- Charles Spalding Thomas
Infobox Governor
name = Charles Spalding Thomas
order = 11th
office = Governor of the State of Colorado
term_start = 1899
term_end = 1901
lieutenant =
predecessor = Alva Adams
successor =James Bradley Orman
birth_date =December 6 ,1849
birth_place =Darien, Georgia
death_date = death date and age|1934|6|24|1849|12|6
death_place =Denver, Colorado
party = Democrat
spouse =
profession =
religion =Charles Spalding Thomas (
December 6 1849 –June 24 1934 ) was aUnited States Senator fromColorado . Born in Darien, McIntosh County, Georgia, he attended private schools in Georgia andConnecticut , and served briefly in the Confederate Army.Thomas graduated from the law department of the
University of Michigan atAnn Arbor in 1871, and was admitted to the bar the same year. He moved to Colorado and began to practice inDenver , where he was a city attorney in 1875 and 1876. He was a member of theDemocratic National Committee from 1884 to 1896, and was an unsuccessful candidate for election to theUnited States House of Representatives in 1884, to the Senate in 1888 and 1895, and to thegovernor ship in 1894.Thomas was Governor of Colorado from 1899 to 1901, and was elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 1913 to fill the vacancy caused by the death of
Charles J. Hughes, Jr. he was reelected in 1914, and served from January 15, 1913, to March 3, 1921. In 1920, he was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection on the Nationalist ticket. [cite web
url=http://clerk.house.gov/members/electionInfo/1920election.pdf
title=Statistics of the Congressional and Presidential Elections of November 6, 1934
accessdate=2006-10-25
author=William Tyler Page
last=Page
first=William Tyler
date=
year=
month=
format=PDF
work=
publisher=Clerk of the House of Representatives
pages=2
language=
archiveurl=
archivedate=
quote=]In the Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth Congresses, Thomas was chairman of the Committee on Woman Suffrage, and a member of the Committee on Coast Defenses (Sixty-fifth Congress) and the Committee on Pacific Railroads (Sixty-sixth Congress). He resumed the practice of law and died in Denver; his remains were cremated and the ashes interred in Fairmount Cemetery.
Notes
References
* [http://www.colorado.gov/dpa/doit/archives/govs/thomas.html Governor Charles S. Thomas Collection at the Colorado State Archives] Retrieved on 18 April 2008.
*CongBio|T000160External links
*Find A Grave|id=13077989
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