Flournoy was born in 1846 in
Chesterfield County,
Virginia. In 1863, during the
American Civil War, he
enlisted as a
private in the
Confederate States Army and served until the war's end in 1865. After graduating from
Hampden–Sydney College in 1868, Flournoy taught school for four years while studying law. In 1870 he relocated to Romney, West Virginia, where he served as principal of the Potomac Academy. He was admitted to the bar in 1873, and afterward served on the Board of Regents for the
West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and Blind (1876–1880). During his second term in the West Virginia Senate, Flournoy relocated to
Charleston to practice law. He also engaged in several business ventures and was an
incorporator of the Bank of Romney, the Tug and Guyandotte Railroad Company, the Bradford Building Company, the White Oak Mining Company, and the West Construction Company. Flournoy served on the Board of Trustees of Hampden–Sydney College from 1892 until his death in 1904.
Samuel Lightfoot Flournoy was born on November 25, 1846, in
Chesterfield County,
Virginia, 7 miles (11 km) from
Richmond, and was the son of Richard W. Flournoy and his wife, Sarah Parke Poindexter Flournoy.[1][2][3][4] He had four siblings, two brothers and two sisters: Reverend Parke Poindexter Flournoy, Eliza Flournoy Ayler, Richard W. Flournoy, and Ellen Flournoy Thornton.[4] Flournoy was of
English and
Frenchancestry.[3] He was a relative of
Thomas Flournoy,
United States Representative from Virginia.[5] The majority of Flournoy's youth and early adulthood were spent in Richmond, where he attended the city's public schools.[1][2]
In 1863, during the
American Civil War, Flournoy
enlisted as a
private in the
Confederate States Army at the age of 17.[1][2] He served the entirety of his enlistment in Company A, Otey Battery, 13th Battalion, Virginia Light Artillery in Richmond, throughout the course of the war until its end in 1865.[1][2][3]
Education and teaching career
Following the war, Flournoy entered
Hampden–Sydney College in
Hampden Sydney, Virginia, to pursue an education in
classical studies.[1][2] His elder brother Parke Poindexter Flournoy had been an assistant professor at the college during the war.[4][6] Flournoy graduated with honors and a
Bachelor of Arts from Hampden–Sydney College in 1868 and received the Speaker's Medal from the institution's Philanthropic Debating Society.[1][2][6][7] While attending Hampden–Sydney College, he was a member of the
Beta Theta Pifraternity.[7] Following graduation, Flournoy taught school for four years while studying
law.[1][2] Around 1870 he relocated to
Romney,
West Virginia, where he took charge as principal and taught at the Potomac Academy with "considerable success" and continued his law studies.[8][9][10] Flournoy was
admitted to the bar in Romney in January 1873.[1][2][11]
Law and political careers
Romney law practice
Following his admission to the bar, Flournoy immediately began
practicing law in Romney and "won merited distinction" in his field.[2] He became a prominent leader in the community and was elected as a member of the
Romney Literary Society.[1][2][12] Flournoy served on the fourth Board of Regents of the
West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and Blind from 1876 to 1880.[13] He served three terms as
mayor of Romney.[1][2][11] As his law career prospered, Flournoy was active in the establishment of The Society of the Ex-Confederate Soldiers in Hampshire County.[14] The society's missions were to obtain an accurate roster of Confederate veterans and to collect and preserve materials to maintain a "truthful" history of the American Civil War.[14] Flournoy and a group of Confederate veterans met at the
Hampshire County Courthouse in Romney on July 31, 1883, where he was appointed secretary of the society.[14] The society's constitution was presented at its first annual reunion on September 5, 1883, at which time Flournoy was officially titled as the society's corresponding secretary.[14]Alexander W. Monroe was among the society's three concurrently-serving vice presidents.[14]
West Virginia Senate
Flournoy was elected to represent the 12th Senatorial District, consisting of
Grant,
Hampshire,
Hardy,
Mineral, and
Pendleton counties, in the
