Note: This is just one of
1,164
family groupings listed on
The Political Graveyard web site.
These families each have three or more politician members,
all linked together by blood, marriage or adoption.
This specific family group is a subset of the
much larger Four Thousand
Related Politicians group. An individual may be listed
with more than one subset.
These groupings — even the names of the groupings,
and the areas of main activity — are the
result of a computer algorithm working with the data I have,
not the choices of any historian or genealogist.
|
Roger Wolcott (1679-1767) —
of Windsor, Hartford
County, Conn.
Born in Windsor, Hartford
County, Conn., 1679.
Colonial
Governor of Connecticut, 1750-54.
Died in Windsor, Hartford
County, Conn., May 17,
1767 (age about 87
years).
Interment at Palisado
Cemetery, Windsor, Conn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Simon Wolcott and Martha (Pitkin) Wolcott; married to Sarah Drake;
father of Erastus
Wolcott, Ursula Wolcott (who married Matthew
Griswold (1714-1799)) and Oliver
Wolcott Sr.; grandfather of Oliver
Wolcott Jr., Roger
Griswold, Mary Ann Wolcott (who married Chauncey
Goodrich) and Frederick
Wolcott; granduncle of Abigail Wolcott (who married Oliver
Ellsworth); great-granduncle of Samuel
Clesson Allen, William
Wolcott Ellsworth and Henry
Leavitt Ellsworth; second great-grandfather of John
William Allen, James
Samuel Wadsworth, Henry
Titus Backus, Christopher
Parsons Wolcott, Matthew
Griswold (1833-1919) and Roger
Wolcott (1847-1900); second great-granduncle of Elisha
Hunt Allen and George
Washington Wolcott; third great-grandfather of Charles
Frederick Wadsworth, James
Wolcott Wadsworth, Edward
Oliver Wolcott and Alfred
Wolcott; third great-granduncle of Albert
Asahel Bliss, Philemon
Bliss, William
Fessenden Allen and Frederick
Hobbes Allen; fourth great-grandfather of James
Wolcott Wadsworth Jr. and Selden
Chapin; fourth great-granduncle of Judson
H. Warner and Henry
Augustus Wolcott; fifth great-grandfather of James
Jermiah Wadsworth and Frederic
Lincoln Chapin; sixth great-grandfather of James
Wadsworth Symington; first cousin once removed of William
Pitkin; first cousin twice removed of Daniel
Pitkin; first cousin thrice removed of James
Hillhouse and Timothy
Pitkin; first cousin four times removed of Phineas
Lyman Tracy, Albert
Haller Tracy and John
Robert Graham Pitkin; first cousin five times removed of Edmund
Holcomb, Joseph
Pomeroy Root, George
Griswold Sill, Frederick
Walker Pitkin and Luther
S. Pitkin; first cousin six times removed of Augustus
Brandegee, George
Frederick Stone, Clarence
Horatio Pitkin, Carroll
Peabody Pitkin, Caleb
Seymour Pitkin, Harry
Kear Wolcott, Eldred
C. Pitkin and Henry
Merrill Wolcott; first cousin seven times removed of Thomas
Theodore Prentis, Frank
Bosworth Brandegee and Ephraim
Henry Cowles. |
| | Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Matthew Griswold (1714-1799) —
of Lyme, New London
County, Conn.
Born in Lyme, New London
County, Conn., March
25, 1714.
Lawyer;
member of Connecticut
council of assistants, 1759-69; Deputy
Governor of Connecticut, 1769-84; Governor of
Connecticut, 1784-86; delegate
to Connecticut convention to ratify U.S. constitution, 1788.
Died in Lyme, New London
County, Conn., April
28, 1799 (age 85 years, 34
days).
