Argalus Starks

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Preceded byHenry Brown
Succeeded byEdward McGarry
Argalus Starks
3rd Prison Commissioner of Wisconsin
In office
January 4, 1854  January 2, 1856
GovernorWilliam A. Barstow
Preceded byHenry Brown
Succeeded byEdward McGarry
Member of the Wisconsin Senate
from the 14th district
In office
January 3, 1866  January 1, 1868
Preceded bySmith S. Wilkinson
Succeeded byStephen Steele Barlow
Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
from the Sauk 2nd district
In office
January 1, 1862  January 3, 1866
Preceded byMarsena Temple
Succeeded byRollin M. Strong
Personal details
Born(1804-03-10)March 10, 1804
DiedJune 28, 1870(1870-06-28) (aged 66)
Resting placeWalnut Hill Cemetery, Baraboo, Wisconsin
Party
Spouses
  • Mary Ann Filkins
    (m. 1828; died 1838)
  • Margaret R. Worthman
    (m. 1839; died 1864)
  • Catherine Schwartz
    (m. 18641870)
Children
  • Mary Jane (Greeney)
  • (b. 1835; died 1914)
  • John Starks
  • (b. 1841; died 1865)

Argalus Waldo Starks (March 10, 1804  June 28, 1870) was an American farmer, politician, and Wisconsin pioneer. He served as the 3rd State Prison Commissioner of Wisconsin and later served 6 years in the Wisconsin Legislature, representing Sauk County.

Born in Williamsburg, Massachusetts, Starks lived in Jefferson County, New York, and then in Albany, New York.[1] He served on the Albany City Council while living in Albany, New York.

He moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin Territory, around 1840, and began operating a stage coach line from Milwaukee to Watertown. He became involved with the Democratic Party organization in Milwaukee and was appointed City Marshall, and was nominated for Sheriff of Milwaukee County, but was not elected.

In the late 1840s, he supported the Free Soil Party, but ultimately returned to the Democratic Party.[1] He moved to Sauk County in 1852, and in 1853 he was chosen as the Democratic nominee for the new office of State Prison Commissioner. Prior to 1853, the state had a board of prison commissioners appointed by the Governor; an 1853 law established the elected position of State Prison Commissioner, which office was temporarily held by an appointee of the Governor until the Fall general election of 1853.

His main opponent in the 1853 election was Free Soil candidate Sherman M. Booth, who wouldthe following yearbecome famous for his effort to free Joshua Glover in defiance of federal fugitive slave laws.[2]

Starks won the election[2] and was regarded as a fair and honest officeholderin contrast to Governor William A. Barstow and other state officials of his time, who were implicated in a major bribery investigation.[1] Starks was seen as refusing that influence, and came under attack from Governor Barstow and his allies.[1]

Starks did not run for re-election in 1855, and instead returned to his farm in Sauk County. After the outbreak of the American Civil War, however, Starks chose to re-enter politics as a Union Democrat, and remained aligned with the National Union ticket throughout the war. He was elected to four terms in the Wisconsin State Assembly and one two-year term in the Wisconsin State Senate, running on the Union ticket.[3] He remained a Republican after the war,[4] but died in 1870 of a kidney disease.[1]

Family

Electoral history

References

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