John C. Woodson
John Chesterfield Woodson and John Woodson Jr. another represented Cumberland County in the Virginia House of Delegates between 1788 and 1791.
Early and family life
This John Woodson was born on Christmas Day, 1823 to Jacob Woodson and his wife, the former Elizabeth Brown. The Woodson family could trace its ancestry to Dr. John Woodson who emigrated to the Virginia colony from Dorsetshire, England in 1619 on the same ship as Governor George Yardley, and lived in Henrico Colony, as would many of his descendants, although others moved westward along the James River from Curles Plantation in Henrico County, at times intermarrying with the First Families of Virginia or early Huguenots. The name Jacob became more common in the Woodson family after a third generation descendant married Jacob Michaux, descended from the Huguenots who had settled at Manakintown above the falls of the James River after 1700, and descendants from Price Edward County and Buckingham County revolutionary war patriots both married daughters of one or more men named Jacob Woodson. This John Woodson attended the University of Virginia from 1848–51. He also read law with a lawyer in the state capital allied with the Whig party.Personal life
Woodson married Sarah E. Amiss of Pendleton County in Highland County, Virginia on November 16, 1848. They had children Edmund, Andrew Dyer, Katherine Elizabeth, Frank, Robert Lee, Thomas Chapman and John H.Career
In 1847, Woodson became a member of the Virginia Bar and moved westward to the state's Appalachian region. He became Commonwealth's Attorney for Highland and Pendleton County, both west of the Shenandoah Valley, but by 1860 had moved somewhat back to Harrisonburg, Virginia, the county seat for Rockingham County and owned one slave.During the American Civil War, Woodson served as quartermaster for the 146th Confederate militia regiment. Rockingham County voters also elected Woodhouse to the House of Delegates alongside Charles Grattan and John H. Hopkins, but Woodson resigned that part-time position and S.A. Coffman was elected in his place.
As Virginia's Presidential Reconstruction began, Rockingham County voters again elected Woodson to the General Assembly for the session from 1865 to 1867, and he served alongside W.G. Thompson and H.B. Harnsberger.
In 1867, Rockingham County voters elected Conservatives Woodson and Jacob N. Liggett to represent them in the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1868.