Stephen Wallace Dorsey | |
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United States Senator from Arkansas |
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In office March 4, 1873 – March 3, 1879 |
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Preceded by | Benjamin F. Rice |
Succeeded by | James D. Walker |
Personal details | |
Born |
Benson, Vermont |
February 28, 1842
Died | March 20, 1916 Los Angeles, California |
(aged 74)
Political party | Republican |
Stephen Wallace Dorsey (February 28, 1842 – March 20, 1916) was a Senator from Arkansas.
He was born in Benson, Rutland County, Vermont, February 28, 1842 and moved to Ohio and settled in Oberlin. He attended the public schools. During the Civil War served in the Union Army. After the war he returned to Ohio and settled in Sandusky where he was employed by the Sandusky Tool Co. and subsequently became its president. He was elected president of the Arkansas Railway Co. and moved to Arkansas and settled in Helena.
He was elected as a Republican to the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1873, to March 3, 1879. He did not run for reelection. He was a chairman of the Committee on District of Columbia (Forty-fifth Congress). In 1876, he was made a member of the Republican National Committee. In 1880, when the Republicans nominated James G. Garfield for president and Chester A. Arthur for vice president, Dorsey became the Secretary of the Republican National Committee. His reputation was tarnished, though, by the Star route scandal, in which Dorsey and his partners were accused of defrauding the government out of $412,000. Dorsey was defended by noted criminal law attorney Robert G. Ingersoll. Though he was eventually found not guilty, the cost of his defense and the damage to his reputation all but destroyed Dorsey’s political and financial ambitions.
After Dorsey, no other Republican served as senior Senator from Arkansas until Tim Hutchinson in 1999, upon David Pryor's retirement. No other Republican served in the class 3 Senate seat from Arkansas that Dorsey held until John Boozman in 2011.