Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Jerome Eddy

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Children
  
Arthur Jerome Eddy

Succeeded by
  
James C. Willson

Name
  
Jerome Eddy

Political party
  
Democratic

Role
  
Author

Spouse(s)
  
Ellen M. Curtis


Jerome Eddy wwwarticeduaiccollectionscitiresourcesClos

Relations
  
Willard and Eliza (Case) Eddy, Parents Lulu Orrell, daughter-in-law

Died
  
July 21, 1920, New York City, New York, United States

Books
  
Recollections and impressio, Ganton & Co: A Story of Chicag, Delight - the Soul of Art: Five Lect, Two Thousand Miles on, The New Competition: An Exami

Preceded by
  
Edward Hughes Thompson

Jerome Eddy was a Michigan businessman, politician and diplomat. He served on the Democratic Michigan State Central Committee and was a delegate to many Democratic State Conventions. During the Grover Cleveland Presidency, he served as a United States Consul in Canada.

Contents

Early life

Born on November 29, 1829 in Stafford, Genesee County, New York, Eddy moved to Flint with his parents, Willard and Eliza (Case) Eddy, in 1837. In 1841, he left school to become an apprentice to George H. Hazleton, brother of another Flint Mayor, Porter Hazelton. When he reached the age of 20, he went into business for himself as a merchant and into real estate. Ellen M. Curtis married Eddy in 1858. Eddy was in the lumbering business with Artemus Thayer operating a planing mill. Original, he lived with his wife at the corner of East Kearsley and Clifford streets, later the location of the Flint public library building, The Carnegie Library, in 1910. Around 1870 they moved to a house on Church Street built by George Hazelton in the 1930s.

Political life

He was elected as the mayor of the City of Flint in 1878 serving a 1-year term. While Mayor in 1878, Eddy purchased the Genesee Democrat from H. N. Mather. Soon afterwards, his son Arthur Jerome Eddy managed and edited the Democrat. His son became a noted businessman, art collector, and writer. His son married Lulu Orrell, the granddaughter of Henry H. Crapo, a Governor of Michigan.

Post-political life

Eddy was buried in Glenwood Cemetery, Flint after he died on November 24, 1905.

References

Jerome Eddy Wikipedia