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Isaac D. Barnard

 
Wikipedia: Isaac D. Barnard
Isaac D. Barnard


In office
March 4, 1827 – December 6, 1831
Serving with William Marks and William Wilkins
Preceded by William Findlay
Succeeded by George M. Dallas

Born July 18, 1791
Aston Township, Pennsylvania
Died February 28, 1834 (aged 42)
West Chester, Pennsylvania
Resting place Oakland's Cemetery near West Chester
Birth name Isaac Dutton Barnard
Nationality American
Profession Lawyer
Committees Committee on Militia
Military service
Allegiance United States
Service/branch United States Army
Militia
Rank Major-General
Unit Fourteenth Regiment, United States Infantry
Battles/wars War of 1812

Isaac Dutton Barnard was born on July 18, 1791, in Aston Township, Pennsylvania.[1] He moved to a farm near Chester with his parents, and was a scholar at several public schools.[1] He later resided in Philadelphia until 1811, when he moved back to Chester.[1] While he was studying law, Barnard became a member of the Fourteenth Regiment, United States Infantry, and served in the War of 1812.[1] He fought at the Battle of Plattsburg, and the Battle of Lyon Creek, and promoted from captain to major for meritorious service.[2] After the war ended he resumed his legal studies,[1] and was admitted to the bar on May 1, 1816.[2] He begun practicing law in West Chester.[1] Barnard was the deputy attorney general for Chester County from 1817 to 1821,[1] and an Assistant Burgess in the government of the borough of West Chester in 1821, 1824, and 1825.[3] Barnard was also a major-general of militia, and declined the judgeship of Chester County.[2]

Beginning in 1820, and ending in 1826, he was a member of the Pennsylvania State Senate, and the year he left the State Senate, he was the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.[1] He was elected to the United States Senate as a Jacksonian, and begun his first term on March 4, 1827.[1] During the 21st and 22nd United States Congresses, he was the chairman of the Committee on Militia.[1] In 1829, Barnard was closely defeated in his attempt to gain the nomination for Governor of Pennsylvania.[2] He undertook part of a second Senate term, but resigned from the Senate on December 6, 1831,[1] due to ill health.[2] He was replaced by a future Vice President of the United States, George M. Dallas.[4] Just before he resigned, the New York papers were reportedly demanding that Barnard be given a place in the United States Cabinet.[2] Barnard died on February 28, 1834, in West Chester, and was interned in Oakland's Cemetery nearby.[1] William Everhart, a wealthy merchant, named a street after Barnard, with whom he was a friend, which had been created after Everhart divided up a farm into lots sometime after the summer of 1830.[5]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Barnard, Isaac Dutton, (1791 - 1834) 
  2. ^ a b c d e f Biographical and Portrait Cyclopedia of Chester County, Pennsylvania, comprising a historical sketch of the county. pp. 204. 
  3. ^ West Chester Borough Officials: 1799-present 
  4. ^ George Mifflin Dallas, 11th Vice President (1845-1849) 
  5. ^ West Chester 

Sources

External links

United States Senate
Preceded by
William Findlay
United States Senator (Class 1) from Pennsylvania
1827 – 1831
Served alongside: William Marks, William Wilkins
Succeeded by
George M. Dallas

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