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Senate Years of Service: 1861-1863 Party: Republican
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| Library of Congress |
BROWNING, Orville Hickman, a Senator from Illinois; born in Cynthiana, Harrison County, Ky.,
February 10, 1806; attended Augusta College; studied law; admitted to the bar
in 1831; moved to Quincy, Ill., in 1831 and practiced; served in the Illinois
Volunteers during the Black Hawk War 1832; member, State senate 1836-1843;
unsuccessful candidate for election as a Whig in 1850 to the Thirty-second
Congress and in 1852 to the Thirty-third Congress; delegate to the
anti-Nebraska convention held at Bloomington, Ill., in May 1856, which laid the
foundations of the Republican Party; appointed as a Republican to the United
States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Stephen A. Douglas and
served from June 26, 1861, to January 12, 1863, when a successor was elected;
was not a candidate for election in 1863; chairman, Committee on Enrolled Bills
(Thirty-seventh Congress); appointed by President Andrew Johnson as Secretary
of the Interior 1866-1869, also discharging for a time the duties of Attorney
General; delegate to the State constitutional convention in 1869; resumed the
practice of law; died in Quincy, Adams County, Ill., August 10, 1881; interment
in Woodland Cemetery.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography; Baxter,
Maurice.
Orville H. Browning: Lincolns Friend and Critic. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1957; Browning, Orville.
The Diary of Orville H. Browning, 1850-1881. Edited by T. C.
Pease and J. Randall. Springfield: Trustees of the Illinois State Historical
Society, 1925-1931.
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