J. B. Judkins was an American lawyer and politician in Arkansas. He was elected to the state senate in 1880. [1] In 1883 he was elected president of the senate. [2] He was a lawyer in Black Rock, Arkansas. [3]
John Isaac Moore was a member of the Arkansas Senate and acting governor of the U.S. state of Arkansas.
John Coit Spooner was a politician and lawyer from Wisconsin. He served in the United States Senate from 1885 to 1891 and from 1897 to 1907. A Republican, by the 1890s, he was one of the "Big Four" key Republicans who largely controlled the major decisions of the Senate, along with Orville H. Platt of Connecticut, William B. Allison of Iowa, and Nelson W. Aldrich of Rhode Island.
Delos Rodeyn Ashley was a California and Nevada politician who served as State Treasurer of California and a member of the United States House of Representatives from Nevada.
Jacob Welsh Miller was a United States senator from New Jersey.
Charles J. Perrenot was a politician in Florida. He served as president of the Florida Senate.
Richard A. Dawson was a lawyer and state legislator in Arkansas. He was born in Virginia and his father was a minister. Dawson studied at Oberlin College, and received his law degree from the Old University of Chicago. Dawson practiced law in Pine Bluff, Arkansas and represented the area in the Arkansas General Assembly from 1873 to 1874 and from 1879 to 1881.
William Dugger was a state senator in Arkansas. He was a Republican. He served in the Arkansas Senate in 1871. He represented the Third District.
Charles W. Stapleton was an American lawyer and politician from New York.
Christian Heinrich "Henry" Thane was a wealthy businessman and bank owner in Arkansas. His Craftsman-style home, Thane House, was designed by Little Rock architect Charles L. Thompson. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Robert W. Glover was a teacher, postmaster, tax assessor, judge, state legislator, and Missionary Baptist pastor in Arkansas. He served in both houses of the Arkansas General Assembly.
Colonel Preston Withers Farrar was an American lawyer and Whig politician. He was the Speaker of the Louisiana House of Representatives from 1848 to his death in 1850. He also served in both houses of the Mississippi Legislature.
Paul Burrus Benham Jr. was a state legislator from Arkansas. He was born in Memphis, Tennessee and studied at Vanderbilt University. He served as president of the Mississippi River Railway Commission.
Xenophon Jacob Pindall Sr. was a lawyer, state legislator, and judge in Arkansas. He was a Lieutenant Colonel in the Missouri State Guard during the American Civil War.
Archibald Hamilton Rutherford was a public official, state legislator, and Treasurer of Arkansas.
Hector McNeil Grant was a medical doctor, councilman, mayor, and state legislator in Arkansas. He served in the Arkansas Senate. He owned a drugstore on First Street in Helena, Arkansas.
George James Crump was an officer in Confederate Army during the American Civil War, a lawyer, a state legislator for one term in the Arkansas House of Representatives and a public official. He also went by the name G. J. Crump.
Joseph Warren House was a lawyer in Little Rock, Arkansas, a state legislator, and a United States District Attorney. He served in the Arkansas Senate.
Ripley "Rip" B. Weaver was a soldier, raiser of stock animals, state legislator, and government official from Arkansas. He served in the Arkansas House of Representatives and the Arkansas Senate, including as President of the Arkansas Senate. He was a Democrat.
Zachariah Bradford Jennings was a state legislator in Arkansas. He served in the Arkansas House of Representatives and the Arkansas Senate. He proposed the bill to establish Cleburne County, Arkansas in the Arkansas Senate.
Charles Minor was a lawyer and politician in Arkansas. He served in the Arkansas House of Representatives. He served two terms in the Arkansas House. He testified he lived in Jackson County.