Henry Lippitt Explained

Henry Lippitt
Order:33rd
Office:Governor of Rhode Island
Term Start:May 25, 1875
Term End:May 29, 1877
Lieutenant:Henry T. Sisson
Predecessor:Henry Howard
Successor:Charles Van Zandt
Birth Date:9 October 1818
Restingplace:Swan Point Cemetery
Party:Republican
Spouse:Mary Ann Balch
Children:Charles Warren Lippitt,
Henry F. Lippitt, Jeanie Lippitt Weeden, Mary Balch (Lippitt) Steedman, Robert Lincoln Lippitt
Parents:Warren Lippitt,
Eliza (Seamans) Lippitt
Signature:Henry Lippitt governor of Rhode Island-signature.jpg
Residence:Lippitt Mansion,
Providence, Rhode Island

Henry Lippitt (October 9, 1818 – June 5, 1891) was the 33rd Governor of Rhode Island from 1875 to 1877.

Family

Lippitt was the son of Warren Lippitt and Eliza (Seamans) Lippitt, married to Mary Ann Balch. Lippitt was the father of Charles Warren Lippitt, another Rhode Island Governor, and the father of Henry F. Lippitt, a U.S. Senator from Rhode Island; the grandfather of Rhode Island House Minority Leader Frederick Lippitt;[1] the great-grandfather of John Chafee, another Rhode Island Governor, U.S. Senator and Secretary of the Navy); and the great-great-grandfather of Lincoln Chafee, the former U.S. Senator and governor of Rhode Island.

Business

Lippitt was the president of the Lippitt Woolen Company and owned various textile mills, including Lippitt Mill in West Warwick and the Hanora Mills and Social Mill in Woonsocket. He was also a vice president of the Rhode Island Institution for Savings and the president of the Rhode Island National Bank.

Governorship

Lippitt was a Republican and succeeded fellow Republican Henry Howard as governor of Rhode Island on May 25, 1875. He was governor for two years and was then succeeded by another Republican, Charles C. Van Zandt, on May 29, 1877.

Home

The Governor Henry Lippitt House is located on the East Side of Providence. Completed in 1865, it was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976, and in 1981 was donated by the Lippitt family to Preserve Rhode Island.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://politicalgraveyard.com/families/10001-045.html The Political Graveyard, Greene-Lippitt family of Rhode Island