PoliticalGraveyard.com
The Political Graveyard: A Database of American History
Oliphant family of Trenton, New Jersey

Note: This is just one of 1,325 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.

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.

  Samuel Duncan Oliphant (1824-1904) — of Uniontown, Fayette County, Pa.; Trenton, Mercer County, N.J. Born in Fayette County, Pa., August 1, 1824. Lawyer; burgess of Uniontown, Pennsylvania, 1852-53; colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War. Died in Trenton, Mercer County, N.J., October 23, 1904 (age 80 years, 83 days). Interment at Riverview Cemetery, Trenton, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Fidelio Hughes Oliphant and Jane Creigh (Duncan) Oliphant; married 1847 to Mary Coulter Campbell; married 1877 to Beulah Ann Oliphant; father of Richard Coulter Oliphant; grandfather of A. Dayton Oliphant.
  Political family: Oliphant family of Trenton, New Jersey.
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Richard Coulter Oliphant (1852-1910) — also known as Richard C. Oliphant — of Trenton, Mercer County, N.J. Born in Uniontown, Fayette County, Pa., 1852. Honorary Vice-Consul for Paraguay in Trenton, N.J., 1903-04. Died in Trenton, Mercer County, N.J., 1910 (age about 58 years). Interment at Riverview Cemetery, Trenton, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Samuel Duncan Oliphant and Mary Coulter (Campbell) Oliphant; married to Sarah J. Ross; uncle of A. Dayton Oliphant.
  Political family: Oliphant family of Trenton, New Jersey.
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  A. Dayton Oliphant (1887-1963) — of Trenton, Mercer County, N.J.; Princeton, Mercer County, N.J. Born in Trenton, Mercer County, N.J., October 28, 1887. Republican. Lawyer; member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Mercer County, 1915-17; Mercer County Prosecutor of the Pleas, 1918-23; chair of Mercer County Republican Party, 1921; circuit judge in New Jersey, 1927-45; associate justice of New Jersey state supreme court, 1945-46, 1948-57; chancellor of New Jersey court of chancery, 1946-48. Presbyterian. Member, American Bar Association; American Judicature Society; Society of the Cincinnati; Phi Delta Theta; Society of Colonial Wars. Died in Trenton, Mercer County, N.J., June 25, 1963 (age 75 years, 240 days). Interment at Riverview Cemetery, Trenton, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Elizabeth Van Der Veer (Dayton) Oliphant and Henry Duncan Oliphant; married, June 21, 1924, to Marguerite A. Broughton; nephew of Richard Coulter Oliphant; grandson of Samuel Duncan Oliphant.
  Political family: Oliphant family of Trenton, New Jersey.
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial

"Enjoy the hospitable entertainment of a political graveyard."
Henry L. Clinton, Apollo Hall, New York City, February 3, 1872
The Political Graveyard

The Political Graveyard is a web site about U.S. political history and cemeteries. Founded in 1996, it is the Internet's most comprehensive free source for American political biography, listing 338,260 politicians, living and dead.
 
  The coverage of this site includes (1) the President, Vice President, members of Congress, elected state and territorial officeholders in all fifty states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. territories; and the chief elected official, typically the mayor, of qualifying municipalities; (2) candidates at election, including primaries, for any of the above; (3) all federal judges and all state appellate judges; (4) certain federal officials, including the federal cabinet, diplomatic chiefs of mission, consuls, U.S. district attorneys, collectors of customs and internal revenue, members of major federal commissions; and political appointee (pre-1969) postmasters of qualifying communities; (5) state and national political party officials, including delegates, alternate delegates, and other participants in national party nominating conventions; (6) Americans who served as "honorary" consuls for other nations before 1950. Note: municipalities or communities "qualify", for Political Graveyard purposes, if they have at least half a million person-years of history, inclusive of predecessor, successor, and merged entities.  
  The listings are incomplete; development of the database is a continually ongoing project.  
  Information on this page — and on all other pages of this site — is believed to be accurate, but is not guaranteed. Users are advised to check with other sources before relying on any information here.  
  The official URL for this page is: https://politicalgraveyard.com/families/46157.html.  
  Links to this or any other Political Graveyard page are welcome, but specific page addresses may sometimes change as the site develops.  
  If you are searching for a specific named individual, try the alphabetical index of politicians.  
Copyright notices: (1) Facts are not subject to copyright; see Feist v. Rural Telephone. (2) Politician portraits displayed on this site are 70-pixel-wide monochrome thumbnail images, which I believe to constitute fair use under applicable copyright law. Where possible, each image is linked to its online source. However, requests from owners of copyrighted images to delete them from this site are honored. (3) Original material, programming, selection and arrangement are © 1996-2025 Lawrence Kestenbaum. (4) This work is also licensed for free non-commercial re-use, with attribution, under a Creative Commons License.
What is a "political graveyard"? See Political Dictionary; Urban Dictionary.
Site information: The Political Graveyard is created and maintained by Lawrence Kestenbaum, who is solely responsible for its structure and content. — The mailing address is The Political Graveyard, P.O. Box 2563, Ann Arbor MI 48106. — This site is hosted by HDLmi.com. — The Political Graveyard opened on July 1, 1996; the last full revision was done on February 17, 2025.