William Henry Bogart

William Henry Bogart (1810 in Albany, New York [1] – 1888 in Aurora, Cayuga County, New York[2]), was a lawyer, legislator, journalist, historian [3] and one of the first trustees of Wells College.[4]

Political Office

In 1840 Mr. Bogart was elected to the New York State Assembly to represent Tompkins County; he served one term.[5] Additionally he was a clerk for the New York State Senate.[6]

Writings

Mr. Bogart was a correspondent for New York Courier and Enquirer and the New York World newspapers,[7] but he was also an historian and author. He most well known for his book on Daniel Boone, Daniel Boone and the Hunters of Kentucky (1854) which Bogart wrote in an attempt to rescue Daniel Boone from becoming entirely myth and legend.[8] Bogart also wrote poetry and books on more general American history.

Sources

gollark: You could transmit power that way too, though it would be... dangerous, inefficient, more expensive and less practical than cables, etc.
gollark: Just very short-range radio.
gollark: I think it's technically possible to do it, but impractical and hard and inefficient.
gollark: Use wireless components.
gollark: The CC community's OS obsession is unhealthy.
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