WEBSTER COUNTY WEST VIRGINIA ****************************************************************** Submitted to the West Virginia Biographies Project by: Valerie & Tommy Crook vfcrook@trellis.net April 13, 2000 ****************************************************************** The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, Volume III, pg. 406-407 HON. WILLIAM SMITH O'BRIEN, former circuit judge of the circuit composed of Webster and Upshur counties, has been one of the prominent lawyers of Buckhannon for thirty years. He is an editor and publisher, and at all times exerts a forceful influence in polities and in com- munity affairs. Judge O'Brien was born in Barbour County, West Vir- ginia, January 8, 1862, and is a son of Emmet J. and Martha Ann (Hall) O'Brien. The paternal family runs back into Irish history for many generations, and with distinguished connections, including the famous Robert Emmet. The grandfather of Judge O'Brien was Daniel O'Brien, who was born in County Clare, Ireland, in 1774 and came to America in 1796. In 1804 he moved to West Virginia from Baltimore, and became a merchant at Beverly. He died in 1844. In 1815 he married Hannah Norris, daughter of Capt. John and Mary (Jones) Nor- ris, of Lewis County. She was a relative of Gen. George Washington, connected through the Jones and Ball fam- ilies. She died in Upshur County in 1880. The Norris and Jones families were from Fauquier County, Virginia, and were of English descent. Emmet J. O'Brien, father of Judge O'Brien, was born at Beverly, and though he had only the advantages of the common schools he excelled in mathematics, particularly in geometry and surveying. He learned the trade of stone cutter and mason, became a bridge building contractor, and with his brother Daniel they constructed the abutments of the bridge across the Tygart's Valley at Philippi, West Virginia. He was a member of the first Constitutional Convention of West Virginia, and in 1867-68 represented the Sixth District in the State Senate. Before the War of the Rebellion he was commissioned a brigadier general of the militia by Governor Wise of Virginia. He was offered a commission in the Confederate Army, but refused be- cause his sympathies were with the Union. He died in. 1888, near Weston. General O'Brien married Martha Ann Vandervort, widow of Joseph Vandervort. She was a daughter of Jonathan and Elizabeth (Reger) Hall, and was born and reared on Big Skin Creek, Lewis County, West Virginia. Her great-grandfather, Jacob Reger, was of German descent, and settled on the Buckhannon River, near Volga, Barbour County, about 1776. Her paternal ancestor, Joseph Hall, father of Jonathan Hall, was born in England, and was a pioneer settler in the Reger settle- ment. His wife was Ann Hitt, a French Huguenot from North Carolina, who was married first to a Mr. Martin and then to William Strange, who was lost in the forest. His body was afterward found near the head waters of what is known as Strange Creek, Braxton County, West Vir- ginia. She next married Joseph Hall. The other children of General O'Brien and wife were: Alonzo Lee, who was a graduate of West Point Military Academy and was a lieutenant in the Regular Army at the time of his death; Daniel U., who attended West Virginia University, was prominent in the Cadet Corps at the Uni- versity, served as captain in the Spanish-American war, and is now a farmer and stock dealer in Gilmer County; Mary Lillian, deceased wife of the late William M. Arnold, of Ravenswood, West Virginia. William Smith O'Brien was a child when his parents moved from Barbour County to Weston in Lewis County, where he was reared on a farm. He did the work of the farm, was employed in brick yards, attended public schools and West Virginia University, and taught for about ten years in Lewis County. While teaching he studied law, his chief instructor being Judge John Brannon, of Weston, one of the ablest lawyers of the state. He graduated from the law department of West Virginia University in 1891, and the following year began practice at Buckhannon. For several years he was junior partner with Hon. William D. Talbot, until his death in 1907. In 1912 Judge O'Brien was elected judge of the Twelfth Judicial Circuit, composed of the counties of Webster and Upshur. Early in his term what is known as "The West Virginia Bribery Cases" were removed from the Kanawha Circuit Court to Webster County for trial. Five members of the Legislature stood indicted for bartering their votes for money in the election of a United States senator. Judge O'Brien presided over the lengthy trials. They were convicted and sentenced to serve terms in the penitentiary. The Supreme Court of Appeals refused appeals. The Upshur-Webster Circuit was heavily republican, but the campaign was in a sense non-partisan. In 1920 the state was redistricted, and Randolph and Upshur were joined. The circuit was republican, and Judge O'Brien went down in the landslide, but reduced his opponents' majority very materially. After retiring from the bench. he formed a partnership with Jerome V. Hall, and under the firm name of O'Brien and Hall he again entered into the active practice of the law. He is also editor and man- ager of the Upshur Record, a democratic weekly newspaper published in Buckhannon. Judge O'Brien has been active in business and community affairs. He was one of the promoters and organizers of the Peoples Bank of West Virginia, one of the leading banking institutions of the city, and was one of its directors for many years. He is a member and trustee of the First Methodist Episcopal Church of Buckhannon. He was president of the County Sunday School Association for many years, and teacher of the "O'Brien" Sunday School Class for nearly twenty- five years. He is a past chancellor of Buckhannon Lodge No. 54, Knights of Pythias; is affiliated with Franklin Lodge No. 7, A. F. and A. M.; Upshur Chapter No. 34, R. A. M.; and Buckhannon Commandery No. 24, Knights Templar. He was commissioned captain of Company B, Second Regiment of the State Guards. During the World war he served as chairman of the Legal Advisory Board for Upshur County, and was active in every war movement as opportunity afforded. In politics he affiliates with the democratic party. On October 14, 1896, Judge O'Brien married Miss Emma White, daughter of Alexander P. and Mary White, of Camden, Lewis County. Mr. White is a first cousin of Stonewall Jackson. Mrs. O'Brien was educated in the common schools and in Broaddus College. Judge and Mrs. O'Brien have four children: Perry Emmet, born August 2, 1898, a graduate of West Virginia Wesleyan College; Daniel Pitt, born August 31, 1900; Mary Martha, born November 30, 1902, and William Talbot, born August 29, 1904, who are now students in West Virginia Wesleyan College.