John Culpepper (c. 1761 – January 1841) was a Federalist Congressional Representative from North Carolina.
Culpepper attended the public schools; became a minister and pastored Rocky River Baptist Church for fifty years;[2] Under the authority of the Third North Carolina General Assembly during the American Revolution, Montgomery County, North Carolina was formed in 1779 from a portion of Anson County.
[3] Culpepper was to later represent U.S. Congressional Districts that contained both counties.
Culpepper presented credentials as a Federalist Member-elect to the Tenth Congress and served from March 4, 1807, until January 2, 1808, when the seat was declared vacant as the result of a contest on account of alleged irregularities; subsequently reelected to fill the vacancy declared by the House of Representatives and served from February 23, 1808, to March 3, 1809.
Culpepper married and had children, including: Culpepper died at the residence of his son in Darlington County, South Carolina in January 1841; interment in the cemetery at Society Hill, South Carolina.