Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Albert E Mead

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Preceded by
  
Henry McBride

Succeeded by
  
Samuel G. Cosgrove

Party
  
Republican Party

Name
  
Albert Mead

Political party
  
Republican


Albert E. Mead httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Role
  
Former Governor of Washington

Died
  
March 19, 1913, Bellingham, Washington, United States

Education
  
Northwestern University School of Law

Previous office
  
Governor of Washington (1905–1909)

Spouse
  
Jane Pifer (m. 1899), Lizzie Brown (m. 1887)

Albert Edward Mead (December 14, 1861 – March 19, 1913) was the fifth Governor of Washington, serving in that position from 1905 to 1909.

Contents

Biography

Mead was born in Kansas on December 14, 1861. There is conflicting information about his town of birth: most reliable sources say it was Manhattan, Kansas, but there is one claim he was born in Ashland, Kansas. He received his formal education at Southern Illinois Normal University and at Northwestern University's Union College of Law in Chicago.

Career

After graduating from law school in 1885, Mead returned to Kansas to practice law for four years. He married Elizabeth "Lizzy" Pauline Brown and they had one daughter, Mary; and three sons, Wendell, Roland, and William. In 1889, he moved to Washington Territory. Mead served as Mayor of Blaine, Washington (1892), as a member of the Washington State House of Representatives (1892), and as prosecuting attorney for Whatcom County, Washington from 1898 to 1903. His wife, "Lizzy", died in 1898, and on May 5, 1899, he married Mina Jane Hosmer Pifer, and they had one son, Albert Vincent.

Mead's election to the governor's office in 1904 over U.S. Senator George Turner was considered a significant upset at the time. During his tenure, he supported legislation establishing a Railroad Commission, and acts establishing a State Bank Examiner, a State Tax Commission, and a State Highway Commission.

After his term as governor ended, Mead moved to Bellingham, Washington, where he returned to private practice as a lawyer and served as president of the Chamber of Commerce.

Death

Mead died in Bellingham on March 19, 1913, and is interred at Bayview Cemetery.

References

Albert E. Mead Wikipedia