Broome family of Florida
Note: This is just one of 643 family
groupings listed on The
Political Graveyard web site. These families each have three or
more politician members, all linked together by blood, marriage or
adoption.
Some families traditionally (and perhaps properly) considered
separately are joined together here if linked by marriage or
otherwise. These groupings — even the names of the
groupings, and the state or lists of states of main activity —
are the result of a computer algorithm, not the choices of any
historian or genealogist.
- James Emilius Broome (1808-1883) — also known as
James E. Broome; "The Veto Governor" —
of Tallahassee, Leon
County, Fla.; Fernandina (now part of Fernandina Beach), Nassau
County, Fla.; New York, New York
County, N.Y. Born in Hamburg, Aiken
County, S.C., December
15, 1808. Son of John Broome and Jeanette (Witherspoon) Broome;
father of John
Dozier Broome and James
E. Broome. Democrat. Merchant;
planter;
lawyer;
probate judge in Florida, 1843-48; Governor of
Florida, 1853-57; member of Florida
state senate, 1861. Died in DeLand, Volusia
County, Fla., November
23, 1883. Original interment at Oakdale
Cemetery, DeLand, Fla.; reinterment in 1897 somewhere
in Quincy, Fla.
- John Dozier Broome (d. 1898) — also known as John
D. Broome — of DeLand, Volusia
County, Fla.; Orlando, Orange
County, Fla. Son of James
Emilius Broome; brother of James
E. Broome. Lawyer; delegate to
Florida state constitutional convention, 1885; circuit judge in
Florida, 1887-98; died in office 1898. Died, apparently due to a stroke and
Bright's
disease, in Sewanee, Franklin
County, Tenn., November
4, 1898. Burial
location unknown.
- James E. Broome — of Quincy, Gadsden
County, Fla. Son of James
Emilius Broome; brother of John
Dozier Broome. Member of Florida
state senate, 1897. Burial
location unknown.
"Enjoy the hospitable entertainment of a political
graveyard."
Henry L. Clinton, Apollo Hall, New York City, February
3, 1872 |
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