PropertyValue
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  • Levi Casey (politician)
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  • General Levi Casey (c. 1752 – February 3, 1807) was a United States Representative from South Carolina. He was born in South Carolina and served in the South Carolina militia during the American Revolutionary War. Son of Abner Casey, he served in the American Revolutionary War along with his step brothers, brother(s) and nephews. One of his stepbrothers, Benjamin Casey was killed in action at Camp Middlebrook, New Jersey. He married Elizabeth Duckett in 1775. He reached the rank of brigadier general in the South Carolina militia. After the war, he served as justice of Newberry County Court in 1785.
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Office
  • Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives
  • Member of the South Carolina Senate
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dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
term start
  • 1803-03-04
Birth Date
  • c. 1752
Branch
  • South Carolina State Militia
death place
Name
  • Levi Casey
resting place
  • Congressional Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
District
  • 6
Party
  • Democratic-Republican
Birth Place
  • South Carolina
Term
  • 1781
  • 1786
  • 1792
  • 1798
  • 1800
term end
  • 1807-02-03
death date
  • 1807-02-03
Rank
Allegiance
Battles
Successor
Before
Years
  • 1803
After
State
  • South Carolina
Predecessor
abstract
  • General Levi Casey (c. 1752 – February 3, 1807) was a United States Representative from South Carolina. He was born in South Carolina and served in the South Carolina militia during the American Revolutionary War. Son of Abner Casey, he served in the American Revolutionary War along with his step brothers, brother(s) and nephews. One of his stepbrothers, Benjamin Casey was killed in action at Camp Middlebrook, New Jersey. He married Elizabeth Duckett in 1775. He reached the rank of brigadier general in the South Carolina militia. After the war, he served as justice of Newberry County Court in 1785. Casey was a member of the South Carolina Senate in 1781 and 1782 and 1800–1802 and a member of the South Carolina House of Representatives 1786-1788, 1792–1795 and 1798-1799. He was elected as a Republican to the Eighth and Ninth Congresses and served from March 4, 1803, until his death, before the close of the Ninth Congress. Prior to dying, he had been reelected to the Tenth Congress. He died in Washington, D.C., February 3, 1807 and was buried in the Congressional Cemetery.