Charles C. Comstock

Charles Carter Comstock ( born March 5, 1818 in Sullivan, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, † February 20, 1900 in Grand Rapids, Michigan ) was an American politician. Between 1885 and 1887 he represented the state of Michigan in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Career

Charles Comstock attended the public schools of his home. In 1853 he moved to Grand Rapids in Michigan, where he worked in agriculture and wood processing. It specialized in the production of furniture and other artefacts made ​​of wood. At the same time he began a political career as a member of the Democratic Party.

1863 and 1864 he was mayor of the city of Grand Rapids. In 1870 he applied unsuccessfully for the office of the Governor of Michigan. In 1873 he joined as unsuccessful in a congressional election. In the meantime, he joined the short-lived Greenback Party, for which he again failed in 1878 with a candidacy for Congress. In the congressional elections of 1884 he was then as a common candidate of the Democrats and the Greenback Party in the fifth electoral district of Michigan in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington DC chosen, where he became the successor of Julius Houseman on March 4, 1885. As Comstock renounced in 1886 on another candidacy, he was able to complete only one term in Congress until March 3, 1887.

After his retirement from the U.S. House of Representatives, Charles Comstock retired from politics and died on 20 February 1900 in Grand Rapids. He was married twice and had six children.

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