Samuel A. Talcott
Samuel Austin Talcott (December 31, 1789 Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut – March 19, 1836 New York City) was an American lawyer and politician.
Life
He was the son of Samuel Talcott (1740-1798, grandson of Joseph Talcott, Colonial Governor of Connecticut) and Abigail Ledyard Talcott. On May 28, 1810, he married Rachel Skinner; their son was John Ledyard Talcott (b. 1812), a justice of the New York Supreme Court.
He practiced law at New Hartford, New York. There he married in 1818 his second wife, Mary Eliza Stanley (1800-1848), and their son was Thomas Grosvenor Talcott (1819-1870).
He was a leading member of the Albany Regency, and was New York State Attorney General from 1821 to 1829 when he was forced to resign "due to irregular habits", a then used euphemism for what is now called a "drinking problem". Afterward he practiced law in New York City.
He is mentioned briefly as a character in The Witch of Blackbird Pond, written by Elizabeth George Speare in 1958.
Sources
- Talcott genealogy
- List of NY State Attorneys General, at Office of the Att. Gal. of NY
- Bio and photo of his son John, at The Historical Society of the Courts in the State of NY
- Talcott genealogy, at rootsweb (giving wrong birthplace)
- Political Graveyard
- His second marriage, info at New Hartford Public Library
- Info on his father-in-law F. Stanley, at The NYG&B
- List of NY State Attorneys General, at Office of the Att. Gal. of NY
- Marriage records Talcott/Skinner
- Samuel A. Talcott at Find a Grave
Legal offices | ||
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Preceded by Thomas J. Oakley |
New York State Attorney General 1821 – 1829 |
Succeeded by Greene C. Bronson |
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