William J. McConnell

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William J. McConnell
William J. McConnell

In office
January 1893 – January 1897
Lieutenant(s) F. B. Willis (1893)
F. J. Mills (1895)
Preceded by N. B. Willey
Succeeded by Frank Steunenberg

Born September 18, 1839
Commerce, Michigan
Died March 30, 1925
Moscow, Idaho
Political party Republican

William John McConnell (born September 18, 1839 in Commerce, Michigan – died March 30, 1925 in Moscow, Idaho) was Governor of Idaho from 1893 until 1897. Prior to that he represented Idaho as one of its first United States Senators after statehood.

As a young man McConnell moved to California to engage in mining, cattle, merchandizing, and banking. He then lived in Oregon from 1862 to 1863, where he taught school, and then moved to Idaho Territory in 1863. From 1865 to 1867 he served as a deputy U.S. Marshal.

McConnell returned to Oregon and worked in the cattle business. In 1886, McConnell returned to Idaho and became a member of the state constitutional convention in 1890.

In November 1890 McConnell was elected by the Idaho Legislature to serve in the United States Senate for the remainder of the Fifty-first United States Congress which ended in March 1891. In that same election the Idaho Legislature chose former Idaho Territory Congressional delegate Fred Dubois to serve the full six-year term from that point forward.

McConnell was elected Governor of Idaho in 1892 and then again in 1894. He was appointed Indian Inspector by President William McKinley in 1897, serving until 1901. In 1909, McConnell was appointed as an Inspector of the Immigration Service in Moscow, Idaho, by President William Howard Taft, and served in that position until his death.

Preceded by
(none)
United States Senator (Class 3) from Idaho
January 5, 1891–March 3, 1891
Served alongside: George L. Shoup
Succeeded by
Fred Dubois
Preceded by
N. B. Willey
Governor of Idaho
January 1893–January 4, 1897
Succeeded by
Frank Steunenberg