Rash's Surname Index
Notes for William Cooper TALLEY
WILLIAM COOPER TALLEY, son of Rev. Lewis S. and Priscilla (Clark) Talley, was born December 11, 1831, on his father's farm (later the home of Lewis Zebley), at Talley's Corner, Brandywine Hundred, Del. His father died in 1847, and his mother in 1850, as shown by their tombstones at Bethel Cemetery. He attended the Forwood School when a boy, it being close to his home. The Forwood School House was memorable for one thing at least. A debating society was organized there many years ago. Among the active debaters were William Cooper Talley and Powell Clayton, now Ambassador to Mexico, each or whom in the Civil War rose to the rank of Brigadier General. These brigadiers were related by John Clayton and Rev. Lewis S, Talley each marrying a daughter of George Clark. There was also a slight relationship by Sarah (Foulk) Clayton, the grandmother or Powell Clayton. being the daughter of Sarah (Talley) Foulk. Cooper Talley and Powell Clayton were of necessity on opposites sides in the debates, but during the Civil War they were on the same side, battling for their country , one in the far West and the other in the East. They each succeeded well in shedding new luster on their family names. William Cooper Talley graduated in 1853 at Professor Sudler's Academy at Wilmington, Del, The professor was a graduate at West Point and a fine military tactician. Under his teaching young Talley perhaps received the military impulse which later developed into the brave soldier of the Civil War. After his graduation he took a prospecting trip through the West, but finally decided to locate at Media, Pa. Here he began the reading of law, and at the same time, with other parties, published the Upland Union, a Democratic newspaper issued at Media. Talley was a strong Douglas man, and his associates were equally as strong for Breckenridge. The lack of harmony caused Mr. Talley to withdraw from the paper. Being solicited by a committee from Norristown, Pa., he purchased the National Democrat of that city, and advocated the election of Douglas. Lincoln being elected, the war followed. The brave young man from Brandywine Hundred, with the military spirit already kindled at the Wilmington Academy, could not resist the call to arms. He raised a company, unsheathed his sword, and gallantly fought for his country and his convictions. Upon his return home, at the expiration of his three years, he became Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue for the Seventh District of Pennsylvania, and later received the appointment of Collector. When his office expired he again took up journalism, and published the Delaware County Democrat, at Chester, Pa. While editing this paper, in 1874, he was elected on the Democratic ticket to the Pennsylvania Legislature, and served until the close of the session in 1876. During two sessions of this term he was Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, and a member of the Centennial Committee. He assisted in arranging for the Centennial grounds, and for a State Building. Meeting with financial reverses, he retired from politics and disposed of his paper; and in 1877 took a position in the Printing Department at Washington, D. C., in the proof room of the Congressional Record. He now [as of 1898] leads a quiet and honorable life in that city.(A History of The Talley Family on the Delaware and Their Descendants - by
George A. Talley, published 1898, p 168-171.)
Talley was Captain of the Arch Dick Guards, a company of volunteers recruited from the vicinity of Chester, organized at Camp Wayne near West Chester, June 9, 1861, as Company F, 30th Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers.
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