- Samuel Finley Vinton
Samuel Finley Vinton (
September 25 ,1792 -May 11 ,1862 ) was a member of theUnited States House of Representatives fromOhio fromMarch 4 ,1823 toMarch 4 ,1837 and again fromMarch 4 ,1843 toMarch 4 ,1851 .Born in
South Hadley, Massachusetts , Vinton was the son of Abiatha and Sarah (Day) Vinton. He graduated fromWilliams College in 1814 paying his way through school by teaching. He studied law and was admitted to the bar inConnecticut in 1816. He then moved to southernOhio and practiced law in Gallipolis. There he married Romaine Madeleine Bureau in 1824. She died in 1831 after producing a son and a daughter.After holding various local offices, he was elected to the Eighteenth Congress on a non-partisan ballot. Vinton was re-elected to the Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-first, Twenty-second, Twenty Third and Twenty-fourth Congresses. In the Twenty-third Congress he was an Anti-Jacksonian Democrat and in the Twenty-fourth and succeeding Congresses he was a Whig.
He did not seek re-election in 1836, returning to Ohio to his successful practice of law. However, he returned to Congress in 1843, again as a Whig. In his second service in Congress, he was a member of the Twenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, Thirtieth, and Thirty-first Congresses. He was noted for his service on the Public Lands Committee, helping to create the
United States Department of the Interior , and, asThomas Ewing put it, had "more influence in the House of Representatives, much more, than any other man in it." He was an authority onparliamentary procedure and in the Thirtieth Congress, he declined the Speakership but took the chairmanship of the Ways and Means Committee instead.President
Millard Fillmore offered him the post of Secretary of the Interior, but he declined. He did not run for re-election in 1850, instead running forGovernor of Ohio as a Whig in 1851. In 1853, he became president of the Cleveland and Toledo Railroad, retiring the next year toWashington, D.C. .In 1862, President
Abraham Lincoln appointed him to appraise the value of slaves freed in theDistrict of Columbia . He died in Washington that year and was buried inGallipolis, Ohio .His daughter,
Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren was a writer.Vinton County, Ohio andVinton, Ohio are named for him.
His son-in-law was AdmirialJohn A. Dahlgren .
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