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John Botts

John Minor Botts
JMBotts.jpg
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Virginia's 6th district
In office
March 4, 1847 – March 3, 1849
Preceded by James Seddon
Succeeded by James Seddon
Chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs
In office
March 4, 1847 – March 3, 1849
Preceded by Hugh Haralson
Succeeded by Armistead Burt
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Virginia's 11th district
In office
March 4, 1839 – March 3, 1843
Preceded by John Robertson
Succeeded by William Taylor
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Henrico County
In office
1833–1838
Preceded by Robert A. Mayo
Succeeded by Sherwin McRae
Personal details
Born (1802-09-16)September 16, 1802
Dumfries, Virginia
Died January 8, 1869(1869-01-08) (aged 66)
Culpeper, Virginia
Political party Whig
Other political
affiliations
Constitutional Union
Profession Politician, Lawyer

John Minor Botts (September 16, 1802 – January 8, 1869) was a nineteenth-century politician, planter and lawyer from Virginia. He was a prominent Unionist in Richmond, Virginia during the American Civil War.

Botts was born in Dumfries, Virginia to prominent lawyer Benjamin Gaines Botts (1776 - 1811) and his wife Jane Tyler Botts (1782 - 1811). Both of his parents died in the Richmond Theatre fire on 26 December 1811, so John and his siblings were raised by relatives in Fredericksburg. Botts attended the common schools in Richmond, Virginia, then studied law.

He married Mary Whiting Blair (1801-1841), and they had several children. Two sons (John and Alexander) died in very young; their firstborn son, Archibald Blair Botts (1826-1841), joined the U.S. Army and died in Mexico in 1847, and their daughter Virginia A. Botts (1840-1862) also predeceased her father. Thus, only Beverly Blair Botts (1830-1897), Rosalie S. Botts Lewis (1837-1878), and Isabella McLain Botts Lewis (1841-1928) survived their parents.

After admission to the Virginia bar in 1830. Botts moved to Henrico County, Virginia outside Richmond. He operated a plantation called "Half Sink" on the Chickahominy River in Varina Farms area about nine miles east of downtown Richmond. He used the progressive agricultural methods advocated by his brother Charles Taylor Botts in the 'Southern Planter, as well as slave labor. Botts also raised racehorses and practiced law, and gained the nickname "Bison".

Botts lost his first run for political office in 1831, but won the following year and represented Henrico County in the Virginia House of Delegates from 1833 to 1839. In 1835, he seemed to lose to William B. Randolph, but successfully challenged the results in court. In 1836, he again appeared to lose, to William N. Whiting, but again won a court challenge and was seated.

In 1838, voters elected Botts as a Whig to the United States House of Representatives and William N. Whiting succeeded him as Henrico's state delegate. He gained a reputations for independent spirit as well as partisanship. For example, Botts repeatedly blamed the financial hardship caused by the Panic of 1837 on Democrats, and published many partisan pamphlets. Unlike most Whigs, Botts opposed the Second Bank of the United States on constitutional grounds, but also considering President Andrew Jackson's veto of the bank's renewed charter encroachment upon Congress's powers, and by 1841 favored a national bank. One of the few southern representatives to oppose the Democrats' "gag rule" (refusing to receive or air) antislavery petitions, he argued that violated the constitutional right to petition the government and also eliminated an important safety valve which relieved sectional agitation. Botts served in Congress from 1839 to 1843.


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