William Munford

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William Munford
MunfordVirginiaReports1812.jpg
Virginia Council of State
In office
1806-1811
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State Senator, Virginia
In office
1802-1806
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Representative for Mecklenburg County, Virginia House of Delegates
In office
1798-1802
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Personal details
Born August 15, 1775
  Richland, Mecklenburg County, Virginia
Died June 21, 1825
  Richmond, Virginia
Resting place
Residence(s)
Education
Alma mater College of William & Mary
Profession Law reporter
Politician
Spouse(s) Sarah Radford
Relatives
Known for Poems, and Compositions in Prose on Several Occasions (1798)
Signature [[File:{{{signature}}}|left|200px]]


William Munford (1775-1825), legislator and court reporter, was born in Mecklenburg County, Virginia to Colonel Robert and Anne Munford.[1] He began his education at the grammar school of the College of William & Mary, eventually entering the college itself.[2] After Munford's father’s death, George Wythe provided for his continued education.[3] Without Wythe's aid, Munford likely would not have been able to continue his studies at the College.[4] Under Wythe's teaching, Munford developed his life-long appreciation for both the classics and the law.[5] Munford considered Wythe his “great resource” and believed that “such a man as he casts light upon all around him.”[6] Munford completed his legal education under St. George Tucker who succeeded Wythe as Professor of Law and Police after Wythe resigned in 1790.[7]

After completing his legal studies, Munford entered politics, representing Mecklenburg County from 1797-1798.[8] In 1800, he was elected to the state Senate.[9] In 1811, Munford was made Clerk of the House of Delegates, a position he held until his death.[10] In addition to his political activities, Munford compiled reports of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals.[11] His efforts began at first in collaboration with William W. Hening covering the years 1806-1810 (11-14 Va.), and later as a solitary enterprise from 1810-1821 (15-20 Va.). [12]

Munford remained close to Wythe, and at Wythe's funeral in June, 1806, he gave a eulogy considered by those present to be a moving tribute.[13] Munford said of his mentor and "second father":

Plain in his manners, strictly temperate in his life, and regardless of all profits except such as were made with honor and a good conscience, he furnished an example in the vigour of his youth (as I have been told by some, whom I am happy to see present) of a truly honest and upright lawyer, a character supposed by many (though I hope erroneously) to be very uncommon. No consideration could ever induce him to swerve from the straight line of integrity, to violate justice, or the laws of his country. With the spirit of a philosopher he lived a lawyer, and was indeed the brightest ornament of the bar.[14]

Munford is best known for his contributions to the classics, rather than the law.[15] In 1798 he published a compilation of poems, and he translated classical writings and tragedies.[16] Throughout his life, he worked on crafting a definitive translation of Homer's Iliad because he believed that existing English translations did not capture the magnificence of the original.[17] In 1846, twenty-one years after Munford's death, his translation was published, and was considered a significant achievement in American scholarship.[18]

See also

References

  1. Theodore S. Cox, "Munford, William" in vol. VII, part 1 of Dictionary of American Biography, ed. Dumas Malone (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1962), 326.
  2. Ibid.
  3. Ibid
  4. Ibid.
  5. Ibid.
  6. Lyon G. Tyler, "Glimpses of Old College Life," William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine 8, no. 3 (Jan. 1900), 153-154.
  7. Ibid., 156
  8. Theodore S. Cox, "Munford, William," 326.
  9. Ibid.
  10. Ibid.
  11. Ibid.
  12. Ibid.
  13. Oscar Lane Shewmake, The Honourable George Wythe: Teacher, Lawyer, Jurist, Statesman: An Address Delivered Before the Wythe Law Club of the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, Dec. 18, 1921. Richmond, Va., 1950.
  14. "Oration, Pronounced at the Funeral of George Wythe," The Enquirer (Richmond, VA), June 17, 1806, 3.
  15. Ibid.
  16. Ibid., 326-27
  17. Ibid., 327
  18. Ibid.