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{{short description|Mississippi politician (c. 1793–1835)}} |
{{short description|Mississippi politician (c. 1793–1835)}} |
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{{for|his nephew, the Union Army officer|Duncan Stephen Walker}} |
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{{Infobox person |
{{Infobox person |
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| name = Duncan S. Walker |
| name = Duncan S. Walker |
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Latest revision as of 02:32, 24 January 2026
Mississippi politician (c. 1793–1835)
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Duncan S. Walker |
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| Born | c. 1793 |
| Died | December 31, 1835 |
| Occupation | Lawyer |
Duncan S. Walker (c. 1793 – December 31, 1835) was an American lawyer and a Mississippi state legislator.
Walker was originally from the Carlisle, Pennsylvania area and moved to Mississippi with his brother Robert J. Walker in the 1820s. Their prosperous cousin Stephen Duncan already lived in the lower Mississippi River valley. He, like his brother, was a Jacksonian Democrat.
In 1828, Walker ran for a seat in the Mississippi House of Representatives from Adams County.[2][3][4] He served in the 12th Mississippi legislature.[5] He later moved to Louisiana where he owned a plantation.[5]
He died off a pulmonary illness off Cuba in winter 1835 at age 42.[5][6]
- Rothstein, Morton (1979). “The Changing Social Networks and Investment Behavior of a Slaveholding Elite in the Ante Bellum South: Some Natchez Nabobs, 1800–1860”. In Greenfield, Sidney M.; Strickon, Arnold; Aubey, Robert T. (eds.). Entrepreneurs in Cultural Context. School of American Research, Advanced Seminar Series. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. pp. 65–88. ISBN 978-0-8263-0504-6. LCCN 78021433. OCLC 4859059.

