Person:James Mebane (12)

Watchers
James Mebane
m. Feb 1767
  1. Janett Mebane1768 - Abt 1798
  2. Mary Ann Mebane1770 -
  3. Margaret Mebane1772 - Bet 1812 & 1816
  4. James Mebane1774 - 1857
  5. Sarah Mebane1776 - 1812
  6. Frances Mebane1779 - 1859
  7. William Mebane1779 - 1856
  8. Susannah Mebane1781 -
  9. Robert Mebane1783 - 1827
  10. Elizabeth Mebane1786 - 1859
  11. Nancy Mebane1788 - Bef 1832
  12. Dr John Alexander Mebane1790 - 1859
m. 22 Sep 1799
  1. John Howard MebaneAbt 1800 -
  2. William Kinchen Mebane1801 - 1824
  3. Eliza Harriet Mebane1803 - 1827
  4. Rev. Alexander Allen Mebane1806 - 1846
  5. Giles Mebane1809 - 1899
  6. James Mebane1812 - 1857
  7. Lemuel H. Mebane1816 - 1855
m. 17 Jan 1833
m. 22 Sep 1847
Facts and Events
Name James Mebane
Gender Male
Birth? 5 Sep 1774 Orange County, North Carolina
Marriage 22 Sep 1799 to Elizabeth Kinchen
Marriage 17 Jan 1833 Caswell County, North Carolinato Mary "Polly" Graves
Marriage 22 Sep 1847 Rockingham County, North Carolinato Mary Catherine Watts
Death? 12 Dec 1857 Caswell County, North Carolina
Burial[1] Hawfields Presbyterian

Information found here (http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/rrmeet/bio.html):


Source: From DICTIONARY OF NORTH CAROLINA BIOGRAPHY edited by William S. Powell. Copyright (c) 1979-1996 by the University of North Carolina Press. Used by permission of the publisher. www.uncpress.unc.edu

James Mebane (5 Sept. 1774-12 Dec. 1857), legislator, was probably born at Hawfields, Orange County, one of four sons of Alexander, Jr., and Mary Armstrong Mebane. His father and uncles William, James, John, and Robert were active in the American Revolution, most of them serving as colonels in the North Carolina militia.

Nothing is known of Mebane's early education, though it is likely that he studied under the Reverend Henry Patillo. In 1795 he was one of the first students to enter The University of North Carolina, where he served as the first president of the Dialectic Literary Society; for over a century the society displayed his portrait in a prominent location in its hall. However, he left the university in 1797 without a diploma.

Mebane married Elizabeth Kinchen (1778/79 - 7 Aug. 1832), and the couple had five sons, including Giles Mebane, and one daughter.

His political career began with his election to the House of Commons in 1798; he was reelected in 1801, 1803, 1818, 1820, 1822, 1823, and 1831. During the 1820–21 term he was speaker. In addition, he served in the state senate from 1808 to 1811 and in 1828. In the senate Mebane sponsored the Electoral Act of 1811, which would have given the choice of presidential electors to the state legislature.

Mebane served on the board of trustees of The University of North Carolina from 1811 until his death. He was buried beside his wife in the second graveyard of Hawfields Presbyterian Church in Alamance County.

Roger N. Kirkman

References
  1. Gary Thompson - survey in 2006 - and from booklet from the church dated 2003, titled "The Hawfields Burying Ground". Hawfields Presbyterian Church Cemetery. (Web site by Allen Dew).