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Senate Years of Service: 1870-1875 Party: Republican
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| Library of Congress |
FLANAGAN, James Winright, a Senator from Texas; born in Gordonsville, Orange County, Va., September 5,
1805; attended the common schools and received private instruction; moved to Cloverport, Ky., in
1816, and engaged in mercantile pursuits; justice of the peace 1823-1833; studied law; admitted to
the bar in 1825 and practiced in the Breckenridge County circuit 1833-1843; moved to Henderson,
Rusk County, Tex., in 1843 and continued the practice of law; also engaged in mercantile and
agricultural pursuits; member, State house of representatives 1851-1852; member, State senate
1855-1856; member of the State constitutional conventions in 1866 and 1868; elected lieutenant
governor of Texas in 1869 and served until his resignation in 1870 to become Senator; upon the
readmission of Texas to representation was elected as a Republican to the United States Senate and
served from March 30, 1870, to March 3, 1875; chairman, Committee on Education and Labor
(Forty-third Congress); died in Longview, Gregg County, Tex., September 28, 1887; interment in the
family burying ground in East Henderson, Tex.
BibliographyAvillo, Philip J., Jr. Phantom Radicals: Texas
Republicans in Congress, 1870-1873. Southwestern Historical Quarterly 77 (April
1974): 431-44; Welch, June Rayfield. James Flanagan Was Hendersons First Merchant. In The Texas Senator, pp. 24-25. Dallas: G.L.A. Press, 1978.
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