Interment at Duck
River Cemetery, Old Lyme, Conn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John Griswold and Hannah (Lee) Griswold; married, November
10, 1743, to Ursula Wolcott (daughter of Roger
Wolcott (1679-1767); sister of Oliver
Wolcott Sr.; aunt of Oliver
Wolcott Jr.); father of Roger
Griswold; uncle of Samuel
Holden Parsons and James
Hillhouse; great-grandfather of John
William Allen, Henry
Titus Backus and Matthew
Griswold (1833-1919); second great-granduncle of George
Frederick Stone; third great-grandfather of Selden
Chapin; fourth great-grandfather of Frederic
Lincoln Chapin; first cousin twice removed of Phineas
Lyman Tracy and Albert
Haller Tracy; first cousin thrice removed of George
Griswold Sill; first cousin four times removed of Erastus
Clark Scranton, Sereno
Hamilton Scranton and Samuel
Lord (1831-1880); first cousin five times removed of Joseph
Augustine Scranton, Samuel
Lord (1859-1925) and Joseph
Buell Ely; first cousin six times removed of Harry
Andrews Gager; second cousin once removed of Erastus
Wolcott and Zina
Hyde Jr.; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Hale Sill, Frederick
William Lord, Theodore
Sill and Thomas
Worcester Hyde; second cousin thrice removed of Joseph
Lyman Huntington, Alexander
Hamilton Waterman, Augustus
Frank, Charles
Edward Hyde, Herman
Arod Gager, John
Sedgwick Hyde and Edward
Warden Hyde; second cousin four times removed of Augustus
Brandegee, Collins
Dwight Huntington, George
Milo Huntington, Arthur
Evarts Lord and George
Leffingwell Reed; second cousin five times removed of Thomas
Theodore Prentis, Frank
Bosworth Brandegee, Henry
Arthur Huntington and Allan
Percy Sill; third cousin of Frederick
Wolcott; third cousin once removed of Nathaniel
Merriam, Peter
B. Garnsey, Samuel
Clesson Allen, James
Doolittle Wooster, Henry
Leavitt Ellsworth and William
Wolcott Ellsworth; third cousin twice removed of Elijah
Abel, Calvin
Fillmore, Daniel
Greene Garnsey, Bela
Edgerton, Samuel
George Andrews, Roscius
R. Kennedy, Elisha
Hunt Allen, James
Samuel Wadsworth, George
Washington Wolcott, Christopher
Parsons Wolcott and Roger
Wolcott (1847-1900); third cousin thrice removed of Gideon
Hotchkiss, Asahel
Augustus Hotchkiss, Millard
Fillmore, Harrison
Blodget, Edmund
Holcomb, John
Arnold Rockwell, John
Leslie Russell, Ira
Chandler Backus, Julius
Hotchkiss, Albert
Asahel Bliss, Philemon
Bliss, Alfred
Peck Edgerton, Giles
Waldo Hotchkiss, Joseph
Ketchum Edgerton, Gilbert
Ezra Read, William
Judson Clark, William
Fessenden Allen, Charles
Hull Clark, Charles
Frederick Wadsworth, Rush
Green Leaming, James
Wolcott Wadsworth, Edward
Oliver Wolcott, Charles
M. Hotchkiss, Alfred
Wolcott, Frederick
Hobbes Allen and Hiram
Bingham. |
| | Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Erastus Wolcott (1722-1793) —
of South Windsor, Hartford
County, Conn.
Born in Windsor, Hartford
County, Conn., September
21, 1722.
General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of Connecticut
council of assistants, 1786-89; superior court judge in
Connecticut, 1789-92.
Member, Society
of the Cincinnati.
Died in South Windsor, Hartford
County, Conn., September
14, 1793 (age 70 years, 358
days).
