As a Confederate veteran, lawyer and journalist, he was appointed the first Secretary of Virginia Military Records by Governor Andrew J. Montague in 1904. Hunter served in this capacity until 1910 when he was succeeded by Joseph Virginius Bidgood, former Commander of the Grand Camp of Confederate Veterans.
His father was Colonel Edmund Pendleton Hunter, a noted lawyer of his time. Robert had a law office in Winchester and edited the Winchester Times. During the first Cleveland administration he held the position of Inspector of Public Lands. The latter part of his career was in the practice of law in Washington D.C.
Possessing the charming manner of a Southern Gentleman, Major Hunter was an Old School Virginian.
As a Confederate veteran, lawyer and journalist, he was appointed the first Secretary of Virginia Military Records by Governor Andrew J. Montague in 1904. Hunter served in this capacity until 1910 when he was succeeded by Joseph Virginius Bidgood, former Commander of the Grand Camp of Confederate Veterans.
His father was Colonel Edmund Pendleton Hunter, a noted lawyer of his time. Robert had a law office in Winchester and edited the Winchester Times. During the first Cleveland administration he held the position of Inspector of Public Lands. The latter part of his career was in the practice of law in Washington D.C.
Possessing the charming manner of a Southern Gentleman, Major Hunter was an Old School Virginian.
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