Barbour County AlArchives Biographies.....John Arthur Foster ************************************************ 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 12, 2004, 9:50 am Author: Brant & Fuller (1893) HON. JOHN ARTHUR FOSTER, LL. D., is one of the distinguished jurists of southern Alabama and a lawyer of state reputaion. Tracing his lineage back through several generations, it is learned that the paternal ancestor of the family in this country was one John Foster, who came to America from London, Eng., in the time of the colonies and settled in Southampton, Va., where a son, Arthur, remained; but another son, John, subsequently located at Halifax, the same state. Arthur Foster served with distinciton in the war of the Revolution, with the rank of colonel, and throughout that long and trying struggle shared the fortunes and vicissitudes of his gallant regiment on many fields of victory and defeat. John Foster, also an officer in the patriot army, removed to Georgia at the close of the war and there married and reared a large family. He became a prominent politician and for a number of years served in the state senate, where his abilities as a legislator won for him a reputation, state wide. His son, Arthur, who succeeded him in the senate, became a lawyer of prominence and published, in 1821, a digest of the laws of Georgia. Between the years 1818 and 1821, the entire Foster family except J. L. S. Foster moved to Alabama, and settled in Tuscaloosa county, where a number of the descendants still reside, being among the prominent citizens of that part of the state. John L. S. Foster, the judge's father, was the youngest of a family of six brothers. At the age of nineteen he removed to Jasper county, Ga., where, in 1821, he was united in marriage to Susan Holifield, and where, on the 11th day of November, 1828, Judge John A. Foster first saw the light of day. In 1833, he and family moved to Tuscaloosa county, and the judge recalls distinctly many of the incidents of the trip and remembers having seen Indians in their native costume, although but a child of four years at the time. The judge's father became a prominent merchant and manufacturer, and during the late war between the states he was engaged in manufacturing hats for the army of the Confederacy. For some time he carried on a large mercantile business in the city of Tuscaloosa, and before the war was classed -with the wealthy men of Alabama, but, like many others, lost his earthly possessions, which vanished like mist during the hostilities. He died in Tuscaloosa in 1875, and ten years later his faithful wife was laid to rest at Starkville, Miss. Mr. and Mrs. Foster were both born in the year 1800, and there was but a difference of two weeks in their ages. They became the parents of ten children, the eldest of whom, Elizabeth, married her cousin, who is not now living. Hardy Foster, the first son, died in 1863. The third member of the family is the gentleman whose name heads this sketch, and the fourth in order of birth is Martha, wife of Rev. Dr. T. P. Crawford, who, since 1852, has been located as a missionary in Tung Chow, China, by the Baptist church. Dr. and Mrs. Crawford have become noted in their missionary labors, and are widely known throughout the world in religious circles, especially in connection with the denomination to which they belong. David L. Foster, the third son, was professor of surgery in the university of Alabama at the time of his death in 1891. The names of other members of the family are as follows: Jesse G., deceased; Sarah, widow of Dr. Glen Montgomery of Lexington, Miss. ; Susan, wife of William H. Pace, Marion, Ga. ; Robert S., a practicing physician of Warder, Texas, and Ezra, a physician and surgeon of Brookwood, Ala. As already stated, Judge Foster was born in Jasper county, Ga., at the town of Monticello, and in 1833 was brought by his parents to Alabama. After a course of preparation under the able instruction of Rev. E. B. League, a scholarly and disitnguished Baptist minister, he entered the State university in 1844, and after his graduation, in 1847, began the study of law at Eutaw in the office of Hon. Harry I. Thornton, at that time a member of the supreme court of Alabama. In January, 1849, he engaged in educational work at Crawford, Miss., and after teaching there till 1852, accepted a similar position at the city of Columbus, in the same state, where he had charge of the school until his election as president of the Southern Female college, at La Grange, Ga., in 1855. He continued in charge of the last named institution until 1859, in which year he changed his residence to Clayton, Ala., where he was admitted to the bar in January of that year and where he has since made his home. Shortly after engaging in the practice, Judge Foster effected a co-partnership in the law with Jere N. Williams, Esq., under the firm name of Williams & Foster, and their legal business was large and lucrative, until interfered with by the war. In 1860, Judge Foster was elected justice of the peace, at that time a very important and responsible position, and in August, 1861, he relinquished official and professional life and tendered his services to the Confederacy, enlisting in company G, Twenty-ninth infantry, of which he was in a short time promoted to be first-lieutenant. Subsequently he became captain of the company, and as such served until the close of the war in the southwestern army corps. The Twenty-ninth was first ordered to Pensacola, Fla., where it remained until after the. evacuation of that city, and for some time thereafter was stationed at Pollard, thence sent to Mobile, where it was drilled for heavy artillery service, and put in charge of the redoubts. After remaining at Mobile until 1864, the judge's command was attached first to Cauly's and then to Shelly's brigade, and ordered to Resaca, Ga., and arrived there in time to take part in the bloody Atlanta campaign, and the leading battles incident thereto. The judge received a painful wound in the left arm at Resaca, but refused to leave the ranks, and when Hood made his raid back through Tennessee, the Twenty-ninth formed part of his force and participated in the bloody battles of Franklin and Nashville, in the latter of which Judge Foster had command of his regiment. In this battle, on the 15th of December, 1864, Judge Foster, with his entire regiment, fell into the hands of the enemy, and from that time until his parole, the following June, he remained a prisoner of war on Johnson's island. Retiring from the army, and returning home, Mr. Foster found himself in reduced financial circumstances, and there being no demand for legal services in a town and county from which all courts had disappeared, he collected a class of young men and for some time instructed them in the higher branches of learning. It is a notable fact that quite a number of these young men subsequently distinguished themselves in their various vocations, and are now prominent and useful citizens of the state. In 1866, the judge resumed the practice of his profession at Clayton, and the following year was appointed register in chancery. In 1875 he was appointed a delegate to the state constitutional convention, and in 1876 became a trustee of the university of Alabama, which position he held for a period of sixteen years. In 1878, Judge Foster was elected to represent Barbour county in the state legislature, and two years later was elected chancellor of the southern chancery division of Alabama, to which position he was re-elected in 1886, and again in 1892. The judge was married in December, 1849, to Mary J. Webb, who died in 1857, the mother of three children, two living, namely: John Webb, a lawyer of Abbeville, Ala., and Emma, wife of John E. Toole, Esq., of La Grange,. Ga. Judge Foster married his present wife, Mary Borders, in La Grange, Ga., on the 11th day of May, 1858, and by her is the father of three children, whose names are as follows: Mary, wife of Dr. William H. Robinson, Pearl and Arthur B., a graduate of the university and. practicing lawyer at the town of Troy. Politically, Judge Foster has always been an earnest supporter of the democratic party, and although honored at different times by his fellow-citizens, he has never been a partisan in the sense of seeking official preferment. A faithful devotion to the practice of his chosen profession and his eminent success, both as judge and jurist, have amply demonstrated his wisdom and foresight in this direction, and a large and lucrative legal business has been the reward of his strict consecration to his life work. In 1883, the degree of L.L. D., was conferred on him by the Agricultural and Mechanical college of Alabama, an honor which he fully appreciates. Since 1842, the judge has been a communicant of the Baptist church; he stands high in Masonry, having taken a number of degrees, including that of Knight Templar. Additional Comments: from "Memorial Record of Alabama" This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/alfiles/ File size: 9.2 Kb