Elisha Reynolds Potter

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Elisha Reynolds Potter (November 5, 1764Template:SpndSeptember 26, 1835) was a statesman in the Federalist Party from Kingston, Rhode Island, who served several times as the Speaker in the Rhode Island State Assembly.

Early life

Potter was born in Little Rest (now known as Kingston) in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations on November 5, 1764, and he resided there for all of his life, residing in the Elisha Reynolds House. He was the son of Thomas Potter and Elizabeth (Template:Nee Reynolds) Potter. His maternal grandparents were Elisha Reynolds and Susannah (Template:Nee Potter) Reynolds and his paternal grandparents were Ichabod Potter and Margaret (Template:Nee Helme) Potter.<ref name="RIHS"/>

He received a formal education at Plainfield Academy, and law instruction under Matthew Robinson.<ref name="RIHS"/>

Career

He began his career as a blacksmith's apprentice, but switched to the law in 1793.<ref name=Greene /> Potter was said to be a very large man; when he traveled by stagecoach, he had to purchase two seats.<ref name=Greene />

Potter ran against Peleg Arnold in a special election for the U.S. House of Representatives in 1796 caused by Benjamin Bourne's resignation, and Potter won the election. He served as a United States Congressman from 1796 to 1797 and again from 1809 to 1815.<ref name="RIHS">Template:Cite web</ref>

He was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1815.<ref>American Antiquarian Society Members Directory</ref>

Potter ran for governor of Rhode Island in 1818,<ref name=Greene /> but lost to Nehemiah R. Knight.

Personal life

Potter was twice married and his first wife was Mary (Template:Nee Gardiner) Perkins (1754–1809), daughter of Caleb Gardiner and widow of merchant Joseph Perkins in 1790. After the death of his first wife in 1809, he married her 31-year-old niece, Mary Mawney (1779–1835), in 1810.<ref name="RIHS"/> His second wife was the daughter of Pardon Mawney. Together, Elisha and his second wife were the parents of five surviving children, including:<ref name="RIHS"/>

  • Elisha Reynolds Potter Jr. (1811–1882), who was also a Congressman.<ref name="RIHS"/>
  • Thomas Mawney Potter (1814–1890), who married Loes Martin.<ref name="RIHS"/>
  • William Henry Potter (1816–1908), who married Sarah Corlis (Template:Nee Whipple) Swann in 1857.<ref name="RIHS"/>
  • James Brown Mason Potter (1818–1900), who married Eliza Palmer in 1849.<ref name="RIHS"/>
  • Mary Elizabeth Potter (1820–1901)<ref name="RIHS"/>

His second wife died in July, 1835 at the house of her brother-in-law, Jeffery Davis. Potter died on September 26, 1835, and is buried in Colonel Thomas Potter Cemetery near Kingston, Rhode Island.<ref name="RIHS"/>

See also

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References

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