Charles C. P. Arndt

Charles C. P. Arndt (October 31, 1811 February 11, 1842) was an American Whig legislator from Pennsylvania and the Wisconsin Territory.

Charles C.P. Arndt
BornOctober 31, 1811
DiedFebruary 11, 1842(1842-02-11) (aged 41)
OccupationPolitician and legislator

Biography

Born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, he came with his parents to Green Bay, Michigan Territory. Arndt graduated from Rutgers College, studied law in Easton, Pennsylvania and was admitted to the bar. In 1836, Arndt moved back to Green Bay and was admitted to the bar in Michigan Territory. Arndt was elected to the Wisconsin Territorial Council from Green Bay. On February 11, 1842, after a heated discussion with James Russell Vineyard, Arndt was shot to death in the council room. Vineyard was later tried for the murder and was acquitted on grounds of self-defense.[1][2][3]

Legacy

In 1842, British author Charles Dickens wrote about the tragedy in his book American Notes.[4]

gollark: AMD do that? I thought all the APU stuff was one die for better power consumption.
gollark: I don't disagree that in practice you're probably fine using popular cryptographic stuff, I just don't like people wrongly saying that things are "mathematically proven".
gollark: Fascinating.
gollark: Obviously nobody has publicly disclosed how to break them (except with quantum computers), but that doesn't mean it's not possible, and the NSA hires a lot of mathematicians.
gollark: There aren't actually any mathematical proofs that breaking RSA and AES and whatever actually requires a really large amount of operations.

References

  1. "A Wisconsin Tragedy". The Weekly Wisconsin. February 13, 1886. p. 8. Retrieved March 7, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  2. 'Wisconsin's Saddest Tragedy,' M.M. Qualife, Wisconsin Historical Society: 1922, vol 15, no. 5, pp. 264–283
  3. Charles Arndt, Wisconsin Historical Society
  4. "American Notes," Charles Dickens, 1842
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