Rudolph W. Archer

Rudolph W. Archer (September 20, 1869 January 14, 1932) was a Republican politician in the U.S. state of Ohio who was Ohio State Treasurer 1915-1917 and 1919-1923.

Rudolph W. Archer
28th & 30th Ohio State Treasurer
In office
January 11, 1915  January 8, 1917
GovernorFrank B. Willis
Preceded byJohn P. Brennan
Succeeded byChester E. Bryan
In office
January 13, 1919  January 8, 1923
GovernorJames M. Cox
Preceded byChester E. Bryan
Succeeded byHarry S. Day
Personal details
Born(1869-09-20)September 20, 1869
Bellaire, Ohio
DiedJanuary 14, 1932(1932-01-14) (aged 62)[1]
Bellaire, Ohio
Political partyRepublican

Biography

Rudolph W. Archer was born in Bellaire, Belmont County, Ohio in 1869. He dropped out of school at age ten to help support the family. He worked in a glass factory, and learned business. He was nominated for county treasurer twice by the Republican Party, and twice elected.[2]

Archer was first elected State Treasurer of Ohio in 1914, and served a two-year term. In 1916, he was defeated by Democrat Chester E. Bryan.[3] In 1918 and 1920, he was elected twice more for State Treasurer.

gollark: It's currently sitting at "basic features work" (editing, creating, viewing note pages), but more advanced stuff is not implemented because the design is hard to do elegantly.
gollark: It's going slowly because programming is hard and I'm lazy and conflicted on some design aspects.
gollark: Minoteaur (v2.0.0 really early alpha) is a server-rendered webapp using SQLite/Node.js/Express. I briefly experimented with making UI-type stuff run on the client but it was annoying.
gollark: On the one hand that encourages non-stateful backends (using the database and FS for storage and not holding important stuff in RAM), which I do anyway, but on the others it's inefficient and annoying.
gollark: I like Node.js/Express for my random bodging because it's less evil than PHP (especially when type checked), has really great libraries available, and doesn't do the silly (conventional for PHP) "one execution of your script per request" thing.

References

  1. Halley, W E; Maynard, John P. (1920). Manual of Legislative Practice in the General Assembly 1919-1920. Columbus: State Bindery. p. 51.
  2. Journal of the Senate of the 82nd General Assembly of the State of Ohio. 107. Columbus: State Bindery. 1917.
Political offices
Preceded by
John P. Brennan
Treasurer of Ohio
1915–1917
Succeeded by
Chester E. Bryan
Preceded by
Chester E. Bryan
Treasurer of Ohio
1919–1923
Succeeded by
Harry S. Day
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.