- Job Durfee
Job Durfee (
September 20 ,1790 -July 26 ,1847 ) was a politician andjurist fromRhode Island . Born at Tiverton, he graduated fromBrown University in 1813 and was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Tiverton. He was a member of theRhode Island House of Representatives from 1816 to 1820, and was elected as aDemocratic-Republican to the Seventeenth Congress and was reelected as anAdams-Clay Republican to the Eighteenth Congress, serving fromMarch 4 ,1821 toMarch 3 ,1825 . He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1824 to the Nineteenth Congress and for election in 1828 to the Twenty-first Congress; he was again a member of the State house of representatives from 1826 to 1829, serving as speaker from 1827 to 1829. He declined to be a candidate for reelection and resumed the practice of law; in 1833 he was electedassociate justice of theRhode Island Supreme Court . He waschief justice from June 1835 until his death in Tiverton in 1847; interment was in the family burying ground at Quaket Neck, near Tiverton.Durfee was the author of "What Cheer", a poem in nine
canto s; of anoration , "The Influences of Scientific Discovery and Invention on Social and Political Progress, or Roger Williams in Exile" (1843), under thepseudonym "Theaptes;" and of a philosophical work in verse, entitled "The Panidea" (1846).References
* "Complete Works of Job Durfee, with a Memoir of his Life" (Providence, 1849), edited by his son
* Gibson, "Discourse on the Character and Writings of Chief Justice Durfee" (Providence, 1848)
*CongBio|D000568
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