Note: This is just one of
1,162
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.
This specific family group is a subset of the
much larger Three Thousand
Related Politicians group. An individual may be listed
with more than one subset.
These groupings — even the names of the groupings,
and the areas of main activity — are the
result of a computer algorithm working with the data I have,
not the choices of any historian or genealogist.
|
Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) —
also known as "Silence Dogood"; "Anthony
Afterwit"; "Poor Richard"; "Alice
Addertongue"; "Polly Baker"; "Harry
Meanwell"; "Timothy Turnstone";
"Martha Careful"; "Benevolus";
"Caelia Shortface" —
of Pennsylvania.
Born in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., January
17, 1706.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from Pennsylvania, 1775; U.S.
Postmaster General, 1775-76; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; delegate
to Pennsylvania state constitutional convention, 1776; U.S.
Minister to France, 1778-85; Sweden, 1782-83; President
of Pennsylvania, 1785-88; member,
U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1787.
Deist.
Member, Freemasons;
American
Philosophical Society; American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Famed for his experiments with electricity; invented
bifocal glasses and the harmonica. Elected to the Hall
of Fame for Great Americans in 1900.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., April
17, 1790 (age 84 years, 90
days).
Interment at Christ
Church Burial Ground, Philadelphia, Pa.; statue erected 1856 at
Old City Hall Grounds, Boston, Mass.; statue at La
Arcata Court, Santa Barbara, Calif.; memorial monument at Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Josiah Franklin (1657-1745) and Abiah Lee (Folger) Franklin
(1667-1752); married, September
1, 1730, to Deborah Read; father of Sarah 'Sally' Franklin
(1743-1808; who married Richard
Bache); uncle of Franklin
Davenport; grandfather of Richard
Bache Jr. and Deborah Franklin Bache (1891-1863; who married William
John Duane); great-grandfather of Alexander Dallas Bache
(1806-1867; physicist), Mary Blechenden Bache (1808-1873; who married
Robert
John Walker) and Sophia Arabella Bache (1815-1904; who married William
Wallace Irwin); second great-grandfather of Robert
Walker Irwin; fifth great-grandfather of Daniel
Baugh Brewster and Elise
du Pont; first cousin four times removed of Charles
James Folger, Benjamin
Dexter Sprague and Wharton
Barker (1846-1921); first cousin six times removed of Thomas
Mott Osborne; first cousin seven times removed of Charles
Devens Osborne and Lithgow
Osborne; second cousin five times removed of George
Hammond Parshall. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Bache-Dallas
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Cross-reference: Jonathan
Williams |
| | Franklin counties in Ala., Ark., Fla., Ga., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Kan., Ky., La., Maine, Mass., Miss., Mo., Neb., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Pa., Tenn., Vt., Va. and Wash. are
named for him. |
| | Mount
Franklin, in the White Mountains, Coos
County, New Hampshire, is named for
him. — The minor
planet 5102 Benfranklin (discovered 1986), is named for
him. |
| | Other politicians named for him: Benjamin
F. Butler
— Benjamin
F. Wade
— Benjamin
Franklin Wallace
— Benjamin
Cromwell Franklin
— Benjamin
Franklin Perry
— Benjamin
Franklin Robinson
— Benjamin
F. Randolph
— Benjamin
Franklin Massey
— Benjamin
F. Rawls
— Benjamin
Franklin Leiter
— Benjamin
Franklin Thomas
— Benjamin
F. Hall
— Benjamin
F. Angel
— Benjamin
Franklin Ross
— Benjamin
F. Flanders
— Benjamin
F. Bomar
— Benjamin
Franklin Hellen
— Benjamin
F. Mudge
— Benjamin
F. Butler
— Benjamin
F. Loan
— Benjamin
F. Simpson
— Benjamin
Franklin Terry
— Benjamin
Franklin Junkin
— Benjamin
F. Partridge
— B.
F. Langworthy
— Benjamin
F. Harding
— Benjamin
Mebane
— B.
F. Whittemore
— Benjamin
Franklin Bradley
— Benjamin
Franklin Claypool
— Benjamin
F. Coates
— B.
