Alfred Elisha Ames
Alfred Elisha Ames (December 14, 1814 – September 23, 1874) was an American physician and politician.
Born in Colchester, Vermont, he moved to Orwell, Ohio, in 1831. In 1836 he moved to Chicago, Illinois. He then moved to Vandalia, Illinois, where he served as deputy secretary of state of Illinois and as private secretary to the Governor of Illinois. In 1839, he moved to Springfield, Illinois where he served in the same positions and clerk of the Illinois House of Representatives. He lived in Belvedere and Roscoe, Illinois. In 1845, Ames graduated from Rush Medical College. He served in the Illinois House of Representatives and then in the Illinois State Senate. He also served as probate judge and postmaster of Roscoe, Illinois. In 1851, he moved to Minnesota Territory and settled in what is now Minneapolis, Minnesota. In 1853, Ames served in the Minnesota Territorial House of Representatives. In 1857 he served in the first Minnesota Constitutional Convention of 1857 as a Democrat. He practiced medicine in Minneapolis until his death in 1874. His son was A.A. Ames who was also a physician and mayor of Minneapolis.[1][2]
See also
- Eli B. Ames, brother of Alfred Elisha Ames
Notes
- ↑ 'Transactions of the Minnesota State Medical Association,' Minnesota State Medical Association: 1870, Biographical Sketch of Alred Elisha Ames, pg 103-105
- ↑ Minnesota Legislators Past and Present-Alfred Elisha Ames