Linn Banks


Linn Banks was a 19th-century politician and lawyer, who served 26 years in the Virginia House of Delegates, but resigned in order to run for the U.S. Congress. He served one term and appeared re-elected, although that election was successfully contested by future Virginia governor and Confederate General Extra Billy Smith.

Early life and education

He was born in what was then Culpeper County, Virginia to parents Adam Banks and Gracey James. He married on April 2, 1811 in Wake, North Carolina to Eliza Jane Hunter Sanders. He was the great, great grandson of Adam Bankes, emigrant to Stafford County, Virginia from the Wigan, Lancashire area of England in the mid-17th century.
Banks received a private education, then attended the College of William & Mary studied law.

Career

Admitted to the Virginia bar in 1809, Banks interrupted his legal practice to serve in the War of 1812. He would ultimately resume practicing law, as well as lead the local Virginia Militia for decades, hence his honorific as "colonel". In 1824, Banks hosted the Marquis de Lafayette on his return visit to Virginia, when he visited President Madison and local militia units in Culpeper and Orange Counties.
Madison County voters elected Banks as one of their two representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates in November 1812, and re-elected him many times over more than 25 years. He served from 1812 to 1838, alongside veteran William Morgan until 1814, then Daniel Field, George H. Allen, Robert Hill, Robert L. Madison, Robert Briggs and William Finks. When the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1829-1830 instituted single member districts, Banks continued to represent Madison County. He also served as Speaker of the House for two decades, from 1817 to 1838.
Banks ran as a Democrat and won election to the United States House of Representatives to fill the seat vacated by John M. Patton's resignation in 1838. He only serving until 1841, despite presenting credentials to the following Congress. Although he had appeared re-elected by a narrow vote over former State Senator William "Extra Billy" Smith, Banks lost the recount, so Smith assumed that congressional seat.
Afterward, Banks resumed his legal practice, as well as managed his estates and enslaved labor. He owned 45 slaves in Madison County in 1820., and more than 40 slaves in 1840.

Death and legacy

However, Banks drowned on January 13, 1842 while attempting to ford the Conway River near Wolftown, Virginia. He was interred in the family cemetery on his estate called "Vale Evergreen" near Graves Mill, Virginia.
Robert A. Banks, a possible relative, although the marriage license of his 1865 remarriage listed his father as G.J. Banks, married Louisa J. Finks in 1847, almost a decade after he succeeded to the Madison County House of delegates seat on March 2, 1839, and was re-elected several times,. Robert A. Banks owned about 70 slaves in Madison County in 1850, and 82 in Madison County in 1860