- Philemon Beecher
Philemon Beecher (
March 19 1776 –November 30 1839 ) was an attorney andlegislator who was a member of theUnited States House of Representatives fromOhio .Philemon Beecher was born in
Oxford, Connecticut , the son of Abraham Beecher and Desire Tolles. Philemon Beecher received a classical education, read law and was admitted to the bar.Philemon Beecher moved to
Lancaster, Ohio , in 1801 and continued the practice of law, being admitted to the bar while Ohio was still the Northwest Territory. He was the leading lawyer of the Lancaster bar for twenty-five years. It was in his office that the great lawyer and political figureThomas Ewing studied law. Beecher was often abarrister at the court house inMarietta, Ohio .Beecher was a member of Scioto Lodge No 2 and senior Deacon of the Grand Lodge of Ohio of Free and Accepted Masons. Philemon Beecher made the acquaintance of Susan Gillespie, a daughter of Neil Gillespie of
Brownsville, Pennsylvania , when she came to Lancaster on a visit to her sister, Mrs. Hugh Boyle. Philemon Beecher and Susan Gillespie were married inPennsylvania in 1803 or 1804.Originally a Federalist, Beecher was elected a member of the
Ohio House of Representatives in 1803 and again in the three sessions from 1805 to 1807, serving as speaker in 1807. His swarthy complexion earned him the sobriquet of the "Black Knight."In 1805, he opposed a Resolution commending the United States government for the
Louisiana Purchase , but the Resolution passed by one vote. Beecher was a witness on behalf ofFairfield County, Ohio Common Pleas JudgeWilliam W. Irvin at the latter’simpeachment trial in 1806. Irvin was married to the sister of Beecher’s future wife. Irvin went on to follow Beecher in the Ohio legislature, in Congress, and was later on the Ohio Supreme Court.Philemon Beecher was unsuccessful as candidate for
United States Senator in 1807 againstEdward Tiffin . That year he also failed to win a place on the bench as judge of theOhio Supreme Court . Philemon Beecher was appointed amajor general in the Ohiomilitia .The
Lancaster, Ohio Bank was chartered in 1816 with Beecher as president for one year. He continued as a director of the bank for many years.Philemon Beecher was elected as a
Federalist fromOhio's 5th congressional district to the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Congresses. He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1820.Described in later years as an old-line Whig, in 1822, Philemon Beecher was elected as an Adams-Clay Republican from the new Ohio 9th district to the Eighteenth Congress, and an Adams candidate to the Nineteenth and Twentieth Congresses. In the 1824 battle between
Andrew Jackson andJohn Quincy Adams for Ohio’s electoral votes, he voted for Adams.In 1826, Philemon Beecher participated as a managing member of The Colonization Society in Lancaster, an organization promoting
repatriation toAfrica as an alternative toslavery . He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1828 when he was defeated by his brother-in-law, William W. Irvin.Philemon Beecher returned to Lancaster and continued the practice of law until his death there, aged 63. He and his wife are interred in Elmwood Cemetery.
References
* Wiseman, C. M. L. Centennial history of Lancaster, Ohio, and Lancaster people: 1898, the one hundredth anniversary of the settlement of the spot where Lancaster stands Lancaster, Ohio: C.M.L. Wiseman, 1898, ©1897, 407 pgs.
* History of the Republican Party in Ohio Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1898, 1579 pgs.
* Taylor, William Alexander. Ohio statesmen and annals of progress: from the year 1788 to the year 1900. Columbus, Ohio: Press of the Westbote Co., state printers, 1899, ©1898, 458 pgs.
* Wiseman, C. M. L. Pioneer period and pioneer people of Fairfield County, Ohio. Columbus, Ohio: F. J. Heer Printing Co., 1901, 431 pgs.
* Rerick, Rowland H. State centennial history of Ohio: covering the periods of Indian, French and British dominion, the Territory Northwest, and the hundred years of statehood. Madison, Wis.: Northwestern Historical Association, 1902, 423 pgs.
* A Standard history of Ross County, Ohio. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1917, 1006 pgs.
* Jacobus, Donald Lines, compiler. Families of Ancient New Haven Rome, NY: Press of Clarence D. Smith, 1927, eight volumes plus cross reference index volume.
* Weisenburger, Francis P. The passing of the frontier from 1825 to 1850. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, 1941, 538 pgs.USRepSuccessionBox
state=Ohio
district=5
before=James Kilbourne
after=Joseph Vance
years=1817–1821
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