Interment at Edwards Cemetery, South Windsor, Conn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Roger
Wolcott (1679-1767) and Sarah (Drake) Wolcott; brother of Oliver
Wolcott Sr.; married to Jerusha (Wolcott) Wolcott and Mary
Conyers; uncle of Oliver
Wolcott Jr., Roger
Griswold and Frederick
Wolcott; great-grandfather of James
Samuel Wadsworth; great-granduncle of John
William Allen, Henry
Titus Backus, Christopher
Parsons Wolcott, Matthew
Griswold (1833-1919) and Roger
Wolcott (1847-1900); second great-grandfather of Charles
Frederick Wadsworth, James
Wolcott Wadsworth and Edward
Oliver Wolcott; second great-granduncle of Alfred
Wolcott; third great-grandfather of James
Wolcott Wadsworth Jr.; third great-granduncle of Selden
Chapin; fourth great-grandfather of James
Jermiah Wadsworth; fourth great-granduncle of Frederic
Lincoln Chapin; fifth great-grandfather of James
Wadsworth Symington; first cousin twice removed of Gaylord
Griswold, Samuel
Clesson Allen, Henry
Leavitt Ellsworth and William
Wolcott Ellsworth; first cousin thrice removed of Elisha
Hunt Allen and George
Washington Wolcott; first cousin four times removed of Edmund
Holcomb, Albert
Asahel Bliss, Philemon
Bliss, William
Fessenden Allen and Frederick
Hobbes Allen; first cousin five times removed of Judson
H. Warner, Nelson
Platt Wheeler, William
Egbert Wheeler and Henry
Augustus Wolcott; first cousin six times removed of Alexander
Royal Wheeler; second cousin of William
Pitkin; second cousin once removed of Matthew
Griswold (1714-1799) and Daniel
Pitkin; second cousin twice removed of James
Hillhouse and Timothy
Pitkin; second cousin thrice removed of Phineas
Lyman Tracy, Albert
Haller Tracy, Henry
Ward Beecher, Leveret
Brainard, Edwin
Carpenter Pinney and John
Robert Graham Pitkin; second cousin four times removed of Joseph
Pomeroy Root, George
Griswold Sill, Frederick
Walker Pitkin, George
Buckingham Beecher, Luther
S. Pitkin and Claude
Carpenter Pinney; second cousin five times removed of Augustus
Brandegee, George
Frederick Stone, Clarence
Horatio Pitkin, Carroll
Peabody Pitkin, Caleb
Seymour Pitkin, Harry
Kear Wolcott, Eldred
C. Pitkin, Henry
Merrill Wolcott, Frances
Payne Bolton and Harold
B. Pinney; third cousin thrice removed of John
Arnold Rockwell and Oliver
Morgan Hungerford. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Morris-Ingersoll
family of New York and Connecticut; Conger-Hungerford
family of Connecticut and New York; Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Oliver Wolcott Sr. (1726-1797) —
of Litchfield, Litchfield
County, Conn.
Born in Windsor, Hartford
County, Conn., December
1, 1726.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from Connecticut, 1775-78, 1780-84;
member of Connecticut
council of assistants, 1776-85; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; served in the Continental Army
during the Revolutionary War; Lieutenant
Governor of Connecticut, 1786-96; Governor of
Connecticut, 1796-97; died in office 1797.
Congregationalist.
Died in Litchfield, Litchfield
County, Conn., December
1, 1797 (age 71 years, 0
days).
