- Watson C. Squire
Infobox Governor
name =Watson C. Squire
order =12th
office =Governor of Washington Territory
term_start =1884
term_end =1887
birth_date =May 18 ,1838
birth_place =Cape Vincent, New York
death_date =June 7 ,1926
death_place =Seattle, Washington
nationality =American
spouse =
party =Republican
predecessor =William A. Newell
successor =Eugene Semple Watson Carvosso Squire (
May 18 1838 -June 7 1926 ) was aUnited States Senator fromWashington .Born in
Cape Vincent, New York , he attended the public schools, Falley Seminary (inFulton, New York ) and Fairfield Seminary (Herkimer County, New York ). He graduated fromWesleyan University in 1859 and was principal of the Moravia Institute. During the Civil War, he enlisted in Company F, Nineteenth Regiment, New York Volunteer Infantry, in 1861; he was promoted to the rank of first lieutenant, and wasmuster ed out the same year.He graduated from the Cleveland Law School in 1862 and was admitted to the bar the same year, commencing practice in
Cleveland, Ohio . He raised a company ofsharpshooter s, of which he was commissioned captain. He was madejudge advocate of the district of Tennessee, with headquarters inNashville ; in 1865, he was discharged with the rank of captain and was subsequentlybrevet ted major, lieutenant colonel, and colonel. Subsequently, Squire was employed with theRemington Arms Company and purchased large holdings in theTerritory of Washington in 1876.Squire moved to Seattle in 1879, and was Governor of the Territory of Washington from 1884 to 1887. Upon the admission of Washington as a State into the Union in 1889, Squire was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate; he was reelected in 1891, and served from
November 20 1889 toMarch 3 1897 . He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1897. While in the Senate, he was chairman of the Committee on Coast Defenses (Fifty-second and Fifty-fourth Congresses) and a member of the Committee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard (Fifty-second Congress).He retired from the practice of law and devoted his time to management of his properties in Seattle; he was organizer and president of the Union Trust Co. and the Squire Investment Co. He died in
Seattle , aged 88; interment was in Washelli Cemetery.References
*CongBio|S000761 Retrieved on
2008-02-15 Further reading
*cite book|author=
Meany, Edmond S |title=Governors of Washington : territorial and state|publisher=University of Washington,|year=1915 [http://www.secstate.wa.gov/history/publications_detail.aspx?p=30 Available online through the Washington State Library's Classics in Washington History collection]External links
*findagrave|2545 Retrieved on
2008-02-15
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