Franklin Martin
— Benjamin
Franklin Howey
— Benjamin
F. Martin
— Benjamin
Franklin Rice
— Benjamin
F. Randolph
— Benjamin
F. Hopkins
— Benjamin
F. Tracy
— Benjamin
Franklin Briggs
— Benjamin
F. Grady
— Benjamin
F. Farnham
— Benjamin
F. Meyers
— Benjamin
Franklin White
— Benjamin
Franklin Prescott
— Benjamin
F. Jonas
— B.
Franklin Fisher
— Benjamin
Franklin Potts
— Benjamin
F. Funk
— Benjamin
F. Marsh
— Frank
B. Arnold
— Benjamin
F. Heckert
— Benjamin
F. Bradley
— Benjamin
F. Howell
— Benjamin
Franklin Miller
— Benjamin
F. Mahan
— Ben
Franklin Caldwell
— Benjamin
Franklin Tilley
— Benjamin
F. Hackney
— B.
F. McMillan
— Benjamin
F. Shively
— B.
Frank Hires
— B.
Frank Mebane
— B.
Frank Murphy
— Benjamin
F. Starr
— Benjamin
Franklin Jones, Jr.
— Benjamin
F. Welty
— Benjamin
F. Jones
— Benjamin
Franklin Boley
— Ben
Franklin Looney
— Benjamin
F. Bledsoe
— Benjamin
Franklin Williams
— B.
Frank Kelley
— Benjamin
Franklin Butler
— Benjamin
F. James
— Frank
B. Heintzleman
— Benjamin
F. Feinberg
— B.
Franklin Bunn
— Ben
F. Cameron
— Ben
F. Blackmon
— B.
Frank Whelchel
— B.
F. Merritt, Jr.
— Ben
F. Hornsby
— Ben
Dillingham II
|
| | Coins and currency: His portrait
appears on the U.S. $100 bill, and formerly on the U.S. half
dollar coin (1948-63). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Books by Benjamin Franklin: The
Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin — An
Account of the Newly Invented Pennsylvanian Fire-Place
(1744) |
| | Books about Benjamin Franklin: H. W.
Brands, The
First American: The Life and Times of Benjamin
Franklin — Edmund S. Morgan, Benjamin
Franklin — Stacy Schiff, A
Great Improvisation : Franklin, France, and the Birth of
America — Gordon S. Wood, The
Americanization of Benjamin Franklin — Walter
Isaacson, Benjamin
Franklin : An American Life — Carl Van Doren, Benjamin
Franklin — Philip Dray, Stealing
God's Thunder : Benjamin Franklin's Lightning Rod and the Invention
of America |
| | Image source: Library of
Congress |
|
|
Benjamin Chew (1722-1810) —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in Maryland, November
29, 1722.
Lawyer;
chief
justice of Pennsylvania state supreme court, 1774-77.
Quaker;
later Anglican.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., January
20, 1810 (age 87 years, 52
days).
Interment at St.
Peter's Episcopal Churchyard, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
|
Richard Bache (1737-1811) —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in Settle, Yorkshire, England,
September
12, 1737.
Dry goods
merchant; marine insurance
business; U.S.
Postmaster General, 1776-82.
Died in Bucks
County, Pa., July 29,
1811 (age 73 years, 320
days).
Interment at Christ
Church Burial Ground, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
|
Jonathan Hoge Walker (1754-1824) —
of Pennsylvania.
Born near Hogestown, Cumberland
County, Pa., March
20, 1754.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; lawyer;
district judge in Pennsylvania, 1806-18; U.S.
District Judge for the Western District of Pennsylvania, 1818-24;
died in office 1824.
Died in Natchez, Adams
County, Miss., March
23, 1824 (age 70 years, 3
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Franklin Davenport (1755-1832) —
of Gloucester
County, N.J.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., 1755.
Member of New
Jersey state house of assembly from Gloucester County, 1786-89;
U.S.
Senator from New Jersey, 1798-99; U.S.
Representative from New Jersey 5th District, 1799-1801.
Died in Woodbury, Gloucester
County, N.J., July 27,
1832 (age about 77
years).
Interment at Presbyterian
Cemetery, North Woodbury, N.J.
|
|
Alexander James Dallas (1759-1817) —
also known as Alexander J. Dallas —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in Kingston, Jamaica,
June
21, 1759.
Lawyer;
newspaper
editor; secretary
of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1791-1801; resigned 1801; U.S.
Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 1801-14; U.S.
Secretary of the Treasury, 1814-16.