Interment at East
Cemetery, Litchfield, Conn.; memorial monument at Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Roger
Wolcott (1679-1767) and Sarah (Drake) Wolcott; brother of Erastus
Wolcott and Ursula Wolcott (who married Matthew
Griswold (1714-1799)); married, January
21, 1755, to Laura Collins; father of Oliver
Wolcott Jr., Mary Ann Wolcott (who married Chauncey
Goodrich) and Frederick
Wolcott; uncle of Roger
Griswold; great-grandfather of Roger
Wolcott (1847-1900); great-granduncle of John
William Allen, James
Samuel Wadsworth, Henry
Titus Backus, Christopher
Parsons Wolcott and Matthew
Griswold (1833-1919); second great-granduncle of Charles
Frederick Wadsworth, James
Wolcott Wadsworth, Edward
Oliver Wolcott and Alfred
Wolcott; third great-granduncle of James
Wolcott Wadsworth Jr. and Selden
Chapin; fourth great-granduncle of James
Jermiah Wadsworth and Frederic
Lincoln Chapin; fifth great-granduncle of James
Wadsworth Symington; first cousin twice removed of Gaylord
Griswold, Samuel
Clesson Allen, William
Wolcott Ellsworth and Henry
Leavitt Ellsworth; first cousin thrice removed of Elisha
Hunt Allen and George
Washington Wolcott; first cousin four times removed of Edmund
Holcomb, Albert
Asahel Bliss, Philemon
Bliss, William
Fessenden Allen and Frederick
Hobbes Allen; first cousin five times removed of Judson
H. Warner, Nelson
Platt Wheeler, William
Egbert Wheeler and Henry
Augustus Wolcott; first cousin six times removed of Alexander
Royal Wheeler; second cousin of William
Pitkin; second cousin once removed of Daniel
Pitkin; second cousin twice removed of James
Hillhouse and Timothy
Pitkin; second cousin thrice removed of Phineas
Lyman Tracy, Albert
Haller Tracy, Henry
Ward Beecher, Leveret
Brainard, Edwin
Carpenter Pinney and John
Robert Graham Pitkin; second cousin four times removed of Joseph
Pomeroy Root, George
Griswold Sill, Frederick
Walker Pitkin, George
Buckingham Beecher, Luther
S. Pitkin and Claude
Carpenter Pinney; second cousin five times removed of Augustus
Brandegee, George
Frederick Stone, Clarence
Horatio Pitkin, Carroll
Peabody Pitkin, Caleb
Seymour Pitkin, Harry
Kear Wolcott, Eldred
C. Pitkin, Henry
Merrill Wolcott, Frances
Payne Bolton and Harold
B. Pinney; third cousin thrice removed of John
Arnold Rockwell and Oliver
Morgan Hungerford. |
| | Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | The town
of Wolcott,
Vermont, is named for
him. |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
James Hillhouse (1754-1832) —
of New Haven, New Haven
County, Conn.
Born in Montville, New London
County, Conn., October
20, 1754.
Lawyer;
served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of Connecticut
state house of representatives, 1780-85; member of Connecticut
council of assistants, 1789-90; U.S.
Representative from Connecticut at-large, 1791-96; U.S.
Senator from Connecticut, 1796-1810.
Slaveowner.
Died in New Haven, New Haven
County, Conn., December
29, 1832 (age 78 years, 70
days).
Interment at Grove
Street Cemetery, New Haven, Conn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of William
Hillhouse and Sarah (Griswold) Hillhouse; nephew of Matthew
Griswold (1714-1799); first cousin of Roger
Griswold; first cousin once removed of Henry
Titus Backus; first cousin twice removed of John
William Allen and Matthew
Griswold (1833-1919); first cousin thrice removed of Roger
Wolcott (1679-1767) and George
Frederick Stone; first cousin four times removed of Selden
Chapin; first cousin five times removed of Frederic
Lincoln Chapin; second cousin once removed of Phineas
Lyman Tracy and Albert
Haller Tracy; second cousin twice removed of Erastus
Wolcott, Oliver
Wolcott Sr. and George
Griswold Sill; second cousin thrice removed of Erastus
Clark Scranton, Sereno
Hamilton Scranton and Samuel
Lord (1831-1880); second cousin four times removed of Joseph
Augustine Scranton, Samuel
Lord (1859-1925) and Joseph
Buell Ely; second cousin five times removed of Harry
Andrews Gager; third cousin of Zina
Hyde Jr.; third cousin once removed of Oliver
Wolcott Jr., Frederick
Wolcott, Thomas
Hale Sill, Frederick
William Lord, Theodore
Sill and Thomas
Worcester Hyde; third cousin twice removed of Joseph
Lyman Huntington, Alexander
Hamilton Waterman, Augustus
Frank, Charles
Edward Hyde, Herman
Arod Gager, John
Sedgwick Hyde and Edward
Warden Hyde; third cousin thrice removed of Augustus
Brandegee, Collins
Dwight Huntington, George
Milo Huntington, Arthur
Evarts Lord and George
Leffingwell Reed; fourth cousin of Nathaniel
Merriam, Peter
B. Garnsey, Samuel
Clesson Allen, James
Doolittle Wooster, Henry
Leavitt Ellsworth and William
Wolcott Ellsworth; fourth cousin once removed of Elijah
Abel, Calvin
Fillmore, Daniel
Greene Garnsey, Bela
Edgerton, Samuel
George Andrews, Roscius
R. Kennedy, Elisha
Hunt Allen, James
Samuel Wadsworth, George
Washington Wolcott, Christopher
Parsons Wolcott and Roger
Wolcott (1847-1900). |
| | Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Roger Griswold (1762-1812) —
of Lyme, New London
County, Conn.
