Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Philemon Bliss

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Preceded by
  
Harvey H. Johnson

Role
  
Justice

Children
  
three

Spouse
  
Martha Thorpe (m. 1843)


Alma mater
  
Hamilton College

Succeeded by
  
Cyrus Spink

Name
  
Philemon Bliss

Resigned
  
March 3, 1859

Philemon Bliss

Born
  
July 28, 1813 Canton, Connecticut (
1813-07-28
)

Resting place
  
Columbia Cemetery (Columbia, Missouri)

Died
  
August 25, 1889, Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States

Education
  
University of Missouri, Hamilton College

Political party
  
Republican Party, Opposition Party

Philemon Bliss (July 28, 1813 – August 25, 1889) was an Ohio Congressman, the first chief justice of the Supreme Court of Dakota Territory, and a Missouri Supreme Court justice.

Contents

Early life and education

Bliss was born in Canton, Connecticut in 1813 to Asahel Bliss and Lydia Adams (Griswold) Bliss. He attended Fairfield Academy and Hamilton College, where he studied law. He moved to Elyria, Ohio, where he studied law under his brother Albert.

Career

In 1840 Bliss passed the bar and began practicing law, first in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio and later in Elyria, Ohio. On November 16, 1843 he married Martha W. Thorpe. They had three children. He served as presiding judge of the 14th Judicial Circuit of Ohio from 1848 through 1851. Bliss ran for congressional office as a republican and was elected to the United States House of Representatives. He served in the 34th Congress as an Oppositionist and 35th Congress as a Republican, but did not run for re-election in 1858. President Abraham Lincoln appointed Bliss chief justice of the Supreme Court of Dakota Territory in 1861. He also served as associate justice of the Supreme Court of Missouri from 1868 through 1872.

Later Career

After his retirement from the bench, Bliss became Law Dean for the University of Missouri, where he served until his death in Saint Paul, Minnesota in 1889. He is buried at the Columbia Cemetery in Columbia, Missouri.

Legacy

The Philemon Bliss Scholarship was established at the University of Missouri School of Law in his honor.

References

Philemon Bliss Wikipedia