Washington County ArArchives Biographies.....Walker, Charles W. ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ar/arfiles.html ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Robert Sanchez http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00027.html#0006574 July 19, 2009, 2:45 pm Author: S. J. Clarke (Publisher, 1922) CHARLES W. WALKER. In the legal profession, which embraces many of the most brilliant minds of the nation, it is difficult to win a name and a place of prominence. Many aspire, but few attain. In commercial life one may start out upon a more elevated plane than others; he may enter into a business already established and carry it still further forward. But this is not true in the case of the lawyer. He must commence at the initial point, must plead and win his first case and work his way upward by ability, gaining his reputation and success by merit. People do not place their legal business in unskilled hands; it is the man of power before judge and jury who commands public patronage. Of this class Charles W. Walker is an illustrious type. He began as many others do in the practice of law and his present prominence has come to him as the reward of earnest endeavor, fidelity to trust and recognized ability. He is now living retired in Fayetteville, the oldest native born citizen in the community, and is hale and hearty in his eighty-sixth year. For sixty years he was numbered among the prominent members of the legal profession, practicing for a short time in Carrollton, but returned to his home town prior to the Civil war, where he was active along professional lines until 1919, when he retired from active life. Mr. Walker was born in Fayetteville on the 24th of December, 1835, a son of David and Jane Lewis (Washington) Walker. His paternal grandfather, Jacob Wythe Walker, was for many years prominent in the legal circles of Kentucky. He was born in Virginia, but removed to Kentucky at an early day and there entered the legal profession. Later in life, however, he came to Arkansas and locating in Fayetteville retired from professional life. He was well known in the financial circles of the community, being director of the Real Estate Bank of Fayetteville, and a deep feeling of bereavement swept the community when he departed this life in 1838. Whiting Washington, the maternal grandfather, was likewise a native of Virginia, who went to Kentucky at an early day. He was a wealthy slave-owner and his demise occurred on his estate in Kentucky. David Walker, the father of Charles W. Walker, was born in Todd county, Kentucky, in 1806, and died on the 30th of September, 1879. In early life he determined to enter the legal profession and as a result began study in a law office and some time later was admitted to the bar. In 1831 Mr. and Mrs. Walker came to Fayetteville and the father immediately opened offices there. In 1836 he was a member of the constitutional convention and in 1848 he was appointed supreme judge, serving on the bench from that year until 1878. Mr. Walker was one of the oldest members of the profession in Fayetteville and held distinct precedence as an eminent lawyer. His wife, who was before her marriage Jane Lewis Washington, was born in Logan county, Kentucky, in 1814, and died on the 7th of March, 1847. The following children were born to their union: Wythe, a soldier in the Civil war, who met his death at the battle of Jenkins Ferry; Charles W., whose name initiates this review; Edward, who died in 1919; Nannie, who married Charles R. Buckner, and both of them are deceased; David, a farmer of Coal Hill, this state, and two other children who died in infancy. Mr. Walker was a stanch supporter of the whig party until 1852, when he gave his allegiance to the democratic party, in the interests of which he took an active part. His religious faith was that of the Baptist church, while his wife was a consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal church, South. Charles W. Walker received his early education in the schools of Fayetteville and in due time entered Princeton University, from which institution he was graduated in 1858. Returning home from school he read law in his father's office for some time and then went to Lebanon, Tennessee, where he took a law course. He was admitted to the bar in 1859 and practiced here until the outbreak of the Civil war, when he entered the army, and after the close of the war immediately opened up offices here with Thomas M. Gunther, and continued in active and successful practice until his retirement in 1919. The zeal with which he devoted his energies to his profession, the careful regard evinced for the interests of his clients and an assiduous and unrelaxing attention to all the details of his cases, brought him a large business and made him very successful in its conduct. His arguments elicited warm commendation not only from his associates at the bar, but also from the bench. A very able writer, his briefs always showed wide research, careful thought and the best and strongest reasons which could be urged for his contention, presented in cogent and logical form and illustrated by a style unusually lucid. Although the greater part of Mr. Walker's time was devoted to his legal practice, he was active in political circles as a stanch supporter of the democratic party. The ability and training which qualified him to practice law also qualified him in many respects for duties which lay outside of the strict path of his profession and for one term he was mayor of Fayetteville, the honor being unsolicited, as he was chosen for the office while away on business. His administration was marked by the progress and development of the community and he is remembered as one of Fayetteville's best executives. For two terms he was a member of the state legislature and was a member of the constitutional convention of 1868. On the 26th of September, 1867, Mr. Walker was united in marriage to Miss Serena Jernigan, a native of Illinois, who was reared in Texas, to which state her parents removed at an early day. She was a daughter of Clement L. and Louisa (Sams) Jernigan, the former a native of Tennessee and the latter of Illinois, in which latter state their marriage occurred. Her father won prominence in the saddlery business and conducted that business in Texas until June, 1866, when he came to Arkansas and located in Fayetteville. Mr. Jernigan died in 1895, while his wife's demise occurred in 1888. Four children were born to their union, two of whom are living: Mrs. Walker; and Mrs. Josephine Davenport, a widow, residing iu Fayetteville. Throughout her life Mrs. Jernigan was a consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal church, in which faith the family was reared. He gave his political allegiance to the know nothing party and was a member of the Good Templars. To the union of Mr. and Mrs. Walker three children have been born: The eldest daughter, Nannie F., is the wife of Dr. G. A. Warren of Black Rock, Arkansas. Dr. Warren is one of the most prominent physicians in the state and is considered an authority on typhoid fever. He is a member of the leading medical societies of the state and is president of the State Medical Society; the second member of the Walker family is Louise, the wife of P. C. Wikersham, associated with the Electric Light & Gas Company of Oakland, California; Jennie is the wife of John W. Tilman, an attorney of Pawhuska, Oklahoma. Mr. and Mrs. Walker are consistent members of the Baptist church. For many years Mr. Walker was actively connected with a profession which has important bearing upon the progress and stable prosperity of any section or community and one which has long been considered as conserving public welfare by furthering the ends of justice and maintaining individual rights. His life has been exemplary in every respect and he has ever supported those interests which are calculated to uplift and benefit humanity, while his own high moral worth is deserving of the highest commendation. Additional Comments: Citation: Centennial History of Arkansas Volume II Chicago-Little Rock: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company 1922 File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ar/washington/bios/walker260bs.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.poppet.org/arfiles/ File size: 8.4 Kb