Nisbet was born near
Union Point, Georgia. He attended the Powellton Academy in
Hancock County, Georgia from 1815 to 1817, the
University of South Carolina in
Columbia from 1817 to 1819, and graduated from the
University of Georgia in
Athens with a Bachelor of Arts in 1821. Nisbet then attended the
Litchfield Law School in
Connecticut. After receiving admission in 1824 to the state bar by a special act of the
Georgia General Assembly as he was not yet twenty-one, Nisbet began the practice of law in
Madison, Georgia. Nisbet was elected to the
Georgia House of Representatives in 1827 and served until 1830 when he was elected to the
Georgia Senate. He served in the state senate until 1837. Nisbet unsuccessfully ran for the
U.S. House of Representatives in 1836; however, he was elected to that body in 1838 and again in 1840. Nisbet resigned from the U.S. House in 1841, due to "the condition of his private affairs and a growing distaste for political life." Nisbet was later elected as one of the three initial justices of the
Supreme Court of Georgia in 1845, and he served as an associate justice on that court until 1853. In 1861, Nisbet was a delegate to the
Georgia Secession Convention and signed the
Ordinance of Secession. He also ran an unsuccessful campaign to become
Governor of Georgia in that same year. Nisbet served as a trustee of UGA from 1864 until his death in 1871 in
Macon, Georgia. He was buried in that city's
Rose Hill Cemetery. ==See also==