Denver, Colorado 1901 History | ![]() ![]() |
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July 2003 |
1901 History |
Last updated on 06/08/2003 |
Thomas M. Patterson
See also: Congressional
Biography
County Carlow, Ireland
New York, N. Y.
Crawfordsville, Indiana
Page 684, 686
Thomas M. Patterson, United States
Senator from Colorado, was born in County Carlow, Ireland, November 4, 1840.
At the age of nine years he came with his parents to New York, in which
city he attended the public schools until he was fourteen years old. He
then entered a mercantile house in which he was employed a short time, when the
family removed to Crawfordsville, Indiana. There, the son entered the
office of one of the local newspapers and was employed two years in the
mechanical department. He then engaged with his father, who was a jeweller,
and began an apprenticeship to that business which continued until the outbreak
of the civil war, when he enlisted in the Eleventh Regiment of Indiana
Volunteers, of which Gen. Lew Wallace was then Colonel. Upon the
expiration of his term of service he returned home and resumed his place in his
father’s establishment.
In 1863 he decided to prepare for a professional career. In that year he
entered Asbury University at Greencastle, Indiana, and in 1864 Wabash College at
Crawfordsville, Indiana. In 1865 he became a student in the law office of
M. D. White at Crawfordsville, with whom he remained until the autumn of 1867,
when he was admitted to practice in all the Courts of Indiana. He then
engaged in the practice of his profession at Crawfordsville until 1872. Having
decided to remove to the West, he came to Denver in December of that year and
began here his long, prominent and useful citizenship.
Mr. Patterson’s career in Denver and in Colorado is identified with many
important events in their history since he became a citizen here nearly thirty
years ago. He had immediately engaged in the practice of his profession
and had soon established himself as a lawyer of commanding ability. A
Democrat in politics, deeply interested in the welfare and success of his party,
he was at once received and made a leader in its councils. In the spring
of 1874, within eighteen months after his arrival in Denver, he was elected City
Attorney. Three months later he was nominated by his party as its
candidate for Delegate in the Forty-Fourth Congress from the Territory of
Colorado, and was elected in September by a majority of more than 2,000; his
Republican opponent having been H.P.H. Bromwell. Early in 1875, in the
interval between his election and the assembling of the Forty-Fourth Congress,
he was influential and instrumental at Washington in assuring the passage of the
Enabling Act under which Colorado became a State in 1876.
In the Forty-Fourth Congress, though a young man and hedged about by the
limitations attending the position of a Territorial Delegate, his ability
enabled him to secure the enactment of several laws of great importance to his
constituents; among them having been one authorizing all qualified electors in
Colorado to vote upon the State constitution, the Enabling Act of March, 1875,
having limited that suffrage to those qualified at the time it became a law;
another was a law appropriating money for the pay and expenses of the members of
the Colorado State constitutional convention; another providing for establishing
Federal Courts in Colorado immediately upon its admission as a State. In
1876, before Colorado’s admission, Mr. Patterson prevailed upon the National
Democratic Committee when it issued the call for the St. Louis convention that
nominated Samuel J. Tilden for President, to recognize Colorado as a State and
to provide for its representation by delegates upon the same footing as those
from the States. He was then made the first Colorado member of the
National Democratic Committee, elected a delegate to the St. Louis convention,
and chosen chairman of the Colorado delegation in that historic assemblage.
After Colorado was admitted, the Democratic party unanimously nominated Mr.
Patterson as its candidate for Representative in the Forty-Fifth Congress; the
new State having been entitled at that time to but one member; and by the
election in October, 1876, he became Colorado’s first member of the House of
Representatives at Washington. He was then under thirty-six years of age
and in the fourth year of his citizenship here. As a Representative in
Congress he was active and influential, and was recognized as a leader among
those of his party faith. In that Congress he originated and brought to
passage a half dozen or more measures of especial importance to the people of
Colorado.
In 1878 Mr. Patterson was unanimously renominated for Representative but, after
a brilliant canvass, shared the common defeat that befell his party in the
campaign of that year. He did not again become a candidate until 1888,
when his party nominated him for Governor but failed in his election. In
January, 1901, the Thirteenth General Assembly of Colorado elected him United
States Senator to succeed Edward O. Wolcott whose term expired March 4, 1901.
In the meantime, Mr. Patterson had actively engaged in the practice of his
profession in which he had become as he remains, a master. As a counsellor,
a Court and a jury lawyer, few members of the bar anywhere have brought more
profound legal learning, acumen, thoroughness, and brilliancy of intellect to
the service of clients than he. His fame as a lawyer and as an orator long
since passed beyond the bounds of the State and became National.
Mr. Patterson had also continued his active interest and participation in
political affairs with which he has been so long, conspicuously and ably
identified. He stands today among the leaders of the people in the west
who are not in harmony with the policies of the present dominant National
political organization.
In 1890 Mr. Patterson purchased a controlling interest in the pioneer Rocky
Mountain News, and since then has devoted part of his time and attention to it.
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