John F. Ficken Explained

John Frederick Ficken
Image Name:John F Ficken.PNG
Order:48th Mayor of Charleston
Term Start:1891
Term End:1895
Predecessor:George D. Bryan
Successor:James Adger Smyth
Party:Democrat
Birth Date:16 June 1843
Birth Place:Charleston, South Carolina
Death Place:Charleston, South Carolina
Profession:Lawyer
Spouse:Margaret Buckingham Horlbeck, Emma Julia Blum
Children:Henry Horlbeck Ficken
Alma Mater:College of Charleston
Signature:Signature of John Frederick Ficken Jr. (1843–1925).png

John Frederick Ficken Jr. (1843–1925) was the forty-eighth mayor of Charleston, South Carolina, completing one term from 1891 to 1895. Ficken was born on June 16, 1843, in Charleston to Prussian immigrants John Frederick Ficken Sr., and Rebecca (Beversen) Ficken. He enrolled in the College of Charleston, but he joined the Confederate military at the outbreak of the Civil War. Ficken was given leave from active duty to complete his college education; he received an A.B. degree in 1864 and rejoined active duty. After the war ended, he began practicing law in Charleston and travelled to Germany for a year in 1869 to study civil law at the University of Berlin. From 1877 to December 1891, when he assumed the mayorship of Charleston, Ficken served in the South Carolina statehouse as a representative. He did not stand for re-election in 1891. During his tenure as mayor, Ficken lived at 74 Rutledge Ave. In 1902, he became president of the South Carolina Loan & Trust Co.[1]

Among the civic offices which Ficken held were the following: president of the board of trustees for the College of Charleston, president of the Charleston Library Society, and vice president of the Medical College of South Carolina.[2]

Ficken died on April 16, 1925, and is buried at Magnolia Cemetery in Charleston, South Carolina.[2]

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Men of Mark in South Carolina (vol. 1) . men of mark south carolina volume 1. . Men of Mark Publishing Co. . 1907 . January 18, 2014 . Hemphill, James Calvin . 112.
  2. News: John F. Ficken Dies Suddenly . . Columbia, South Carolina . Charleston . 11 . 1925-04-16 . 1925-04-17 . 2024-06-28 . Newspapers.com.