Frederick William Thomas, American journalist, author member Columbia South Carolinian.
Background
He was the son of Ebenezer Smith Thomas, a journalist who was a nephew of printer Isaiah Thomas. In 1830 he moved to Cincinnati and assisted his father in editing the Advertiser, in which appeared his song “"Tis said that absence conquers love.” He became an associate editor of the Democratic Intelligencer in 1834, and of the Evening Post in 1835.
Education
He was educated in Baltimore, Maryland, where he studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1828.
Career
From 1841 until 1850, he was a clerk in the United States Department of the Treasury in Washington, District of Columbia, for which he selected a library. Subsequently he was professor of rhetoric and English literature in the University of Alabama, and in 1858 resumed the practice of law in Cambridge, Maryland. In 1860 he took charge of the literary department of the Richmond Enquirer, and afterward became editorially connected with the South Carolinian of Columbia.
He traveled extensively through the southern states, was a successful lecturer, and occasionally took part in politics.
Membership
Member Columbia South Carolinian.