Thomas Child, Jr.

"Thomas Child" redirects here. For Thomas Child (MP), see Salisbury (UK Parliament constituency).

Thomas Child (March 18, 1818 – March 9, 1869) was a U.S. Representative from New York.

Life

Born in Bakersfield, Vermont, he was the son of attorney Timothy Child (1779-1862) and Lydia Adams Child (1780-1853). Child attended the common schools and entered the University of Vermont at Burlington at the age of fourteen. He graduated in 1838,[1] and served the same year as a member of the State constitutional convention. He studied law with his father, was admitted to the bar in September 1839, and commenced practice in Berkshire, Vermont. He was a partner of Homer E. Royce, who had also studied with Timothy Child, Sr., and served as a Justice of the Peace in 1840. He moved to New York City about 1848, and engaged in the distilling business.

Child was elected as a Whig to the 34th United States Congress, for a term beginning on March 4, 1855, but never took his seat due to illness. On March 3, 1857, the House resolved that his salary be paid to him from August 18, 1856, to March 3, 1857, as "though he had been in regular attendance at the sittings of the House".

He moved to Port Richmond on Staten Island, in 1857 and retired from active business. He was Town Supervisor of Northfield in 1865 and 1866. He was a member of the New York State Assembly (Richmond Co.) in 1866.

He died in Port Richmond on March 9, 1869, and was buried at the Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn.

References

  1. Goodrich, John Ellsworth (1901). General Catalogue of the University of Vermont and State Agricultural College. Burlington, VT: Burlington Free Press Association. p. 65.
United States House of Representatives
Preceded by
William A. Walker
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 7th congressional district

1855–1857
Succeeded by
Elijah Ward
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