James Pritchard (politician)
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James Pritchard | |
|---|---|
| Speaker of the Ohio Senate | |
| In office February 21, 1805 – November 30, 1806 | |
| Preceded by | Daniel Symmes |
| Succeeded by | Thomas Kirker |
| Personal details | |
| Born | November 1, 1763 |
| Died | February 6, 1813 (aged 49) |
| Party | Democratic-Republican |
| Spouses |
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James Pritchard (November 1, 1763– February 6, 1813) was an American Revolutionary War veteran and Democratic-Republican politician who served in the legislatures of the Northwest Territory, and later in Ohio, and was unsuccessful in runs for congress.
James Pritchard was born November 1, 1763, in Frederick County, Maryland. He served as a private in the Maryland line during the American Revolutionary War. He was married to Tabitha White, and they lived in Pennsylvania before moving to the Northwest Territory.[1]
Northwest Territory
Pritchard was an early settler in Knox Township and one of the early members of the Sugar Grove Methodist church, the first church in that township. He was a lieutenant-colonel of the county militia, and as an associate judge of Jefferson County he helped lay out the county into five townships.[1]
Pritchard was elected as the representative of Jefferson County to the House of Representatives of the Northwest Territory in 1799. He became a leader of the movement toward statehood, allied with other Republicans Edward Tiffin, Thomas Worthington and Nathaniel Massie.[2] After a constitution was approved in 1802, elections were held for the first Ohio legislature in January, 1803. Jefferson County was the only place where Federalists were elected, and Pritchard suspected election fraud and filed a protest, which was over-ruled.[2]