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ANDREW GREGG CURTIN (1817-1894)

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Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 651 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ANDREW GREGG CURTIN (1817-1894)  ,
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American
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political leader, was born at Bellefonte, Centre county, Pennsylvania, on the 22nd of
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April 1817, the son of a native of Ireland who was a
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pioneer iron manufacturer in Pennsylvania . He graduated.from the law department of Dickinson College in 1837, was admitted to the bar in 1839, and successfully practised his profession . Entering politics as a Whig, he was chairman of the Whig state central committee in 1854, and from 1855 to 1858 was secretary of the
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commonwealth . In this capacity he was also ex officio the superintendent of
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common
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schools, and rendered valuable services to his state in perfecting and expanding the
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free public school
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system, and in establishing state normal schools . Upon the organization of the Republican party he became one of its leaders in Pennsylvania, and in
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October 186o was chosen governor of the state on its ticket, defeating Henry D . Foster, the
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candidate upon whom the Douglas and Breckinridge Democrats and the Constitutional Unionists had
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united, by 32,000 votes, after a spirited
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campaign which was watched with intense
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interest by the entire country as an
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index of the result of the ensuing presidential election . During the
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Civil War he was one of the closest and most constant advisers of President Lincoln, and one of the most efficient, most energetic and most patriotic of the " war
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governors " of the North . Pennsylvania troops were the first to reach Washington after the president's call, and from first to last the state, under Governor Curtin's guidance, furnished 387,284
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officers and men to the
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Northern armies . One of his wisest and most praiseworthy acts was the organization of the famous " Pennsylvania Reserves," by means of which the state was always able to fill at once its required
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quota after each successive call . In raising funds and equipping and supplying troops the governor showed
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great energy and resourcefulness, and his plans and organizations for caring for the needy widows and children of Pennsylvania soldiers killed in
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battle, and for aiding and removing to their homes the sick and wounded were widely copied throughout the North . He was re-elected governor in 1863 and served until
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January 1867 . He was United States minister to Russia from 1869 until 1872, when he returned to
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America and took
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part in the Liberal Republican revolt against President U .

S .

Grant . In 1872–1873 he was a member of the state constitutional convention . Subsequently he joined the Democratic party and was a representative in Congress from 1881 to 1887 . He died at his birthplace, Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, on the 7th of October 1894 . See William H . Egle's
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Life and Times of Andrew Gregg Curtin (
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Philadelphia, 1896), which contains chapters written by A . K . McClure, Jno . Russell Young, Wayne McVeagh, Fitz John Porter and others .

End of Article: ANDREW GREGG CURTIN (1817-1894)
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