William J. Copp

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preceded byMarcus Fulton
Succeeded byEdward H. Ives
Preceded byMarcus Fulton
Succeeded byJohn D. Trumbull (Pierce)
H. L. Wadsworth (St. Croix)
William J. Copp
Member of the Wisconsin Senate
from the 28th district
In office
January 6, 1868  January 3, 1870
Preceded byMarcus Fulton
Succeeded byEdward H. Ives
Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
from the PierceSt. Croix district
In office
January 1, 1866  January 7, 1867
Preceded byMarcus Fulton
Succeeded byJohn D. Trumbull (Pierce)
H. L. Wadsworth (St. Croix)
County Judge of Pierce County, Wisconsin
In office
November 15, 1853  January 1, 1855
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byMason Stone
Personal details
Born(1811-08-13)August 13, 1811
DiedDecember 15, 1889(1889-12-15) (aged 78)
Resting placePine Glen Cemetery, Prescott, Wisconsin
Party
Spouse
Charlotte Lindsay
(m. 18391889)
Children
  • Maria Asenath Copp
  • (b. 1838; died 1904)
  • Benjamin Denison Copp
  • (b. 1841; died 1899)
  • Joseph Matthew Copp
  • (b. 1843; died 1883)
  • Alice Lindsay Copp
  • (b. 1848; died 1866)
RelativesBelton A. Copp (brother)

William Johnson Copp (August 13, 1811  December 15, 1889) was an American lawyer, Republican politician, and Wisconsin pioneer. He was one of the founders of Pierce County, Wisconsin, and served as the first Pierce county judge. He also served in the Wisconsin Senate (1868 & 1869) and State Assembly (1866), representing much of northwestern Wisconsin.

William J. Copp was born August 13, 1811, at St. Marys, Georgia. As a child, he moved with his family to St. Augustine, Florida, where his father died in 1822.[1] For a time, Copp returned to Georgia, where his brother Belton A. Copp had established a legal practice. He later went to Winchester, Tennessee, where another brother, Joseph, had become established as a pastor.

In Tennessee, Copp became involved in politics with the Whig Party, and was active in the 1844 United States presidential election on behalf of Henry Clay.[2] During that time, he was also actively studying law. Shortly after the 1844 election, Copp moved to Aberdeen, Mississippi, where he was a junior law partner to his wife's brother, Matthew W. Lindsay.[3] He continued his political activity in Mississippi and was a delegate from Monroe County to the 1845 Whig state convention.[4] He also became involved in the Temperance movement, and was an officer in the "Sons of Temperance" chapter in Monroe County.[5] In 1851, Lindsay, Copp, and their short-lived third partner, Goode, moved their practice from Mississippi back to Tennessee.

Wisconsin years

Copp came to northwest Wisconsin in 1852, buying up land at what is now Prescott, Wisconsin, in partnership with Orrin T. Maxson. Maxson and Copp then collaborated to plat a village at the sitewhich sits at the confluence of the Mississippi and St. Croix riversand began promoting their village to attract settlers and investors.

In 1853, Pierce County was established with the town board of Prescott constituting the first county board of Pierce. At the first election in November 1853, 110 votes were cast and Copp was elected the first county judge of the new county. The following year, rather than running for re-election, he ran for Wisconsin circuit court judge, but came in third in the election, behind Benjamin Allen and the victor, S. S. N. Fuller.[6]

That year, Copp also joined the new Republican Party. In 1855, he was the Republican nominee for Wisconsin State Assembly in the Assembly district comprising all the northwest border counties from Pierce County to what is now Ashland County. But again, Copp fell short of his Democratic opponent, Almon D. Gray.[7]

Copp won his first state office in 1865, running for Wisconsin State Assembly on the National Union ticket. He served in the 1866 legislative session, representing the district of Pierce and St. Croix counties.

He didn't run for re-election in 1867, but the following year became the Republican nominee for Wisconsin Senate in the 28th Senate district. The district then comprised roughly the same geographic region as his first race for Assembly, in 1855. He went on to represent the district in the 1868 and 1869 legislative sessions. During the 1869 session, Copp was a staunch supporter of Cadwallader C. Washburn seeking to be named U.S. senator, but Washburn lost out to Matthew H. Carpenter.[8]

At the 1869 Republican state convention, Copp sought the nomination for Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin, but Thaddeus C. Pound easily won the nomination on the first ballot.[9]

In 1872, Copp began to split from the Republican Party and supported the presidential campaign of Liberal Republican Horace Greeley.[10] He subsequently followed the liberal republicans into alliance with the Democratic Party.

He ran for office one final time in 1879, running as the Democratic nominee for Wisconsin State Assembly in the Pierce County district, but he came in a distant third behind the Republican incumbent Nils P. Haugen and a third party Greenbacker. He may have been damaged by some voters accidentally casting their votes in the name of his son, but still would not have had enough votes to overcome Haugen's majority.[11]

In his later years, he returned to Winchester, Tennessee, where he died in December 1889.[8]

Personal life and family

Electoral history

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI