Charles Paine | |
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Official Vermont State House portrait
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15th | |
Governor of Vermont | |
In office October 15, 1841 – October 13, 1843 |
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Lieutenant | Waitstill R. Ranney |
Preceded by | Silas H. Jennison |
Succeeded by | |
Member of the Vermont House of Representatives | |
In office 1828-1829 |
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Personal details | |
Born | April 15, 1799 |
Died | July 6, 1853 Waco, Texas |
(aged 54)
Political party | Whig |
Charles Paine (April 15, 1799 – July 6, 1853) was an American Whig politician, woolen mill owner, merchant, railroad builder, and the fifteenth Governor of Vermont.
Paine was the son of U.S. Senator Elijah Paine, and was born in Williamstown, Vermont. He graduated from Harvard. Though he never married, he had two children.
Paine moved to Northfield, Vermont in the early part of the nineteenth century to run the family woolen mill. He operated this business until it was destroyed by fire in 1848. He had various other business interests including a hotel and a store, but he is most often remembered as the individual who brought railroads to Vermont. He founded the Vermont Central Railroad and served as the first president of the company.
In Northfield, Paine held the offices of Town Selectman and Moderator of the Town Meeting. In his political life he was a member of the Vermont House of Representatives from 1828 through 1829. He was the 15th Governor of Vermont from 1841 until 1843. During his tenure, a stricter accounting of public funds was established.
As the founder and president of the Vermont Central Railroad Paine built its headquarters in his home town of Northfield, despite the hilly terrain, earning the enmity of residents of larger, more accessible nearby towns. In the extensive yard, engines and railroad cars were built and repaired. In 1853 the Vermont Central Railroad went into bankruptcy due to overexpansion and, in some cases, mismanagement. The railroad was placed under receivership and renamed the Central Vermont Railroad. Its headquarters were moved to St. Albans.