John Parker (Oswego County, NY)

John Parker (born December 27, 1810) was an American farmer and politician from New York.

John Parker (1877)

Life

He was born on December 27, 1810, in Steuben, Oneida County, New York, the son of John Parker (died 1843) and Louisa (Frisby) Parker (died 1823). On March 15, 1831, he married Polly E. Bonner (died 1873), and they had nine children. In 1834, the family moved to a farm in the Town of Orwell.[1]

Parker was Assessor of the Town of Orwell from 1841 to 1847; Highway Commissioner for four years; and Overseer of the Poor for two years. He was a member of the New York State Assembly (Oswego Co., 3rd D.) in 1866 and 1870.[2]

On March 11, 1874, he married Maria (Davis) Loring.

Sources

  1. History of Oswego County, New York by Crisfield Johnson (L. H. Everts & Co., Philadelphia PA, 1877; pg. 303)
  2. Civil List and Constitutional History of the Colony and State of New York compiled by Edgar Albert Werner (1884; pg. 368 and 371)
New York State Assembly
Preceded by
Avery W. Severance
New York State Assembly
Oswego County, 3rd District

1866
Succeeded by
Charles McKinney
Preceded by
Nathan B. Smith
New York State Assembly
Oswego County, 3rd District

1870
Succeeded by
Chauncey S. Sage


gollark: If you just have a stream, you often have to handle stuff like figuring out exactly where each bit of it starts and ends, which is annoying when there's an underlying packetized protocol anyway.
gollark: Or possibly some API which lets you mix both somehow, that would be neat.
gollark: Honestly, I think that in many applications arbitrary-size packets map better to what you're doing than streams.
gollark: Apart from the address caching.
gollark: Huh, I checked the Minitel L3 protocol docs and it apparently does rednet-style "routing" too.
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