Thomas Preston Carpenter

Thomas Preston Carpenter (April 19, 1804 – March 20, 1876), was a lawyer and judge of the Supreme Court of New Jersey.[1][2]

Thomas Preston Carpenter
Born19 April 1804 Edit this on Wikidata
Glassboro Edit this on Wikidata
Died20 March 1876 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 71)
Camden Edit this on Wikidata
OccupationLawyer, judge Edit this on Wikidata
Parent(s)
  • Edward Carpenter Edit this on Wikidata
  • Sarah Carpenter Edit this on Wikidata
Position heldJustice of the Supreme Court of New Jersey Edit this on Wikidata

Personal

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Carpenter was born at Glassboro, Gloucester County, New Jersey, where his father Edward Carpenter operated a glassworks. He was descendant of Samuel Carpenter, Thomas Lloyd, and Samuel Preston, prominent men in the early days of Pennsylvania. His father dying when he was quite young, Thomas Preston Carpenter spent his early life with his grandfather, at Carpenter's Landing (now Mantua). He married on November 27, 1839 to Rebecca Hopkins of Woodbury, New Jersey. They were the parents of four children. He was an active member of the Protestant Episcopal Church, serving as vestryman, warden, and deputy to the diocesan and general conventions.

Career

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After receiving a liberal education, Carpenter studied law with Judge John Moore White of Woodbury, New Jersey, and was admitted as an attorney in September 1830. On October 26, 1838, he was appointed prosecutor of pleas of Gloucester County, New Jersey and took a prominent part in several important trials. In 1845, he was appointed by Governor Charles C. Stratton one of the associate judges of the Supreme Court of New Jersey, his circuit comprising Burlington, Camden, and Gloucester Counties. At his retirement from the judgeship he devoted himself to the practice of law, principally as a counselor, and was eminently successful. At the breaking out of the American Civil War, he joined the Union League of Philadelphia, and gave his entire sympathies to the Union cause.

Death

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Thomas Preston Carpenter died at his home in Camden, New Jersey on March 20, 1876.

References

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  1. ^ Charles E. Sheppard: Biographies Of Gloucester, Salem and Cumberland Counties, New Jersey, pp. 131-132, 415.
  2. ^ John W. Jordan, ed.: Colonial Families of Philadelphia, Lewis Publishers, New York, 1911.


  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: History of the counties of Gloucester, Salem, and Cumberland, New Jersey, with biographical sketches of their prominent citizens. By Thos. Cushing, M. D., and Charles E. Sheppard, Esq.