John Patton (Detroit mayor)
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John Patton (March 1, 1822 – November 15, 1900) was the mayor of Detroit, Michigan, in 1858–1859.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Biography
John Patton was born March 1, 1822, in the county of County Down, Ireland, the son of James and Eliza Patton.<ref name = "farm">Template:Citation</ref> In 1830, John and his father emigrated to Albany, New York, and were joined by the rest of the family the next year. At 17, John Patton was apprenticed as a carriagesmith, and in 1843 moved to Detroit, where he worked for others at his trade.<ref name = "farm"/> Two years later, he went into business as a carriagemaker for himself. The fire of 1848 destroyed his factory, but Patton soon rebuilt, and his business prospered.<ref name = "burt">Template:Citation</ref>
In 1845, Patton married Eliza J. Anderson.<ref name = "farm"/> The couple had five children: William, Walter, Mrs. John McLean, Mrs. E. B. Gay, and John.<ref name = "burt"/>
Patton rapidly became popular in the city,<ref name = "farm"/> due in part to his "masterly" delivery of reading, thespian skills, and command of Scotch and Irish dialects.<ref name = "early">Template:Citation</ref> He served as chief engineer of the Fire Department in 1852–1854 and its president from 1855 to 1857.<ref name = "farm"/> He was a Democrat in politics, and awas elected a city alderman in 1853–1854, mayor in 1858–1859, county auditor in 1864–1869, Wayne County, Michigan, sheriff in 1869–1870, Justice of the Peace from 1880– 1892<ref name = "burt"/> and United States consul at Amherstburg, Ontario, from 1893 to 1897.<ref name = "burt"/><ref name = "gov">Template:Citation</ref>
John Patton died November 15, 1900.<ref name = "burt"/>
References
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