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・ Samuel Margolis
・ Samuel Marinus Zwemer
・ Samuel Marion Driver
・ Samuel Marling
・ Samuel Marsden
・ Samuel Marsden (bishop)
・ Samuel Marsden Collegiate School
・ Samuel Marsh
・ Samuel Marsh (railroad executive)
・ Samuel Marshall
・ Samuel Marshall (Canadian politician)
・ Samuel Marshall Perry
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・ Samuel Martin (entrepreneur)
・ Samuel Martin (linguist)
Samuel Lightfoot Flournoy
・ Samuel Lightfoot Flournoy (West Virginia lawyer)
・ Samuel Lillo
・ Samuel Lilly
・ Samuel Lim Núñez
・ Samuel Lincoln
・ Samuel Linde
・ Samuel Lindqvist
・ Samuel Lindsey House
・ Samuel Lines
・ Samuel Linley
・ Samuel Linnaeus
・ Samuel Lipscomb Seckham
・ Samuel Lisle
・ Samuel Lister (editor)


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Samuel Lightfoot Flournoy : ウィキペディア英語版
Samuel Lightfoot Flournoy

Samuel Lightfoot Flournoy (November 25, 1846 – January 28, 1904) was an American lawyer, politician, and businessperson in the U.S. state of West Virginia. Flournoy served as a state senator representing the 12th Senatorial District in the West Virginia Senate (1885–1890) and served three terms as mayor of Romney, West Virginia. Flournoy unsuccessfully ran as a candidate for the West Virginia Democratic Party gubernatorial nomination in 1900.
Flournoy was born in 1846 in Chesterfield County, Virginia. In 1863, during the American Civil War, he enlisted as a private in the Confederate States Army and served until the war's end in 1865. After graduating from Hampden–Sydney College in 1868, Flournoy taught school for four years while studying law. In 1870 he relocated to Romney, West Virginia, where he served as principal of the Potomac Academy. He was admitted to the bar in 1873, and afterward served on the Board of Regents for the West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and Blind (1876–1880). During his second term in the West Virginia Senate, Flournoy relocated to Charleston to practice law. He also engaged in several business ventures and was an incorporator of the Bank of Romney, the Tug and Guyandotte Railroad Company, the Bradford Building Company, the White Oak Mining Company, and the West Construction Company. Flournoy served on the Board of Trustees of Hampden–Sydney College from 1892 until his death in 1904.
Through his marriage to Frances "Fannie" Ann Armstrong White, Flournoy was a brother-in-law of West Virginia Attorney General Robert White and West Virginia Fish Commission President Christian Streit White, and the son-in-law of Hampshire County Clerk of Court John Baker White. Through his father, Flournoy was a relative of Thomas Flournoy, United States Representative from Virginia. Flournoy was the father of prominent Charleston lawyer Samuel Lightfoot Flournoy.
== Early life and military career ==
Samuel Lightfoot Flournoy was born on November 25, 1846, in Chesterfield County, Virginia, from Richmond, and was the son of Richard W. Flournoy and his wife, Sarah Parke Poindexter Flournoy. He had four siblings, two brothers and two sisters: Reverend Parke Poindexter Flournoy, Eliza Flournoy Ayler, Richard W. Flournoy, and Ellen Flournoy Thornton.〔 Flournoy was of English and French ancestry.〔 He was a relative of Thomas Flournoy, United States Representative from Virginia. The majority of Flournoy's youth and early adulthood were spent in Richmond, where he attended the city's public schools.〔〔
In 1863, during the American Civil War, Flournoy enlisted as a private in the Confederate States Army at the age of 17.〔〔 He served the entirety of his enlistment in Company A, Otey Battery, 13th Battalion, Virginia Light Artillery in Richmond, throughout the course of the war until its end in 1865.〔〔〔

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