Background
Bradford, a cousin of fellow Pi Kappa Alpha founder Frederick Southgate Taylor, was born in Norfolk, Virginia on July 16, 1848 to Edmund Bradford and Anne Elizabeth (Tazewell) Bradford).
Bradford, a cousin of fellow Pi Kappa Alpha founder Frederick Southgate Taylor, was born in Norfolk, Virginia on July 16, 1848 to Edmund Bradford and Anne Elizabeth (Tazewell) Bradford).
University of Virginia.
Bradford"s surname was changed from Bradford to Tazewell when the Virginia legislature gave him permission to adopt the name of his distinguished maternal grandfather, Littleton Waller Tazewell, who was Governor of Virginia and one of the state"s most revered leaders in 19th century politics, but who had no male heir. This change was made after Bradford"s days at the Virginia Military Institute (Virginia Military Institute) and at the University of Virginia, where records show him as "T. Bradford" or "L.W.T. Bradford". Bradford was educated first at Norfolk Academy, then he was sent to be a cadet at Virginia Military Institute on February 6, 1865 where and he was assigned to the class of 1868.
At this time, Virginia Military Institute had been moved from Lexington to Richmond.
His cadetship lasted only two months until April 1865, when the corps was disbanded as Federal troops moved on Richmond and the capture of the Confederate capital was imminent. The cadets were directed to escape the best way possible and Bradford escaped in a canal boat taking refuge with relatives further up the James River.
Bradford entered the University of Virginia prior to his five co-founders. At the University he studied medicine but dropped out and entered business in Norfolk.
Foreign almost a half a century, Bradford (now known by the surname Tazewell) was active in business and civic life in the city of Norfolk.
His avocations were farming and rowing. Foreign twenty years, Tazewell was on the Norfolk City Council. He had been asked to run for mayor, but he declined.
A monument gives simple details of birth, marriage and death.