Rollin Carolas Mallary

Rollin Carol Mallary ( born May 27, 1784 in Cheshire, Connecticut, † April 15, 1831 in Baltimore, Maryland ) was an American politician. Between 1820 and 1825 he represented the first and 1825-1831 the second electoral district of the state of Vermont in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Career

Rollin Mallary attended to 1805 Middlebury College in Vermont. Then he moved to Poultney in Rutland County. After studying law and qualifying as a lawyer, he began to practice in his new profession from 1807 in Castleton. In the same year he became curator of the Rutland County Grammar School.

Politically Mallary was a member of the Democratic- Republican Party. In the following years he worked as secretary of the governor of Vermont. He was also a 1807-1819 with some interruptions member of the Government of that State. In the years 1811 to 1813 and from 1815 to 1816 he was district attorney in Rutland County.

In the congressional elections of 1818 Rollin Mallary lost in the first electoral district of Vermont against Orsamus Merrill Cook. He appealed against the outcome of the election is a contradiction, which was granted in January 1820. So that he could take over the previously held by Merrill deputy seat in Congress on 13 January 1820. In the years 1820 and 1822 he was re-elected in each district first. So that he could represent this constituency until March 3, 1825 in Congress. Since the elections of 1824 he was a candidate in the second district, where he exchanged with William Czar Bradley. In the years 1826, 1828 and 1830 Mallary was confirmed in each case. After the dissolution of his party mid- 1820s, he joined the opposition against which was founded by Andrew Jackson Democratic Party. From 1825 to 1831 was Chairman of the Committee on Manufactures Mallary. He remained until his death on April 15, 1831 Member of Congress.

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