William Duckett Bowie - Career and Wealth

Career and Wealth

His maternal grandfather, Baruch Duckett left him Quarter Plantation near Collington, Maryland where he settled after leaving college as well as a sizeable number of slaves After the death of his two brothers, Governor Robert Bowie in 1818 and Walter Baruch Bowie in 1832, and by purchasing the interests of his sisters, he became the owner of Fairview where he then made his home.

Upon the death of his father in 1810, William Duckett Bowie was made the executioner of his will which increased his wealth significantly and his uncle, Daniel Bowie bequeathed to him all of his land upon his death as well which combined, made him one of the wealthiest planters in Prince Georges County.

In 1830, he and his uncle Walter Bowie Jr. were appointed by the Governor Thomas King Carroll as members of the Levy Court for Prince Georges County. In 1838 and 1839 he was nominated by the Democrats for the state Legislature but defeated by his cousin Thomas Fielder Bowie the Whig candidate. in 1840, he overcame the large Whig vote and was elected to the Maryland House of Delegates in which he served two terms. After that, he beat the Whig leader Robert Bowie of Mattaponi, Maryland for the Maryland Senate seat. He was re-elected at the end of his first term.

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