Henry Roden

Swiss born American prospector, lawyer and politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Henry Joseph Roden (August 8, 1874 – June 5, 1966) was Swiss born American prospector, lawyer and politician who served as Attorney General of the Territory of Alaska as well as a member and subsequently president of the Alaska territorial senate.

Preceded byJames S. Truitt
Preceded byNorman R. Walker
Quick facts 5th Attorney General of the Alaska Territory, Governor ...
Henry Joseph Roden
5th Attorney General of the Alaska Territory
In office
1941–1945[1]
GovernorErnest Gruening
Preceded byJames S. Truitt
Succeeded byRalph Julian Rivers
President of the Alaska Senate
In office
January 27, 1941  January 25, 1943
Preceded byNorman R. Walker
Succeeded byOrville Cochran
Member of the Alaska Senate
from the 4th district
In office
March 3, 1913  March 1, 1915
Preceded byPosition Established
Succeeded byO.P. Gaustad
Member of the Alaska Senate
from the 1st district
In office
January 14, 1935  January 25, 1943
Serving with Norman R. Walker[2]
Preceded byAllen Shattuck
Succeeded byArthur P. Walker
Personal details
BornHenry Joseph Roden
(1874-08-08)August 8, 1874
DiedJune 5, 1966(1966-06-05) (aged 91)
PartyDemocratic
Independent[3]
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Biography

Born in Basel in 1874 Roden arrived in Alaska as part of the Klondike Gold Rush, arriving in Rampart in the summer of 1898.[4]

In 1902 he began independently studying law, eventually passing the Alaska Bar exam in 1906 and served as assistant US Attorney in Fairbanks, assistant US Attorney in Iditarod and as City Attorney of Iditarod.[5]

He was elected to the first Alaska territorial legislature in 1913[6] and was subsequently re-elected as part of the 12th legislature in 1935 [7] and remained a Senator until the 15th legislature in 1941 when he served as Senate President.[8] In 1941 he became Attorney general for the state of Alaska, a position which he held until 1944, when he stood unsuccessfully as the Democratic candidate for the Alaskan representative to the US Congress.[9]

Throughout this time Roden maintained interests in mining. In 1919 he and others incorporated the Admiralty Alaska Gold Mining Company with himself as president, which controlled a mine in Funter Bay; in 1942 he was still an officer of the mining company,[10] and following the start of the Aleutian Islands campaign and the evacuation of the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands the mine was leased to the US government to house some of the evacuees. As Attorney general in 1943 he inspected the mine and wrote a letter to Governor Ernest Gruening expressing concern about the situation.[11][12]

References

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