Scottish
ancestry.
Died in Trenton, Mercer
County, N.J., January
16, 1817 (age 57 years, 209
days).
Interment at St.
Peter's Episcopal Churchyard, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
|
William John Duane (1780-1865) —
Born in Clonmel, County Tipperary, Ireland,
May
9, 1780.
Lawyer;
member of Pennsylvania
state house of representatives, 1809, 1812-14; U.S.
Secretary of the Treasury, 1833.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., September
27, 1865 (age 85 years, 141
days).
Interment at Laurel
Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
|
Theophilus Washington Smith (1784-1845) —
also known as Theophilus W. Smith —
of Edwardsville, Madison
County, Ill.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., September
28, 1784.
Studied law in the office of Aaron
Burr; lawyer; newspaper
editor; candidate for Illinois
state attorney general, 1820; member of Illinois
state senate, 1823-26; advocated the legalization of slavery in
Illinois; justice of
Illinois state supreme court, 1825-42; impeached
by the Illinois Legislature in 1833, on charges
of oppressive
conduct and corruption;
the Senate acquitted him on a vote of 12-10 (two-thirds required).
Died in Chicago, Cook
County, Ill., May 6,
1845 (age 60 years, 220
days).
Original interment in unknown location; reinterment at Rosehill
Cemetery, Chicago, Ill.
|
|
Richard Bache Jr. (1784-1848) —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.; Galveston, Galveston
County, Tex.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., March
11, 1784.
Served in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; postmaster at Philadelphia,
Pa., 1815-28; served in the Texas Navy during the Texas War of
Independence; member of Texas
state senate 11th District, 1846-48.
Member, Freemasons.
Died in Austin, Travis
County, Tex., March
14, 1848 (age 64 years, 3
days).
Interment at Oakwood
Cemetery, Austin, Tex.
|
|
George Howard (1789-1846) —
of near Woodstock, Howard
County, Md.
Born in Annapolis, Anne
Arundel County, Md., November
21, 1789.
Whig. Governor of
Maryland, 1831-33; Presidential Elector for Maryland, 1836,
1840;
delegate to Whig National Convention from Maryland, 1839 (Convention
Vice-President).
Episcopalian.
Died near Woodstock, Howard
County, Md., August
2, 1846 (age 56 years, 254
days).
Entombed at Old
St. Paul's Cemetery, Baltimore, Md.
|
|
Benjamin Chew Howard (1791-1872) —
also known as Benjamin C. Howard —
of Baltimore,
Md.
Born in Baltimore,
Md., November
5, 1791.
Democrat. General in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; member of
Maryland
state house of delegates, 1824-25; U.S.
Representative from Maryland, 1829-33, 1835-39 (5th District
1829-31, 6th District 1831-33, 4th District 1835-39); member of Maryland
state senate, 1840-41; delegate
to Maryland state constitutional convention, 1850.
Episcopalian.
Slaveowner.
Died in Baltimore,
Md., March 6,
1872 (age 80 years, 122
days).
Interment at Green
Mount Cemetery, Baltimore, Md.
|
|
George Mifflin Dallas (1792-1864) —
also known as George M. Dallas —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., July 10,
1792.
Democrat. Lawyer; mayor
of Philadelphia, Pa., 1828-29; U.S.
Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 1829-31; U.S.
Senator from Pennsylvania, 1831-33; Pennsylvania
state attorney general, 1833-35; U.S. Minister to Russia, 1837-39; Great Britain, 1856-61; Vice
President of the United States, 1845-49.
Scottish
ancestry. Member, Freemasons.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., December
31, 1864 (age 72 years, 174
days).
Interment at St.
Peter's Episcopal Churchyard, Philadelphia, Pa.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Alexander
James Dallas and Arabella Maria (Smith) Dallas; brother of Sophia
Burrell Dallas (1784-1860; who married Richard
Bache Jr.); married, May 23,
1816, to Sophia
Chew Nicklin (granddaughter of Benjamin
Chew); uncle of Alexander Dallas Bache (1806-1867; physicist),
Mary Blechenden Bache (1808-1873; who married Robert
John Walker), Sophia Arabella Bache (1815-1904; who married William
Wallace Irwin) and George
Mifflin Dallas (1839-1917); granduncle of Robert
Walker Irwin; second great-granduncle of Claiborne
de Borda Pell; third great-granduncle of Daniel
Baugh Brewster. |
| | Political families: Bache-Dallas
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Claiborne-Dallas
family of Virginia and Louisiana (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Dallas counties in Ark., Iowa, Mo. and Tex. are
named for him. |
| | The city
of Dallas,
Texas, is named for
him. |
| | Politician named for him: George
M. Condon
|
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Books about George Mifflin Dallas: John
M. Belohlavek, George
Mifflin Dallas : Jacksonian Patrician |
|
|
Sophia Dallas (1798-1869) —
also known as Sophia Chew Nicklin —
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., June 25,
1798.
