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David S. Terry

 
US Supreme Court: David Smith Terry

(b. Todd County, Ky., 8 Mar. 1823; d. Lathrop, Calif., 13 Aug. 1889), lawyer, jurist. David Smith Terry, a Texas lawyer and justice of the California Supreme Court, was a political opportunist with a violent history. Raised on the Texas frontier, Terry had numerous scrapes with the law. Elected to the California court in 1855 and serving as its chief justice, 1857–1859, Terry exhibited religious toleration, but was generally unsympathetic to aliens and minorities. In 1879 he was elected to the California Constitutional Convention. Terry and Associate Justice Stephen J. Field developed a personal and political animosity, with both behaving in the spirit of no duty to retreat that resulted in Terry's death allegedly while assaulting Field.

Bibliography

  • Richard Maxwell Brown, No Duty to Retreat: Violence and Values in American History (1991)

— Gordon Morris Bakken

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Artist: Aqueduct
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  • Active: 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Producer, Engineer, Main Performer
  • Representative Albums: "Or Give Me Death," "Power Ballads," "I Sold Gold"

Biography

Aqueduct is the one-man band project of David Terry, originally from Tulsa, OK. After a move to Seattle and the release of Power Ballads, Aqueduct created a buzz in the Northwest and began to open for acts like the Flaming Lips and Modest Mouse. Terry's unshakable keyboard and vocal hooks with drum machine beats led to a signing with Barsuk Records, which released the Pistols at Dawn EP in October of 2004 and the I Sold Gold LP in January of 2005. Touring followed with acts like Mates of State, Viva Voce, and Golden Republic. In 2007, after adding guitarist Matt Nadler, bassist Noah Ritter, and drummer Chris Whitten to the live lineup, Aqueduct's second full-length with Barsuk, Or Give Me Death, came out. ~ David Serra, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: David S. Terry
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David S. Terry.

David Smith Terry (March 8, 1823–August 14, 1889) was a California politician, perhaps best known for his having killed United States Senator David C. Broderick in a duel in 1859.

Biography

Terry was born in Christian County, Kentucky. From 1855–1859 he was a California State Supreme Court Justice, serving as the 4th Chief Justice from 1857.

David Terry was always known for his fiery temper. In 1856, he stabbed Sterling A. Hopkins, a member of the San Francisco Committee of Vigilance and was arrested, but was not tried.

Terry was an advocate of the extension of slavery into California, and the slavery issue proved to be divisive to the California Democratic Party. Although he had been a close friend of David Broderick, he accused Broderick, a Free Soil advocate, of having engineered his loss for re-election in the 1859 state elections. Terry issued inflammatory comments at a state convention in Sacramento, which offended Broderick.

On September 13, 1859, Terry and Broderick, having agreed to a duel, met just outside San Francisco city limits. Terry won the coin toss to select weapons, and chose pistols that had hair triggers. Broderick's discharged early, leaving him open for Terry's shot. At first Terry thought that he had only wounded Broderick, but the Senator died three days later.

Although Terry was acquitted of murder, he left the state and went to serve in the 8th Texas Cavalry aka Terry's Texas Rangers of the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War, and was wounded at Chickamauga. He came back to California in 1868 after the war was over, but was unable to re-enter politics.

Sarah Althea Hill

Terry became entangled in a mysterious divorce case in the 1880s. A young woman named Sarah Althea Hill claimed that she was the legal wife of silver millionaire William Sharon. Sharon denied that they had ever married, but Hill wanted a divorce and a share of Sharon's treasure. She lost her case and eventually wound up marrying Terry. The Terrys appealed, and United States Supreme Court justice Stephen J. Field, a former friend of Broderick's, heard the case in 1888 as the senior justice of the Federal circuit court in California.

Field ruled against Mr. and Mrs. Terry in a final appeal, and jailed them both on contempt of court. The Terrys vowed vengeance. On August 14, 1889 David Terry assaulted Field at a train station in Lathrop, California, near Stockton, California. Field's bodyguard United States Marshal David Neagle (formerly assigned to Tombstone, Arizona) shot and killed Terry. Neagle was arrested by California authorities on a charge of murder. The United States secured the release of Neagle on a writ of habeas corpus. The issue was resolved by In re Neagle, 135 U.S. 1 (1890), a United States Supreme Court decision that determined that the Attorney General of the United States had authority to appoint U.S. Marshals as bodyguards to Supreme Court Justices, and that Neagle had acted within the scope of his authority.

David Terry also took up the cause of the 'Widow Sanchez', of Monterey, Ca. Encarnacion Ortega de Sanchez was the widow of a wealthy rancher who was being cheated by local authorities, including the Sheriff, William Roach, who took her fortune under the guise of guardianship. After kidnapping Roach with the help of a local gunslinger named Anastacio Garcia, They held Roach in a jail cell in Stockton until he agreed to release the widow's gold. But Roach had bribed a guard to ride to Monterey and urge Roach's family to hide the gold. The treasure was hidden somewhere in Carmel Valley by Roach's brother-in-law, Jerry MacMahon. Unfortunately MacMahon was killed in a barroom brawl before he could reveal the location of the money. With no more gold left to the widow, David Terry lost interest in her case and left town.

David S. Terry is buried at Stockton Rural Cemetery in Stockton.

Sarah Terry became insane, and spent the rest of her life at the Stockton State Hospital for the Insane, where she died in 1936. She is buried in the same gravesite as her husband. Terry's first wife, Cornelia Runnels, is buried next to David Terry.

References

Legal offices
Preceded by
Hugh C. Murray
Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court
1857 – 1859
Succeeded by
Stephen J. Field

 
 

 

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US Supreme Court. The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. Copyright © 1992, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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