A. L. Freehafer

Albertus LeRoy (A.L.) Freehafer (February 12, 1868, in Butler, Richland County, Ohio – October 28, 1940, in Payette, Idaho) was a Democratic politician from Idaho. He was a son of Andrew Freehafer and Martha Ellen Kinton, both natives of Richland County, Ohio.

From 1907 to 1908, he represented Washington County, Idaho, as a member of the House of Representatives, and was a minority leader in the assembly. He served two terms as a state senator. As senator, he represented Washington County, Idaho, from 1909 to 1912 and Payette County, Idaho, from 1929 to 1934.

In 1911, Senator Freehafer introduced a bill, written by L.L. Burtenshaw, to the state legislature of Idaho to create Adams County. The bill passed on March 3, 1911.[1]

In 1924, A.L. Freehafer was a Democratic nominee for Governor of Idaho, but finished behind H.F. Samuels, the Progressive candidate, losing by only 81 points. The Republican governor, Charles C. Moore, came in third.[2]

Freehafer is the grandfather of James (Jim) Albertus McClure, a former Republican United States Senator from Idaho.

Notes

  1. L.L. Burtenshaw, "A Short History of Adams County," Adams County Leader, July 1929 [special supplement, no day given].
  2. "Mixed Result in this County; Samuels Leads Freehafer by 81 — Moore, a Very Poor Third. Most of County Ticket Republican," [unknown newspaper but probably Payette Independent or Payette Enterprise, unknown date].
gollark: It might have been another one with a normalized axis, I forget.
gollark: https://lucasnorth.uk/sapply/ I think?
gollark: It doesn't, this just uses people's self-reported scores from one of the three-axis compasses.
gollark: I should try linear regressioning this, could be fun.
gollark: Not updated in ages though.

References

Party political offices
Preceded by
Moses Alexander
Democratic Party nominee, Governor of Idaho
1924
Succeeded by
Asher B. Wilson


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.