John Hunner

John Hunner (November 12, 1844 – May 19, 1918) was an American politician.

Born in Buffalo, New York,[1] he moved to Alma, Wisconsin, in 1860,[1] where he was editor of the local paper and became the first president of the village of Alma. After the Civil War, Hunner moved to Eau Claire, Wisconsin,[1] where he was a grocer and became the editor of the local paper in 1871.[1] He was elected city clerk of Eau Claire. In 1890, Hunner was elected mayor of Eau Claire. He served as State Treasurer of Wisconsin from 1891 to 1895 and was a member of the Democratic Party.[2] He moved to Baltimore in 1917 after suffering a stroke, where he died two years later.[1] His remains were returned to Wisconsin and he was buried at Lakeview Cemetery in Eau Claire.

Notes

  1. "Obituary: Honest John Hunner". Eau Claire Leader. May 22, 1918. p. 8. Retrieved November 24, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  2. Wisconsin Blue Book, 1893, Biographical Sketch of John Hunner, p. 624.
Political offices
Preceded by
Henry B. Harshaw
Treasurer of Wisconsin
1891–1895
Succeeded by
Sewell A. Peterson


gollark: Given our tendency to anthropomorphise natural processes and assign everything labels and whatnot, one could argue that our brains are closer to foolish OOP languages than assembly or something, not that either is remotely sensible as a non-bees description.
gollark: Brains are like stupid things, and they do stupids.
gollark: What if *that* emulation is running on a very overclocked 6502?
gollark: Clearly a mere emulation implemented in the Java code.
gollark: Brains don't use x86. They use hardware Java bytecode interpreters.
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