He was born to the former Dorothy Leigh and her husband, Robert Brent, of a distinguished family in Stafford County, Virginia and who became the mayor of Washington, D.C. His uncle, Col. William Brent (1775-1848), served in Virginia's Fifth Convention during the American Revolutionary War, as well as several terms in the Virginia House of Delegates representing Stafford County, and later as secretary to President Thomas Jefferson and finally as clerk of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.[2][3] This William Brent received a private education suitable to his class, graduated from the College of William and Mary and married Mary Fenwick.
Virginia planter and politician
Stafford County voters twice elected Brent as one of their (part-time) representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates between 1810 and 1811.[4] In 1820 he owned slaves,[5] and also in 1830.[6]
^Cynthia Miller Leonard, The Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Richmond: Virginia State Library pp. 258, 262
^1820 federal census for Stafford County, Virginia p. 3 of 24 on ancestry.com which interprets "William Brent Jr." as owning 24 enslaved men and boys and 19 enslaved women but pages are damaged and would be lower if the adjacent page carryover is incorrect
^1830 federal census for Stafford County, Virginia pp. 37-38 of 66 on ancestry.com which interprets "Will Brent" as owning 15 slaves
^Shavit, David (1992). The United States in Latin America : a historical dictionary (1. publ. ed.). New York u.a.: Greenwood Press. p. 42. ISBN0313275955.
^Brent, Chester Horton. Descendants of Col. Giles Brent, Capt George Brent and Robert Brent, Gentlemen. (Rutland, VT: Tuttle Publishing Co, 1946)