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Joseph W. Holden

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joseph W. Holden (c. 1844–1875) was a North Carolina politician in the nineteenth century. He was the son of William Woods Holden.

During the American Civil War, Holden served in the Confederate States Army and was captured by Union forces at Roanoke Island.[1] In 1865, his father handed over to him the editorship of the North Carolina Standard.[2]

A Republican, he was elected in 1868 to the North Carolina House of Representatives from Wake County. Holden served as Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives while his party controlled the state legislature in 1868-1870, but he resigned before the end of his term.[3] In 1868, Holden was also a delegate to the Republican National Convention. In 1870, Holden lost a close race in a special election to the United States House of Representatives, the result of which he unsuccessfully contested.[4]

In 1874-1875, he served as mayor of Raleigh, North Carolina.[5] Called "one of the most talented men that the State has ever produced" by a local historian, Holden, who was also a noted poet, died at age 31 in 1875.[6]

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