Henry Johnson (Kenosha politician) explained

Henry Johnson
State:Wisconsin
State Assembly:Wisconsin
District:Kenosha 1st
Term Start:January 7, 1856
Term End:January 5, 1857
Predecessor:Charles C. Sholes
Successor:Frederick S. Lovell
Term Start1:January 6, 1851
Term End1:January 5, 1852
Predecessor1:Samuel Hale Jr. (Racine 4th)
Successor1:C. Latham Sholes
State2:New York
State Assembly2:New York
District2:Erie County
Alongside2:Jacob A. Barker
Term Start2:January 1, 1839
Term End2:January 1, 1840
Predecessor2:Lewis F. Allen,,
Successor2:Seth C. Hawley,,
Birth Date:3 September 1794
Birth Place:Williamstown, Vermont, U.S.
Death Place:Somers, Wisconsin, U.S.
Restingplace:Vale Cemetery,
Spouse:Violata Peckham

Henry Johnson (September 3, 1794[1] February 27, 1868[2]) was an American farmer, Republican politician, and Wisconsin pioneer. He was instrumental in the founding of the Wisconsin State Agricultural Society, and served two terms in the Wisconsin State Assembly, representing eastern Kenosha County. Earlier in his life, he was a member of the New York State Legislature.

Biography

Henry Johnson was born in Williamstown, Vermont, in 1794[1] and moved to Niagara County, New York in 1810, where he became established and started a family. By 1821 Johnson had become a prominent citizen in the newly formed Erie County, New York and was elected on the Whig Party ticket to the New York State Assembly for the 1839 session.[3] In 1844 the family relocated to Southport (now the city of Kenosha, incorporated in 1850) in the Wisconsin Territory and then settled on a farm in the town of Pike (now the village of Somers in Kenosha County). At the time, this was part of a larger Racine County, since Kenosha County was established from part of Racine County as a separate entity by an act of the Wisconsin Legislature in January 1850. On April 28, 1848 Johnson attended the Whig Assembly District Convention where he was nominated for Assemblyman for the 1st Wisconsin Legislature[4] but later lost the election to the Democratic candidate Julius L. Gilbert.[5] [6] The very next day April 29, 1848 Johnson attended the Whig Senatorial Convention in the Town of Salem.[7] On October 26, 1850 Johnson was again nominated for assemblyman[8] [9] this time winning his election[10] for the Whig Party ticket as one of the first two assemblymen for the newly formed Kenosha County and serving, for the first of two sessions, on the Wisconsin State Assembly for the 1851 session. On October 24, 1851 Johnson was nominated for Senator by the Whig Party at their county convention at Dutton's Tavern in the Town of Paris,[11] this election he lost to the Democratic candidate John R. Sharpstein.[12]

Johnson became prominent in his new state through his farming community. On January 3, 1850 he helped bring together a number of Kenosha County farmers to create the "Farmer's Club of Southport, Pleasant Prairie, Pike, Bristol and vicinity"[13] - believed to be the first agricultural association in Wisconsin.[14] Five months later, on June 3, 1850, the club was formalized as the Kenosha County Agricultural Society with a constitution and bylaws.[15] Johnson was selected as the first president of the organization and later also served as corresponding secretary.[14] [16] As President of the Kenosha County Agricultural Society, Johnson attended a meeting in the State Assembly hall in Madison, Wisconsin, on March 8, 1851, which recommended the formation of a State Agricultural Society. Johnson took an active part in the meeting, and was appointed to a committee to draft a constitution for the State Agricultural Society. On March 12, the convention met again and approved the constitution drafted by Johnson's committee.[14]

Between the establishment of the Kenosha Agricultural Society in Spring 1850 and the State Agricultural Society in Spring 1851, Johnson served on the 1851 session of the Wisconsin State Assembly representing Kenosha County's eastern district representing the towns of Pike (Somers), Pleasant Prairie, and Southport (Kenosha).[17] Johnson remained a Whig until the creation of the Republican Party in 1854, and on October 26, 1955 was nominated[18] and elected[19] to another term in the Assembly for the 1856 session, running on the Republican ticket.[20]

