Romney law practice in
Romney Following his admission to the bar, Flournoy immediately began
practicing law in Romney and "won merited distinction" in his field. Flournoy served on the fourth Board of Regents of the
West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and Blind from 1876 to 1880. He served three terms as
mayor of Romney. The society's missions were to obtain an accurate roster of Confederate veterans and to collect and preserve materials to maintain a "truthful" history of the American Civil War. In the West Virginia state senatorial election on November 6, 1888, Flournoy defeated his
Republican challenger S. G. Pownall with 5,578 votes to Pownall's 4,028 votes. In his first term in the West Virginia Senate, Flournoy served as
chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and in his second term he served as chairman of the Committee on Counties and Municipal Corporations. The firm would later become Flournoy, Price, and Smith with the addition of Harrison Brooks Smith in 1894. On March 7, 1892, Flournoy and his partner Price were admitted to practice before the
Supreme Court of the United States. Flournoy and Price continued to expand their law practice into
Southern West Virginia when they were admitted to the bar of
Summers County in 1894. In April 1897, while practicing law in Charleston, Flournoy became qualified to practice law at the bar of
Tazewell County, Virginia. As a Charleston lawyer, Flournoy represented both plaintiffs and defendants involved in suits over coalfield land titles in Southern West Virginia and
Southwest Virginia. From 1900 to 1901, Flournoy represented the defendant Henry C. King in a widely publicized case involving claim to a land title of spanning counties in Southern West Virginia and Southwest Virginia in the
United States Circuit Court of Appeals. In 1901, Flournoy represented S. J. Ritchie of
Akron, Ohio, in the Tazewell County Court, where his client claimed a large land tract of valuable coalfields spanning Tazewell County and
McDowell County, West Virginia.
Gubernatorial candidacy In early April 1900, a movement among prominent
West Virginia Democratic Party members in Charleston began to coalesce around Flournoy in support of his candidacy for West Virginia governor. Flournoy was considered a
William Jennings Bryan Democrat with conservative positions, and Charleston Democrats felt he would receive wide support and would not antagonize corporations. In his announcement, Flournoy stated that he was unwilling to engage in a heated contest for the nomination and that he would be content with the outcome of the Democratic Party state convention, no matter the decision. He further stated that he trusted the state convention would craft a ticket that would command the support of the people of West Virginia. At the West Virginia Democratic Party State Convention held in
Parkersburg on June 6, 1900, Flournoy competed for the party's nomination for gubernatorial candidacy against Lewis N. Tavenner of Parkersburg, John H. Holt of
Huntington, and Virgil G. Lewis of
Mason City. Prior to the convention,
Daniel B. Lucas of
Jefferson County had been a candidate for nomination. Holt won the Democratic Party's nomination on the first ballot, but lost in the
general election to
Republican candidate
Albert B. White.
West Virginia Bar Association Flournoy was present at the first meeting of the West Virginia Bar Association held on the date of its organization on July 8, 1886, in
Grafton. As a member, Flournoy was appointed to draft the association's
constitution and
by-laws and served on its executive committee. In addition to serving as a vice president of the association, Flournoy also represented the 12th Judicial Circuit on the association's Committee on Judicial Administration and Legal Reform and later served on the Committee of Admissions. On January 7, 1892, Flournoy was elected as the association's vice president for
West Virginia's 3rd congressional district. == Business pursuits ==