Second
Lady of the United States, 1845-49.
Female.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., January
11, 1869 (age 70 years, 200
days).
Interment at St.
Peter's Episcopal Churchyard, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
|
Robert John Walker (1801-1869) —
also known as Robert J. Walker —
of Madisonville, Madison
County, Miss.; Washington,
D.C.
Born in Northumberland, Northumberland
County, Pa., July 19,
1801.
Democrat. Lawyer; U.S.
Senator from Mississippi, 1835-45; resigned 1845; U.S.
Secretary of the Treasury, 1845-49; Governor
of Kansas Territory, 1857; newspaper
publisher.
Slaveowner.
Died in Washington,
D.C., November
11, 1869 (age 68 years, 115
days).
Interment at Oak
Hill Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
|
|
William Wallace Irwin (1803-1856) —
also known as William W. Irwin —
of Pittsburgh, Allegheny
County, Pa.
Born in Pittsburgh, Allegheny
County, Pa., 1803.
Lawyer;
mayor
of Pittsburgh, Pa., 1840-41; U.S.
Representative from Pennsylvania 22nd District, 1841-43; U.S.
Charge d'Affaires to Denmark, 1843-47.
Scotch-Irish
ancestry.
Died in Pittsburgh, Allegheny
County, Pa., September
15, 1856 (age about 53
years).
Interment at Allegheny
Cemetery, Pittsburgh, Pa.
|
|
John Cadwalader (1805-1879) —
of Pennsylvania.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., April 1,
1805.
Democrat. Lawyer; U.S.
Representative from Pennsylvania 5th District, 1855-57; U.S.
District Judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 1858-79;
died in office 1879.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., January
26, 1879 (age 73 years, 300
days).
Interment at Christ
Church Burial Ground, Philadelphia, Pa.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Thomas Cadwalader (1779-1841) and Mary (Biddle) Cadwalader
(1781-1850); married, October
18, 1828, to Mary Binney (1805-1831); married, December
10, 1833, to Henrietta Maria Bancker (1806-1889); father of John
Cadwalader; grandnephew of Lambert
Cadwalader; first cousin of Thomas
Biddle; first cousin twice removed of Benjamin
Chew (1722-1810), Edward
Biddle, Charles
Biddle and Francis
Beverley Biddle; second cousin of Charles
Bingham Penrose and Alfred
Wells; second cousin once removed of James
Biddle, John
Biddle (1792-1859) and Richard
Biddle; second cousin twice removed of Boies
Penrose and Spencer
Penrose; third cousin of George
Howard, Benjamin
Chew Howard, Sophia
Dallas, Edward
MacFunn Biddle, James
Stokes Biddle and Charles
John Biddle; third cousin once removed of John
Lee Carroll and John
Biddle (1859-1936); third cousin twice removed of Edward
MacFunn Biddle Jr. and John
Howell Carroll; third cousin thrice removed of Anthony
Joseph Drexel Biddle Jr.. |
| | Political families: Lee-Randolph
family; Ballard-Gadsden-Randolph
family of West Virginia; Pendleton-Lee
family of Maryland; Shippen-Middleton
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Bache-Dallas
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Biddle-Randolph
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Carroll
family of Maryland (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — federal
judicial profile — Wikipedia
article — Ballotpedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Edward Tilghman Paca (1812-1852) —
also known as Edward T. Paca —
of Queen
Anne's County, Md.
Born October
18, 1812.
Member of Maryland
state house of delegates from Queen Anne's County, 1840-41.
Died May 23,
1852 (age 39 years, 218
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Benjamin Harris Brewster (1816-1888) —
of Pennsylvania.
Born in Salem
County, N.J., October
13, 1816.
