William A. Forward

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William Augustus Forward was a Florida lawyer, planter and a Democratic politician who served on the Florida Supreme Court from 1860 to 1865.[1] He was born in 1812. He died October 19, 1865.

Forward was born in New York in 1812. He was a cousin of Walker Forward, Treasury Secretary to William Henry Harrison. Though his father had fought in the War of 1812, around 1816 the family moved to Canada. While in Canada, he studied law, but was banished from Canada for participating in the Rebellions of 1837. He then returned to New York. He was befriended by Congressman Isaac H. Bronson and came to Florida at his behest.

Forward moved to St. Augustine where he opened a legal practice and entered politics as a Democrat. Widowed in 1841, Forward then remarried on June 9, 1842, to Mary Hutchinson, daughter of a New York attorney and granddaughter of a Dartmouth College president. He embraced planter life and is known to have owned slaves in 1850. Like many in East Florida, Forward resisted statehood for Florida and supported the division of Florida, contrary to he sentiments of most Democrats at the time.

In 1844, St. Johns County elected him to the Territorial House of Representatives, and in January 1845 became Speaker of the House. After statehood he left office, but was elected to the Senate to replace Senator George Center after his resignation adjourned session in November of 1845. He chaired the judiciary comĀ­mittee. He returned to the House in 1847 and was reelected to the Senate in 1848, a Democrat in a a Whig controlled Legislature. As Legislator, he was opposed to the popular election of circuit judges but supported popular election of probate judges. He also supported granting defendants greater rights to appeal. In 1850, the Democrats held a majority and he became Chair of the Corporations Committee.

He continued to oppose popular election of circuit judges. His proposal that judges be appointed by the governor with confirmation by the Senate was not adopted. His bid to become a judge was not successful in 1850. But he defeated incumbent Thomas Douglas in 1853 to become Circuit Judge for East Florida. In 1851 he opened a practice with former comptroller Simon Towle in Tallahassee. He left the Bench four years later entered into practice with John P. Sanderson.

Forward moved to Palatka, where he became a charter member First Presbyterian Church, in Palatka, which first met at the Putnam County Courthouse in 1856. [2] In 1859, he was elected to the Supreme Court and began serving January 2, 1860.[3]. He supported Succession to the point of nearing volunteering to serve in the Second Florida Infantry as a private. He became ill in July of 1865 and died in Savannah on October 19, on a journey to seek medical treatment.

[edit] References

  • Manley, Walter W., Brown, E. Canter. and Rise, Eric W. The Supreme Court of Florida and Its Predecessor Courts, 1821-1917. pp 168-170. University Press of Florida. Gainesville, Florida. 1997. eBook ISBN: 9780813022987. ISBN: 9780813015408. at Netlbrary. Online.May 17, 2008.