Jonas H. McGowan

Jonas Hartzell McGowan ( born April 2, 1837 Mahoning County, Ohio; † July 5, 1909 in Washington DC ) was an American politician. Between 1877 and 1881 he represented the state of Michigan in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Career

Jonas McGowan first attended a school in Alliance. In 1854 he moved with his parents to Orland in Steuben County in Indiana. Until 1861 he studied at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He then taught for a year as a teacher in the city of Coldwater. In the following years he took as a cavalry soldier in the army of the Union part in the civil war. After a subsequent study of law and its made ​​in 1867 admitted to the bar he began to work in his new profession. In the years 1868 to 1872 he was district attorney in Branch County.

Politically, McGowan to the Republican Party, for which he sat in the Senate from Michigan. For seven years he was a board member of the University of Michigan. In the congressional elections of 1876 McGowan was selected in the third electoral district of Michigan in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington, where he became the successor of George Willard on March 4, 1877. After a re-election in 1878 he was able to complete in Congress until March 3, 1881 two legislative sessions. During this time the Reconstruction ended in the former member states of the Confederacy.

In 1880, McGowan opted not to run again. After retiring from the U.S. Reopräsentantenhaus he remained in the federal capital, Washington, where he worked as a lawyer. There he is on July 5, 1909 and passed away. He was married to Josephine Pruden since 1862.

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