Republican. Lawyer; Pennsylvania
state attorney general, 1867-69; resigned 1869; Presidential
Elector for Pennsylvania, 1876;
Presidential Elector for Pennsylvania, 1876;
U.S.
Attorney General, 1882-85.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., April 4,
1888 (age 71 years, 174
days).
Interment at Woodlands
Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
|
Charles James Folger (1818-1884) —
also known as Charles J. Folger —
of Geneva, Ontario
County, N.Y.
Born in Nantucket, Nantucket
County, Mass., April
16, 1818.
Republican. Lawyer;
common pleas court judge in New York, 1844; county judge in New York,
1851-55; member of New York
state senate 26th District, 1862-69; delegate
to New York state constitutional convention, 1867; judge of
New York Court of Appeals, 1870-80; chief
judge of New York Court of Appeals, 1880-81; U.S.
Secretary of the Treasury, 1881-84; died in office 1884;
candidate for Governor of
New York, 1882.
Died in Geneva, Ontario
County, N.Y., September
4, 1884 (age 66 years, 141
days).
Interment at Glenwood
Cemetery, Geneva, N.Y.
|
|
Edward Shippen (1823-1904) —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in Lancaster
County, Pa., November
16, 1823.
Lawyer;
Consul
for Argentina in Philadelphia,
Pa., 1872-88, 1892-95; Consul
for Chile in Philadelphia,
Pa., 1872-98; Consul
for Ecuador in Philadelphia,
Pa., 1873-97.
Member, Sons of
the Revolution; Society
of Colonial Wars.
Died, from pneumonia,
in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., March
14, 1904 (age 80 years, 119
days).
Interment at Laurel
Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pa.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Dr. Joseph Galloway Shippen (1783-1857) and Anna Maria (Buckley)
Shippen (1790-1865); married, June 29,
1849, to Augusta Chauncey Twiggs (1825-1909); grandnephew of Edward
Shippen (1729-1806); great-grandson of Edward
Shippen (1703-1781); great-grandnephew of William
Shippen; third great-grandson of Edward
Shippen (1639-1712); first cousin once removed of Bertha
Shippen Irving; first cousin twice removed of Benjamin
Chew (1722-1810) and Thomas
Willing; second cousin once removed of Charles
Willing Byrd; third cousin of George
Howard, John
Brown Francis, Benjamin
Chew Howard and Sophia
Dallas; third cousin once removed of John
Lee Carroll and Edward
Overton Jr.; third cousin twice removed of James
Rieman Macfarlane, John
Howell Carroll and Francis
Fisher Kane. |
| | Political families: Lee-Randolph
family; Ballard-Gadsden-Randolph
family of West Virginia; Pendleton-Lee
family of Maryland; Shippen-Middleton
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Bache-Dallas
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Biddle-Randolph
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Carroll
family of Maryland (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Image source: Philadelphia Times,
December 20, 1891 |
|
|
Benjamin Dexter Sprague (1827-1893) —
also known as Benjamin D. Sprague —
of Lansing, Mower
County, Minn.; Rushford, Fillmore
County, Minn.
Born in Bedford, Hillsborough
County, N.H., December
6, 1827.
Farmer;
miller;
member of Minnesota
state house of representatives District 15, 1863; member of Minnesota
state senate, 1864-65, 1870 (15th District 1864-65, 14th District
1870).
Died in Minneapolis, Hennepin
County, Minn., July 26,
1893 (age 65 years, 232
days).
Interment at Lakewood
Cemetery, Minneapolis, Minn.
|
|
John Lee Carroll (1830-1911) —
of Maryland.
Born in Baltimore,
Md., September
30, 1830.
Democrat. Member of Maryland
state senate, 1868-74; Governor of
Maryland, 1876-80; delegate to Democratic National Convention
from Maryland, 1880,
1884.
Catholic.
Died in Washington,
D.C., February
27, 1911 (age 80 years, 150
days).