Born in Lyme, New London
County, Conn., May 21,
1762.
Lawyer;
U.S.
Representative from Connecticut, 1795-1805 (at-large 1795-1805,
4th District 1805); superior court judge in Connecticut, 1807-09; Lieutenant
Governor of Connecticut, 1809-11; Governor of
Connecticut, 1811-12; died in office 1812.
Died in Norwich, New London
County, Conn., October
25, 1812 (age 50 years, 157
days).
Interment at Griswold
Cemetery at Black Hall, Old Lyme, Conn.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Matthew
Griswold (1714-1799) and Ursula (Wolcott) Griswold; married to
Fanny Rogers; nephew of Erastus
Wolcott and Oliver
Wolcott Sr.; grandson of Roger
Wolcott (1679-1767); grandfather of Matthew
Griswold (1833-1919); granduncle of John
William Allen and Henry
Titus Backus; second great-grandfather of Selden
Chapin; third great-grandfather of Frederic
Lincoln Chapin; first cousin of James
Hillhouse, Oliver
Wolcott Jr. and Frederick
Wolcott; first cousin twice removed of James
Samuel Wadsworth, Christopher
Parsons Wolcott and Roger
Wolcott (1847-1900); first cousin thrice removed of Charles
Frederick Wadsworth, George
Frederick Stone, James
Wolcott Wadsworth, Edward
Oliver Wolcott and Alfred
Wolcott; first cousin four times removed of James
Wolcott Wadsworth Jr.; first cousin five times removed of James
Jermiah Wadsworth; first cousin six times removed of James
Wadsworth Symington; second cousin once removed of William
Pitkin, Gaylord
Griswold, Samuel
Clesson Allen, Phineas
Lyman Tracy, William
Wolcott Ellsworth, Henry
Leavitt Ellsworth and Albert
Haller Tracy; second cousin twice removed of Elisha
Hunt Allen, George
Washington Wolcott and George
Griswold Sill; second cousin thrice removed of Edmund
Holcomb, Erastus
Clark Scranton, Sereno
Hamilton Scranton, Albert
Asahel Bliss, Philemon
Bliss, William
Fessenden Allen, Samuel
Lord (1831-1880) and Frederick
Hobbes Allen; second cousin four times removed of Judson
H. Warner, Joseph
Augustine Scranton, Nelson
Platt Wheeler, William
Egbert Wheeler, Samuel
Lord (1859-1925), Henry
Augustus Wolcott and Joseph
Buell Ely; second cousin five times removed of Harry
Andrews Gager and Alexander
Royal Wheeler; third cousin of Daniel
Pitkin and Zina
Hyde Jr.; third cousin once removed of Timothy
Pitkin, Thomas
Hale Sill, Frederick
William Lord, Theodore
Sill and Thomas
Worcester Hyde; third cousin twice removed of Joseph
Lyman Huntington, Henry
Ward Beecher, Alexander
Hamilton Waterman, Augustus
Frank, Leveret
Brainard, Edwin
Carpenter Pinney, John
Robert Graham Pitkin, Charles
Edward Hyde, Herman
Arod Gager, John
Sedgwick Hyde and Edward
Warden Hyde; third cousin thrice removed of Joseph
Pomeroy Root, Augustus
Brandegee, Collins
Dwight Huntington, George
Milo Huntington, Frederick
Walker Pitkin, George
Buckingham Beecher, Luther
S. Pitkin, Claude
Carpenter Pinney, Arthur
Evarts Lord and George
Leffingwell Reed; fourth cousin of Nathaniel
Merriam, Peter
B. Garnsey and James
Doolittle Wooster; fourth cousin once removed of Elijah
Abel, Calvin
Fillmore, Daniel
Greene Garnsey, Bela
Edgerton, Samuel
George Andrews and Roscius
R. Kennedy. |
| | Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | The town
of Griswold,
Connecticut, is named for
him. |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Augustus Brandegee (1828-1904) —
of New London, New London
County, Conn.
