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Senate Years of Service: 1900-1905 Party: Republican
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| Library of Congress |
BARD, Thomas Robert, a Senator from California; born in Chambersburg, Franklin County,
Pa., December 8, 1841; attended the common schools; graduated from the
Chambersburg Academy in 1858; studied law, but before completing his studies
secured a position with the Pennsylvania Railroad Co., later becoming assistant
to the superintendent of the Cumberland Valley Railroad; engaged in the grain
business at Hagerstown, Md.; during the early part of the Civil War served as a
volunteer Union scout during the invasions of Maryland and Pennsylvania by the
Confederates; moved to Ventura County, Calif., in 1864; member of the board of
supervisors of Santa Barbara County 1868-1873; laid out the town of Hueneme;
one of the commissioners appointed to organize Ventura County in 1871; director
of the State board of agriculture 1886-1887; elected as a Republican to the
United States Senate to fill the vacancy in the term beginning March 4, 1899,
and served from February 7, 1900, to March 3, 1905; unsuccessful candidate for
reelection in 1904; chairman, Committee on Fisheries (Fifty-seventh Congress),
Committee on Irrigation (Fifty-eighth Congress); died at his home, Berylwood,
in Hueneme, Ventura County, Calif., March 5, 1915; interment in the family
cemetery on his estate.
BibliographyHutchinson, William Henry.
Oil, Land, and Politics: The California Career of Thomas R.
Bard. 2 vols. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1965.
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