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Senate Years of Service: 1845-1849; 1857-1861; 1867-1877 Party: Democrat; Republican; Republican
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CAMERON, Simon, (father of James Donald Cameron),
a Senator from Pennsylvania; born in Maytown, Lancaster County, Pa., March 8,
1799; apprenticed as a printer; newspaper owner and editor; cashier of a bank, president of two
railroad companies, and adjutant general of Pennsylvania; elected to the United States Senate to fill
the vacancy caused by the resignation of James Buchanan, and served from March 13, 1845, to
March 3, 1849; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1857,
to March 4, 1861, when he resigned, having been appointed Secretary of War; chairman, Committee
on Patents and the Patent Office (Twenty-ninth Congress), Committee on Public Buildings
(Twenty-ninth Congress), Committee on District of Columbia (Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth
Congresses), Committee on Printing (Thirtieth Congress); unsuccessful candidate for the Republican
presidential nomination in 1860; Secretary of War in the Cabinet of President Abraham Lincoln
1861-1862; United States Minister to Russia 1862; was again elected as a Republican to the United
States Senate in 1867; reelected in 1873, and served from March 4, 1867, until his resignation,
effective March 12, 1877; chairman, Committee on Agriculture (Fortieth and Forty-first Congresses),
Committee on Foreign Relations (Forty-second through Forty-fifth Congresses), Committee on Public
Buildings and Grounds (Forty-second Congress); retired from active business pursuits and traveled
extensively in Europe and the West Indies; died near Maytown, Lancaster County, Pa., June 26,
1889; interment in Harrisburg Cemetery, Harrisburg, Pa.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; Bradley, Erwin. Simon Cameron, Lincolns
Secretary of War: A Political Biography. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press,
1966; Crippen, Lee. Simon Cameron, Ante-bellum Years. 1942. Reprint. New
York: Da Capo Press, 1972.
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