David Perley Lowe

David Perley Lowe ( born August 22, 1823 in Utica, New York, † April 10, 1882 in Fort Scott, Kansas ) was an American politician. Between 1871 and 1875 he represented the first electoral district of the state of Kansas in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Career

David Lowe drew even at a young age to Ohio, where he attended the public schools. After studying law at the Cincinnati Law College and his 1851 was admitted as a lawyer in Cincinnati, he began to work in his new profession. In 1861 he moved his residence and his law firm after Mound City, Kansas. Lowe was a member of the Republican Party, for which he sat 1863-1864 in the Senate of Kansas. In the years 1867 to 1871 Lowe judge was in the sixth judicial district. Since 1870 he was a resident of Fort Scott.

In 1870, he was in the first district of Kansas in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington DC selected. There he entered on March 4, 1871, the successor of Sidney Clarke. After a re-election in 1872 he was able to complete in Congress until March 3, 1875 two legislative sessions. From 1873 to 1875 he was chairman of Bergbauauschusses. In 1874, Lowe gave up another candidacy. After the end of his time in Congress ( Chief Justice ) was appointed by the Supreme Court in Utah Territory David Lowe of President Ulysses S. Grant to the presiding judge. After his return to Kansas Lowe in 1879 again in the sixth Judicial District Judge. This office he held until his death in 1882.

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