James Patrick Rossiter
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Erie, Pennsylvania
James Patrick Rossiter | |
|---|---|
| 36th Mayor of Erie, Pennsylvania | |
| In office 1932–1936 | |
| Preceded by | Joseph C. Williams |
| Succeeded by | Charles R. Barber |
| Personal details | |
| Born | September 13, 1890 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
| Died | September 26, 1943 (aged 53) Erie, Pennsylvania |
| Political party | Democratic Party |
| Alma mater | Georgetown University Law School |
James Patrick Rossiter (September 13, 1890, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – September 26, 1943, in Erie, Pennsylvania) was a prominent politician in Pennsylvania.[1][2]
He was the second of seven children of Louis T. Rossiter, an insurance company superintendent, and his wife Elizabeth C. "Lizzie" (Griffin) Rossiter. The family moved to the Philadelphia suburbs in New Jersey after James was born and by 1900 was living in the town of Wenonah in Gloucester County.[3] His father brought the family to Erie in 1903, where he again worked in the insurance field. By 1910, the family lived at 439 West Fifth Street, just off Erie's posh Millionaires Row, which runs along West Sixth Street between Perry Square and Gridley Park.[4][5][6] After World War I, he returned to living with his parents at their West Fifth Street home.[7] In 1930, he and two adult siblings were living with their widowed father at 616 West Ninth Street, just southwest of their West Fifth Street homestead.[8]
Education
He attended the Burns School in Erie and graduated Erie High School in 1910. He studied pre-law at the Pennsylvania State College, where he served one year in ROTC as a condition of his attendance at what was then a land-grant college. He finished his law studies at Georgetown University Law School, where he graduated in 1916.[4]