Peleg Emory Aldrich

Peleg Emory Aldrich (July 24, 1813 – March 14, 1895) was a teacher, lawyer, politician and jurist who served as the twelfth mayor of Worcester, Massachusetts, and as an Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court.

Peleg Emory Aldrich
Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court
In office
1873  March 14, 1895
Appointed byWilliam B. Washburn
Member of the
Massachusetts House of Representatives
In office
1866–1867
12th Mayor of
Worcester, Massachusetts
In office
1866  January 3, 1863
Preceded byIsaac Davis
Succeeded byD. Waldo Lincoln
District Attorney
for the Middle District
In office
1853–1865
Appointed byJohn H. Clifford
Personal details
BornJuly 24, 1813[1]
New Salem, Massachusetts[1]
DiedMarch 14, 1895 (aged 71)
Worcester, Massachusetts[2]
Political partyWhig, Republican
Alma materHarvard Law School, L.L.B. 1844[3]
OccupationAttorney

Early life

Aldrich was born on July 24, 1813, in New Salem, Massachusetts.[1]

Family life

Aldrich married Sarah Woods, of Barre, Massachusetts, in 1850.[4] They had five children,[5] three daughters and two sons.[6]

Early education and career

For his early education, Aldrich attended the public schools of New Salem, Massachusetts. At the age of sixteen, Aldrich entered the academy in Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts.[3] After he left the academy, Aldrich went into teaching, first in Ashfield, Massachusetts, later, in 1837, in Tappahannock, Virginia.[7][3] Aldrich studied law while he was teaching. In 1842[7] Aldrich entered Harvard Law School, graduating with the L.L.B. degree in 1844.[3] Soon after he graduated from Harvard Law School, Aldrich returned to teaching in Virginia.[3]

Aldrich was admitted to the Virginia Bar in 1845, but he did not practice law there.[3] Aldrich returned to Massachusetts and began working for the firm of Ashman, Chapman & Norton in Springfield, Massachusetts. Aldrich was admitted to the Massachusetts Bar at Hampden County[2] in the spring of 1846.[3] In December 1846, Aldrich moved to Barre, Massachusetts, where he opened a law office.[3] Aldrich would stay in Barre for seven years.[3]

Barre Patriot

For three of the years he was in Barre, Aldrich edited the Barre Patriot,[2] which was a pro-Whig party newspaper.[3]

District Attorney

In 1854 Governor Clifford appointed Aldrich as District Attorney for the Middle District,[2] Aldrich moved to Worcester after he was appointed District Attorney.[7] Aldrich served as the District Attorney until 1865.[3]

Political career

Aldrich was a member of the Whig Party until that party dissolved, at which point he joined the newly formed Republican Party.[3][4]

Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1853

Aldrich was a member of the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1853.[3]

Mayor of Worcester

Aldrich served as the mayor of Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1862.[3] It was as the mayor of Worcester that Aldrich was present at the battle of Antietam because he had gone to the front to visit soldiers from the city.[3] In 1865 he was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society,[8] which is located in Worcester.

Massachusetts House of Representatives

Aldrich served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1866 to 1867.[4]

In January 1865, Aldrich formed a law firm, Bacon & Aldrich, in partnership with Peter C. Bacon.[3] Aldrich stayed in this partnership until he was elevated to the bench in 1873.[3][4]

Judicial career

In 1873 Governor Washburn appointed Aldrich as an Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court.[4] Aldrich remained on the court until his death on March 14, 1895.[3]

Notes

  1. American Bar Association (1895), Report of the Eighteenth Annual Meeting of the American Bar Association held at Detroit, Michigan, Detroit, Michigan: American Bar Association, p. 508
  2. American Antiquarian Society (1896), Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, New Series, Volume X (PDF), Worcester, MA: American Antiquarian Society, p. 22
  3. Reno, Conrad (1901), Memoirs of the Judiciary and The Bar of New England for the Nineteenth Century, Volume III, Boston, MA: The Century Memorial Publishing Company, p. 476
  4. Reno, Conrad (1901), Memoirs of the Judiciary and The Bar of New England for the Nineteenth Century, Volume III, Boston, MA: The Century Memorial Publishing Company, p. 477
  5. American Antiquarian Society (1896), Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society, New Series, Volume X (PDF), Worcester, MA: American Antiquarian Society, p. 24
  6. American Bar Association (1895), Report of the Eighteenth Annual Meeting of the American Bar Association held at Detroit, Michigan, Detroit, Michigan: American Bar Association, p. 511
  7. American Bar Association (1895), Report of the Eighteenth Annual Meeting of the American Bar Association held at Detroit, Michigan, Detroit, Michigan: American Bar Association, p. 509
  8. American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
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