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Michael C Kerr

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President
  
Ulysses S. Grant

Name
  
Michael Kerr

Preceded by
  
James G. Blaine


Succeeded by
  
Samuel J. Randall

Party
  
Democratic Party

Political party
  
Democratic

Resigned
  
August 19, 1876

Michael C. Kerr httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Preceded by
  
James A. Cravens William S. Holman

Succeeded by
  
Simeon K. Wolfe Nathan T. Carr

Role
  
Former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives

Died
  
August 19, 1876, Rockbridge County, Virginia, United States

Previous office
  
Speaker of the United States House of Representatives (1875–1876)

Education
  
University of Louisville

Michael Crawford Kerr (March 15, 1827 – August 19, 1876) was an American legislator, and the first Democratic Speaker of the United States House of Representatives after the Civil War.

Contents

Early life

He was born at Titusville, Pennsylvania and educated at the Erie Academy. He graduated from the University of Louisville School of Law in 1851. He moved to New Albany, Indiana in 1852 and was a member of the State Legislature from 1856 to 1857.

Political career

He was elected to Congress in 1864 as a War Democrat, having vigorously opposed the Copperhead element in his district. He won the praise of Republican Governor Morton for helping suppress illegal conspiracies by Copperheads.

Kerr served in the United States House of Representatives as a Democrat from Indiana from 1865 to 1873. In Congress he was looked upon as one of the leaders of the Democratic party. He strongly opposed the Republican policy of Reconstruction in the Southern States. He was not re-elected in 1872.

His hard money views on financial questions did not meet with favor in his agrarian constituency, where he openly antagonized the inflationists and the Greenback element and favored the resumption of specie payments. In 1874, however, after a sharp contest he won the seat back, and on his re-entry into Congress was elected to the speakership. He presided as Speaker at only the first session of the Forty-fourth Congress and died of consumption shortly after its adjournment.

References

Michael C. Kerr Wikipedia