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.
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John Hart (c.1713-1779) —
also known as "Honest John" —
of Hopewell, Hunterdon County (now Mercer
County), N.J.
Born about 1713.
Hunterdon
County Judge, 1768-75; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New Jersey, 1776; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; member of New
Jersey state house of assembly from Hunterdon County, 1776-78; Speaker of
the New Jersey State House of Assembly, 1776-78.
Died, from kidney
failure, in Hopewell, Hunterdon County (now Mercer
County), N.J., May 11,
1779 (age about 66
years).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Mercer County, N.J.; reinterment in
1865 at First
Baptist Church Cemetery, Hopewell, N.J.; memorial monument at Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
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Samuel Laning (1765-c.1842) —
of Camden, Camden
County, N.J.
Born in Moorestown, Burlington
County, N.J., 1765.
Builder;
livery
business; mayor of
Camden, N.J., 1828-30; resigned 1830.
Died about 1842 (age about 77
years).
Burial
location unknown.
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John Lanning (1780-1850) —
of Bridgeton, Cumberland
County, N.J.
Born in Burlington
County, N.J., October
16, 1780.
Member of New
Jersey state house of assembly from Cumberland County, 1831-32.
Died in Bridge Point, Somerset
County, N.J., December
12, 1850 (age 70 years, 57
days).
Burial
location unknown.
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Hanford Nichols Lockwood (1788-1875) —
also known as Hanford N. Lockwood —
of Troy, Rensselaer
County, N.Y.
Born in Brookfield, Fairfield
County, Conn., April
17, 1788.
Mayor
of Troy, N.Y., 1850-51.
Died in Troy, Rensselaer
County, N.Y., April
27, 1875 (age 87 years, 10
days).
Burial
location unknown.
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John Adams Dix (1798-1879) —
also known as John A. Dix —
of Cooperstown, Otsego
County, N.Y.; Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.; New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Boscawen, Merrimack
County, N.H., July 24,
1798.
Democrat. Secretary
of state of New York, 1833-39; member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1842; U.S.
Senator from New York, 1845-49; postmaster at New
York City, N.Y., 1860-61; U.S.
Secretary of the Treasury, 1861; general in the Union Army during
the Civil War; U.S. Minister to France, 1866-69; Governor of
New York, 1873-75; defeated, 1848, 1874; candidate for mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1876.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., April
21, 1879 (age 80 years, 271
days).
Interment at Trinity
Cemetery, Manhattan, N.Y.
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Presumably named
for: John
Adams |
| | Relatives: Son-in-law of John
Jordan Morgan; son of Col. Timothy Dix, Jr. (1770-1813) and
Abigail (Wilkins) Dix; married to Catharine Waine Morgan (1802-1884);
first cousin thrice removed of Roger
Sherman; second cousin once removed of Nathan
Read; third cousin once removed of Roger
Sherman Baldwin, Sherman
Day, Ebenezer
Rockwood Hoar, William
Maxwell Evarts, George
Frisbie Hoar, John
Hill Walbridge and Henry
E. Walbridge; third cousin twice removed of Aaron
Kellogg and Charles
Kirk Tilden; fourth cousin of Simeon
Eben Baldwin, Rockwood
Hoar, Sherman
Hoar, Maxwell
Evarts and Arthur
Outram Sherman; fourth cousin once removed of Abel
Merrill, Samuel
Laning, Orsamus
Cook Merrill, Amariah
Kibbe Jr., John
Lanning, Timothy
Merrill (1781-1836), Daniel
Putnam Tyler, Chauncey
Mitchell Depew, John
Frederick Addis and Roger
Sherman Hoar. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Hoar-Sherman
family of Massachusetts; Murphy-Merrill
family of Harbor Beach, Michigan (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Fort Dix (established 1917 as Camp Dix; later
Fort Dix; now Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst), a U.S.
Army post in Burlington
County, New Jersey, is named for
him. — Dix Mountain,
in the Ardirondack Mountains, Essex
County, New York, is named for
him. — The World War II Liberty
ship SS John A. Dix (built 1942-43 at South
Portland, Maine; sold 1947, scrapped 1968) was named for
him. |
| | 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 |
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James Lockwood Conger (1805-1876) —
of Mt. Clemens, Macomb
County, Mich.; St. Clair, St. Clair
County, Mich.
Born in Trenton, Mercer
County, N.J., February
18, 1805.
Whig. School
teacher; lawyer; merchant;
banker;
patent
medicine manufacturer; U.S.
Representative from Michigan 3rd District, 1851-53.
Died in St. Clair, St. Clair
County, Mich., April
10, 1876 (age 71 years, 52
days).
Interment at Green
Lawn Cemetery, Columbus, Ohio; cenotaph at Clinton
Grove Cemetery, Clinton Township, Macomb County, Mich.
