On March 12, 1876, Trinkle was born in
Wytheville,
Wythe County, Virginia, as the youngest son of the prominent Trinkle family. After graduating from
Hampden–Sydney College in 1895, he studied law at the
University of Virginia, where he was manager of the
Virginia Glee Club, and later opened a Wytheville law practice. Trinkle served as the chairman and an elector of the
Democratic Party in 1916. In 1919, he was a founding member of the
Lee Highway Association, to promote the establishment of a national highway named after Confederate general
Robert E. Lee.'''''' He served two terms in the
Virginia Senate before his election as
governor in 1921. Trinkle boasted of his support for woman suffrage and some newspapers credited his victory in the primary in part to the women's vote. Trinkle also acted as a delegate for
Virginia to the
Democratic National Convention in 1924 and 1928. On November 25, 1939, he died in
Richmond, Virginia, and was interred in East End Cemetery in Wytheville. Trinkle Hall (formally known as Trinkle Library) on the campus of the
University of Mary Washington and Trinkle Hall on the campus of the
College of William and Mary were both named in his honor, as he helped secure funding to construct the buildings. However, due to the historical treatment of minorities during the Jim Crow segregation era in which he served, the University of Mary Washington elected to rename the hall, as it runs against the university's ASPIRE policy of inclusion among all students. On July 24, 2020, Mary Washington renamed Trinke Hall to
James Farmer Hall, after the prominent civil rights activist and former professor at the university. At William and Mary, Trinkle Hall was renamed in September 2020 to Unity Hall. Trinkle Hall on the
Radford University campus is also named for him. ==Election==