- John F. Kinney
Infobox Judge
name = John F. Kinney
imagesize =
caption =
office = Justice of the Supreme Court of Iowa
termstart = 1847
termend = 1854
nominator =
appointer =Ansel Briggs
predecessor =
successor =
office2 = Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Utah
termstart2 = 1854
termend2 = 1857
nominator2 =
appointer2 =Franklin Pierce
predecessor2 =
successor2 =
office3 = Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Utah
termstart3 = 1860
termend3 = 1863
nominator3 =
appointer3 =James Buchanan
predecessor3 =
successor3 =
birthdate = birth date|1816|4|2|mf=y
birthplace =New Haven, New York , USA
deathdate = death date and age|1902|8|16|1816|4|2|mf=y
deathplace =Salt Lake City, Utah , USA
spouse = Hannah Hall (1838-1895)
Lucy Jane Leonard (1899-1902)John Fitch Kinney (
April 2 ,1816 –August 16 ,1902 ) was a prominent American attorney,judge , and Democraticpolitician . He served as Justice of the Supreme Court of Iowa, twice as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Utah and one term as the Territory of Utah'sDelegate in the House of Representatives of the 38th Congress.He was born in
New Haven, New York , the fourth child and second son of Stephen Fitch Kinney (1789-1872) and Abby Brockway (1788-1824). Having completed public school and a more select school, he entered the Oswego Academy at age 16. After two years of higher learning there, he entered the law office ofOrville Robinson , with whom he studiedlaw for two and half years. He then removed toMarysville, Ohio , where he resumed his law studies. He was admitted to the bar in 1837 and began thepractice of law in Marysville. [ Orson F. Whitley, "History of Utah" Volume IV—Biographical, 1904, Salt Lake City, George Q. Cannon & Sons Company, Publishers, pp. 668-671 ]On
December 29 ,1838 , Kinney and Hannah Hall (1816-1895) were married inMount Vernon, Ohio . He lived there and practiced successfully until the summer of 1844, when he removed toLee County, Iowa . He was twice elected secretary of the Territorial Legislative Council, in 1845 and 1846, and was prosecuting attorney for Lee County in 1846 and 1847. In June 1847, he was made president of the Democratic Convention, and before leaving Iowa City, which was then the capital of the new state, he was appointed, byGovernor Briggs, as Justice of the Supreme Court of Iowa, to fill a vacancy. Kinney served in the office under the Governor's appointment for nearly two years. He was then elected Judge of the Supreme Court for six years, by the joint assembly of the Legislature. In January 1854, he resigned in order to remove to Utah Territory. [Ibid. ]President Pierce had appointed Kinney as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Utah, and he served in that position from January 1854 until 1857. He then removed to
Nebraska City, Nebraska , where he resumed his law practice. He was re-appointed Chief Justice of the Territory of Utah by President Buchanan and served fromJune 26 ,1860 until March 1863.cite web |title=Biographical Directory of the United States Congress |first= |last= |work=Bioguide.Congress.gov |url=http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=K000225 |date= |accessdate=2008-04-07] He was directly involved in the events leading up to theMorrisite War of 1862, and allowed a condemnation of Territorial Governor Stephen S. Harding to be read into the public record after Harding issued a blanketpardon for all Morrisites convicted in connection with the war.Kinney was elected as the Territory of Utah's Democratic
Delegate to the 38th Congress and served fromMarch 4 ,1863 untilMarch 3 ,1865 . He was not a candidate for re-nomination in 1864. He returned to Nebraska City, and resumed his law practice. In February 1867, President Johnson appointed Kinney a Special IndianCommissioner to visit theSioux . He was appointed by President Arthur as agent of the Yankton Sioux inSouth Dakota , and served fromDecember 11 ,1884 untilJanuary 1 ,1889 , when he resigned, in order to escape the rigors of the northern climate, and again resumed the practice of law in Nebraska City.In 1890, Kinney removed to
San Diego, California . His wife Hannah died there onMay 1 ,1895 . He was Chairman of the Democratic Central Committee in 1896, when San Diego County was carried forWilliam Jennings Bryan in the Presidential election, and at the close of his official term, in 1898, received from the County Convention a vote of thanks and an expression of confidence for the able and satisfactory manner in which he had discharged his duties. Kinney was again married onMay 9 ,1899 , to Lucy Jane Leonard (1826-1911), widow of Moses Thurston (1817-1873), aMormon pioneer and old friend from Utah. Though they were married in San Diego, the Kinneys made their home in Salt Lake City.John Fitch Kinney died at age 86 in Salt Lake. [ "
Los Angeles Times ", Aug. 17, 1902, from Salt Lake City (Utah), Aug. 16, "Hon. John F. Kinney Dead At Salt Lake --- Prominent Jurist And Legislator Of Several States --- Delegate in Congress and Justice of State Supreme Bench—Married Widow of Moses Thurston at San Diego Two Years Ago," p. 2 ] His remains were then returned to San Diego, where he is interred in Mount Hope Cemetery, alongside his first wife.ee also
*United States Congress Delegates from the Territory of Utah
References
External links
*CongBio|K000225|name=KINNEY, John Fitch|inline=1 at the
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/kinney.html John F. Kinney] at the Political Graveyard
*findagrave|10789087
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