- William Rainey Marshall
Infobox Governor
name= William Rainey Marshall
caption= William Rainey Marshall
order= 5th
office= Governor of Minnesota
term_start=January 8 ,1866
term_end=January 9 ,1870
lieutenant=Thomas H. Armstrong
predecessor=Stephen Miller
successor=Horace Austin
birth_date= birth date|1825|10|17|mf=y
birth_place=Columbia, Missouri , U.S.
death_date= death date and age|1896|1|8|1825|10|17|mf=y
death_place=Pasadena, California , U.S.
party= Republican
profession= banker, farmer
spouse= Abby Langford
religion=
footnotes=Willian Rainey Marshall (
October 17 ,1825 ndashJanuary 8 ,1896 [Newspaper articles reporting Gov. Marshall's death on April 4, 1895 were in error. See this article's discussion page.] ) was an Americanpolitician . He was the 5thGovernor of Minnesota fromJanuary 8 ,1866 toJanuary 9 ,1870 and was a member of the Republican party. He served as an officer in the 7th Minnesota Regiment during theAmerican Civil War (1861–65).Energy and ambition characterized the life of Minnesota's fifth—and only "southern-born" governor. He was born in
Columbia, Missouri . The first stops on young Marshall's trek north wereIllinois andWisconsin , where he mined for lead and surveyed land. In 1849 he crossed the St. Croix River to settle in St. Paul, soon home of his fledgling hardware business. His political career began with a term in the first territorial legislature, and his reputation grew when he served as chairman of the convention that founded the state's Republican Party. The one-time banker, dairy farmer, stock-raiser, and newspaper publisher volunteered to fight in both the Civil War and theDakota War of 1862 .A battle-scarred hero, an experienced entrepreneur, and a force in the Republican Party, Marshall handily won the 1865 and 1867 gubernatorial elections. As governor, he repeatedly urged passage of a black suffrage amendment. After defeating it twice, the legislature finally adopted the amendment and inspired Marshall to declare that the "free young state of Minnesota" is "now altogether free." During William Marshall's administration, his adoptive state experienced a post-Civil-War surge of growth and development: its population doubled to 350,000, its railroad mileage quadrupled, and its commercial endeavors flourished.
After leaving office, Marshall remained active in both the private and public sectors as an attorney, banker, and as a railroad and land commissioner. He was a partner in a law firm with Jude Kerr and
Robertson Howard while residing in St. Paul, but subsequent commercial ventures faltered, as did his health. He moved toCalifornia in 1894 and died there two years later.Marshall County, Minnesota was named after him. He is listed as one of the few politicians to be an adherent ofSwedenborgianism [http://politicalgraveyard.com/group/swedenborgian.html] .References
External links
* [http://www.mnhs.org/people/governors/gov/gov_07.htm Minnesota Historical Society]
* [http://www.leg.state.mn.us/legdb/fulldetail.asp?ID=13894 Minnesota Legislators Past & Present]
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