David R. Porter
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Rittenhouse Porter (October 31, 1788 – August 6, 1867) was the governor of Pennsylvania from 1839 to 1845.
Born near Norristown, Pennsylvania, he was a business owner for a while until business failures and recession drove him into politics. He served in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1819, and in the Pennsylvania State Senate in 1836. He narrowly defeated incumbent governor Joseph Ritner in 1838. The narrow margin of victory, contested by Ritner supporters, led to the Buckshot War. Porter led the state through a recession and helped to suppress anti-Catholic riots in Philadelphia. Following his term as governor, he returned to business; Porter owned an iron works and promoted a transcontinental railroad.
Porter's son Horace served as a general in the Union Army during the Civil War.
[edit] External links
Preceded by Joseph Ritner |
Governor of Pennsylvania 1839–1845 |
Succeeded by Francis Rawn Shunk |
Governors of Pennsylvania | |
---|---|
Mifflin • McKean • Snyder • Findlay • Hiester • Shulze • Wolf • Ritner • Porter • Shunk • Johnston • Bigler • Pollock • Packer • Curtin • Geary • Hartranft • Hoyt • Pattison • Beaver • Pattison • Hastings • Stone • Pennypacker • Stuart • Tener • Brumbaugh • Sproul • Pinchot • Fisher • Pinchot • Earle • James • Martin • Bell • Duff • Fine • Leader • Lawrence • Scranton • Shafer • Shapp • Thornburgh • Casey • Ridge • Schweiker • Rendell |