|
Senate Years of Service: 1902-1907 Party: Republican
 |
| Library of Congress |
DRYDEN, John Fairfield, a Senator from New Jersey; born in Temple, Franklin County, Maine, August 7,
1839; moved to Massachusetts in 1846 with his parents, who settled in Worcester; attended Yale
College; founded the Prudential Insurance Co. of America in Newark, N.J., in 1875, becoming its
first secretary and in 1881 its president, and served in the latter position until 1911; one of the founders
of the Fidelity Trust Co.; involved in the establishment and management of various street railways,
banks, and other financial enterprises in New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania; elected as a
Republican to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of William J. Sewell and
served from January 29, 1902, to March 3, 1907; was a candidate for reelection, but withdrew
because of a deadlock in the legislature; chairman, Committee on Relations with Canada
(Fifty-seventh Congress), Committee on Enrolled Bills (Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses);
resumed his former business pursuits; died in Newark, N.J., November 24, 1911; interment in Mount
Pleasant Cemetery.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography;
Reynolds, Robert D., Jr. The 1906 Campaign to Sway Muckraking Periodicals. Journalism
Quarterly 56 (Autumn 1979): 513-20, 589.
|