Harry Innes Thornton | |
Birth Date: | 1834 |
Death Place: | Fresno, California |
Unit: | 58th Alabama Infantry Regiment |
Battles: | American Civil War
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Harry Innes Thornton Jr. (c. 1834 - February 25, 1895) was a United States Democratic politician and attorney in California.
Born in Greene County, Alabama, Thornton followed his family to California. In 1841, his father, Harry Innis Thornton Sr., was a judge and member of the Alabama Legislature, residing in Eutaw, Alabama.[1] By 1851, Thornton Sr. moved to California and was appointed to the federal Public Land Commission to address property ownership in California.[2] By 1854, Thornton Jr.'s sister and her husband, James D. Thornton, had moved to San Francisco, also.
Thornton Jr. was a member of the California State Senate during the 1850s.[3] At the start of the American Civil War, he gave a speech on the floor of the Senate defending the Southern states' rights to succeed.[4] He resigned from the Legislature and went to serve in the Army of the Confederate States of America.[5] He was wounded at the Battle of Chickamauga Sept. 18–20, 1863 while serving with the 58th Regiment Alabama Infantry.[6] After the war, he returned to California and practiced law in that state and Nevada,[7] handling complex mining litigation.[4] He died in Fresno, California, on February 25, 1895.