Johnson N. Camden Explained

Johnson Newlon Camden
Jr/Sr:United States Senator
State:West Virginia
Term Start1:March 4, 1881
Term End1:March 3, 1887
Predecessor1:Frank Hereford
Successor1:Charles J. Faulkner
Term Start2:January 25, 1893
Term End2:March 3, 1895
Predecessor2:John E. Kenna
Successor2:Stephen B. Elkins
Birth Name:Johnson Newlon Camden
Birth Date:6 March 1828
Birth Place:Lewis County, Virginia, US
(now West Virginia)
Death Place:Baltimore, Maryland, US
Party:Democratic
Spouse:Anna Gaither Thompson
Children:Johnson N. Camden Jr.
George Camden
Annie Camden Spilman

Johnson Newlon Camden (March 6, 1828 – April 25, 1908) was a prominent oilman, industrialist, banker, railroad tycoon, and politician who was estimated to be worth $25 million at the time of his unexpected death.[1] Although both of his attempts to become governor of the new state of West Virginia failed, he did become United States Senator, representing West Virginia on two occasions.

Early and family life

Born in 1828 in Collins Settlement, the county seat of Lewis County, Virginia (now West Virginia), to Col. John Scrivener Camden (1798–1862)[2] and his wife, the former Nancy Newlon, Johnson Newlon Camden was the grandson of Rev. Henry Benjamin Camden, who freed his slaves in Maryland in 1804 and moved west to what became Harrison County, West Virginia during the American Civil War. Johnson Camden's siblings included Dr. Thomas Bland Camden, CSA Lt. Col. Edwin Duncan Camden (1840–1922) of the 25th Virginia Infantry, William D. Camden (1842–1878), Amanda McKinley, Lorenzo Dow Camden (1844–1910) and John Scrivener Camden Jr. (1851–1923). Their uncle, Judge Gideon D. Camden of Harrison County, resigned his judicial position as the Civil War began and declined to become a delegate to the Confederate Congress and later became a West Virginia state senator.

Johnson N. Camden attended school in Sutton and at age 14 apprenticed with his uncle Gideon, who was then an assistant county clerk in Weston.[3] In 1846, Johnson Camden won an appointment as a cadet at the United States Military Academy at West Point while his father represented Braxton, Lewis and Gilmer counties in the Virginia House of Delegates for a single term (1845–46). The younger Camden left West Point in 1848, to read law in his home state.

On June 22, 1858, in Wheeling, Johnson N. Camden married Anne Thompson (1834–1918), daughter of prominent lawyer George W. Thompson, who had become a U.S. congressman and was then a prominent local judge. They would have children Johnson N. Camden Jr. (1865–1942) and Annie Camden Spilman (1862–1958), but their son George died as an infant.

Law and politics

Camden was admitted to the Virginia bar and began his practice in Sutton, the Braxton County seat, in 1851. Although his father continued to live in Lewis County, Johnson's brothers Edwin, William and Lorenzo had moved to Braxton County. Young Johnson N. Camden was appointed the same year as Braxton County's prosecuting attorney. In 1852 he won election as prosecuting attorney for Nicholas County.

In 1858, Camden moved to Parkersburg, on the Ohio River. There he began investing in land. The following year, he moved to Burning Springs, site of an oil boom in 1860 which made him rich. Camden became involved in oil refining and coal mining and sold part of his interest for $100,000. He went into business with his brother-in-law John S. McKinley; they sold their oil interests for $410,000 in 1866, and invested the proceeds in several new industries. Camden Consolidated Oil Company was ultimately acquired by Standard Oil.[4] Camden also consolidated several small railroads, which helped transport great quantities of coal.[5]

Camden sympathized with the Union and did not serve in either army during the American Civil War, although CSA General Stonewall Jackson had been raised nearby.[6] His younger brother Edwin Duncan Camden became lieutenant colonel of the 25th Virginia Infantry, and after his capture became one of the Immortal 600 (hostages used by the Union as human shields in South Carolina as a retaliation for Confederate treatment of Union prisoners of war).

Camden became president of the First National Bank of Parkersburg at its organization in 1862, and was an unsuccessful Democratic candidate for Governor of West Virginia in 1868 and again in 1872. The legislature elected him as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate, where he served one term, from March 4, 1881, to March 4, 1887. He then resumed the practice of law at Parkersburg. Upon the death in office of U.S. Senator John E. Kenna, Camden was again elected by the legislature and served the remainder of that term, from January 25, 1893, to March 3, 1895, then retired from elective politics. While in the Senate, Camden was chairman of the Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expense (Fifty-third Congress) and a member of the Committee on Railroads (Fifty-third Congress). He continued his former business and civic pursuits.

Death and legacy

Camden died in Baltimore, Maryland, en route back to Weston, West Virginia, after visiting family.[7] His son, Johnson N. Camden Jr., was a U.S. Senator from Kentucky in the 63rd Congress.

In 1903–04, Camden built the Union Trust & Deposit Co./Union Trust National Bank at Parkersburg.[8] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. Camden also owned lumber and hotel interests in Lanes Bottom, West Virginia (now known as Camden-on-Gauley).[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Johnson Newlon Camden.
  2. Cynthia Miller Leonard (ed), The General Assembly of Virginia 1619-1978: A Bicentennial Register of Members (Richmond, 1978) p. 416
  3. Web site: Johnson Newlon Camden.
  4. Howard R. Lee, The Burning Springs and other Tales of the Little Kanawha, (Morgantown: West Virginia University Press 1968) bio of Johnson F. Camden at App. III, available at http://genealogy.park.lib.wv.us/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/The-Burning-Springs.pdf
  5. Web site: Johnson Newlon Camden.
  6. J.N. Camden owned one 40-year-old mulatto female slave in Lewis, Virginia in 1860; and his brother Dr. T.B. Camden owned one 15-year-old male slave in the same county; John Scrivener Camden owned five slaves in Braxton county in 1860
  7. Web site: Johnson Newlon Camden.
  8. Web site: National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Citizens National Bank. December 1981. September 10, 2011 . Eliza Smith, Christina Mann. State of West Virginia, West Virginia Division of Culture and History, Historic Preservation.
  9. Book: West Virginia place names, their origin and meaning, including the nomenclature of the streams and mountains. 1945 . Piedmont, W.Va..