George W. Hulick

George Washington Hulick ( born June 29, 1833 in Batavia, Ohio; † August 13, 1907 ) was an American politician. Between 1893 and 1897 he represented the state of Ohio in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Career

George Hulick attended the public schools of his home and then the Farmer 's College near Cincinnati. He then worked for two years as a teacher. For some time he also directed the Pleasant Hill Academy. After studying law and his 1857 was admitted to the bar he began in Batavia to work in this profession. At the beginning of the Civil War, he served from April to August 1861, a volunteer infantry unit from Ohio in the army of the Union. He was elected captain of his unit. Between 1864 and 1867 Hulick estate judge was in Clermont County. For nine years he was a member of the local Board of Education. Politically, he joined the Republican Party. In May 1868, he was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in part in Chicago, was nominated to the General Ulysses S. Grant as a presidential candidate.

In the congressional elections of 1892 Hulick was in the sixth electoral district of Ohio in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington DC chosen, where he became the successor of Dennis D. Donovan on March 4, 1893. After a re-election he was able to complete in Congress until March 3, 1895 two legislative sessions. In 1896, he was not nominated by his party for re-election. After the end of his time in the U.S. House of Representatives George Hulick again practiced as an attorney in Batavia, where he died on August 13, 1907.

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