Lorenzo D. Whiting

Lorenzo Dow Whiting (November 17, 1819 – October 10, 1889) was an American politician from New York. Born to an early American family, Whiting worked as a store clerk before moving to Illinois in 1838 to study patent law. After a seven-year return to New York, Whiting established a farm in Bureau County, Illinois, which became one of the most prosperous in the region. This led to his being elected as township supervisor, then to the Illinois General Assembly. He served in the assembly for eighteen years: two as a representative and sixteen as a senator. He was known for his advocacy of canals and opposition to railroads. He was the father of journalist Lilian Whiting.

Lorenzo D. Whiting
Member of the Illinois Senate
from the 25th district
In office
1882–1886
Preceded byMeredith Walker
Succeeded byEdward A. Washburn
Member of the Illinois Senate
from the 19th district
In office
1872–1882
Preceded byredistricted
Succeeded byredistricted
Member of the Illinois Senate
from the 21st district
In office
1870–1872
Preceded bynew district
Succeeded byredistricted
Personal details
Born(1819-11-17)November 17, 1819
Arcadia, New York
DiedOctober 10, 1889(1889-10-10) (aged 69)
Political partyRepublican
ResidenceIndiantown Township, Bureau County, Illinois
ProfessionFarmer

Biography

Lorenzo Dow Whiting was born in Arcadia, New York, on November 17, 1819. He was a descendant of Cotton Mather through his mother, Zilpha. Whiting attended school then worked as a clerk in Olcott, New York until he was eighteen. He then set out for Illinois, working in patent rights for four years. Whiting returned to New York in 1842 to teach and oversee the schools in Newfane. He also served as a justice of the peace. In 1849, he returned to Illinois to teach, initially settling near Wyanet. However, he quickly abandoned his teaching ambitions to focus on farming, purchasing a farm near Tiskilwa. Whiting amassed 600 acres (240 ha) of land, making his farm one of the largest in the area and bringing him to local prominence.[1]

Whiting was named a supervisor of Indiantown Township, Bureau County, Illinois, served for five or six years, then was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives as a Republican in 1868. Shortly thereafter, he was elected as a delegate to the 1870 Constitution of Illinois Convention. There, Whiting successfully advocated for a provision empowering the general assembly to regulate the railroad business. After his two-year term in the state house, Whiting was elected to the Illinois Senate in 1870. He would serve in that body until 1886 and was noted for his advocation of the Hennepin Canal. Whiting also wrote the bill that passed the Illinois and Michigan Canal to the federal government.[1]

Whiting married Lucretia C. Clement in 1846. They had three children before she died in 1872. Eldest son Clement A. became a professor at the Pacific School of Osteopathy in Los Angeles. Herbert L., the middle child, maintained the land holdings in Illinois after Lorenzo's death. Daughter Emily Lilian became a journalist (under the name Lilian Whiting) in Boston, Massachusetts.[1][2] Whiting married Eriphyle Robinson in 1874. He died on October 10, 1889,[1] and was buried in Mount Bloom Cemetery in Tiskilwa.

gollark: It's in the weird position of "sort of public but hard to access".
gollark: POST https://osmarks.tk/wsthing/report, it accepts JSON; you can send a `report` string, an array of strings `flags`, a string code sample `code`, and an object of arbitrary metadata stuff `host`.
gollark: How do you plan to break the trilaterating sniffer thing anyway?
gollark: Er, sure, I'll pull up the incident report system docs.
gollark: Can you connect it to potatOS Analytics too?

References

  1. Harrington, George B. (1906). Past and Present of Bureau County, Illinois. Chicago, IL: The Pioneer Publishing Co. p. 763.
  2. Logan, Mrs. John A. (1912). The Part Taken by Women in American History. Wilmington, DE: The Perry-Nalle Publishing Co. p. 849.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.