Interment at New
Cathedral Cemetery, Baltimore, Md.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Mary Digges (Lee) Carroll (1800-1859) and Charles Carroll
(1801-1862); brother of Helen Sophia Carroll (1841-1886; who married
Charles
Oliver O'Donnell); married to Anita Phelps (1837-1873);
grandnephew of John
Lee; great-grandson of Benjamin
Chew, Charles
Carroll of Carrollton and Thomas
Sim Lee; first cousin once removed of George
Howard, Benjamin
Chew Howard, Sophia
Dallas and John
Howell Carroll; first cousin thrice removed of Daniel
Carroll; first cousin four times removed of Richard
Henry Lee, Francis
Lightfoot Lee and Arthur
Lee; second cousin twice removed of Outerbridge
Horsey; second cousin thrice removed of Charles
Carroll, Barrister, Alexander
Contee Hanson, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee and Alexander
Contee Magruder; third cousin once removed of John
Cadwalader (1805-1879) and Edward
Shippen; third cousin twice removed of John
Duffy Alderson (1896-1975); third cousin thrice removed of Zachary
Taylor; fourth cousin of John
Cadwalader (1843-1925) and Bertha
Shippen Irving; fourth cousin once removed of John
Read Magruder, Fitzhugh
Lee and Francis
Preston Blair Lee. |
| | Political families: Lee-Randolph
family; Carroll
family of Maryland; Eisenhower-Nixon
family (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article |
|
|
George Mifflin Dallas (1839-1917) —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in Pittsburgh, Allegheny
County, Pa., February
7, 1839.
Lawyer;
law
professor; Judge
of U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit, 1892-1909.
Scottish
ancestry.
Died January
21, 1917 (age 77 years, 349
days).
Interment at St.
James the Less Church Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
|
George Hammond Parshall (b. 1843) —
also known as George H. Parshall —
of Brooklyn, Kings
County, N.Y.
Born in Jamaica, Queens, Queens
County, N.Y., April
23, 1843.
Republican. Physician;
member of New York
state assembly from Kings County 7th District, 1897; candidate
for New York
state senate 5th District, 1900.
Member, Sons of
the American Revolution; Freemasons.
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
John Cadwalader (1843-1925) —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., June 27,
1843.
Democrat. Lawyer;
delegate to Democratic National Convention from Pennsylvania, 1888,
1904.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., March
11, 1925 (age 81 years, 257
days).
Interment at St.
Peter's Episcopal Churchyard, Philadelphia, Pa.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John
Cadwalader and Henrietta Maria (Bancker) Cadwalader (1806-1889);
married to Mary Helen Fisher (1844-1937); great-grandnephew of Lambert
Cadwalader; first cousin once removed of Thomas
Biddle; first cousin thrice removed of Benjamin
Chew (1722-1810), Edward
Biddle and Charles
Biddle; second cousin once removed of Charles
Bingham Penrose, Alfred
Wells and Francis
Beverley Biddle; second cousin twice removed of James
Biddle, John
Biddle (1792-1859) and Richard
Biddle; third cousin once removed of George
Howard, Benjamin
Chew Howard, Sophia
Dallas, Edward
MacFunn Biddle, James
Stokes Biddle, Charles
John Biddle, Boies
Penrose and Spencer
Penrose; fourth cousin of John
Lee Carroll and John
Biddle (1859-1936); fourth cousin once removed of Edward
MacFunn Biddle Jr. and John
Howell Carroll. |
| | Political families: Lee-Randolph
family; Ballard-Gadsden-Randolph
family of West Virginia; Pendleton-Lee
family of Maryland; Shippen-Middleton
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Bache-Dallas
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Biddle-Randolph
family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Carroll
family of Maryland (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Robert Walker Irwin (1844-1925) —
Born in Copenhagen, Denmark,
of American parents, January
4, 1844.
Kingdom of Hawaii Consul-General (1880) and Minister (1881) to Japan;
negotiated an immigration treaty which enabled many Japanese to move
to Hawaii.
Died January
5, 1925 (age 81 years, 1
days).
Burial
location unknown.
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Wharton Barker (1846-1921) —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., May 1,
1846.
Served in the Union Army during the Civil War; financier;
People's candidate for President
of the United States, 1900.
Member, American
Philosophical Society.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., April 9,
1921 (age 74 years, 343
days).
Interment at Laurel
Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pa.
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Alfred Clark Chapin (1848-1936) —
also known as Alfred C. Chapin —
of Brooklyn, Kings
County, N.Y.; Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in South Hadley, Hampshire
County, Mass., March 8,
1848.
Democrat. Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from Kings County 11th District, 1882-83; Speaker of
the New York State Assembly, 1883; New York
state comptroller, 1884-87; mayor
of Brooklyn, N.Y., 1888-91; delegate to Democratic National
Convention from New York, 1888
(member, Committee
on Permanent Organization); U.S.
