James Myers (politician)

James Myers was an American politician who served as the second lieutenant governor of Ohio from 1854 to 1856.[1]

James Myers
2nd Lieutenant Governor of Ohio
In office
January 9, 1854  January 14, 1856
GovernorWilliam Medill
Preceded byWilliam Medill
Succeeded byThomas H. Ford
Member of the Ohio Senate
from the Lucas & other Counties district
In office
December 4, 1848  January 4, 1852
Preceded byJesse Wheeler
Succeeded byWilliam Mungen
Member of the Ohio House of Representatives
from the Lucas County district
In office
January 6, 1862  January 3, 1864
Preceded byDennis Steele
Succeeded byLorenze L. Morehouse
Personal details
BornJune 1795
Dutchess County, New York
DiedJuly 19, 1864(1864-07-19) (aged 69)
Toledo, Ohio
Resting placeForest Cemetery
Political partyDemocratic, Unionist

Biography

James Myers was born in June 1795 in Dutchess County, New York, of German ancestry. When young, his parents moved to Albany and then Schenectady, where he grew up.[2] During the War of 1812, he volunteered during the summer of 1813, and served on the northern frontier in the winter campaign under general Wade Hampton. The next summer he was stationed at Brooklyn Heights, near New York City.[3]

After the war ended, Myers farmed and engaged in mercantile pursuits.[3] In 1823[3] or 1825,[2] he became collector of tolls at Schenectady on the new Erie Canal, until 1836, when he moved to Toledo, Ohio.

In Toledo, Myers became involved with the construction of the Miami and Erie Canal. After completion of the canal, he concentrated on property management and real estate. He was elected to two terms under Ohio's first constitution to the Ohio State Senate, to represent much of Northwest Ohio starting in 1848. Under the new constitution, he served a single term as Lieutenant Governor of Ohio as a Democrat.[2][3]

He was in feeble health beginning in the mid-1850s, but served a two-year term as a representative from Lucas County in the Ohio House of Representatives during the American Civil War, after nomination by the Union convention.[2][3]

Myers' health further declined, and after much pain, he died July 19, 1864, at his home, northwest corner of Jefferson and Superior Streets, Toledo.[2]

References

  1. "Lieutenant Governors Of The State Of Ohio: 1852 - Present". Ohio Secretary of State. Retrieved 2012-01-24.
  2. Scribner, Harvey, ed. (1910). Memoirs of Lucas County and the city of Toledo: from the earliest ... Vol. 1. Madison, Wisconsin: Western Historical Association. pp. 120–121.
  3. Biographical notices of the members of the fifty-fifth General Assembly of the State of Ohio. Columbus: John Wallace. 1862. pp. 81–83.
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