Marmaduke H. Dent
Marmaduke Herbert Dent was a West Virginia soldier, lawyer, politician and judge of the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals.
Early and family life
Born in Granville, Monongalia County, Virginia in 1848 to the former Mary C. Roberts and her husband Marshall M. Dent, who was a newspaper editor in Morgantown, the county seat of Monongalia County. His grandfather, Dr. D.W. Roberts, was an early Republican, including a delegate to the 1860 Republican National Convention which nominated Abraham Lincoln for President in 1860, but Marmaduke Dent would be a lifelong Democrat and Populist. He married Mary J. Warder in 1876 and they had a daughter. The family also included elder and younger brothers and a daughter.Marshall Dent was a delegate to the Virginia Secession Convention of 1861, where he voted against secession twice, and then became one of Monongalia County's delegates at the First Wheeling Convention and prepared the minutes.
Despite his young age, Marmaduke Dent volunteered for the 6th West Virginia Cavalry during the American Civil War. After the war, he enrolled in the first class of the new West Virginia University, and in 1870 became the first graduate and first advanced graduate. Dent also became the first president of its alumni association.
Career
Dent worked as a teacher after graduation, as well as read law and was admitted to the bar in 1875, in Grafton, West Virginia, where he lived the rest of his life.After serving in a number of local elected positions in Grafton, Dent was elected to the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals in 1892 and served as its president in 1899, 1900, and 1902. His term lasted from 1893 to 1904, when he was not re-elected. In 1898, he wrote the opinion in Carrie Williams v. Board of Education which ruled that black students were entitled to the same length of school term as white students and that teacher Williams was entitled to the same pay.