Barbour County AlArchives Biographies.....A. H. Alston November 17 1844 - ? ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/al/alfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Ann Anderson alabammygrammy@aol.com May 11, 2004, 10:52 pm Author: Brant & Fuller (1893) JUDGE A. H. ALSTON is a native of Bibb county, Ga., and was born November 17, 1844. His parents, Willis and Elizabeth Alston, were natives of Georgia and South Carolina, respectively, and of English descent. Willis Alston was born in Hancock county, Ga., in 1806; married at Georgetown, S. C., in 1823, to Elizabeth Howard, and died in Texas, in the year 1846. Mrs. Alston was the daughter of Rev. John Howard of North Carolina, for many years a distinguished minister of the Methodist church, and her death occurred near Decatur, Ga., in January, 1866. Judge Alston's paternal grandfather was Robert Alston, who moved in an early day from Halifax, N. C., to Hancock county, Ga., thence later to Florida, but subsequently returned to Georgia, and died at Thomasville, that state. Judge Alston was preparing to enter college when the Civil war broke out and thwarted his plans. Like other patriotic sons of the south, he tendered his services to the Confederacy, and in May, 1862, enlisted in company C, Ninth Tennessee cavalry, which formed a part of the division commanded by Gen. John Morgan, under which noted leader, with the exception of a short interval, Judge Alston served throughout the war. He took part in a number of that general's dashing raids, which form such an interesting chapter in the war period, and was captured at Mt. Sterling, Ky., and sent to Rock Island, where he remained a prisoner until exchanged in March, 1865. Rejoining his command, the judge was actively engaged in the service until the surrender at Charlotte, N. C., the same spring, after which he returned to his home 4n Georgia, and in August, 1865, came to Alabama, locating at Eufaula, where he began the study of law in the office of Cato & Baker - leading attorneys of the place. The following year, he pursued his legal studies assiduously, and in 1867 was admitted to the bar and at once began the practice of his profession in Eufaula, in the courts of which, and other places, his talents soon won for him a lucrative business. After practicing in Eufaula until 1870, Judge Alston removed to the vicinity of Fort Browder, Barbour county, where for some years he was engaged in agriculture; but in 1882, he was appointed, by Gov. Cobb, judge of probate, to fill an unexpired term. So efficiently did he discharge the duties of the position that, in 1886, he was elected to succeed himself by the largest majority ever received by any candidate for the office, and that, too, when there were three popular competitors in the field against him. The judge's official record is without a blemish, and the able manner in which he has conducted the office has won for him friends among all classes, irrespective of party affiliations. His success was long since assured, and as a careful and painstaking attorney and safe counselor he occupies a prominent place among his legal brethren of the Barbour county bar. In personal appearance, the judge is tall and straight, and has a decidedly military bearing. He is popular with the people and his reputation as a citizen is second to that of no other man of the city in which he resides. He is a Mason, and also belongs to the K. of H., and A. O. U. W., and is a steward in the Methodist church. Judge Alston was married December 17, 1867, in Barbour county, to Anne M. Ott, daughter of Col. E. S. Ott, and is the father of nine children : Augusta, wife of Laurence H. Lee; Edward O., graduate of state university in the class of '90; at present a clerk in the general freight office of Richmond & Danville railroad, at Richmond, Va.; Robert C., also a graduate of the state universirty and at this time a law student; Louisa, Philip H., Lizzie Drake, William Ott, and Augustus H. Additional Comments: from "Memorial Record of Alabama" This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/alfiles/ File size: 4.3 Kb