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Senate Years of Service: 1897-1901; 1901-1903 Party: Silver Republican; Democrat
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TURNER, George, a Senator from Washington; born in Edina, Knox County, Mo., February 25, 1850;
attended the common schools; served as United States military telegraph operator with the Union
forces during the Civil War 1861-1865; studied law; admitted to the bar in 1869 and commenced
practice in Mobile, Ala.; United States marshal for the southern and middle districts of Alabama
1876-1880; associate justice of the supreme court for the Territory of Washington 1885-1888;
resumed the practice of law in Spokane, Wash., in 1888; also interested in mining; member of the
Territorial convention in 1889 that framed the constitution of the new State of Washington;
unsuccessful candidate for election as a Republican to the United States Senate in 1889 and 1893;
elected on a fusionist ticket with Silver Republicans, Democrats, and Populists to the United States
Senate and served from March 4, 1897, to March 3, 1903; was not a candidate for reelection;
resumed the practice of law in Spokane, Wash.; member of the Alaska Boundary Tribunal in 1903;
unsuccessful Democratic candidate for governor in 1904; counsel for the United States at The Hague
in the northeastern fisheries arbitration with Great Britain in 1910; appointed by President William H.
Taft as a member of the International Joint Commission, created to prevent disputes regarding the use
of boundary waters between the United States and Canada 1911-1914; counsel for the United States
before the International Joint Commission 1918-1924; practiced law in Spokane, Wash.; died in
Spokane, January 26, 1932; interment in Greenwood Cemetery.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography;
Johnson, Claudius. George Turner, Attorney-at-Law. Research Studies of the State
College of Washington 11 (September 1943): 171-92.
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