Ebenezer Bradbury

Ebenezer Bradbury (July 31, 1793 – June 19, 1864) was a Massachusetts machinist[1] who served as the Treasurer and Receiver-General of Massachusetts and as a member, and the Speaker, of the Massachusetts House of Representatives.

Ebenezer Bradbury
21st Treasurer and Receiver-General of Massachusetts
In office
1849[1]  1851
GovernorGeorge N. Briggs
Preceded byJoseph Barrett
Succeeded byCharles B. Hall
Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives[2]
In office
1847[2][3]  1847
Preceded byJohn Davis Long
Succeeded byCharles J. Noyes
Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
from Newburyport, Massachusetts, Essex County, Massachusetts[2]
Personal details
BornJuly 31, 1793
Newburyport, Massachusetts
DiedJune 19, 1864 (aged 70)
Salisbury, Massachusetts
NationalityAmerican
Political partyWhig
OccupationMachinist

Early life

Bradbury was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts on July 31, 1793.[1]

Massachusetts House of Representatives

Bradbury represented Newburyport, Massachusetts, Essex County, Massachusetts[2] in the Massachusetts House of Representatives. Bradbury was the Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1847.[3]

Massachusetts Treasurer

Starting in 1849, Bradbury was the Treasurer and Receiver-General of Massachusetts.[1]

Bradbury lived in Newton, Massachusetts.[1]

See also

  • 68th Massachusetts General Court (1847)

References

  1. Poole, Alexis (1850), 'Poole's Statistical View of the Executive and Legislative Departments of the Government of Massachusetts Fourth Series, Boston, Massachusetts: Dutton & Wentworth, p. 3
  2. THE MASSACHUSETTS STATE RECORD AND YEAR BOOK OF GENERAL INFORMATION 1847, Boston, Massachusetts, 1847, p. 38
  3. THE MASSACHUSETTS STATE RECORD AND YEAR BOOK OF GENERAL INFORMATION 1847, Boston, Massachusetts, 1847, p. 34
Political offices
Preceded by
Samuel H. Walley, Jr.
Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
1847
Succeeded by
Francis Crowninshield
Preceded by
Joseph Barrett
21 st Treasurer and Receiver-General of Massachusetts
1849-1851
Succeeded by
Charles B. Hall


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