Huntsman carried the legal skills he learned from Williams with him westward to
Overton County, Tennessee and later
Madison County, Tennessee, where he became a highly regarded
criminal lawyer. Huntsman served in the Tennessee state senate from 1815 to 1821 and from 1827 to 1831. A proponent of revision to the state constitution, he was elected a delegate for
Madison County, Tennessee, at the constitutional convention held in
Nashville, Tennessee, in 1834. He defeated
David Crockett for the Twelfth Congressional seat in 1835, a loss that led to Crockett's journey to
Texas and his death at the
Alamo. Huntsman served one term as a
Jacksonian Democrat to the
Twenty-fourth Congress. A leader of the Democratic Party in West
Tennessee in the 1830s and 1840s, he corresponded with notable politicians of his day such as
Andrew Jackson,
James K. Polk,
James Buchanan, and
John C. Calhoun. His term lasted from March 4, 1835, to March 4, 1837. He ran unsuccessfully for re-election to the
Twenty-fifth Congress, losing to
John Wesley Crockett, his predecessor's son. ==Legacy==