|
Senate Years of Service: 1869-1881 Party: Democrat
 |
THURMAN, Allen Granberry, a Representative and a Senator from Ohio; born in Lynchburg, Va., November 13,
1813; moved with his parents to Chillicothe, Ohio, in 1819; attended the Chillicothe Academy;
private secretary to the Governor 1834; studied law; admitted to the bar in 1835 and practiced in
Ross County, Ohio; elected as a Democrat to the Twenty-ninth Congress (March 4, 1845-March 3,
1847); declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1846; resumed the practice of law; associate
justice of the supreme court of Ohio 1851-1854, chief justice 1854-1856; unsuccessful Democratic
candidate for governor of Ohio in 1867; elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 1868;
reelected in 1874 and served from March 4, 1869, to March 3, 1881; served as President pro
tempore of the Senate during the Forty-sixth Congress; chairman, Committee on Private Land Claims
(Forty-second through Forty-fifth Congresses), Committee on the Judiciary (Forty-sixth Congress);
appointed a member of the Electoral Commission to decide the contests in various States in the
presidential election of 1876; unsuccessful candidate for reelection to the United States Senate in
1881; resumed the practice of law in Columbus, Ohio; appointed by President James Garfield a
member of the international monetary conference in Paris in 1881; unsuccessful candidate for Vice
President of the United States on the Democratic ticket in 1888; died in Columbus, Franklin County,
Ohio, December 12, 1895; interment in Green Lawn Cemetery.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; Carroll, Howard. Allen Thurman. In Twelve
Americans: Their Lives and Times. pp. 331-54. 1883. Reprint. Freeport, N.Y.: Books for
Libraries Press, 1971; Hare, John S. Allen G. Thurman: A Political Study. Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio
State University, 1933.
|