Leftwich was born in Bedford County, Virginia near Liberty (now Bedford) on September 22, 1765.[3] His father Augustine Leftwich (1712-1795) had moved westward from New Kent County in Virginia's Tidewater region into the Piedmont after securing a royal land grant, and married at least twice. Jabez was the youngest of his surviving sons, most of whom distinguished themselves in the American Revolutionary War. His elder brothers included Ltc. William Leftwich (1737-1820), Col. Thomas Leftwich (1740-1816), Augustine Leftwich Jr. (1744-1835), Capt. Uriah Leftwich (1748-1838), Col. Littleberry Leftwich (1757-1823) and Joel Leftwich (1759-1846, who became this man's commanding officer in the War of 1812, and whose political career this man would supersede). The family also included two daughters who married: Ann Petross Leftwich Hackworth (1731-1820) married a veteran of the French and Indian War, and Mary Elizabeth Leftwich Early (1746-1818) married Joshua Early and had a son Rev. John Early who became a Methodist preacher and for 19 years of bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church South.
In 1785, Jabez Leftwich married Delilah Stovall (1766-1846), who bore sons Augustine Leftwich (1785-1844) and Capt. Jabez Leftwich Jr. (1792-1876), as well as daughters Permelia Leftwich Drake (1787-1829), Elizabeth Leftwich Drake (1798-1876) and Eliza Leftwich Drake (1808-1850), all of whom married different members of the same family.
Career
Bedford County voters elected Leftwich to represent them several times, beginning in 1801 when he became one of Bedford County's representatives (part-time) in the Virginia House of Delegates, and won re-election annually until 1809.[4] Except for the term that began December 3, 1805, he served alongside Isaac Otey, then served with Samuel Hancock, who had succeeded his brother and whom he had defeated in 1809.
Within two years after his congressional term expired in 1825, Leftwich moved to Madison County, Alabama, where he was a farmer and merchant. In his later years, he served in the Alabama House of Representatives.
Leftwich farmed using slave labor, as did his father and brothers. In the 1810 census, he owned 14 slaves.[5] A decade later, he owned six slaves in Bedford county's southern district,[6] and ten in the northern district.[7]
Shortly before his wife's death in 1846 after a protracted illness of several months, they moved to Franklin County, Alabama in the Russell Valley and lived in the household of their daughter Betsey, who had married William Drake. Her sister Eliza had married Capt. Neely Drake and moved to Pickens County, Alabama. Their sister Permelia had married Andrew Drake but predeceased her mother, dying in childbirth in 1829.
Death and legacy
Leftwich also died in the household of his daughter and her husband near Huntsville, Alabama on June 22, 1855. He was buried in Maple Hill Cemetery in Huntsville.
The University of Virginia has some of the Leftwich family papers.[8][9]
His namesake grandson Col. Jabez Leftwich Drake (1832=1864) died in the Battle of Peachtree Creek near Atlanta. Another grandson, Cpt. Joel W. Leftwich (1842-1862)died of pneumonia at Chimbarozo hospital during that conflict.
Electoral history
1823; Leftwich was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives with 56.12% of the vote, defeating fellow Democratic-Republican Nathaniel H. Claiborne.
^Lyon Gardiner Tyler, Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography (1915) vol. 2, p. 117 (available at hathitrust.org)
^Tyler p. 117 says he was born in Caroline County, as had some of his elder brothers, his mother's family being there but the family having moved to Bedford County by that time
^Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library, 1978) pp. 223, 227, 231, 235, 239, 243, 247, 251
^1810 U.S. Federal Census for Bedford County, Virginia p. 18 of 34
^1820 U.S. Federal Census for Southern District, Bedford County, Virginia p. 12 of 26
^1820 U.S. Federal Census for Northern District, Bedford County, Virginia p. 12 of 25
^Butler, Stuart L. (2008). Real Patriots and Heroic Soldiers: Gen. Joel Leftwich and the Virginia Brigade in the War of 1812. Heritage Books. ISBN978-0788447754.