Pleasant Moorman Miller

Pleasant Moorman Miller ( * in Lynchburg, Virginia, † 1849) was an American politician. Between 1809 and 1811 he represented the state of Tennessee in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Career

Pleasant Miller's exact birth and death date and his place of death are unknown, as his earlier life. In 1796 he came to Rogersville, Tennessee; in 1800 he moved on to Knoxville. From 1801 to 1802 he sat in the council of this city.

Politically Miller was a member of the founded by President Thomas Jefferson Democratic- Republican Party. In the state- wide discharged congressional elections of 1808 he was the first deputy's mandate of Tennessee in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington DC chosen, where he became the successor of Jesse Wharton on March 4, 1809. Until March 3, 1811, he was able to complete a term in Congress.

Around the year 1824 became Miller in the western part of the state of Tennessee. Between 1836 and 1837 he practiced there from the Office of the Chancellor. He died in 1849 and was buried in Trenton.

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