
William Cabell Rives
'William Cabell Rives' (
May 4,
1793–
April 25,
1868) was an
American lawyer, politician and
diplomat from
Albemarle County, Virginia. He represented
Virginia as a
Jackson Democrat in both the
U.S. House and
Senate and also served as the U.S. minister to
France.
Rives was born ''Union Hill'', the estate of his grandfather, Col. William Cabell, in
Amherst County, Virginia. The estate was located along the
James River in what is now
Nelson County. His parents were Robert (1764-1845) and Margaret Cabell (c.1770-1815) Rives. After private schooling he attended
Hampden-Sydney College and then the
William and Mary until
1809.
Leaving
Williamsburg, he studied law with
Thomas Jefferson at
Monticello and was admitted to the bar at
Richmond in
1814. Rives began his law practice in Nelson County, but in
1819 he married Judith Page Walker (1802-1882) and moved to the estate she had inherited, named ''Castle Hill'' near Cobham in Albemarle County. (Cobham is about 12 miles east of
Charlottesville.) This would remain his home for the rest of his life.
Rives political career began when he served in the state constitutional convention in
1816. He served in the
Virginia House of Delegates in
1817-
19 for Nelson County, and again in
1822 for Albemarle County. Later in
1822 he elected to the
United States House of Representatives and served from
1823-
29. From 1829 to
1832 he was minister to
France.
When Rives returned from France, he was elected to complete a term in the
United States Senate. In all he would serve parts of three terms there, the last as a member of the
Whig Party. From 1849 to 1853, he was again minister to France.
In February
1861 he was a delegate to the
Peace Conference in
Washington; he opposed secession, but was loyal to his state when it seceded. He represented the state in the
Provisional Confederate Congress from
1861 to
1862 snd in the
Second Confederate Congress from
1864 to
1865 during the
Civil War.
Rives died at the country estate of ''Castle Hill'' in
1868 and is buried in a family plot there. He was the author of several books, the most important being his ''Life and Times of James Madison'' (3 vols., Boston, 1859-68). He served on the Board of Visitors for the
University of Virginia from 1834-1849, and was for many years the president of the Virginia Historical Society.
His son, Alfred Landon Rives was an engineer of some prominence, and his granddaughter
Amélie Rives became well known as a novelist, her best known book being ''The Quick or the Dead?'' (1888).
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