Born in New London, New London
County, Conn., July 15,
1828.
Republican. Lawyer;
member of Connecticut
state house of representatives, 1854, 1858-61; Speaker of
the Connecticut State House of Representatives, 1861; delegate to
Republican National Convention from Connecticut, 1856,
1864,
1880,
1884;
U.S.
Representative from Connecticut 3rd District, 1863-67.
Died in New London, New London
County, Conn., November
10, 1904 (age 76 years, 118
days).
Interment at Cedar
Grove Cemetery, New London, Conn.
|
|
William Henderson Packwood (1832-1917) —
also known as William H. Packwood —
of Curry
County, Ore.; Baker
County, Ore.
Born in Illinois, 1832.
Democrat. Miner; delegate
to Oregon state constitutional convention from Curry County, 1857.
Died in 1917
(age about
85 years).
Interment at Mt.
Hope Cemetery, Baker City, Ore.
|
|
Alonzo Mark Leffingwell (1842-1928) —
also known as Alonzo M. Leffingwell —
of Henderson, Jefferson
County, N.Y.; Watertown, Jefferson
County, N.Y.
Born in Jefferson
County, N.Y., September
26, 1842.
Lawyer;
Prohibition candidate for U.S.
Representative from New York, 1891 (22nd District), 1892 (24th
District); candidate for Justice of
New York Supreme Court 5th District, 1905, 1906, 1920.
Died in Watertown, Jefferson
County, N.Y., June 28,
1928 (age 85 years, 276
days).
Interment at North Watertown Cemetery, Watertown, N.Y.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Reuben Wood Leffingwell and Sarah (Carpenter) Leffingwell;
married, August
31, 1870, to Harriet A. Cook; married, October
5, 1923, to Charlotte Fuller Rice; uncle of John
Leffingwell Randolph; second cousin twice removed of Calvin
Fillmore; second cousin thrice removed of Samuel
Huntington and Luther
Walter Badger; third cousin once removed of Zina
Hyde Jr., Millard
Fillmore and John
Leslie Russell; third cousin twice removed of John
Davenport, Joshua
Coit, James
Davenport, Samuel
H. Huntington, Henry
Huntington, Gurdon
Huntington, Daniel
Webster, Bela
Edgerton, Heman
Ticknor, John
Foster Dulles and Allen
Welsh Dulles; fourth cousin of William
Woodbridge, Isaac
Backus, Henry
Titus Backus, Augustus
Brandegee, Leslie
Wead Russell, Thomas
Worcester Hyde, Charles
Hazen Russell and John
Clarence Keeler; fourth cousin once removed of Ebenezer
Huntington, Theodore
Davenport, Nathaniel
Huntington, James
Huntington, Joseph
Lyman Huntington, Elisha
Mills Huntington, Alfred
Peck Edgerton, David
Edgerton, Benjamin
Nicoll Huntington, Joseph
Ketchum Edgerton, Matthew
Griswold, Charles
Edward Hyde, Frank
Bosworth Brandegee, John
Sedgwick Hyde, Edward
Warden Hyde and George
Leffingwell Reed. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Upham
family; Saltonstall-Davis-Frelinghuysen-Appleton
family of Massachusetts (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
|
|
Frank Bosworth Brandegee (1864-1924) —
also known as Frank B. Brandegee —
of New London, New London
County, Conn.
