A Guide to the Henry Wirtz Thomas Collection, 1834-1952
A Collection in The Fairfax County Public Library
Record Group Number MSS 06-26
City of Fairfax Regional Library
Virginia Room
10360 North Street
Fairfax, VA 22030-2514 USA
Virginia Room: 703-293-6227 x6
Fax: 703-293-2155
Email: va_room@fairfaxcounty.gov
URL: https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/library/branches/virginia-room
© 2024 Fairfax County Public Library. All rights reserved.
Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
None
Use Restrictions
Consult repository for information
Preferred Citation
Henry Wirtz Thomas Collection, MSS 06-26, Virginia Room, Fairfax County Public Library
Acquisition Information
Col. Henry W. Thomas Elgin of McLean, VA initially donated this collection to the Historical Society of Fairfax County during 1950-1951. They transferred the collection to the Virginia Room on an unknown date. Mrs. Arthur J. Mourot of Alexandria, VA donated the portraits of Judge and Mrs. Henry Wirtz Thomas in May 1982. Lee Hubbard, Fairfax, VA donated the 1834 “H.W. Thomas, Attorney at Law” advertising card in 2001. Mrs. Anne Paul donated the albumen print of the Henry W. Thomas House, Fairfax, VA, in August 2005. William “Wild Bill” Patram, Fairfax, VA, donated Thomas’ 1854-1872 account book in January 2019. Patram found the account book in an unknown house that he moved during his long career.
Processing Information
Chris Barbuschak, July 2019
EAD generated by Ross Landis, 2024
Historical and Biographical Information
Henry Wirtz Thomas was born in Leesburg, Virginia on October 20, 1812, to Margaret and John Henry Thomas. After studying law in a Washington, D.C. college, he taught school for a period, and moved to Fairfax Court House in 1833. In 1837, Thomas served as a Major in the Virginia Militia. At age 26, Thomas was selected as the Commonwealth’s Attorney, followed by his election to the House of Delegates for the 1841-1842 and 1847-1849 sessions. He went on to serve as the Fairfax County and Alexandria County representative in the Senate from 1850-1863, and from 1871-1875.
During the outbreak of the Civil War when the residents of Fairfax County deliberated on seceding, Thomas initially opposed secession, but later changed course. He is alleged to have stood in the Fairfax Courthouse’s doorway intimidating voters into voting for secession. After seceding, Thomas moved to Richmond and offered his services to President Jefferson Davis.
On April 5, 1865, Thomas was appointed to a committee of three to wait on President Abraham Lincoln and discussed with him how to reestablish civil government in Virginia. On August 12, 1867, Thomas, then a judge of the Ninth Judicial Circuit of Virginia was arrested by the U.S. Grand Jury for violating the Civil Rights Bill. He had earlier refused to allow Jane Taylor, an African American, to testify in his court in May 1866. Despite this, he was elected as the 12th Lieutenant Governor of Virginia from 1875-1878, and continued to serve as a judge on the Fairfax County Circuit Court until shortly before his death in June 1890.
Scope and Content
The Henry Wirtz Thomas Collection consists of 0.5 linear feet, spans the years 1834-1952, and consists of correspondence, newspaper clippings, brochures, albumen photographs, pamphlets, an advertising card, and an account book. The 1834 advertising card notes that Thomas’ office was in Allison’s Hotel in Fairfax, VA. Also included are pamphlets containing excerpts from a speech Thomas delivered to the Senate of Virginia on April 4, 1872. Thomas’ account book contains notes on law, his financial dealings, and newspaper clippings from 1854-1857 chronicling court cases he was involved with and other happenings.
Separated Material
None
Index Terms
- Fairfax (Va.) - History
- Lawyers - Virginia - Fairfax - Biography
- Thomas, Henry Wirtz (1812-1890)