Representative from New York 2nd District, 1891-92.
Member, Alpha
Delta Phi.
Died in Montreal, Quebec,
October
2, 1936 (age 88 years, 208
days).
Interment at Woodlawn
Cemetery, Bronx, N.Y.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Ephraim Atlas Chapin (1819-1868) and Josephine Jerusha (Clark)
Chapin (1822-1888); married, February
20, 1884, to Grace Stebbins (c.1863-1908); married, January
6, 1913, to Charlotte (Storrs) Montant; father of Grace Chapin
(who married Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991)); grandfather of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); grandnephew of Chester
William Chapin; great-grandfather of Hamilton
Fish and Alexa
Fish Ward; second cousin four times removed of Daniel
Chapin (1761-1821); third cousin of Arthur
Beebe Chapin; third cousin twice removed of John
Strong, Elijah
Hunt Mills, John
Putnam Chapin (1810-1864) and Milton
Prince Higgins; third cousin thrice removed of Samuel
Clesson Allen, Daniel
Chapin (1791-1878) and Graham
Hurd Chapin; fourth cousin of Zenas
Ferry Moody; fourth cousin once removed of Samuel
Strong, Joseph
Churchill Strong, Ebenezer
Strong, James
Samuel Wadsworth, Charles
James Folger, Jacob
Sloat Fassett, Arthur
Platt Howard and Edward
Stanley Kellogg. |
| | Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
|
|
Thomas Mott Osborne (1859-1926) —
also known as Thomas M. Osborne; "Tom
Brown" —
of Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y.
Born in Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y., September
23, 1859.
Delegate to Democratic National Convention from New York, 1896,
1924;
Independent candidate for Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1898; mayor of
Auburn, N.Y., 1903-05.
Son of the founder of International Harvester; prison reformer; New
York State Public Service Commissioner; New York State Fish and Game
Commissioner, 1911; warden of Sing Sing Prison, Ossining, N.Y.,
1914-16; indicted
by a grand jury in 1915 for alleged perjury
and neglect
of duty; tried,
but the charges were dismissed; commander of naval prison,
Portsmouth, N.H., 1917-20.
Died in Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y., October
20, 1926 (age 67 years, 27
days).
Interment at Fort
Hill Cemetery, Auburn, N.Y.
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|
John Howell Carroll (1865-1903) —
also known as J. Howell Carroll —
of Maryland.
Born in Maryland, September
21, 1865.
U.S. Consul in Cadiz, 1897-1902.
Died, of consumption,
in Mentone (Menton), France,
February
7, 1903 (age 37 years, 139
days).
Interment at Green
Mount Cemetery, Baltimore, Md.
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George Benjamin Starbuck (1866-1931) —
also known as George B. Starbuck —
of Utica, Oneida
County, N.Y.
Born in Troy, Rensselaer
County, N.Y., August
24, 1866.
Bookkeeper;
U.S. Vice Consul in Cienfuegos, 1915-29.
Died in Cienfuegos, Cuba,
August
5, 1931 (age 64 years, 346
days).
Interment at Tomas Acea Cemetery, Cienfuegos, Cuba.
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|
Bertha Shippen Irving (1876-1945) —
also known as Bertha Violet Shippen —
of Haddonfield, Camden
County, N.J.
Born in St.
Louis, Mo., October
18, 1876.
Democrat. Alternate delegate to Democratic National Convention from
New Jersey, 1924;
postmaster at Haddonfield,
N.J., 1933-45 (acting, 1933-35).
Female.
Died, from a heart
attack, in Haddonfield, Camden
County, N.J., March
26, 1945 (age 68 years, 159
days).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Charles Devens Osborne (1888-1961) —
also known as Charles D. Osborne —
of Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y.
Born in Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y., November
22, 1888.
Democrat. Newspaper
publisher; mayor of
Auburn, N.Y., 1928-31, 1936-39; member of New York
Democratic State Committee, 1934-48; candidate for U.S.
Representative from New York 36th District, 1942.
Died in Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y., June 1,
1961 (age 72 years, 191
days).
Interment at Fort
Hill Cemetery, Auburn, N.Y.
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William Christian Bullitt (1891-1967) —
also known as William C. Bullitt —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., January
25, 1891.
