William Weston (January 24, 1803 - March 19, 1875) was an attorney and politician in
Burlington, Vermont, and
Brooklyn,
New York. He served in several local and state offices, and is most notable for his service as a member of the
Vermont Senate in the 1850s.
Early life
Weston was born in
Reading, Massachusetts on January 24, 1803,[1][2] the son of William Weston and Synthe (Porter) Weston.[2] He was raised in
Montreal, where his father had moved his family shortly after his birth.[1] His father died in 1818, and Weston moved to
Craftsbury, Vermont,[1] where he began a career as a merchant, first in Craftsbury,[1] and later in
Newport.[3] In 1827, Weston began to
study law in the office of
Augustus Young, and in 1829 he moved to
Burlington, where he continued to study law with attorney Charles Adams.[1] He was
admitted to the bar in 1830, and practiced in Burlington.[4]
Career
After settling in Burlington, Weston became active in politics, and was an advocate of
abolishing slavery.[5] He moved from the Whig Party[1][6] to the Free Soil Party,[7][8] back to the Whigs,[9] and then to the Republican Party[1][10] as the abolition movement coalesced and expanded during the 1840s and 1850s.[11] In addition to advocating the abolition of slavery, Weston was also active in the
temperance movement.[12]
Prior to Burlington's incorporation as a city, it had a town government, and Weston served as a
justice of the peace,[13] and was a member of the
board of selectmen in 1829, and from 1850 to 1853.[14] From 1836 to 1847, Weston was
Chittenden County's register of
probate,[15] and he was the assistant secretary of the
Vermont Senate in 1836,[16] 1837,[17] 1838,[18] 1839,[19] and 1840.[19] From 1839 to 1842 he was the reporter of decisions for the
Vermont Supreme Court,[1] and in 1842, Weston served as secretary for the state Council of Censors, the body that met every seven years to review actions of the executive and legislative branches and ensure their constitutionality.[20] In 1847 he was assistant clerk of the
Vermont House of Representatives.[21] In 1849[22] and 1850,[23] Weston was elected to the
Vermont Senate;[24] he served until 1851, and was the Senate's
President pro tempore in 1850.[25]
Weston died in Brooklyn on March 19, 1875.[27] He was buried in Plot 206 of Locust Street Cemetery in Burlington.[28][29] The street's name was later changed to Elmwood Avenue, and the burial ground is now known as Elmwood Cemetery.[30]
Family
In 1835, Weston married Sarah Maria Lyman (d. 1843).[31] Their only child, Ellen, was born in 1841 and died in 1844.[32] In 1858, he married Melinda Colver (1819-1896).[27] They had no children.[33]