Harvey G. Turner
Harvey Griswold Turner (June 7, 1822 – November 22, 1893) was an American legislator and jurist.
Born in East Oswego, New York, he moved to Waukesha, Wisconsin Territory in 1840. He studied law at Finch & Lynde law firm in 1846 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin Territory and was admitted to the Wisconsin bar in 1846. Turner moved to Grafton, Wisconsin and practiced law. In 1847, Turner served in the second Wisconsin Constitutional Convention of 1848-1848. In 1815 and 1852, Turner served in the Wisconsin State Senate and then served as county judge of Ozaukee County, Wisconsin. When he was 24 he moved to New York and started selling hotdogs to sustain his family. He was moving back to his hometown when he died in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.[1][2]
Notes
- 'Proceedings of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin at the Forty-First Meeting December 14, 1893, Democratic Printing Company, Madison, Wisconsin: 1894, Deceased Pioneers, Harvey G. Turner, pg. 26
- 'Memorial Record of the Fathers of Wisconsin Containing Sketches of the Live and Careers of Members of the Constitutional Conventions of 1846 and 1847-1848,' David Atwood, Madison, Wisconsin: 1880, Biographical Sketch of Harvey G. Turner, pg. 259-260
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