Andrew S. Warner

Andrew Sylvester Warner (January 12, 1819 – December 26, 1887) was an American politician from New York.

Andrew S. Warner (1877)

Life

He was born on January 12, 1819, in Vernon, Oneida County, New York, the son of Andrew Warner (c.1791–1843) and Elizabeth C. (Young) Warner (b. c.1796). In 1837, the family removed to a farm in Sandy Creek, in Oswego County. On October 19, 1842, he married Mary Elizabeth Greene (d. 1859), and they had two sons.

He was a Free Soiler in 1848, and joined the Republican Party upon its foundation. He was a member of the New York State Assembly (Oswego Co., 2nd D.) in 1855 and 1856; and of the New York State Senate (21st D.) in 1860 and 1861.

On October 3, 1861, he married Chloe Monroe (1840–1916), and their son was Wilbert Charles Warner MD (1864–1927). He fought in the American Civil war attaining the rank of colonel, but contracted typhoid fever and was discharged.

In 1874, he ran as an Independent for Congress in the 24th District, but was defeated by Republican William H. Baker.

He died on December 26, 1887, in Sandy Creek, New York; and was buried at the Woodlawn Cemetery there.

Sources

gollark: You can also use `setfenv`, but I think that might go away eventually? Depends on the will of the squidly one.
gollark: `load(your_code, filename [or nil, probably], "t", environment_table)`
gollark: Well, the sandboxing backend for potatOS does, but it's close enough.
gollark: PotatOS just passes in a replacement `_G` table to `load`.
gollark: It looks like a usable approach would be to just sandbox "webpages" to allow... basically just a subset of term access, all the random utility functions and libraries which are important, *maybe* HTTP (impose limits on requests - "CORS" type things, perhaps?), and a few things for user input and whatnot.
New York State Assembly
Preceded by
Jacob M. Selden
New York State Assembly
Oswego County, 2nd District

1855–1856
Succeeded by
Leonard Ames
New York State Senate
Preceded by
Cheney Ames
New York State Senate
21st District

1860–1861
Succeeded by
Richard K. Sanford
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