HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
"7
pursued an academic course : returned to
Virginia in 18S4 and edited and pulslished a
Democratic newspaper for a number of
years ; member of the Democratic State
Central Committee, and chairman of the
fourth congressional district committee ;
elected in i8yi a member of the general as-
sembly; register of the land office 1895-97;
presented credentials as a member-elect in
the fifty-fifth congress and served from
March 4, 1897, until March 3, 1898, when
he was succeeded by Robert T. Thorp, who
contested his election ; elected to the fifty-
sixth congress and served from March 4,
1899, until his death in Washington, D. C,
March 3, 1900.
Flood, Henry Delaware, born at Appo- mattox county, Virginia, September 2, 1865, son of Joel W. Flood, a prominent farmer of the county, who served as major four years under Lee; attended the schools of Appo- mattox and Richmond, Washington and Lee University, and the University of Vir- ginia ; began the practice of law on Septem- ber 15, 1886; elected to the house of dele- gates of the general assembly of Virginia in 1887 and re-elected in 1889; elected to the state senate in 1891, and re-elected in 1895 and in 1899. In the senate he introduced a bill placing the state department of agri- culture upon a stronger basis ; and the bill authorizing the attorney-general to bring suit against the state of West Virginia for her pro rata share of the old state debt ; and he was made one of the commissioners elected by the legislature to carry out the provisions of the bill, and whose labors re- sulted in the consequent litigation, just recently ended. Elected attorney for the commonwealth of Appomattox county in
1891, 1895 and 1899; presidential elector on
the Cleveland and Stevenson ticket in 1892 ;
nominated for congress by the Democratic
party in i8g6 and defeated ; elected as a
Democrat to the fifty-seventh, fifty-eighth,
fifty-ninth, sixtieth and sixty-first con-
gresses and re-elected to the sixty-second
congress (March 4, 1901-March 3, 191 1) ; he
is still a member (1915) ; was author of reso-
lution admitting Arizona and New Mexico
to statehood. He was a member of the
constitutional convention in 1901. His ad-
dress is Appomattox, Virginia.
Fulkerson, Abram, born in Washington county, Virginia, May 13, 1834; was gradu- ated from the Virginia Military Institute; studied law, was admitted to the bar, and practiced; entered the Confederate service in March, 1861, as a captain; promoted to major, lieutenant-colonel and colonel ; elected to the house of delegates of Vir- t;inia in 1871-1873, and to the senate of \irginia in 1877-1879; elected as a Read- juster CO the forty-seventh congress (March .-., t88i-March 3, 1883) I resumed the prac- tice of law after leaving congress: died at Bristol, Virginia, December 17, 1902.
Gaines, William Embre, born in Charlotte county, Virginia, August 30, 1844; attended the common schools ; when the civil war broke out in ]86i ; enlisted as a private in Company K, Eighteenth Virginia Regiment (Pickett's Division) ; re-enlisted in the Army of the Cape Fear and surrendered with Johnson, near Greensboro, North Carolina, in April, 1865, having attained the rank of adjutant of Manly's Artillery Battalion; en- gaged in business in banking in Burkeville, Virginia ; elected as a Republican to the Vir- ginia state senate in 1883, and served three