T. Spicer Curlett

Thomas Spicer Curlett (1847 – May 7, 1914) was a Republican farmer, postmaster and state legislator in Lancaster County, Virginia, during Reconstruction.

[3] On November 4, 1868, he married Susie Spicer (1849-1933) of Lancaster County, who would survive him, as would their son John (1870-1944), who would also serve in the Virginia House of Delegates beginning in 1906 and also act as an oyster inspector.

During the American Civil War, Spicer was a private in Company B of the Maryland Volunteers Eastern Shore Infantry.

[9] Henry Straughan Hathaway who owned Enon Hall wrote to him denouncing his political affiliation with blacks.

[10] Curlett may have returned to Baltimore by 1894 and worked as a salesman,[11] though his wife and son remained in Lancaster County, Virginia.