Abraham Browning
Abraham Browning (July 16, 1808 – August 22, 1889) was the Attorney General of New Jersey from 1845 to 1850 and a prominent citizen of Camden County, New Jersey.
Biography
Browning was born near Camden in 1808 and entered the New Jersey bar in 1834. He was a delegate at the New Jersey Constitutional Convention in 1843, and later was appointed Attorney General under Governor Charles C. Stratton and stayed on during second tenure of Governor Daniel Haines.[1] He would later serve as a delegate to the 1864 Democratic National Convention.
Browning's Cherry Hill Farm helped give Cherry Hill, New Jersey its name. He is often credited with coining the term "the Garden State", the official nickname of New Jersey,[2], though there is evidence that the term goes back to the colonial period.[3]
References
- "State of New Jersey". www.nj.gov.
- Kozma, Christina. "Reaping what they Sow; What's it worth... to keep the farm?", New Jersey Monthly, February 7, 2008. Accessed January 1, 2018. "Why exactly is New Jersey called the Garden State? According to a recent New Jersey Farm Bureau survey, nearly half of us aren't sure. Some background: In 1876 Abraham Browning, an attorney, politician, and the owner of Cherry Hill Farm, which gave its name to the town that now stands in its place, coined the term, comparing New Jersey, two-thirds of which was rolling farmland, to a big barrel, open on both ends, from which Pennsylvanians and New Yorkers gobbled up the state's agricultural bounty."
- "You are being redirected..." njbmagazine.com.
Legal offices | ||
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Preceded by Richard P. Thompson |
Attorney General of New Jersey 1845– 1850 |
Succeeded by Lucius Elmer |