41st Ohio General Assembly
Appearance
41st Ohio General Assembly | |||||
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Overview | |||||
Legislative body | Ohio General Assembly | ||||
Jurisdiction | Ohio, United States | ||||
Meeting place | Columbus, Ohio | ||||
Term | December 5, 1842 | – December 3, 1843||||
Election | October 1842 | ||||
Opposition | Whig | ||||
Ohio Senate | |||||
Members | 36 Senators | ||||
Speaker | James J. Faran (D-Cincinnati) | ||||
Party control | Democratic | ||||
Ohio House of Representatives | |||||
Members | 72 Representatives | ||||
Speaker | John Chaney (D-Fairfield) | ||||
Party control | Democratic |
The 41st Ohio General Assembly first convened on December 5, 1842. The 36 members of the Ohio Senate and the 72 members of the Ohio House of Representatives were elected during the General Election of October 1842.
Leadership
Senate
- Speaker of the Senate
- James J. Faran (D-Cincinnati)
House of Representatives
- Speaker of the House
- John Chaney (D-Fairfield)
Members
Senate
Name | County | Party |
---|---|---|
Charles M. Aten | Columbiana | Democratic |
Joseph Barnet | Montgomery | Whig |
Thomas W. Bartley | Richland | Democratic |
Jacob Clark | Lucas, Williams, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, Allen, and Hardin | Democratic |
William H. P. Denny | Warren and Greene | Whig |
James J. Faran (Speaker) | Hamilton | Democratic |
Nelson Franklin | Fairfield and Pickaway | Democratic |
John Fuller | Huron and Erie | Whig |
Seabury Ford | Cuyahoga and Geauga | Whig |
Josiah Harris | Medina and Lorain | Democratic |
Robert Hazeltine | Butler and Preble | Democratic |
James Henderson | Muskingum | Whig |
John E. Jackson | Portage and Summit | Whig |
John Johnson | Knox and Coshocton | Democratic |
Oliver Jones | Hamilton | Democratic |
Jacob B. Koch | Holmes and Tuscarawas | Democratic |
Samuel Lahm | Stark | Democratic |
Allen Latham | Hocking, Ross, Pike, and Jackson | Democratic |
James Loudon | Clermont, Brown, and Clinton | Democratic |
Moses McAnelly | Seneca, Sandusky, Wood, Ottawa, and Hancock | Democratic |
Alexander McConnell | Morgan, Perry, and Washington | Democratic |
Joseph McCutchen | Crawford, Delaware, and Marion | Democratic |
Robert H. Miller | Belmont and Harrison | Democratic |
James Mitchell | Jefferson and Carroll | Democratic |
Simeon Nash | Gallia, Lawrence, and Scioto | Whig |
Eben Newton | Trumbull | Whig |
James Parker | Licking | Democratic |
John Richey | Morgan, Perry, and Washington | Democratic |
Joseph Ridgway, Jr. | Franklin, Madison, and Clark | Whig |
William Robbins | Adams, Highland, and Fayette | Democratic |
Benjamin Stanton | Champaign, Logan, and Union | Whig |
Abraham Van Vorhes | Athens and Meigs | Whig |
Joseph S. Updegraff | Miami, Darke, Mercer, and Shelby | Whig |
Benjamin F. Wade | Ashtabula and Lake | Whig |
William C. Walton | Guernsey and Monroe | Democratic |
Charles Wolcott | Wayne | Democratic |
House of Representatives
Name | County | Party |
---|---|---|
J. B. Ackley | Athens and Meigs | Whig |
Samuel Atherton | Huron and Erie | Whig |
Isaac Atkinson, Sr. | Jefferson and Carroll | Whig |
George W. Baird | Seneca, Sandusky, Hancock, Wood, and Ottawa | Democratic |
Jacob H. Baldwin | Trumbull | Whig |
Henry C. Brish | Seneca, Sandusky, Hancock, Wood, and Ottawa | Democratic |
Israel Brown | Hamilton | Democratic |
Charles Bowen | Muskingum | Whig |
Le Grand Byington | Hocking, Ross, Pike, and Jackson | Democratic |
Richard W. Cahill | Richland | Democratic |
Hiram Campbell | Gallia, Lawrence, and Scioto | Whig |
David Chambers | Muskingum | Whig |
John Chaney (Speaker) | Fairfield | Democratic |
Joseph Chenoweth | Franklin | Whig |
John C. Clark | Morgan | Democratic |
John P. Converse | Geauga | Whig |
Jacob Counts | Miami, Darke, Mercer, and Shelby | Whig |
Otway Curry | Logan and Union | Fed. |
Nathaniel Dike | Jefferson and Carroll | Whig |
