Alexander Hamilton HandyAlexander Hamilton Handy (December 25, 1809 – September 12, 1883) was a Mississippi attorney who served on the Mississippi Supreme Court from 1853 to 1867, sitting as Chief Justice of Mississippi from 1864 to 1867.[1][2] BiographyHandy was born in Somerset County, Maryland on December 25, 1809, the son of Betsey (née Wilson) and George Handy.[3][4] He studied at the Washington Academy and was admitted to the bar in 1834.[3] After marrying, he moved to Mississippi with his family,[3] in 1836.[4] In 1853, he was elected as an associate justice on the High Court of Errors and Appeals and was reelected in 1860, and again in 1865.[4] on April 18, 1864, he was made Chief Justice, where he served until October 1, 1867.[3] He resigned his office due to the Reconstruction-era subjection of the court to military power by the Federal government.[4] Thereafter, he returned to Baltimore, Maryland where he practiced law and taught at the University of Maryland Law School.[3] In 1871, he moved back to Canton, Mississippi where he died on September 12, 1883.[3] Handy was a secessionist, opining of the "black" Republican Party that:
Personal lifeIn 1835, he married Susan Wilson Stuart. His daughter Arianna Handy married German-Jewish immigrant musician and conductor Otto Sutro (also brother of San Francisco mayor Adolph Sutro).[6] His granddaughters were the piano duettists Rose and Ottilie Sutro. References
|