Ransom_Halloway

Ransom Halloway

Ransom Halloway

American politician


Ransom Halloway (c. 1793 April 6, 1851) was a United States representative from New York.

Quick Facts Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New York's 8th district, Preceded by ...

Early life

Halloway was born in Pawling, Dutchess County. His name is sometimes spelled "Holloway." After the deaths of their parents, Ransom and his sister were raised by relatives.[1]

Career

He settled in Beekman, where he farmed and worked as a hat maker.[2][3] He was also active in the state militia, and was appointed paymaster of the 30th Brigade in 1818.[4]

Halloway was elected as a Whig to the Thirty-first Congress, holding office from March 4, 1849, to March 3, 1851.[5][6]

Personal life

In 1820, he married Rebecca Dodge, a daughter of Joseph and Ann Dodge, who died on August 5, 1843.[7]

In 1851, a few months before his death, he married Eliza Genevieve Waring of Mount Pleasant in Prince George County, Maryland. His second wife's name appears in some accounts as "Warren."[8]

He died on April 6, 1851, in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, at Mount Pleasant,[9] the home of his second wife.[10] He was buried next to his first wife at the Dodge Family Cemetery in Pawling.[11][8]


References

  1. Louise Tompkins, Millbrook Round Table, Out of the Past in Old Dutchess: Aaron Burr and the Quaker Lady, January 27, 1971
  2. Dutchess County Historical Society, Year Book, 1946, page 53
  3. New York Herald, Odds and Ends, November, 1848
  4. Senate, New York (State) Legislature (1902). Documents of the Senate of the State of New York: Volume 11. p. 1963. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  5. Putnam County Courier, Death of Benjamin Bailey, July 20, 1872
  6. W.M. Morrison, Stryker's American Register and Magazine, Volume 6, 1853, page 223
  7. The Bowies and Their Kindred: A Genealogical and Biographical History, 1899, page 492. This entry describes Halloway as being from New Jersey, bus since only one person named Halloway has ever served in Congress, this is clearly an error.
  8. Hawley, An Explanation of Proposed Revisions, page 26

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