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Senate Years of Service: 1817-1818 Party: Democratic Republican
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FISK, James, a Representative and a Senator from Vermont; born in Greenwich, Hampshire
County, Mass., October 4, 1763; self-educated; served in the Revolutionary War 1779-1782;
member, Massachusetts general assembly 1785; entered the Universalist ministry and preached
occasionally; moved to Barre, Vt., in 1798; studied law; admitted to the bar and commenced
practice in Barre; member, Vermont house of representatives 1800-1805, 1809-1810, 1815; judge
of the Orange County Court 1802-1809, 1816; selected as the member from Orange County to
locate the capital in 1803; chairman of the committee that endeavored to get a settlement of the
northern boundary with Canada in 1804; elected as a Democratic Republican to the Ninth and Tenth
Congresses (March 4, 1805-March 3, 1809); unsuccessful candidate for reelection to the Eleventh
Congress; elected as a Democratic Republican to the Twelfth and Thirteenth Congresses (March 4,
1811-March 3, 1815); chairman, Committee on Elections (Thirteenth Congress); unsuccessful
candidate for reelection to the Fourteenth Congress; appointed United States judge for the Territory
of Indiana in 1812, but declined; judge of the supreme court of Vermont 1815-1816; elected as a
Democratic Republican to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of
Dudley Chase and served from November 4, 1817, to January 8, 1818, when he resigned; collector
of customs for the district of Vermont 1818-1826; moved to Swanton, Vt., in 1819, and died there
November 17, 1844; interment in Church Street Cemetery.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography.
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