Difference between revisions of "Ebenezer Dorr IV"

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(New page: {{Infobox Biography | subject_name =Ebenezer Dorr IV | image_name =EbenDorrIV.jpg | image_size =200px | image_caption = | date_of_birth =December 13, 1787 | place_of_bi...)
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Revision as of 13:33, 12 November 2007

Ebenezer Dorr IV
EbenDorrIV.jpg
Born December 13, 1787
Bath, Sagadahoc, Maine
Died September 4, 1846
Pensacola
Occupation U.S. Marshal, Sheriff
Spouse Judith M. Walker
Sarah C. Allen (1826-1846)
Parents William & Jane Partridge Dorr
Children Eben Walker Dorr
Mary Brooks Dorr
James William Dorr
Frances Allen Dorr
Ann Worcester Dorr
Clara Barkley Dorr Moreno

Ebenezer "Eben" Dorr IV (1787-1846) was a seaman, U.S. Marshal and the first Sheriff of Escambia County elected after Floirda achieved statehood.

Early life

Dorr was born on December 13, 1787 in Bath, Maine. He owned a privateering ship during the War of 1812 and was briefly captured and imprisoned in the British Dartmoor Prison.

He returned to Maine and had a son, Eben Walker Dorr, with his first wife Judith Walker. He remarried to Sarah Allen on October 11, 1826. They moved to Pensacola, where Dorr set up a prosperous sea trade, and had their first child in 1827. The family owned slaves and managed real estate.

On September 13, 1841, President John Tyler appointed Dorr U.S. Marshal of the Western District of the Territory of Florida.[1]

Dorr branding "SS" on Jonathan Walker's hand.

In 1844 Dorr was involved in the case of Jonathan Walker, who aided the escape of seven Pensacola slaves, was captured and returned to the city. Dorr had him placed in the Spanish jail, where he languished for several months until his trial. Found guilty by a jury, Walker's sentence included an hour in the pillory, large fines and the mark "SS" (for "slave stealer") to be branded into his hand. Dorr carried out the sentence.

When Florida was granted statehood on March 3, 1845 (a slave state paired with free state Iowa), he was the first sheriff elected to the post. He remained in the position until his death a year later.

References

  1. Note: There is some question of a distinction between the titles "sheriff" and "marshal." Records show that both coexisted in Escambia County, but as the Western District was nearly 200 miles across, it is possible that a U.S. Marshal in the Pensacola area was treated as the de facto sheriff.
Preceded by:
Peter Woodbine
Escambia County Sheriff
1842-1846
Succeeded by:
Mortimar Bright