Personal life and family

Henry Johnson was the third child of seven children born to Henry Johnson and Betsey Johnson ( Vorce). The elder Henry Johnson had served as a captain in the American Revolutionary War. Johnson's younger brother Isaac L. Johnson, niece Martha Johnson(daughter of brother Lewis), nephew Leonard Johnson(son of brother Lewis), brother-in-law Almon Tinkham(husband of sister Betsey) and several of Betsey and sister Freelove's children all relocated to Kenosha County, Wisconsin.

The younger Henry Johnson married Violata Peckham in Niagara County, New York, sometime before 1820, she died in 1855. They had seven children:

Henry Johnson died February 27, 1868.[2] Henry and Violata are buried in Vale Cemetery in Kenosha County, Wisconsin.

Notes and References

  1. News: Vermont U.S. Vital Records 1720-1908 . . June 23, 2024 .
  2. News: Died . Kenosha Telegraph-Courier. March 5, 1868 . 2 . June 23, 2024 .
  3. Journal of the Assembly of the State of New York at their Sixty-Second Session . 1839 . State of New York . . 4 . June 17, 2021 .
  4. News: Whig Assembly District Convention . South Port American . May 3, 1848 . 3 . June 24, 2024 .
  5. News: Election Results . South Port American . May 10, 1848 . 2 . June 24, 2024 .
  6. News: Racine County Official Election Results . South Port American . May 17, 1848 . 2 . June 24, 2024 .
  7. News: Whig Senatorial Convention . South Port American . May 3, 1848 . 3 . June 11, 2022 .
  8. News: By Speeds Line . Milwaukee Daily Sentinel and Gazette . October 28, 1850 . Newspaper page shows the year 1850 although newspaperarchive.com lists it as 1839 . 2 . June 24, 2024 .
  9. News: Whig Nomination . Kenosah Telegraph-Courier . November 1, 1850 . 2 . June 24, 2024 .
  10. News: Election Returns . Kenosha Telegraph-Courier . November 15, 1850 . 2 . June 24, 2024 .
  11. News: Whig County Convention . Kenosha Democrat . November 1, 1951 . 3 . June 24, 2024 .
  12. News: Kenosha County Vote . Kenosha Democrat . November 8, 1851 . 2 . June 24, 2024 .
  13. News: Farmers Club of Southport, Pleasant Prairie, Pike, Bristol and vicinity . Kenosha Telegraph-Courier . January 11, 1850 . 2 . June 24, 2024 .
  14. Book: Transactions of the Wisconsin State Agricultural Society . 1 (1851) . 1852 . . Wisconsin State Agricultural Society . 9–11, 107 . June 17, 2021 .
  15. News: Farmers Meeting . Kenosha Democrat . June 6, 1850 . 3 . June 24, 2024 .
  16. Book: The History of Racine and Kenosha Counties, Wisconsin . Western Historical Company . 1879 . 543, 703 . June 17, 2021 .
  17. Manual for the use of the Assembly, of the State of Wisconsin . 1853 . State of Wisconsin . Constitution of the State of Wisconsin . https://images.library.wisc.edu/WI/EFacs/WIBlueBks/BlueBks/WIBlueBk1853/reference/wi.wibluebk1853.i0004.pdf . 41 . June 17, 2021 .
  18. News: Republican Nomination . Milwaukee Daily Free Democrat . October 27, 1855 . 2 . June 24, 2024 .
  19. News: Election Returns . Kenosha Telegraph-Courier . November 8, 1855 . 3 . June 24, 2024 .
  20. News: Election Returns . Daily Free Democrat . November 10, 1855 . . 2 . June 17, 2021 .
  21. News: Hung Himself . . February 11, 1889 . 3 . June 17, 2021 .
  22. Book: Butterfield, Consul Willshire . History of Dane County, Wisconsin . Western Historical Company . 1880 . . 1004 . June 17, 2021 .