Edward M. Kinsella

Edward M. Kinsella (June 15, 1911 – December 3, 1973) was an American politician from New York.

Life

He was born on June 15, 1911[1] in Solvay, New York. He attended Solvay High School, Syracuse University and Le Moyne College. Then he engaged in the insurance business, and entered politics as a Republican.[2] He married Genevieve L. Degan, and they had two sons.[3]

Kinsella was Mayor of Solvay from 1961 to 1970; and a member of the New York State Assembly (120th D.) from 1971 until his death in 1973, sitting in the 179th and 180th New York State Legislatures.

He died on December 3, 1973, in Community General Hospital in Syracuse, New York.[4]

gollark: Not compared to any sort of recent land-based one or even mobile networks.
gollark: TCP can't protect you from:- network failures- the other end not sending packets for whatever reason- general weirdness
gollark: You can probably trust your own server decently, but only if you can trust that it's definitely the real server, and you *cannot* trust the network connection.
gollark: You should at least make it handle any big issues *sensibly* and not just silently do the wrong thing.
gollark: It could accidentally send the wrong thing or explode or something.

References

  1. "KINSELLA, EDWARD" at Social Security Info
  2. New York Red Book (1973; pg. 202)
  3. "Edward M. Kinsella, Jr. (1935–2014)" at Maurer Funeral Home
  4. EDWARD KINSELLA, ASSEMBLYMAN, DIES in the New York Times on December 4, 1973 (subscription required)
New York State Assembly
Preceded by
Mortimer P. Gallivan
New York State Assembly
120th District

1971–1973
Succeeded by
Rocco Pirro


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