Elisha Johnson

Elisha Johnson (1785–1866) was an engineer and early resident of Rochester, New York. He served the then village as its fifth mayor.

Elisha Johnson
5th Mayor of Rochester, New York
In office
1838  December 1838
Preceded byThomas Kempshall
Succeeded byThomas H. Rochester
Personal details
Born1785
Chautauqua County, New York
Died1866 (aged 8081)
Ithaca, New York
ResidenceHornby Lodge, Tellico River Mansion
ProfessionEngineer

Early life

Elisahe Johnson was born in 1785 in Chautauqua County, New York. He graduated from Williams College.

Career

Johnson moved to Rochester in 1817 and purchased 80 acres (320,000 m2) of land on the east bank of the Genesee River from Enos Stone. Johnson built a horse railroad to Carthage by the Lower Falls of the Genesee and was the chief engineer and contractor of the Tonawanda Railroad. Johnson became the mayor of Rochester in 1838 and came up with a plan for the construction of a water works through the village that was rejected by the Common Council. At the end of his term Johnson became an engineer for the Genesee Valley Canal and moved to Portageville, New York, where he built the Hornby Lodge.[1]

Johnson built the Tellico River Mansion on his plantation in Tellico Plains, Tennessee and, with his brother and former Mayor of Buffalo, Ebenezer Johnson, purchased the Tellico Iron and Manufacturing Company. During the American Civil War, Union Army General William Sherman's soldiers destroyed the Tellico Iron Works, but Sherman acquitted Johnson for his part in supplying the Confederate Army because of Johnson's northern birth and sympathies. Johnson then moved to Ithaca, New York.

Death

Johnson died in 1866 in Ithaca, New York.[2]

gollark: I only have 40 or so left, somehow.
gollark: I got a box of 100 perfectly good pens last year.
gollark: Who would *buy* them?
gollark: How did you get away with selling pens for *that* much?
gollark: These are distinguishable, right?

References

Preceded by
Thomas Kempshall
Mayor of Rochester, NY
1838-December 1838
Succeeded by
Thomas H. Rochester


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