George Eustis Sr. should not be confused with George Eustice.
George Eustis Sr. | |
Office1: | Secretary of State of Louisiana |
Term1: | 1832–1834 |
Governor1: | Andre B. Roman |
Predecessor1: | George A. Waggaman |
Successor1: | Martin Blache |
Office2: | Attorney General of Louisiana |
Term2: | 1830–1832 |
Governor2: | Jacques Dupré Andre B. Roman |
Predecessor2: | Alonzo Morphy |
Successor2: | Etienne Mazureau |
Birth Date: | 20 October 1796 |
Birth Place: | Boston, Massachusetts |
Death Place: | New Orleans, Louisiana |
Resting Place: | First Church in Jamaica Plain Cemetery, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts |
Resting Place Coordinates: | 42.3098°N -71.1159°W |
Education: | Harvard College (1815) |
Known For: | First Justice of the Supreme Court of Louisiana |
Party: | Whig |
Children: | 6, including George Jr., James |
Parents: | Jacob Eustis Elizabeth Saunders Gray |
Relations: | William Eustis (uncle) |
George Eustis Sr. (October 20, 1796 – December 22, 1858) was chief justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court in 1838. He was also one of the founders of the Pontchartrain Railroad and a benefactor of the University of Louisiana, now Tulane University.
George Eustis was born in Boston on October 20, 1796, to Jacob Eustis and Elizabeth Saunders Gray. He attended and graduated from Harvard University in 1815.
In 1815, he was appointed as private secretary to his uncle, William Eustis, who was then serving as Minister to the Netherlands. Having begun studying law while in the Netherlands, Eustis settled in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1817, completed his studies, and was admitted to the bar.
A Whig, Eustis served three terms in the Louisiana House of Representatives in the 1820s. He was Louisiana Attorney General from 1830 to 1832, and from 1832 to 1834 he was Secretary of State. As Secretary of State he helped establish Medical College of Louisiana, which received its charter in 1835.
From 1838 to 1839, Eustis was a justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court. He was a delegate to Louisiana's 1845 constitutional convention, where he secured approval for establishment of the University of Louisiana. The university received its charter in 1847, and he was ex officio president of the original board of trustees.
In 1846, Eustis became the first chief justice of Louisiana Supreme Court, and he served until the court was reorganized in 1852.[1]
On April 18, 1825, Eustis married Clarisse Allain,[2] the daughter of Valérien Allain and Céleste (née Duralde) Allain. She was the granddaughter of François Allain, a native of Brittany, France who emigrated to Louisiana after serving in the French Army in 1745 at the Battle of Fontenoy.[3] Clarisse was the niece of Julie (née Duralde) Clay and John Clay, the brother of Henry Clay,[4] and Marie Clarisse Duralde (1779–1809), who married William C. C. Claiborne (1773/5–1817), Governor of Louisiana. Her uncle, Martin Duralde Jr. (1785–1848) married Susan Hart Clay (1805–1825), the daughter of Henry Clay.[5] They were the parents of:[6] [7]
Chief Justice Eustis died in New Orleans on December 22, 1858. His remains were taken aboard the steamship Cahawba for the trip north so they could be interred in the family tomb in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, a fact noted by Richard Henry Dana Jr. author of the celebrated Two Years Before the Mast. Dana was traveling on the same vessel, as described in his 1859 work To Cuba and Back.[13]
His granddaughter, Louise Mary Eustis (1867–1934), was married to noted polo player Thomas Hitchcock Sr. (1860–1941).[14]
His grandson through his son Allain, George Patrick Eustis (1860–1927), was the maternal grandfather of William Wayne McMillan Rogers III (1933–2015), better known as actor Wayne Rogers.[15]