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(1771-1849) |
Charles Huston was born on January
16, 1771, in Plumstead Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, the eldest
son of Thomas and Jane Walker Huston. After a local education, he
entered Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania with the class of 1789. An accomplished
Latin and Greek scholar, he attained honors on graduation and remained
in Carlisle to tutor Dickinson students and study law under Thomas
Duncan. During 1792-93, he took over as Principal of the college's
Grammar School. He continued to tutor undergraduates in Latin and
Greek, among them the young first year student, Roger
Brooke Taney. He is said to have joined Washington's expedition
in 1794 to quell the Whiskey Rebellion. He then gave up his teaching
to concentrate on a legal career, was called to the bar, and took himself
to the newly laid out Lycoming County where he launched a highly successful
career as a land lawyer.
In 1807, Huston relocated again to Bellefonte, Pennsylvania in Centre County and built an even larger practice. On August 22, 1818, Governor Findlay appointed him as president judge of the Fourth Judicial District of Pennsylvania. After eight years with this responsibility, Governor Shulze appointed him, in 1826, to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court upon which he served until his retirement in 1845. His activities in retirement indicate that his early legal interests were still with him, as he completedThe History and Nature of Original Titles to Land in the Province and State of Pennsylvania. Huston married Mary Winter. He had, in 1830, a township in Centre County named for him and currently has a Middle School named for him in Lower Burrell, Pennsylvania. Charles Huston died in Bellefonte on November 10, 1849 at the age of seventy-eight. |