Richard Abbay
Member of the Mississippi Senate
from the 34th district
In office
January 1900  January 1904
Member of the Mississippi House of Representatives
from the Tunica County district
In office
January 1896  January 1900
In office
January 1888  January 1892
Personal details
Born(1838-06-09)June 9, 1838
Davidson County, Tennessee
DiedJune 5, 1919(1919-06-05) (aged 80)
Commerce, Mississippi
Political partyDemocrat

Richard Felix Abbay (June 9, 1838 - June 5, 1919) was an American politician and planter and a Democratic Mississippi state legislator in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Biography

Richard Felix Abbay was born in Davidson County, Tennessee, on June 9, 1838.[1][2] He was the son of Richard, a planter, and Mary (Compton) Abbay.[1] Abbay was raised in Mississippi, and received his early education in Tennessee.[1][2] He graduated from Cumberland University in 1858.[1] He then had to go to Cuba due to poor health.[1] He was able to return to New Orleans on the last ship to enter the port before the Union blockade, the Habana.[1] After returning, Richard joined the Confederate States Army, but, after briefly serving, he had to return home (to Tunica County, Mississippi) after suffering a stroke of paralysis.[1]

Career

Abbay read law under General James R. Chalmers and was admitted to the Tennessee bar in 1867.[1][2] After four years, he stopped practicing law to focus on his family plantation in Tunica County, Mississippi.[1][3] Abbay was first elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives, representing Tunica County as a Democrat in 1887 for the 1888-1890 term.[1][4] He was re-elected (in 1889) for the 1890-1892 term.[1] Abbay also served on the 1890 Mississippi Constitutional Convention.[1] Abbay served again in the House from 1896 to 1900.[4][5] He was elected to the Mississippi State Senate in 1899 to represent the 34th district, which composed of Mississippi's Coahoma, Quitman, and Tunica counties, from 1900 to 1904.[3][6]

Later life

Abbay died at his home in Commerce, Mississippi,[7] on June 5, 1919.[2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Mississippi: Embracing an Authentic and Comprehensive Account of the Chief Events in the History of the State and a Record of the Lives of Many of the Most Worthy and Illustrious Families and Individuals. Goodspeed. 1891. p. 276.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Mooney, Charles Patrick Joseph (1920). The Mid-South and Its Builders: Being the Story of the Development and a Forecast of the Future of the Richest Agricultural Region in the World. Mid-South Biographic and Historical Association. p. 656.
  3. 1 2 Mississippi (1900). Department Reports. pp. 54, 85.
  4. 1 2 Rowland, Dunbar (1917). The Official and Statistical Register of the State of Mississippi. Department of Archives and History. p. 209.
  5. Mississippi (1898). Department Reports. p. 16.
  6. Mississippi Official and Statistical Register. Secretary of State. 1900.
  7. "Obituary for COL. R. F. ABBAY". Nashville Banner. 1919-06-06. p. 20. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
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