Fred S. Jackson
Fred Schuyler Jackson ( born April 19, 1868 in Stanton, Miami county, Kansas; † November 21, 1931 in Topeka, Kansas ) was an American politician. Between 1911 and 1913 he represented the fourth electoral district of the state of Kansas in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Career
In 1881, Fred Jackson moved with his parents in the Greenwood County. He visited there and in Miami County public schools. Between 1885 and 1890 he was self- employed as a teacher. After studying law at the University of Kansas in Lawrence and its made in 1892 admitted to the bar he began in Eureka to work in his new profession.
Between 1893 and 1897 Jackson District Attorney in Greenwood County and from 1906 until 1907, he was Deputy Attorney General of Kansas. After that, he was from 1907 to 1911 Attorney General of that State. Politically, Jackson member of the Republican Party. In the congressional elections of 1910, he was appointed as their candidate in the fourth district of Kansas in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington DC selected. There he met on March 4, 1911 the successor of James Monroe Miller. But since he 1912 the Democrats Dudley Doolittle defeated in the elections of the year, he was able to complete only one term in Congress until March 3, 1913.
After the end of his time in the federal capital Jackson again worked as a lawyer in Eureka. In 1915 he moved to Topeka, after he had been appointed to the State Commission that deal with the public utilities dealt ( Public Utilities Commission ). In this body he remained until 1924. Thereafter, he worked again as a lawyer. Fred Jackson was also involved in agriculture and especially in the field of animal husbandry. He died in November 1931 in Topeka and was buried in Eureka.