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Senate Years of Service: 1892-1899 Party: Democrat
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| Oil on canvas, R.J. Onderdonk, Collection of U.S. House of Representatives |
MILLS, Roger Quarles, a Representative and a Senator from Texas; born in Todd County, Ky.,
March 30, 1832; attended the common schools; moved to Texas in 1849; studied
law; admitted to the bar in 1852 and commenced practice in Corsicana, Tex.;
member, State house of representatives 1859-1860; enlisted in the Confederate
Army and served throughout the Civil War, attaining the rank of colonel of the
Tenth Regiment, Texas Infantry; elected as a Democrat to the Forty-third and to
the nine succeeding Congresses and served from March 4, 1873, until his
resignation on March 28, 1892, having been elected Senator; chairman, Committee
on Ways and Means (Fiftieth Congress), Committee on Interstate and Foreign
Commerce (Fifty-second Congress); elected to the United States Senate in 1892
to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John H. Reagan; reelected in
1893 and served from March 23, 1892, to March 3, 1899; was not a candidate for
reelection; died in Corsicana, Tex., September 2, 1911; interment in Oakwood
Cemetery.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography;
Dictionary of American Biography; Barr, C. Alwyn. The Making
of a Secessionist: The Antebellum Career of Roger Q. Mills.
South Western History Quarterly 79 (October 1975): 129-44;
Mills, Roger Quarles, and William McKinley.
Addresses on the Tariff. Rochester, NY: n.p., 1891.
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