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Senate Years of Service: 1832-1839 Party: Jacksonian; Democrat
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| Indiana Historical Society |
TIPTON, John, a Senator from Indiana; born near Sevierville, Sevier County, Tenn., August 14,
1786; received a limited schooling; moved to Harrison County, Ind., in 1807 and engaged in
agricultural pursuits; served with the Yellow Jackets in the Tippecanoe campaign and subsequently
attained the rank of brigadier general of militia; sheriff of Harrison County, Ind., 1816-1819; member,
State house of representatives 1819-1823; one of the commissioners to select a site for a new capital
for Indiana in 1820; commissioner to determine the boundary line between Indiana and Illinois 1821;
appointed United States Indian agent for the Pottawatamie and Miami tribes 1823; laid out the city of
Logansport, Ind., in 1828; elected as a Jacksonian (later Democrat) to the United States Senate on
December 9, 1831, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James Noble; reelected in 1832 and
served from January 3, 1832, to March 3, 1839; due to poor health declined to be a candidate for
reelection in 1838; chairman, Committee on Roads and Canals (Twenty-fifth Congress), Committee
on Indian Affairs (Twenty-fifth Congress); died in Logansport, Cass County, Ind., on April 5, 1839;
interment in Mount Hope Cemetery.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; Blackburn, Glen A. The Papers of John Tipton. Ph.D.
dissertation, Indiana University, 1928; Robertson, Nellie and Dorothy Riker, eds. The John
Tipton Papers. 3 vols. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Bureau, 1942.
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