Page:Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography volume 3.djvu/318
in a cotton factory in Manchester, after which he was employed on the Richmond & Danville railroad, and subsequently became a student in Washington and Lee University, and during the sessions of 1881-82 studied law in the University of Virginia, and was admitted to the bar. For several succeeding years he practiced his profession in Richmond, then moved to Bedford county, Virginia, and in 1898 was elected by the legislature of Virginia judge of the circuit court, which office he held until by the reorganization of the circuits by the constitutional convention of 1901-02, he lost his position, when he again engaged in his practice in Bedford county, residing in Bedford city. He later served in the state senate, and in 1914 was appointed by President Wilson judge of the United States Court for Alaska.
Kent, Charles William, born in Louisa county, Virginia, September 27, 1860, son of Robert Meredith Kent, of that county, and Sarah Garland Hunter, his wife. On his father's side he is descended from Abram Kent, who settled in Hanover county, Virginia, from England, and established himself as a planter. His father was a merchant until about 1850, when he retired to his country home, where he lived the rest of his life. Being past military life at the outbreak of the civil war, he served the Confederate government in a civil capacity. On his mother's side he is descended from Scotch ancestors who came to Virginia in the early part of the seventeenth century. His grandfather, John Hunter, was named after the famous Scotch surgeon of that name. George Hunter, one of his ancestors, was a surgeon in the continental navy during the revolutionary war. His brother, the late Linden Kent, a distinguished lawyer of Washing- ton. D. C., was adjutant to Col. R. T. W. Duke during the civil war, and was captured just before the surrender at Appomattox, and imprisoned on Johnson's Island. Professor Kent was educated in the private schools of his native county, and at the Locust Dale Academy. He entered the University of Virginia in 1878, and graduated in 1882 with the degree of Master of Arts. He received that year the debater's medal from the Jefferson Literary Society, making a unique family record, his brothers, Linden and Henry, having already won medals in the Washington and Jefferson societies respectively. From 1884 to 1887 He continued his advanced work in English. German and philosophy in the universities of Goettingen, Berlin and Leipsic. The University of Leipsic conferred upon him, in June, 1887, the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (magna cum laude). Upon his return home he was appointed licentiate for one year in French and German at his alma mater, and for the next four or five years he held the professorship of English and modern languages in the University of Tennessee. In 1893 he was elected professor of English literature, rhetoric and belles lettres in the University of Virginia. Dr. Kent is recognized as a lecturer of ability, and possesses oratorical gifts of a high order. His addresses on literature before the Summer School of Methods, have attracted scores of teachers whom he has delighted and filled with enthusiasm. He has been among the prominent lecturers at Monteagle, Tennessee; Salt Springs, in Georgia; Tulane University; the V. P. I. at Blacksburg, and other schools and colleges. As