Samuel Snider Explained

Samuel Snider
Image Name:Samuel P. Snider (Minnesota Congressman).jpg
Caption:From Volume V (1914) of Herringshaw's National Library of American Biography
State1:Minnesota
District1:4th
Term Start1:March 4, 1889
Term End1:March 3, 1891
Preceded1:Edmund Rice
Succeeded1:James Castle
Office2:Member of the Minnesota House of Representatives
Term2:1884-1888
Birth Date:October 9, 1845
Birth Place:Mount Gilead
Death Date:September 24, 1928 (aged 82)
Death Place:Minneapolis, Minnesota
Party:Republican

Samuel Prather Snider (October 9, 1845  - September 24, 1928) was a representative from Minnesota. He was born in Mount Gilead, Morrow County, Ohio and attended the public schools, the local high school at Mount Gilead, Ohio, and Oberlin College, Ohio.

During the Civil War he enlisted as a private soldier in the Sixty-fifth Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry. After the war he engaged in commercial pursuits in New York, moved to Minnesota in 1876 and settled in Minneapolis.

He organized and built the Midland Railway in southern Minnesota and engaged in agricultural pursuits and the mining of iron ore.

he was a member of the Minnesota House of Representatives 1884 - 1888; was elected as a Republican to the 51st United States Congress (March 4, 1889  - March 3, 1891). He was also unsuccessful for reelection in 1890 to the 52nd congress. He was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1892.

He retired and resided in Minneapolis until his death, interment was in Lakewood Cemetery.