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Gideon Tomlinson

American politician (1780–1854)


Summary

American politician (1780–1854)

FieldValue
nameGideon Tomlinson
imageGideon Tomlinson (Conn. Rep., Gov., US Sen.) (3x4a).jpg
jr/srUnited States Senator
stateConnecticut
term_startMarch 4, 1831
term_endMarch 3, 1837
predecessorCalvin Willey
successorPerry Smith
order225th
office2Governor of Connecticut
term_start2May 2, 1827
term_end2March 2, 1831
lieutenant2John Samuel Peters
predecessor2Oliver Wolcott Jr.
successor2John Samuel Peters
state3Connecticut
district3at-large
term_start3March 4, 1819
term_end3March 3, 1827
predecessor3Thomas Scott Williams
successor3David Plant
birth_date
birth_placeStratford, Connecticut
death_date
death_placeFairfield, Connecticut
spouseSarah Bradley Tomlinson, Lydia Ann Wells Wright Tomlinson
childrenJabez Huntington Tomlinson
alma_materYale College
professionlawyer, politician
partyToleration (1817–1827)
Democratic-Republican (1827–1828)
National Republican (1828–1834)
Whig (1834–1854)

|jr/sr = United States Senator Democratic-Republican (1827–1828) National Republican (1828–1834) Whig (1834–1854)

Gideon Tomlinson (December 31, 1780 – October 8, 1854) was a United States senator, United States Representative, and the 25th Governor for the state of Connecticut.

Biography

Born in Stratford, Tomlinson completed preparatory studies and graduated from Yale College in 1802. He went to Virginia for a year to be a private tutor and to study law. When he returned to Fairfield he continued his studies and was admitted to the bar in 1807. That same year he married Sarah Bradley. He received a Master of Arts, in 1808 from Yale. Their only child, Jabez Huntington Tomlinson, was born in 1818 but died at the young age of 19 in 1838. Mrs. Tomlinson died in 1842. In 1846, Gideon married Mrs. Lydia Ann Wells Wright, widow of William Wright of Bridgeport, Connecticut.

Career

Tomlinson entered politics in 1817, as clerk of the Connecticut House of Representatives, and was reelected again in 1818, when he served as speaker. He was Delegate to the State Constitutional Convention in 1818.

Elected to the Sixteenth and to the three succeeding United States Congresses, Tomlinson served as a Representative from March 4, 1819 to March 3, 1827, and was chairman of the Committee on Commerce (Nineteenth Congress).

Winning the 1827 gubernatorial nomination, Tomlinson was elected Connecticut's eighth governor. He was reelected to the governor's office in 1828, 1829, and 1830. During his tenure, prison reform was accomplished in 1827 with the opening of a more civilized penitentiary. His administration advocated educational improvements and fiscal support to the public school system. On March 2, 1831, Tomlinson resigned from office to accept an appointment to the U.S. Senate.

Tomlinson served in the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1831, to March 3, 1837. There, he served as chairman of the Committee on Pensions (Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth Congresses). In 1837, he left the Senate and became the first President of the newly chartered Housatonic Railroad Company.

He was a trustee of Trinity College, then retired to private life.

Death and legacy

Tomlinson died in Fairfield on October 8, 1854. He is interred at the Old Congregational Cemetery, Stratford, Connecticut. The Tomlinson Bridge (built 1796-98) of Fair Haven (part of New Haven) Connecticut is named after him. The Tomlinson Middle School in Fairfield is named in his honor.

References

References

  1. (14 August 2015). "Gideon Tomlinson". Museum of Connecticut History.
  2. "Gideon Tomlinson". The Political Graveyard.
  3. "Gideon Tomlinson". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  4. "Gideon Tomlinson". Connecticut State Library.
  5. "Gideon Tomlinson". Govtrack US Congress.
  6. "Gideon Tomlinson". National Governors Association.
  7. (1900). "The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography". J.T. White.
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