Robert P. Aitken | |
Image Name: | Robert_P._Aitken_(1819-1905).jpg |
State House: | Michigan |
State: | Michigan |
District: | Genesee 2 |
Term Start: | January 1, 1865 |
Term End: | 1868 |
Birth Date: | February 5, 1819 |
Birth Place: | Perth, New York, US |
Death Date: | April 3, 1905 (age 86) |
Death Place: | Flint Township, Michigan, US |
Spouse: | Sarah Aitken (née Johnstone) |
Parents: | William Aitken Helen Aitken (née Chalmers) |
Relations: | Ten children including David D. Aitken |
Profession: | Farmer, Township Supervisor, Insurance company secretary |
Party: | Republican |
Robert P. Aitken (February 5, 1819 – April 3, 1905) was an American politician. He was a member of the Republican Party and served in the Michigan House of Representatives from 1865 to 1868. He was also a township supervisor, a fire insurance company secretary, and a farmer.[1]
Aitken was born on February 5, 1819, in what is now Perth, New York to William Aitken and Helen Aitken (née Chalmers), both of whom were born in Scotland.[1] He was raised as an Episcopalian and remained a devout follower of this denomination for his entire life.[1] He was the fifth of six children.[1] As a teenager he worked in his uncle William Hinton's office.[1] In 1842, he moved to Flint Township, Michigan.[1]
In 1865, Aitken was elected to the Michigan House of Representatives for Genesee County's 2nd District, and was re-elected in 1867.[1] [2] He also held the office of Supervisor of Flint Township for twenty nine years.[1]
He also acted as secretary of the Genesee County Fire Insurance Company.[1]
On March 12, 1843, he married Sarah Johnstone. They had ten children, five sons and five daughters. One of their sons was David D. Aitken, also a politician.
Aitken died on April 3, 1905. He is buried in historic Glenwood Cemetery in Flint, next to his wife and children.[1]
Aitken's 1843 Greek Revival/Italianate style farmhouse at 1110 N. Linden Rd. in Flint Township, Michigan was added to The National Register of Historic Places as an example of high-quality 19th century architecture on November 26, 1982.[3] It was later owned by his son David D. Aitken and remains a private residence.