Burroughs Abbott Explained

Burroughs Abbott
State Senate:South Dakota
District:33rd
Term Start:1891
Term End:1892
Predecessor:George W. Miller
Successor:Samuel A. Kennedy
Alongside:James H. Kyle
State House2:Minnesota
District2:16th
Term Start2:1859
Term End2:1860
Alongside2:Thomas McDonough
Predecessor2:Reuben Butters
Birth Date:October 9, 1830
Birth Place:Indiana, U.S.
Death Date:December 6, 1905 (aged 75)
Party:Populist
Otherparty:Republican
Spouse:Angeline Ruggles
Profession:teacher, farmer

Burroughs Abbott (October 9, 1830  - December 6, 1905) was an American politician who served in the Minnesota House of Representatives and the South Dakota Senate.

Abbott was born in Indiana on October 9, 1830. There, he married Angeline Ruggles, and worked as a farmer and teacher, before moving his family to Minnesota in 1856.[1] [2] He was elected to the state's House of Representatives, serving the sixteenth district from 1859 to 1860.[1] Abbott moved to South Dakota in 1883,[2] and between 1891 and 1892 was a state senator from Brown County, district 33.[3] Though state records in Minnesota and South Dakota do not list a party affiliation for Abbott,[1] [3] George Washington Kingsbury writes that Abbot began his political career as a Republican and later joined the Populist Party.[2] He died on December 6, 1905.

Notes and References

  1. News: New Search Abbott, Burroughs "Burrough". S. J. Clarke Publishing Company. January 19, 2018. Minnesota Legislative Reference Library.
  2. Book: George Martin. Smith. Kingsbury. George Washington. South Dakota: Its History and Its People. 1915. 698.
  3. News: Burroughs Abbott. January 19, 2018. South Dakota Legislative Research Council.