Democrat. Newspaper
correspondent; U.S. Ambassador to Soviet Union, 1933-36; France, 1936-40; candidate for mayor
of Philadelphia, Pa., 1943.
Member, Phi
Beta Kappa.
Co-author,
with Sigmund Freud, of a psychological study of Woodrow
Wilson.
Died, of leukemia,
in Neuilly, France,
February
15, 1967 (age 76 years, 21
days).
Interment at Woodlands
Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pa.
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|
Lithgow Osborne (1892-1980) —
of Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y.
Born in Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y., April 2,
1892.
Democrat. Private secretary to U.S. Ambassador James
W. Gerard, 1915; newspaper
editor; candidate for New York
state assembly from Cayuga County, 1923; candidate for New York
state senate 42nd District, 1924; delegate to Democratic National
Convention from New York, 1928;
candidate for U.S.
Representative from New York 36th District, 1932; New York State
Conservation Commissioner, 1933; delegate
to New York state constitutional convention at-large, 1938; U.S.
Ambassador to Norway, 1944-46.
Member, Audubon
Society; Council on
Foreign Relations.
Died in Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y., March
10, 1980 (age 87 years, 343
days).
Interment at Fort
Hill Cemetery, Auburn, N.Y.
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|
Francis White (1892-1961) —
of Baltimore,
Md.
Born in Baltimore,
Md., March 4,
1892.
U.S. Minister to Czechoslovakia, 1933; U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, 1953-57; Sweden, 1957-58.
Episcopalian.
Died, from a heart
ailment, in Baltimore,
Md., February
23, 1961 (age 68 years, 356
days).
Interment at Green
Mount Cemetery, Baltimore, Md.
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|
Philip Wilson Bonsal (1903-1995) —
also known as Philip W. Bonsal —
of Washington,
D.C.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., May 22,
1903.
Executive in overseas telephone
companies; Foreign Service officer; U.S. Vice Consul in Havana, 1938; U.S. Consul in Madrid, as of 1947; Barcelona, as of 1947; U.S. Ambassador to Colombia, 1955-57; Bolivia, 1957-59; Cuba, 1959-60; Morocco, 1961-62.
Died, while ill with pneumonia,
in Washington,
D.C., June 28,
1995 (age 92 years, 37
days).
Interment at Oak
Hill Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
|
|
Claiborne de Borda Pell (1918-2009) —
also known as Claiborne Pell; "Senator
Oddball" —
of Newport, Newport
County, R.I.
Born in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., November
22, 1918.
Democrat. Served in the U.S. Coast Guard during World War II; U.S.
Senator from Rhode Island, 1961-97; delegate to Democratic
National Convention from Rhode Island, 1964,
1988,
1996.
Episcopalian.
Member, Society
of the Cincinnati; Council on
Foreign Relations.
Died, from Parkinson's
disease, in Newport, Newport
County, R.I., January
1, 2009 (age 90 years, 40
days).
Interment at Berkeley Memorial Cemetery, Middletown, R.I.
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Daniel Baugh Brewster (1923-2007) —
also known as Daniel B. Brewster —
of Glyndon, Baltimore
County, Md.
Born in Baltimore
County, Md., November
23, 1923.
Democrat. Served in the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II; member
of Maryland
state house of delegates, 1951-58; U.S.
Representative from Maryland 2nd District, 1959-63; U.S.
Senator from Maryland, 1963-69; defeated, 1968; candidate for
Democratic nomination for President, 1964;
delegate to Democratic National Convention from Maryland, 1964;
speaker, 1968.
Episcopalian.
Member, American Bar
Association.
Indicted
in 1969 on charges
of accepting
an illegal gratuity; after trial,
conviction,
and reversal, pleaded no
contest, 1975.
Died, of liver
cancer, in Owings Mills, Baltimore
County, Md., August
19, 2007 (age 83 years, 269
days).
Interment at St.
Thomas Episcopal Church Cemetery, Owings Mills, Md.
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Elise du Pont (b. 1935) —
also known as Elise Ravenel Wood —
of Rockland, New Castle
County, Del.
Born December
27, 1935.
Republican. Lawyer;
Assistant Administrator, U.S. Agency for International Development,
1983; candidate for U.S.
Representative from Delaware at-large, 1984.
Female.
Still living as of 1984.
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