Born in New London, New London
County, Conn., July 8,
1864.
Republican. Lawyer;
member of Connecticut
state house of representatives from New London, 1889, 1899-1900;
Speaker
of the Connecticut State House of Representatives, 1899-1900;
alternate delegate to Republican National Convention from
Connecticut, 1900;
member of Connecticut
Republican State Central Committee, 1901; U.S.
Representative from Connecticut 3rd District, 1902-05; U.S.
Senator from Connecticut, 1905-24; died in office 1924.
Member, Union
League.
Killed
himself by inhaling from
a gaslight, in Washington,
D.C., October
14, 1924 (age 60 years, 98
days). Five years later, U.S. Sen. Cole
Blease of South Carolina received a letter from a woman alleging
that Brandegee had been murdered;
the letter was turned over to a Senate committee to investigate the
mystery,
but nothing came of it.
Interment at Cedar
Grove Cemetery, New London, Conn.
|
|
John Leffingwell Randolph (1878-1954) —
also known as John Randolph —
of Niagara Falls, Niagara
County, N.Y.
Born in Warsaw, Wyoming
County, N.Y., June 5,
1878.
Newspaper
correspondent; U.S. Vice Consul in Moscow, 1917; U.S. Consul in Tiflis, as of 1919-21; Baghdad, as of 1924-29; Quebec City, as of 1932-38; U.S. Consul General in Belfast, 1939-41; Edmonton, as of 1943.
Died in St. Petersburg, Pinellas
County, Fla., 1954
(age about
76 years).
Interment at Newark
Cemetery, Newark, N.Y.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Burnett Howe Randolph and Catherine Melissa 'Kittie' (Leffingwell)
Randolph; married, August
17, 1929, to Persis S. Schramm; nephew of Alonzo
Mark Leffingwell; second cousin thrice removed of Calvin
Fillmore; second cousin four times removed of Samuel
Huntington and Luther
Walter Badger; third cousin twice removed of Zina
Hyde Jr., Millard
Fillmore and John
Leslie Russell; third cousin thrice removed of John
Davenport, James
Davenport, Joshua
Coit, Samuel
H. Huntington, Henry
Huntington, Gurdon
Huntington, Daniel
Webster, Bela
Edgerton and Heman
Ticknor; fourth cousin once removed of William
Woodbridge, Isaac
Backus, Henry
Titus Backus, Augustus
Brandegee, Leslie
Wead Russell, Thomas
Worcester Hyde, Charles
Hazen Russell, John
Clarence Keeler, John
Foster Dulles and Allen
Welsh Dulles. |
| | Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin
family of Connecticut and New York; Upham
family; Saltonstall-Davis-Frelinghuysen-Appleton
family of Massachusetts (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
| | Image source: U.S. passport application
(1921) |
|
|
Otis Larry Packwood (1927-2008) —
also known as Otis L. Packwood —
of Montana.
Born March
31, 1927.
U.S.
Attorney for Montana, 1969-75.
Died in Billings, Yellowstone
County, Mont., October
15, 2008 (age 81 years, 198
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Robert William Packwood (b. 1932) —
also known as Bob Packwood —
of Portland, Multnomah
County, Ore.; Lake Oswego, Clackamas
County, Ore.
Born in Portland, Multnomah
County, Ore., September
11, 1932.
Republican. Lawyer; chair of
Multnomah County Republican Party, 1960-62; member of Oregon
state house of representatives, 1963-68; U.S.
Senator from Oregon, 1969-95; resigned 1995; delegate to
Republican National Convention from Oregon, 1972.
Unitarian.
Member, American Bar
Association; Jaycees;
Beta
Theta Pi.
Resigned
from the U.S. Senate in 1995, after the Select Committee on Ethics recommended
his expulson for sexual
misconduct, attempting to obstruct
the committee's investigation, and using his position to solicit
employment for his
wife.
Still living as of 2014.
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