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Senate Years of Service: 1861-1879 Party: Republican
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HOWE, Timothy Otis, a Senator from Wisconsin; born in Livermore, Androscoggin County,
Maine, February 24, 1816; attended the common schools and graduated from the
Maine Wesleyan Seminary; studied law; admitted to the bar in 1839 and commenced
practice in Readfield, Maine; moved to Wisconsin in 1845 and settled in Green
Bay; judge of the circuit court and supreme court justice of Wisconsin
1850-1853, when he resigned; unsuccessful Republican candidate for the United
States Senate in 1856; elected as a Republican to the United States Senate in
1860; reelected in 1866 and 1872 and served from March 4, 1861, to March 3,
1879; unsuccessful candidate for reelection; chairman, Committee on Enrolled
Bills (Thirty-eighth and Thirty-ninth Congresses), Committee on Claims
(Thirty-ninth through Forty-second Congresses), Committee on the Library
(Thirty-ninth Congress, Forty-first Congress, Forty-third through Forty-fifth
Congresses); served as a commissioner for the purchase of the Black Hills
territory from the Indians; delegate to the International Monetary Conference
held at Paris in 1881; appointed Postmaster General in the Cabinet of President
Chester Arthur in 1881, and served until his death in Kenosha, Wis., on March
25, 1883; interment in Woodlawn Cemetery, Green Bay, Wis.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography;
Dictionary of American Biography; Russell, William H. Timothy
O. Howe, Stalwart Republican.
Wisconsin Magazine of History 35 (Winter 1951): 90-99.
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