From 1897 through 1898, Barbour served as mayor of Culpeper.[2] Barbour was elected on May 23, 1901, to represent Culpeper County at the Constitutional Convention in Richmond, Virginia.[3] At the convention on May 29, 1902, Barbour voted to proclaim the new constitution in effect without submitting it to the voters for ratification.[2]
Barbour relocated to Fairfax County, Virginia in 1907 where he began a law firm with R. Walton Moore (former Assistant Secretary of State) and Thomas R. Keith, which had become Barbour, Garnett, Pickett & Keith by the time of his death. The firm's clients included the Potomac Electric Power Company and the Washington Railway & Electric Co. Barbour also tended a dairy herd at his Fairfax County estate and founded the Maryland and Virginia Milk Producers Association.[2] From 1932 through 1949, Barbour was a member of the board of the Virginia State Library.[2]
While residing in Fairfax, Virginia, Barbour built a home which he called "the Oaks" but which is now called the "Barbour House".[4]
Death
One of the last surviving members of the 1902 Virginia Constitutional Convention, Barbour died after a long illness at Doctors Hospital in Washington, D.C., on May 6, 1952.
References
^"ohn S. Barbour, 85" Washington Evening Star Obituary May 6, 1952
^Cynthia Miller Leonard, The General Assembly of Virginia 1619–1978 (Richmond, Virginia State Library 1978) p.
^William Page Johnson, II (Spring 2004). "The Unfinished Manassas Gap Railroad"(PDF). Historic Fairfax City, Inc.: The Historical Society of Fairfax City, Virginia. Archived from the original(PDF) on February 9, 2012. Retrieved April 5, 2009.