William Douglass | Guernsey | Democratic |
Thomas Earl | Portage | Whig |
David Fisher | Clermont, Brown, and Clinton | Whig |
John Fudge | Greene | Whig |
Simeon Fuller | Lake | Whig |
John M. Gallagher | Madison and Clark | Whig |
Archibald Gordon | Hamilton | Democratic |
Isaac Green | Licking | Democratic |
John Gruber | Harrison | Democratic |
James P. Henderson | Richland | Democratic[a] |
Isaac Houseman | Madison and Clark | Whig |
Phelps Humphrey | Licking | Democratic |
Isaac E. James | Delaware, Marion, and Crawford | Democratic |
Elihu Johnson | Hocking, Ross, Pike, and Jackson | Democratic |
Daniel Kelley | Perry | Democratic |
Thomas M. Kelley | Cuyahoga | Whig |
James Kilgore | Stark | Democratic |
James B. King | Butler | Democratic |
Newton Larsh | Preble | Whig |
John Larwill | Wayne | Democratic |
John Martin | Columbiana | Democratic |
Rudolphus Martin | Stark | Democratic |
William McClung | Fairfield | Democratic |
John McClure | Miami, Darke, Mercer, and Shelby | Whig |
David McConnell | Tuscarawas and Holmes | Democratic |
William B. McCrea | Champaign | Whig |
Joel B. McFarland | Butler | Democratic |
Caleb J. McNulty | Knox | Democratic |
Jesse Meredith | Coshocton | Democratic |
Gilman C. Mudgett | Lucas, Williams, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, Allen, and Hardin | Democratic |
Wilson Nelson | Hocking, Ross, Pike, and Jackson | Democratic |
Cornelius Okey | Monroe | Democratic |
Edson B. Olds | Pickaway | Democratic |
Samuel H. Pardee | Portage | Whig |
Thomas Pilcher | Belmont | Democratic |
John Probasco, Jr. | Warren | Whig |
John Reid | Columbiana | Democratic |
Moses Rees | Clermont, Brown, and Clinton | Democratic |
Robert Robinson | Adams, Highland, and Fayette | Whig |
Thomas Ross | Clermont, Brown, and Clinton | Whig |
Robert C. Schenck | Montgomery | Whig |
Amos Seward | Summit | Whig |
George W. Sharp | Delaware, Marion, and Crawford | Democratic |
John A. Smith | Adams, Highland, and Fayette | Whig |
Nicholas Spindlar | Knox | Democratic |
James B. Steedman | Lucas, Williams, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, Allen, and Hardin | Democratic |
Jonathan Tuttle | Ashtabula | Whig |
William Wakefield | Hamilton | Democratic |
Richard Warner | Lorain and Medina | Democratic |
Nathan Webb | Trumbull | Whig |
John D. White | Clermont, Brown, and Clinton | Democratic |
Joseph Wilford | Wayne | Democratic |
George W. Woodbridge | Washington | Independent Whig |
Standing committees
Senate
Committee | Democratic members | Whig members |
---|---|---|
Judiciary | Thomas W. Bartley, William C. Walton | Eben Newton |
Finance | William C. Walton, Jacob Clark | Seabury Ford |
Canals | Alexander McConnell, Jacob B. Koch | Joseph Barnet |
Roads and Highways | Moses McAnelly | Nelson Franklin, John E. Jackson |
Schools and School Lands | Josiah Harris, Charles Wolcott | Simeon Nash |
New Counties | John Richey, James Loudon | John Fuller |
Military Affairs | Charles Wolcott, Robert H. Miller | Benjamin F. Wade |
Medical Colleges and Universities | Jacob Clark, John Johnson | James Henderson |
Colleges and Universities | James Loudon, Thomas W. Bartley | Joseph S. Updegraph |
Agriculture, Manufacture, and Commerce | Robert H. Miller, William Robbins | William H. P. Denny |
Penitentiary | Samuel Lahm, James Mitchell | Joseph Ridgway |
Library | Josiah Harris, John Johnson | John E. Jackson |
Currency | Allen Latham, Joseph McCutchen | Eben Newton |
Public Lands | James Parker, Alexander McConnell | Benjamin Stanton |
Rail Roads and Turnpikes | Olliver Jones, Robert Hazeltine | Abraham Van Vorhes |
Public Institutions | Nelson Franklin, Samuel Lahm, James Parker | N/A |
Corporations | Charles M. Aten, Moses McAnelly | James Henderson |
Public Buildings | Joseph McCutchen, Joseph Ridgway, Jacob B. Koch | N/A |
Public Debt | Robert Hazeltine, James Mitchell | William H. P. Denny |
