John Edwards (Pennsylvania politician) explained

John Edwards
State:Pennsylvania
District:4th
Term Start:March 4, 1839
Term End:March 3, 1843
Preceded:See below
Succeeded:Charles Jared Ingersoll
Birth Date: 1786
Birth Place:Ivy Mills, Pennsylvania
Death Place:Glen Mills, Pennsylvania
Party:Anti-Masonic
Whig

John Edwards (1786June 26, 1843) was an Anti-Masonic and Whig member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania.

Biography

John Edwards (granduncle of John E. Leonard) was born in Glen Mills, Pennsylvania. He studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1807 and commenced practice in Chester, Pennsylvania. He was deputy attorney general for Delaware County, Pennsylvania, in 1811. He moved to West Chester, Pennsylvania, in 1825 and shortly thereafter engaged in the manufacture of iron and later of nails near Glen Mills, Pennsylvania.

Edwards was elected as an Anti-Masonic candidate to the Twenty-sixth Congress and reelected as a Whig to the Twenty-seventh Congress. After his time in congress, he resumed his former manufacturing pursuits, and died on his estate near Glen Mills in 1843. Interment in the Friends' (Hicksite) Cemetery of the Middletown Friends Meetinghouse in Middletown Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania.

Sources