Sneha Girap (Editor)

Horace Eaton

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Preceded by
  
William Slade

Role
  
American Politician

Preceded by
  
Education
  

Political party
  
Party
  
Whig Party

Name
  
Horace Eaton

Succeeded by
  
Horace Eaton Horace Eaton Wikipedia


Lieutenant
  
Leonard SargeantRobert Pierpoint

Governor
  
John MattocksWilliam Slade

Born
  
June 22, 1804Barnard, Vermont (
1804-06-22
)

Profession
  
doctor / professor / politician

Died
  
July 4, 1855, Middlebury, Vermont, United States

Horace Eaton (June 22, 1804 – July 4, 1855) was an American Whig politician, a medical doctor, the twelfth lieutenant governor of Vermont, and the eighteenth governor of Vermont.

Contents

Biography

Eaton was born in Barnard, Vermont on June 22, 1804. He graduated from Middlebury College in 1825, taught at Middlebury Academy for two years, then moved to Enosburg, a village in Berkshire, Vermont, where his father practiced medicine. He studied with his father while attending medical school at Castleton State College graduating in 1828, and joined his father's practice. He was married twice; to Cordelia H. Fuller with whom he had two children; and to Edna Palmer.

Career

Eaton was town clerk of Enosburg. He was a member of the Vermont Senate in 1837 and from 1839 to 1842.

Eaton was elected the 12th lieutenant governor of Vermont and served from 1843 to 1846.

Eaton served as the eighteenth governor of Vermont from 1846 to 1848. He was a delegate to the state Constitutional Convention in 1848. During his administration, he opposed the admission of slave states to the Union and to the Mexican War.

Eaton played a key role in the creation of the state Superintendent of Public Instruction position, and he was the first one to hold it, serving from 1845 to 1850. In 1848 he was appointed professor of chemistry and natural history at Middlebury, and held the chair until 1855.

Death

Eaton died in Middlebury, Vermont on July 4, 1855, the 79th anniversary of American independence; and is interred at Enosburg Center Cemetery, Enosburg Center, Franklin County, Vermont.

References

Horace Eaton Wikipedia


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