Clifton L. Thompson
Clifton L. Thompson, a Virginia merchant and Republican politician after the American Civil War, served in the Virginia [Constitutional Convention of 1868] representing Albemarle County, Virginia and one term in the Virginia [House of Delegates] representing Hanover County, Virginia, then worked as a federal tax collector and tobacco inspector in central Virginia until shortly before his death.
Early and family life
Born in 1825 in Virginia to the former Avis O. Bowen and her husband, William A. Thompson.C. L. Thompson married Pamela E. Marshall, daughter of Coleman Marshall in Orange, Virginia on November 3, 1845. They lived in Charlottesville, Albemarle County, in 1850 and in 1860 in its Fredericksville Parish. They had daughters Ann C. Thompson, Frances Thompson and Lizzie Thompson and sons John C. Thompson and William T. Thompson. After Pamela Marshall Thompson's death, the 51 year old widower remarried in October 1876, in Middlebrook, Augusta County, Virginia to 28 year old Mary M. Arehart.
Career
Thompson listed his occupation as "merchant" or "retired merchant" on federal census forms before he gained a federal patronage job after the American Civil War. Before the war, he advertised selling tobacco products in local Albemarle County newspapers.His activities during American Civil War are unclear, particularly his relation to private George Thompson, who joined the 19th Virginia Infantry recruited from Albemarle County and who became the local militia's first fatality during the First Battle of Bull Run. Charlottesville served as a Confederate hospital town during most of the conflict, and only one skirmish occurred in its vicinity.
By the time of Virginia's first postwar election, Thompson was a Radical Republican. Albemarle County voters elected Thompson and African-American James T. S. Taylor as Republicans to represent them at the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868. They defeated conservatives Judge Alexander Rives and farmer William H. Southall, as well as merchant Thomas W. Savage. However, neither Thompson nor Taylor proved outspoken at that assembly.
After Virginia voters adopted that Constitution, Hanover County voters elected Thompson and W. R. Winn to represent them at the Virginia House of Delegates in 1869, and Thompson served a single term. In 1879 and 1883 C. L. Thompson was a federal tobacco inspector based in Charlottesville, which could be a patronage position consistent with his Republican politics.