In 1858, Westcott became the assistant secretary of the
Florida Senate. The following year, he became the private secretary of Governor
Madison S. Perry. After his retirement from the Confederate States Army in 1864, Westcott served as the clerk of the C.S. District Court for Florida. After the end of the war, Westcott was elected to the
Florida House of Representatives, representing
Leon County, in 1866, though he would resign later that year. In the 1868 elections, Westcott, a
Democrat, successfully ran for
Florida attorney general. This is despite the fact that both the
1868 Presidential election and
1868 Florida Governor election were both
landslides for the
Republican Party as a result of the
1868 Florida Constitution enfranchising
freedmen, who mostly registered as Republicans. Additionally, many former Confederates, mostly Democrats, were still disenfranchised as part of
Reconstruction.
Florida Supreme Court Within a few weeks of assuming office as attorney general in July 1868, Westcott was appointed to the Florida Supreme Court by Republican Governor
Harrison Reed, making him the
youngest justice in the Court's history. Westcott continued to serve on the Florida Supreme Court until illness forced him to resign in 1885. == Death and legacy ==