Samuel Fowler (1779–1844): Difference between revisions
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Samuel Fowler (30 October 1779 at Newburgh, Orange County, New York (USA) – 20 February 1844 at Franklin, Sussex County, New Jersey (USA) was a doctor, state legislator, member of the House of Representatives from northwestern New Jersey. As the owner of zinc and iron mines and an iron works at Franklin, New Jersey became a noted mineralogist who discovered several varieties of rare minerals (chiefly various ores of zinc).
Biography
Born in Newburg, New York on 30 October 1779, Fowler was the son of John Fowler and Glorianna (?). He attended the Montgomery Academy and subsequently was graduated from the Pennsylvania Medical College. He began to practice medicine in 1800 in Hamburg, New Jersey. In 1827, Fowler became a member of New Jersey's State Council (precursor to the New Jersey State Senate), and was elected as a Jacksonian Democrat to House of Representatives, serving in the Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth Congresses (March 4, 1833-March 3, 1837)
Fowler died on 20 February 1844 in Franklin, New Jersey and was interred in the North Church Cemetery in Hardyston Township, New Jersey.
Fowler was the father of Colonel Samuel Fowler (1818–1863), a officer with the 15th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War and grandfather of Samuel Fowler (1851–1919), who served in the House of Representatives from 1889 to 1893.