Person:DeWitt Atkin (1)

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DeWitt Clinton Atkin
b.6 Jun 1829 Ohio
  1. DeWitt Clinton Atkin1829 - 1915
m. 20 Mar 1855
  1. Clyde Gilmer Atkin1856 - 1933
  2. Emma AtkinAbt 1858 - 1937
  3. Inez M. Atkin1865 - 1921
  4. Rozina Bernice Atkin1875 - 1959
Facts and Events
Name DeWitt Clinton Atkin
Gender Male
Birth? 6 Jun 1829 Ohio
Marriage 20 Mar 1855 Jefferson, Ashtabula, Ohioto Malora Lucy Hunt
Death? 16 Apr 1915 Newberg, Yamhill, Oregon
Burial? 18 Apr 1915 Laurel, Washington, Oregon


Research Notes: Family found in 1870 Census, Geneva, Ashtabula Co. OH

He is found on the 1900 Yamhill Oregon US Census living with his son, Clyde. He is widowed and 69 years old.

Source for most other information is Nancy Brown, 6033 S.W. Hood Ave., Portland, OR 97201, researcher for Janet Atkin Nicoll, great granddaughter of Lucy Malora Hunt.

He was named after Dewitt Clinton governor of new york

biography A lawyer and statesman, DeWitt Clinton was born in Little Britain, New York, and as such was educated at Columbia College. Three years after graduating form his college in 1786, Clinton was admitted to the bar, became secretary to his uncle, George Clinton, who was the governor of New York. Soon after, he became a member of the Anti-Federalist party.

He was a member of the New York state legislature from 1797 until 1802, when he became a member of the U.S. Senate. However, he later resigned in 1803 in order to serve as mayor of New York City, and thus he served in that capacity with two brief interruptions until 1815.

In 1812, he ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. presidency against James Madison. One of Clinton’s most lasting accomplishments as a leader in civic and state affairs was the establishment of the New York public school system; actively interested in all scientific and social questions, he encouraged steam navigation, modified the laws governing criminals and debtors, and advocated the building of the Erie Canal.

On the strength of the canal question, which he had made a political issue, Clinton was elected as governor of New York, serving from 1817 to 1823. In the first year of his third term, he opened the canal at Rome, New York for navigation, breaking ground.