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Israel Washburn Jr.

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Preceded by
  
Ephraim K. Smart

Preceded by
  
Lot M. Morrill

Parents
  
Israel Washburn

Succeeded by
  
Thomas J. D. Fuller

Role
  
Former Governor of Maine


Preceded by
  
Charles Stetson

Name
  
Israel Jr.

Succeeded by
  
Stephen Coburn

Succeeded by
  
Abner Coburn

Siblings
  
Charles Ames Washburn

Israel Washburn, Jr. mywebwvnetedujelkinslp2001imageswashburnjpg

Died
  
May 12, 1883, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Previous office
  
Governor of Maine (1861–1863)

Political party
  
Whig Party, Republican Party

Similar People
  
Cadwallader C Washburn, Elihu B Washburne, John Baldacci, Paul LePage

Israel Washburn Jr. (June 6, 1813 – May 12, 1883) was a United States political figure. Originally a member of the Whig Party, he later became a founding member of the Republican Party. In 1842, Washburn served in the Maine House of Representatives.

Israel Washburn Jr. httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In 1854, angry over the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Washburn called a meeting of 30 members of the US House of Representatives to discuss forming what became the Republican Party. Republican gatherings had taken place in Wisconsin and Michigan earlier in the year, but Washburn's meeting was the first in the U.S. Capital, and among U.S. Congressmen. He was probably also the first politician of his rank to use the term "Republican", in a speech at Bangor, Maine on June 2, 1854. Washburn represented the district which included Bangor and the neighboring town of Orono, Maine, where he had his home and law office.

Born in 1813 in Livermore (in modern-day Maine, then a part of Massachusetts) to a prominent political family, Washburn organized the Maine Republican Party from 1854 onward. He was the 29th Governor of Maine from 1861 to 1863. During the American Civil War, he helped recruit Federal troops from Maine. In 1862, he attended the Loyal War Governors' Conference in Altoona, Pennsylvania, which ultimately gave Abraham Lincoln support for his Emancipation Proclamation.

Washburn had been an unsuccessful candidate for the Thirty-first Congress in 1848; elected as a Whig to the Thirty-second and Thirty-third Congresses, as a Republican to the Thirty-fourth, Thirty-fifth, and Thirty-sixth Congresses and served from March 4, 1851, to January 1, 1861, when he resigned, having been elected Governor. He was Chairman of the Committee on Elections (Thirty-fourth Congress).

Washburn was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1882.

Washburn was the brother of Elihu B. Washburne, Cadwallader C. Washburn, William D. Washburn, Samuel Benjamin Washburn, and Charles Ames Washburn. He died in 1883 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He is buried at the Mount Hope Cemetery in Bangor, Maine.

The town of Washburn, Maine is named in his honor.

References

Israel Washburn Jr. Wikipedia