. . . . . . . . "John R. Chambliss Sr."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "none"@en . . "John Randolph Chambliss senior (* 4. M\u00E4rz 1809 im Sussex County, Virginia; \u2020 3. April 1875 in Emporia, Virginia) war ein US-amerikanischer Jurist, Politiker und Offizier. Er geh\u00F6rte der Whig Party an. Der Brigadegeneral John Randolph Chambliss junior (1833\u20131864) und der Lieutenant (1846\u20131886), welche beide in der Konf\u00F6deriertenarmee dienten, waren seine S\u00F6hne."@de . . . "John Randolph Chambliss Sr. (March 4, 1809 \u2013 April 3, 1875) was a Virginia plantation owner and politician who served in the Confederate House of Representatives during the American Civil War. His son, Brigadier General John R. Chambliss Jr., a cavalryman, was killed during the war. After the war, he retired from politics and returned to his home to again practice law. He was interred in the family graveyard near Emporia, Virginia."@en . . "2588"^^ . "John Randolph Chambliss senior"@de . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "1084473054"^^ . "John Randolph Chambliss senior (* 4. M\u00E4rz 1809 im Sussex County, Virginia; \u2020 3. April 1875 in Emporia, Virginia) war ein US-amerikanischer Jurist, Politiker und Offizier. Er geh\u00F6rte der Whig Party an. Der Brigadegeneral John Randolph Chambliss junior (1833\u20131864) und der Lieutenant (1846\u20131886), welche beide in der Konf\u00F6deriertenarmee dienten, waren seine S\u00F6hne."@de . . . "none"@en . "1862"^^ . . . "5277701"^^ . . . "John Randolph Chambliss Sr. (March 4, 1809 \u2013 April 3, 1875) was a Virginia plantation owner and politician who served in the Confederate House of Representatives during the American Civil War. His son, Brigadier General John R. Chambliss Jr., a cavalryman, was killed during the war. Chambliss was born in Sussex County, Virginia. He attended the Winchester Law School and passed the bar exam, establishing a profitable practice near his home. He became a wealthy plantation owner. He served as a delegate to the Virginia state constitutional convention in 1850\u201351. An ardent supporter of states rights, he was the delegate from Greensville and Sussex counties to the Virginia secession convention in 1861. He was subsequently elected to the First Confederate Congress. After the war, he retired from politics and returned to his home to again practice law. He was interred in the family graveyard near Emporia, Virginia."@en . . . . .