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Warner Underwood

Warner Underwood
A man in his early fifties with thick, black hair and a black beard wearing a black jacket and tie and white shirt
United States Consul to Glasgow, Scotland
In office
July 17, 1862 – September 30, 1864
President Abraham Lincoln
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky's 3rd district
In office
March 4, 1855 – March 3, 1859
Preceded by Francis Bristow
Succeeded by Francis Bristow
Member of the Kentucky Senate
In office
1849-1853
Member of the Kentucky House of Representatives
In office
1848
Personal details
Born Warner Lewis Underwood
(1808-08-07)August 7, 1808
Goochland County, Virginia
Died March 12, 1872(1872-03-12) (aged 63)
Warren County, Kentucky
Resting place Fairview Cemetery
Political party American
Other political
affiliations
Whig
Spouse(s) Lucy Craig Henry
Relations Brother of Joseph Rogers Underwood
Children Fanny Underwood Grider, Lucy W. Underwood McCann, Juliette Western Long, Josie Underwood Nazro, Henry Underwood, Warner Underwood, Mary Underwood Crump
Residence Mount Air plantation
Alma mater University of Virginia at Charlottesville
Profession Lawyer
Religion Episcopalian
Signature W. L. Underwood

Warner Lewis Underwood (August 7, 1808 – March 12, 1872) was an attorney, state legislator and U.S. Representative from Kentucky. Like his brother Joseph Rogers Underwood (who had represented the same Kentucky district a decade previously), he was a Unionist before the American Civil War, and during the war (in which his plantation was destroyed), he served as U.S. Consul in Glasgow, Scotland.

Born in Goochland County, Virginia, on August 7, 1808, to John Underwood (1767-1837), a veteran of the American Revolutionary War, and his wife Frances Rogers (d.1809), he had several older brothers and sisters. His grandfather Thomas Underwood (1740-1815) had been a colonel in Goochland County during the American Revolutionary War, and also served on the Committee of Safety. His older brother Joseph Rogers Underwood had moved to Kentucky five years before he was born, and represented Kentucky's 3rd Congressional district a decade before Warner Underwood.

Warner Underwood moved to Bowling Green, Warren County, Kentucky in 1825, but returned to Charlottesville, Virginia to study law at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville, graduating in 1829.

He married Lucy Craig Henry (1816-1893), daughter of an engineer on the Green-Barren River improvement project in Bowling Green's Christ Episcopal Church in 1831. Although born in Kentucky, her lineage also included the First Families of Virginia, and her grandfather William Henry (1761-1824) had served as a private under Col. Harry Lee during the American Revolution. Eight of their children survived to adulthood, including Fanny R. Underwood Grider (1833-1901)(who married the son of U.S. Congressman Henry Grider), Lucy Underwood McCann (whose husband Ferdinand J. McCann moved to California and became a judge in Santa Cruz), Juliette Underwood Western Long (1835-1909) (who married a Confederate Kentucky Cavalry Colonel), Joanna Louisa Underwood Nazro (1840-1923)(whose husband was an officer of the 26th Illinois Infantry), Warner Underwood (1845-1874), Henry Lewis Underwood (1848-1925) and Mary Underwood Crump (1857-1920).


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