House
Committee | Democratic members | Whig members |
---|---|---|
Privileges and Elections | Joel B. McFarland, James P. Henderson,[a] John C. Clark | David Chambers, John P. Converse |
Unfinished Business | George W. Baird, Richard W. Cahill, David McConnell | Isaac Houseman, John P. Converse |
Judiciary | Le Grand Byington, Caleb J. McNulty, Elihu Johnson | John Probasco, Thomas M. Kelley |
Finance | Joel B. McFarland, Henry C. Brish, John Larwill | Thomas Earl, Isaac Atkinson |
Banks and the Currency | Edson B. Olds, George W. Sharp, Le Grand Byington, Archibald Gordon | Nathaniel Dike |
Public Works | Jesse Meredith, Gilman C. Mudgett, Wilson Nelson | Hiram Campbell, David Chambers |
Common Schools, Colleges and Universities | Henry C. Brish, Isaac Green, Isaac E. James | Otway Curry, Simeon Fuller |
Medical Colleges and Medical Societies | James P. Henderson,[a] John C. Clark, Phelps Humphrey | J. B. Ackley, Charles Bowen |
Roads and Highways | Cornelius Okey, John Martin, William Wakefield | Joseph Chenowith, Amos Seward |
Public Lands | Caleb J. McNulty, Jesse Meredith, James B. Steedman | David Fisher, John McClure |
Agriculture and Manufactures | Israel Brown, Joseph Wilford, William Douglass | Newton Larsh, Nathan Webb |
Claims | John Larwill, Gilman C. Mudgett, Moses Rees | David Chambers, Amos Seward |
The Militia | Jesse Meredith, George W. Sharp, John D. White | Thomas Earl, Robert Robinson |
The National Road | Isaac Green, William McClung, Thomas Pilcher | John M. Gallagher, John Fudge |
Rail Roads | David McConnell, Richard W. Cahill, George W. Baird | William B. McCrea. John P. Converse |
New Counties | James B. King, Daniel Kelley, James Kilgore | Jacob H. Baldwin, Robert Robinson |
The Library | Thomas Pilcher, Phelps Humphrey, John Reid | George W. Woodbridge, Otway Curry |
Public Buildings | Daniel Kelly, Rudolphus Martin, John D. White | John Probasco, Jacob Counts |
Public Institutions | John C. Clark, Nicholas Spindlar, Richard Warner | Jonathan Tuttle, Thomas Ross |
Corporations | Elihu Johnson, Richard Warner, James Kilgore | Robert C. Schenck, Thomas Ross |
The Penitentiary | William McClung, John Reid,[b] Cornelius Okey | Charles Bowen, Samuel H. Pardee |
Public Printing | James B. Steedman, John Gruber, Rudolphus Martin | George W. Woodbridge, John A. Smith |
The Public Debt | James P. Henderson,[a] John Gruber, Edson B. Olds | Robert C. Schenck, Samuel Atherton |
Enrollment | Gilman C. Mudgett | John M. Gallagher |
Notes
- ^ a b c d Although a March 31, 1843, issue of the Carroll Free Press lists James P. Henderson as a Whig, he's referred to as a Democrat in issues of The Ohio Democrat and The Democratic Standard printed directly after the election. It is therefore plausible that Henderson switched parties in the months following the election.
- ^ Contemporary source ostensibly contains a typo and calls the representative "Reed". The name is close enough to "Rees" that it could also mean Moses Rees. Nevertheless, both were Democrats.
References
- ^ a b "Members of the Present Legislature". The Democratic Standard. Vol. III, no. 20. December 13, 1842. p. 1. ISSN 2376-1350. LCCN sn83035312. Retrieved December 27, 2020 – via Chronicling America.
- ^ a b Pearce, J., ed. (March 31, 1843). "Meeting of the Whig Members of the Legislature". Carroll Free Press. Vol. IX, no. 24. Carrollton, OH. p. 2. ISSN 2376-0362. LCCN sn83035366. Retrieved December 27, 2020 – via Chronicling America.
- ^ a b Mitchener & Matthews (October 27, 1842). "The Legislature". The Ohio Democrat. Vol. 3, no. 41. p. 3. ISSN 2372-8612. LCCN sn84028889. Retrieved December 28, 2020 – via Chronicling America.
- ^ a b Mitchener & Matthews (December 22, 1842). "Standing Committees of the Ohio Legislature". The Ohio Democrat. Vol. 3, no. 49. New Philadelphia, OH. ISSN 2372-8612. LCCN sn84028889. Retrieved December 27, 2020 – via Chronicling America.