|
Senate Years of Service: 1887-1900 Party: Republican
 |
DAVIS, Cushman Kellogg, a Senator from Minnesota; born in Henderson, Jefferson County, N.Y., June 16,
1838; moved with his parents to Waukesha, Wis.; attended the public schools, Carroll College in
Waukesha; graduated from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in 1857; studied law; admitted
to the bar in 1859 and commenced practice in Waukesha; during the Civil War served as first
lieutenant in the Twenty-eighth Regiment, Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, in 1861 and 1862; assistant
adjutant general 1862-1864; moved to St. Paul, Minn., in 1865; member, State house of
representatives 1867; United States district attorney 1868-1873; Governor of Minnesota 1874-1875;
elected as a Republican to the United States Senate in 1886; reelected in 1892 and again in 1898, and
served from March 4, 1887, until his death on November 27, 1900; chairman, Committee on
Pensions (Fiftieth through Fifty-second Congresses), Committee on Territories (Fifty-fourth Congress),
Committee on Foreign Relations (Fifty-fifth and Fifty-sixth Congresses); member of the commission
which met in Paris, France, in September 1898 to arrange terms of peace after the war between the
United States and Spain; died in St. Paul, Minn.; interment in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington,
Va.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography;
Coy, Richard. Cushman K. Davis and American Foreign Policy, 1887-1900. Ph.D. dissertation,
University of Minnesota, 1965; Kreuter, Kent. The Presidency or Nothing: Cushman K. Davis and
the Campaign of 1896. Minnesota History 41 (Fall 1969): 301-16.
|