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Asahel Huntington

Asahel Huntington
Asahel Huntington.png
Clerk of Courts
Essex County, Massachusetts
In office
1851 – September 5, 1870
8thMayor of
Salem, Massachusetts
In office
March 1853 – March 1854
Preceded by Charles Wentworth Upham
Succeeded by Joseph Andrews
Member of the
Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1853
District Attorney for the District of
Essex and Middlesex Counties
In office
1830–1845
Preceded by New office
District Attorney
Essex County, Massachusetts
In office
1830–1845
County Attorney
Essex County, Massachusetts
In office
1830–1845
County Attorney
Essex County, Massachusetts
In office
1830–1845
Member of the
Massachusetts House of Representatives
In office
1827 – 1827
Member of the
Salem, Massachusetts
School Board
In office
1827 – 1827
In office
1830 – 1832
In office
1840 – 1842
In office
1846 – 1847
In office
1857 – 1858
Personal details
Born July 28, 1798
Topsfield, Massachusetts
Died September 5, 1870
Spouse(s) Caroline Louisa (De Blois) Tucker, m. August 1842.
Children William De Blois Huntington; Sarah Louisa Huntington; Arthur Lord Huntington
Alma mater Phillips Academy, class of 1815.
Yale College, class of 1819.
Profession

Asahel Huntington (July 28, 1798 – September 5, 1870) was an American politician who served as a Mayor of Salem, Massachusetts.

Huntington was born in Topsfield, Massachusetts on July 23, 1798. His father was the Rev. Asahel Huntington, and his mother was Alethea, daughter of Dr. Elisha Lord, of Pomfret, Connecticut. Huntington was the brother of Massachusetts Lieutenant Governor Elisha Huntington.

Huntington graduated from Yale College in 1819. After leaving College, Huntington commenced his legal studies at Newburyport, and after some interruptions completed them at Salem, Mass., where he was admitted to the bar in 1824. He continued in practice in Salem until 1851, when he was appointed clerk of all the courts in Essex County; this office he held till his death. He served the State repeatedly in the Massachusetts Legislature, and in the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1853, and in the same year was mayor of the city of Salem. He died in Salem, Mass., after a brief illness, 5 Sept., 1870.

He was married, 15 Aug,1842, to Mrs Caroline (Deblois) Tucker, of Boston, who survived him, with a son and daughter.

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from the Yale Obituary Record.


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