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Winthrop Ketcham

Winthrop W. Ketcham
Winthrop Welles Ketchum - Brady-Handy adjusted.jpg
Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania
In office
June 26, 1876 – December 6, 1879
Nominated by Ulysses S. Grant
Preceded by Wilson McCandless
Succeeded by Marcus Wilson Acheson
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania's 12th district
In office
March 4, 1875 – July 19, 1876
Preceded by Lazarus D. Shoemaker
Succeeded by William H. Stanton
Member of the Pennsylvania Senate
In office
1859-1861
Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
In office
1858
Personal details
Born (1820-06-29)June 29, 1820
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
Died December 6, 1879(1879-12-06) (aged 59)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Political party Republican

Winthrop Welles Ketcham (sometimes spelled Ketchum, June 29, 1820 – December 6, 1879) was a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania, serving until June 1876. He resigned when appointed as a United States federal judge in western Pennsylvania. He served in Pittsburgh until his death.

Ketcham was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. His father, Lewis N. Ketcham, was a painter and cabinet-maker. At an early age Ketcham assisted his father in painting buildings in the city and lock-houses along the canal.

Ketcham pursued classical studies; he served as an instructor in Wyoming Seminary in Kingston, Pennsylvania, from 1844 to 1847 and in Girard College in Philadelphia in 1848 and 1849. In 1846 he married Sarah Urquhart, with whom he had a daughter, Ella, and a son, J. Marshall.

After leaving the seminary, Ketcham read law in the offices of Lazarus Denison Shoemaker and Charles Denison. He was admitted to the bar in the several courts of Luzerne County on January 8, 1850, and practiced law in Wilkes-Barre from 1850 to 1855. (At that time the county included most of the area of the current Lackawanna County, which was not established until 1878.)

Ketcham became a Republican when that party was first organized, having been a Whig prior to that time. He was a delegate to the Chicago Republican National Convention in 1860, which nominated Abraham Lincoln for President, and a delegate at large to the Baltimore convention of 1864, when Lincoln was renominated. In 1868 he was a presidential elector from this state, and cast his vote for Ulysses Grant. In 1866, 1869, and 1872 he received votes in the Republican state conventions for the office of governor.


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