West Virginia Senate in 1885 and was re-elected to the seat in 1889.[15][16][17][18] In the West Virginia state senatorial election on November 6, 1888, Flournoy defeated his
Republican challenger S. G. Pownall with 5,578 votes to Pownall's 4,028 votes.[15] Following his election, Flournoy was selected as part of West Virginia's attending delegation to the inauguration of President
Benjamin Harrison.[19][20] In his first term in the West Virginia Senate, Flournoy served as
chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and in his second term he served as chairman of the Committee on Counties and Municipal Corporations.[1][2] Throughout his two terms, Flournoy served on the committees of Privileges and Elections, Federal Relations, Immigration and Agriculture, and Public Printing.[1][2] In 1890, during his second term in the West Virginia Senate, Flournoy relocated from Romney to
Charleston and continued practicing law there.[2][11][21] He resigned from his senate seat in 1890.[16]
In April 1897, while practicing law in Charleston, Flournoy became qualified to practice law at the bar of
Tazewell County, Virginia.[27] As a Charleston lawyer, Flournoy represented both plaintiffs and defendants involved in suits over coalfield land titles in Southern West Virginia and
Southwest Virginia. From 1900 to 1901, Flournoy represented the defendant Henry C. King in a widely publicized case involving claim to a land title of 500,000 acres (2,000 km2) spanning counties in Southern West Virginia and Southwest Virginia in the
United States Circuit Court of Appeals.[28][29][30] In 1901, Flournoy represented S. J. Ritchie of
Akron, Ohio, in the Tazewell County Court, where his client claimed a large land tract of valuable coalfields spanning Tazewell County and
McDowell County, West Virginia.[31]
Gubernatorial candidacy
In early April 1900, a movement among prominent
West Virginia Democratic Party members in Charleston began to coalesce around Flournoy in support of his candidacy for West Virginia governor.[32][33] Flournoy was considered a
William Jennings Bryan Democrat with conservative positions, and Charleston Democrats felt he would receive wide support and would not antagonize corporations.[32] Flournoy took the matter under advisement and on April 25, 1900, he announced his candidacy for West Virginia governor.[32][34][35] In his announcement, Flournoy stated that he was unwilling to engage in a heated contest for the nomination and that he would be content with the outcome of the Democratic Party state convention, no matter the decision.[34][36] He further stated that he trusted the state convention would craft a ticket that would command the support of the people of West Virginia.[34][36] Following his announcement, the Spirit of Jefferson newspaper in
Charles Town stated of Flournoy on May 1, 1900: "Mr. Flournoy is a most estimable gentleman, well and favorably known here, would doubtless make an excellent governor, and as the nominee of the Democratic party would receive a hearty support in the Eastern panhandle."[36] Flournoy also received the support of the Democratic Party in
Mineral County in May 1900.[37]
At the West Virginia Democratic Party State Convention held in
Parkersburg on June 6, 1900, Flournoy competed for the party's nomination for gubernatorial candidacy against Lewis N. Tavenner of Parkersburg, John H. Holt of
Huntington, and Virgil G. Lewis of
Mason City.[35][38][39] Prior to the convention,
Daniel B. Lucas of
Jefferson County had been a candidate for nomination.[40] Holt won the Democratic Party's nomination on the first ballot, but lost in the
general election to
Republican candidate
Albert B. White.[38][39] Flournoy and Lewis each received just one vote while Holt received 483 and Tavenner received 450 votes.[38][39][41]
West Virginia Bar Association
Flournoy was present at the first meeting of the West Virginia Bar Association held on the date of its organization on July 8, 1886, in
Grafton.[42][43] As a member, Flournoy was appointed to draft the association's
constitution and
by-laws and served on its executive committee.[43][44][45] In addition to serving as a vice president of the association, Flournoy also represented the 12th Judicial Circuit on the association's Committee on Judicial Administration and Legal Reform and later served on the Committee of Admissions.[46] On January 7, 1892, Flournoy was elected as the association's vice president for
