book:266.david_lowrey
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====== 266. David Lowrey Seymour ====== | ====== 266. David Lowrey Seymour ====== | ||
- | //This page is a placeholder added on 28 Sep 2014. It will be filled | + | 266. DAVID LOWREY< |
+ | (// | ||
+ | // | ||
+ | // | ||
+ | // | ||
+ | born at Newington Parish, Wethersfield, | ||
+ | Mass., 11 Oct. 1867; married 27 July 1837, MARIA LUCY CURTISS, born at Derby, | ||
+ | Conn., 11 Aug. 1813, died 11 Oct. 1867, daughter of Sheldon Clarke and Hannah | ||
+ | (Bradley). | ||
+ | |||
+ | He was graduated from Yale College in 1826; tutor at Yale College 1828--1830; | ||
+ | studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1829, and began practice in Troy, N.Y. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Mr. Seymour was a warm supporter of Gen. Jackson' | ||
+ | became associated with local politics | ||
+ | speaker gave him considerable prominence at once. In 1836 he was elected to the | ||
+ | New York Assembly. The Democratic party in the State was split between wrangling | ||
+ | factions, and Mr. Seymour allied himself with the Conservatives. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1842 he was elected to the Twenty-eighth Congress | ||
+ | 1845) by a narrow margin over his Whig opponent. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In general, he supported the Tyler administration. He was again a candidate in | ||
+ | 1844, but was defeated. In 1850 he ran and defeated Russell Sage, and served in | ||
+ | the Thirty-second Congress (4 Mar. 1851 to 3 Mar. 1853). He ran a fourth time | ||
+ | in 1852 but was defeated by a wide margin. | ||
+ | |||
+ | He had public service also as District Attorney and Master of Chancery; and in | ||
+ | 1867 was a member of the Constitutional Convention of New York. He was partial | ||
+ | to public life, and had many qualities which well fitted him for it. He was able | ||
+ | and brilliant in debate; familiar with political history, and at home in dealing | ||
+ | with business facts. At Washington he wielded his full share of influence, and | ||
+ | was popular in political and social circles. As chairman of the committee on | ||
+ | commerce, he distinguished himself by the elaborateness and value of his | ||
+ | reports, and more especially by his agency in effecting the Canadian Reciprocity | ||
+ | Treaty. | ||
+ | |||
+ | As a lawyer, Mr. Seymour occupied a front rank. He was a fine advocate and also | ||
+ | a safe, cautious counsellor. He was a terrific worker, and it is probable that | ||
+ | excessive labor shortened his days. It was his habit to spend his days in | ||
+ | transacting ordinary business, and much of his nights in continuous, wearing | ||
+ | mental labor. He was a man of great caution, and had the foresight which made | ||
+ | him fortunate in pecuniary ventures. From small beginnings, he accumulated a | ||
+ | considerable fortune. As husband and father, he was an idol in his household. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ^ Children: ^^ | ||
+ | | i. | MARY LOUISA< | ||
+ | | ii. | HARRIETTS MARIA, b. 23 Feb. 1843; d. 12 Mar. 1844. | | ||
+ | | iii. | SARAH LOWREY, b. 10 Apr. 1846; m. S. FISHER JOHNSON. | | ||
+ | | iv. | FRANCES MARIA, b. 16 June 1848; m. at New York City, in 1871, CHARLES EDWARD PATTERSON, of Troy, b. at Corinth, Vt, 3 May 1842, s. of James Hervey and Fidelia (Howes). | | ||
\\ [[265.john_deming|(< | \\ [[265.john_deming|(< | ||
book/266.david_lowrey.1411930116.txt.gz · Last modified: 2014/09/28 13:48 by jims