navy in the cabinet of interim President David G. Burnet. He represented the Red River District in the Texas Congress 1837-1841.

He participated in the Regulator-Moderator War in East Texas as a leader of the Harrison County Moderators. On March 2, 1842, his home was surrounded by the Regulators. He ran to the edge of Lake Soda and dived in, his body sinking to the bottom riddled with bullets.

He was interred at “Potter’s Point,” a bluff near his home; reinterred in the Texas State Cemetery, at Austin, Texas, in 1931. Potter County, Texas is named for him.

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