George B. Keezell
George Bernard Keezell was a Virginia farmer, newspaperman and Democratic politician who served as a member of the Virginia Senate and later in the Virginia House of Delegates, in both representing his native Rockingham County.
Early life and education
Born in Keezeltown in Rockingham County, at a home his grandfather had built in 1794, to the former Amanda Fitzallen Peale and her husband George Keezell. George was an only child, the third generation to hold that family name. His father died when he was eight years old. Young George was educated in private schools locally, then for two years at Stuart Hall, a college in Baltimore.Career
Keezell began farming when he was 16, to support his mother. From 1912 until 1923, Keezell engaged in newspaper work.At age 21 he was selected as one of the local justices of the peace. In 1883 Keezell ran for state senate, and seemed to have lost to Republican Joseph B. Webb. However Keezell successfully challenged the results, and was seated in January 1884. Although he would be elected four times, so that his senatorial service was the longest of any man in his generation, for the second session of his first term, his senatorial district only included Rockingham County, and John Acker succeeded to that seat in 1887. Rockingham County voters again elected Keezell to represent them in the state senate nearly a decade later, in 1895 when he succeeded T.K. Harnsberger, and he was re-elected twice. Keezell resigned from the senate in 1910 to become Rockingham County's treasurer, whereupon Rockingham County voters selected county attorney John Paul to succeed him. More than a decade later, in 1921, Keezell won election as one of the two men representing Harrisonburg and Rockingham County in the Virginia House of Delegates, and was re-elected until 1929. Keezell served as chairman of the Rockingham County Democratic party for 25 years. He and George N. Earman also represented Rockingham County at the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1902. Keezell also served as a presidential elector in 1904. Four successive governors also appointed him a member of the State Board of Fisheries. Keezell also took an active interest in education. He served on the senate committee for Public Institutions and Education, and was patron of the bill establishing the State Normal and Industrial School in Harrisonburg. He also served as chairman of its board of trustees.