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Lorenzo Crounse

American politician and judge (1834–1909)

Lorenzo Crounse

Summary

American politician and judge (1834–1909)

FieldValue
nameLorenzo Crounse
imageLorenzo Crounse.jpg
imagesize120 px
order18th
office1Governor of Nebraska
term_start1January 13, 1893
term_end1January 3, 1895
lieutenant1Thomas J. Majors
predecessor1James E. Boyd
successor1Silas A. Holcomb
office2Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Nebraska's at-large congressional district
term_start2March 4, 1873
term_end2March 3, 1877
predecessor2John Taffe
successor2Frank Welch
office3Member of the Nebraska Territorial House of Representatives
term31866
office4Associate Justice of the Nebraska Supreme Court
term_start41867
term_end41873
office5Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury
term_start5April 27, 1891
term_end5October 31, 1892
office6Member of the Nebraska State Senate from the 10th District
term61901
birth_date
death_date
birth_placeSharon, New York, U.S.
death_placeOmaha, Nebraska, U.S.
partyRepublican
spouseMary E. Griffiths
signatureSignature of Lorenzo Crounse (1834–1909).png

Lorenzo Crounse (January 27, 1834May 13, 1909) was a Nebraska Republican politician and the eighth Governor of Nebraska.

Early life

Born in Sharon in Schoharie County, New York, Crounse attended the New York Conference Seminary in Charlotteville, New York. While teaching school, he studied law and in 1857 he was admitted to the bar. In 1860, he married Mary E. Griffiths and they had four children.

Career

Crounse established a law practice at Fort Plain, New York. During the Civil War he organized Battery K, New York Light Artillery and became a captain in 1861, served for a year; but was discharged after suffering wounds at a battle on the Rappahannock River in Virginia and resumed his law practice.

Lorenzo Crounse

Crounse moved to the Nebraska Territory in 1864, and became part of the territorial legislature and later was a delegate to the state's constitutional convention. He became a Justice of Nebraska state supreme court from 1867 to 1873, and after his term expired, ran and was elected as a Republican to the Forty-third and Forty-fourth Congresses (1873–1877). He declined to run again in 1876.

He became an internal revenue collector for the district of Nebraska in 1879, and then was appointed Assistant Secretary of the United States Treasury on April 27, 1891. He resigned on October 31, 1892 to become the 8th governor of Nebraska. During his term, future Nebraska representative William E. Andrews worked as his private secretary. He served until 1895, and then served briefly in the Nebraska state senate in 1901.

Death and legacy

After his wife, Mary E. Griffiths Crounse (1836-1882) died, Crounse remained a widower, and he spent his last years with one of his four children. He died in Omaha. The now-extinct village of Crounse, Nebraska, near Lincoln was named after him.

References

References

  1. "Lorenzo Crounse". The Encyclopedia of Nebraska.
  2. "Lorenzo Crounse". National Governors Association.
  3. "Lorenzo Crounse". Semi-Centennial History of Nebraska.
  4. "Lorenzo Crounse". The Political Graveyard.
  5. Pesek, Cara. (2005-05-17). "Natives of Crounse remember town replaced by lake". [[Lincoln Journal Star]].
Wikipedia Source

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