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Image courtesy of the Library of Congress |
GARFIELD, James Abram, a Representative from Ohio and 20th President of the United States;
born in Orange, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, November 19, 1831; attended district
school; driver and helmsman on the Ohio Canal; entered Geauga Seminary,
Chester, Ohio, in March 1849; attended the Eclectic Institute, Hiram, Ohio,
1851-1854; graduated from Williams College, Williamstown, Mass., 1858; teacher;
professor of ancient languages and literature in Hiram College, Hiram, Ohio;
president of Hiram College, Hiram, Ohio, 1857-1861; member of the Ohio state
senate 1859; lawyer, private practice; Union Army, Ohio Volunteer Infantry
1861-1863; elected as a Republican to the Thirty-eighth and to the eight
succeeding Congresses; chair, Committee on Military Affairs (Fortieth
Congress); chair, Committee on Banking and Currency (Forty-First Congress);
chair, Committee on Appropriations (Forty-Second and Forty-Third Congresses);
member of the Electoral Commission created by act of Congress approved January
29, 1877, to decide the contests in various States in the presidential election
of 1876; elected to the United States Senate on January 13, 1880, for the term
beginning March 4, 1881, but declined to accept having been elected President
of the United States on November 4, 1880; elected the twentieth President of
the United States in 1880 and served from March 4, 1881, until his death on
September 19, 1881, in Elberon, N.J., from the effects of an assassins attack
on July 2, 1881, in Washington, D.C.; interment in Lake View Cemetery,
Cleveland, Ohio.
BibliographyPeskin, Allan.
Garfield. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1978;
Smith, Theodore Clarke.
The Life and Letters of James Abram Garfield. 2 vols. New
Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1925.
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