West Virginia's 3rd congressional district.[47]
Business pursuits
In addition to his law practice and political pursuits, Flournoy also engaged in several business ventures. On August 4, 1888, he purchased five shares priced at $100 each in order to invest in and provide
capital stock for the
incorporation of the Bank of Romney.[21] Along with Harrison B. Smith and fellow state senator George E. Price, Flournoy again served as an
incorporator on April 25, 1901, when the Tug and Guyandotte Railroad Company was granted its charter with $100,000 in capital.[48] The Tug and Guyandotte Railroad was constructed between the
Norfolk and Western Railway at
Davy and
Baileysville to facilitate the transportation of coal.[29] Flournoy, Price, and Flournoy's son Richard Parke Flournoy were incorporators of the Bradford Building Company which was chartered with capital of $20,000 on September 25, 1901, with the purpose of engaging in general building and construction projects.[49]
The following year, on December 20, 1902, Flournoy, Price, and their law partner Smith were also incorporators of the White Oak Mining Company and of the West Construction Company.[50][51] With an authorized capital stock of $100,000, the White Oak Mining Company, that was engaged in the mining, shipment, and sale of coal, the cutting and sawing of timber, and the operations and sales of railway, telephone, and telegraph lines and networks.[50] The West Construction Company, based in
Chattanooga,
Tennessee, was a general contracting and construction firm also involved in the operation and maintenance of railway, telephone, and telegraph lines.[51]
Personal life
Marriage and children
On April 10, 1875, in Hampshire County, Flournoy married Frances "Fannie" Ann Armstrong White (April 10, 1844 – February 25, 1922), the daughter of Hampshire County Clerk of Court
John Baker White and his wife Frances Ann Streit White.[3][52][53][54] Frances White's brother,
Robert White, served as
West Virginia Attorney General, and her brother
Christian Streit White served as President of the West Virginia Fish Commission. Flournoy and his wife Frances had six children (five sons and one daughter):[3][52]
Richard Parke Flournoy (December 29, 1875 – May 5, 1959)[55][56]
Harry Lightfoot Flournoy (March 4, 1878 – December 31, 1954)[57]
Frances T. Flournoy Preston, married James M. Preston of
Lewisburg, West Virginia[58][59]
Robert Baker Flournoy (October 10, 1882 – July 25, 1883)[60][61]
Alexander White Flournoy (March 15, 1887 – March 16, 1958), married Anne Cary Gravatt[65][66]
Religious activities
Flournoy was active in the
Presbyterian Church in Hampshire County and served as a
trustee for the
Presbytery of Winchester, along with
Henry Bell Gilkeson.[67] In 1881, Flournoy and his fellow trustees were instrumental in securing from Amos L. and Allie G. Pugh a house and a large partially
woodedlot in
Capon Bridge for use by the Presbytery as a centrally located
manse in Hampshire County.[67] Flournoy was elected as a
deacon in the Presbyterian Church in 1879 and remained a trustee of the Presbytery of Winchester until 1891 when he relocated to Charleston.[68] Following his move to Charleston, Flournoy became a member of the First Presbyterian Church and served as one of seven church elders there.[69]
Later life and death
Flounoy died as a result of throat and pulmonary illnesses on January 28, 1904, at 2:40 a.m. in
Orlando,
Florida, where he had traveled to restore his failing health.[24][70][71] His wife and his physician Dr. Henry were at his side at the time of his death.[24] Flournoy was survived by his wife, and five of his children.[24]
He served on the
Board of Trustees of Hampden–Sydney College from 1892 until his death.[6][72] A tribute to Flournoy was rendered by college president
Richard McIlwaine at a meeting of the Hampden–Sydney College trustees on June 13, 1904.[73]
Following his death, The Weekly Register newspaper in
Point Pleasant remarked that Flournoy "was one of the prominent [Democratic] leaders of the state, and occupied a high place in the estimation [of] the party followers".[24]The Times-Dispatch of Richmond stated that Flournoy "was one of the best known members of the bar" of Charleston and described his service during the American Civil War as gallant.[70]