Following the end of the Civil War, Hunter found that Abingdon plantation, which he had inherited, had been confiscated by the United States Tax Commissioners in 1864. He won his lands back after the (
Bennett v. Hunter, 76 U.S. 326) case was decided by the
Supreme Court of the United States on March 21, 1870. Hunter was employed for 40 years as a clerk in the
United States General Land Office. In 1877-1879, he served as a Delegate in the Virginia General Assembly and as County Clerk of Alexandria. In 1881, Hunter advertised Abingdon for sale. During the same year, he sold his remaining Abingdon property at auction to the Alfred Richards Brick Company. Hunter was married to Alice A. Swain by George Armstrong on June 22, 1882. Alice Swain was a student of music at the Philadelphia Academy. He married Filah Saunders after the death of his first wife in 1898. His final book,
The Women of the Debatable Land, was published in 1912. ==Death and interment==