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Relatives: Son
of David Beeman Conger (1779-1838) and Hannah (Lockwood) Conger
(1779-1821); married, December
23, 1824, to Paulina Belvedere Clark (1806-1847); second cousin
once removed of Hanford
Nichols Lockwood; second cousin thrice removed of John
Hart; third cousin of Homer
Nichols Lockwood and Charles
Franklin Conger; third cousin once removed of Daniel
Lockwood and Hugh
Conger; third cousin twice removed of Ebenezer
Lockwood, Alfred
Collins Lockwood and Daniel
Clark Joyce; third cousin thrice removed of John
Alsop, William
Henry Rossell and Asbury
Elliott Kellogg; fourth cousin of Thaddeus
Betts, Anson
Griffith Conger, Harmon
Sweatland Conger, Omar
Dwight Conger, Moore
Conger, Chauncey
Stewart Conger (1838-1916) and Frederick
Ward Conger; fourth cousin once removed of Horatio
Lockwood, Walter
Booth, Abiel
Case, Abraham
Bogart Conger, Edwin
Hurd Conger, James
W. Conger, Franklin
Barker Conger, Benn
Conger, Frank
Elisha Reed and Chauncey
Stewart Conger (1882-1963). |
| | Political families: Conger
family of New York; Conger-Hungerford
family (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
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Absalom Price Lanning (1809-1886) —
also known as Absalom P. Lanning —
of Mercer
County, N.J.
Born in Lawrenceville, Mercer
County, N.J., September
18, 1809.
Member of New
Jersey state house of assembly from Mercer County, 1868-69.
Died in Lawrenceville, Mercer
County, N.J., September
26, 1886 (age 77 years, 8
days).
Interment at Lawrenceville
Cemetery, Lawrenceville, N.J.
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Homer Nichols Lockwood (b. 1833) —
also known as Homer N. Lockwood —
of Auburn, Cayuga
County, N.Y.
Born in Victory, Cayuga
County, N.Y., June 23,
1833.
Member of New York
state assembly from Cayuga County 1st District, 1866-67.
Burial
location unknown.
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John Hart Brewer (1844-1900) —
also known as J. Hart Brewer —
of Trenton, Mercer
County, N.J.
Born in Woodsville, Mercer
County, N.J., March
29, 1844.
Republican. Manufacturer;
member of New
Jersey state house of assembly from Mercer County, 1876; U.S.
Representative from New Jersey 2nd District, 1881-85; delegate to
Republican National Convention from New Jersey, 1888.
Died in Trenton, Mercer
County, N.J., December
21, 1900 (age 56 years, 267
days).
Interment at Riverview
Cemetery, Trenton, N.J.
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William Mershon Lanning (1849-1912) —
also known as William M. Lanning —
of Trenton, Mercer
County, N.J.
Born in Ewingville, Mercer
County, N.J., January
1, 1849.
Republican. School
teacher; lawyer;
district judge in New Jersey, 1887-91; delegate
to New Jersey state constitutional convention, 1894; president,
Mechanics' National Bank of
Trenton, 1899; U.S.
Representative from New Jersey 4th District, 1903-04; resigned
1904; U.S.
District Judge for New Jersey, 1904-09; Judge
of U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit, 1909-12; died in
office 1912.
Presbyterian.
Died in Trenton, Mercer
County, N.J., February
16, 1912 (age 63 years, 46
days).
Interment at Ewing Church Cemetery, Ewing, N.J.
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Lummie J. Earle (1852-1906) —
also known as Columbia J. Coberly —
of Leadsville (now Elkins), Randolph
County, W.Va.
Born in 1852.
Democrat. Postmaster at Leadsville,
W.Va., 1885-89; Elkins,
W.Va., 1889.
Female.
Died in West Virginia, June 6,
1906 (age about 53
years).
Interment at Maplewood
Cemetery, Elkins, W.Va.
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Samuel Allen Laning (b. 1852) —
also known as Samuel A. Laning —
of Bridgeton, Cumberland
County, N.J.
Born in Bridgeton, Cumberland
County, N.J., August
10, 1852.
Democrat. Postmaster at Bridgeton,
N.J., 1887-90, 1894-96; newspaper
editor.
Presbyterian.
Member, Junior
Order; Royal
Arcanum.
Burial
location unknown.
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Frederick B. Piatt (b. 1873) —
also known as Fred Piatt —
of Muskegon, Muskegon
County, Mich.
Born in Cloud
County, Kan., June 23,
1873.
Prohibition candidate for Michigan
state attorney general, 1940, 1942; Prohibition candidate for Michigan
state senate 23rd District, 1944.
Burial
location unknown.
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Alfred Collins Lockwood (1875-1951) —
also known as Alfred C. Lockwood —
of Phoenix, Maricopa
County, Ariz.
Born in Ottawa, La Salle
County, Ill., July 20,
1875.
Democrat. School
teacher; lawyer;
superior court judge in Arizona, 1913-24; justice of
Arizona state supreme court, 1925-43; chief
justice of Arizona Supreme Court, 1929-31, 1935-37, 1941-43.
Congregationalist.
Member, Freemasons;
Elks.
Died in Phoenix, Maricopa
County, Ariz., October
29, 1951 (age 76 years, 101
days).
Interment at Forest
Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, Calif.
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