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Senate Years of Service: 1815-1821; 1826-1831 Party: Democratic Republican; Adams; Anti-Jacksonian
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SANFORD, Nathan, a Senator from New York; born in Bridgehampton, Long Island, N.Y.,
November 5, 1777; completed preparatory studies; studied law; admitted to the
bar in 1799 and commenced practice in New York City; United States commissioner
in bankruptcy in 1802; United States attorney for the district of New York
1803-1816; member, State assembly 1808-1809, 1811, and served as speaker in the
latter year; member, State senate 1812-1815; elected as a Democratic Republican
to the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1815, to March 3, 1821;
chairman, Committee on Commerce and Manufactures (Fifteenth and Sixteenth
Congresses), Committee on Naval Affairs (Fifteenth Congress), Committee on
Finance (Sixteenth Congress); delegate to the State constitutional convention
in 1821; chancellor of New York 1823-1826, when he resigned, having been
elected Senator; elected as an Adams Republican (later Anti-Jacksonian) to the
United States Senate to fill the vacancy in the term commencing March 4, 1825,
and served from January 14, 1826, to March 3, 1831; was not a candidate for
reelection; chairman, Committee on Foreign Relations (Nineteenth Congress);
resumed the practice of law in Flushing, Queens County, N.Y., and died there
October 17, 1838; interment in St. Georges Episcopal Church Cemetery,
Flushing, N.Y..
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography.
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