Peter H. Turner Explained

Peter H. Turner
State:Wisconsin
State Senate:Wisconsin
District:12th
Term Start:January 1, 1850
Term End:January 1, 1852
Predecessor:Myron B. Williams
Successor:Alva Stewart
State Assembly1:Wisconsin
District1:Jefferson 2nd
Term Start1:June 5, 1848
Term End1:January 1, 1849
Predecessor1:Position established
Successor1:Jarvis K. Pike
Birth Date:11 April 1813
Birth Place:Ilion, New York
Death Place:Sioux City, Iowa
Restingplace:Floyd Cemetery
Sioux City, Iowa
Party:Democratic

Peter Helmer Turner (April 11, 1813June 4, 1885) was an American pioneer and politician.

Biography

Born in Ilion, New York, Turner was in the merchandise business and was in the milling business while living in Ellisburg, New York. In 1840, he moved to Genesee, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin Territory, and then to the town of Palmyra, in Jefferson County. He was elected to the first Wisconsin Constitutional Convention of 1846 serving as a Democrat. Turner then served in the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1848 and in the Wisconsin State Senate in 1850. In 1859, Turner moved to Madison, Wisconsin, where he served on the Madison Common Council and served as president. Turner moved to Dakota Territory in 1871 settling in the Vermillion Valley. He then moved to Sioux City, Iowa, where he died in 1885.[1]

Relatives

There are unsourced assertions on some websites that he was the brother of Joseph Turner (Wisconsin politician), who also came to Wisconsin Territory in 1840.

External links

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Notes and References

  1. 'The Convention of 1846,' Milo Milton Quaife, Wisconsin Historical Society: 1919, Biographical Sketch of Peter Helmer Turner, pg. 795