Jerome B. Chaffee

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Jerome B. Chaffee
Jerome B. Chaffee

Jerome Bunty Chaffee (April 17, 1825 - March 9, 1886), was an entrepreneur and United States Senator from Colorado. Chaffee County, Colorado is named after him.

He was born in Cambria, Niagara County, New York. He moved to Adrian, Michigan in 1844 and worked as a teacher until starting a dry goods business in the late 1840s. In 1852 he moved to St. Joseph, Missouri, and later to Elmwood, Kansas Territory where he started banking businesses and engaged in land speculation.

In 1860 he moved to Colorado to invest in mining. He was one of the founders of the City of Denver, Colorado, and founded the First National Bank of Denver in 1865. Chaffee entered politics and helped organize the Colorado Territory, serving in its first legislature as speaker. He was the territorial delegate to the United States Congress starting in 1870.

In 1876, after Colorado was admitted to the Union, Chaffee was elected to the United States Senate. He served for the duration of his term, until 1879, but did not seek reelection due to poor health.

In 1884, Chaffee was elected state chairman of the Colorado Republican Party.

His sole surviving child, daughter Fannie Josephine (1857-1909), married Ulysses S. Grant, Jr., a son of U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant.

Chaffee died March 9, 1886 at the Grants' home in Salem Center, Westchester County, New York. He is buried in Adrian, Michigan [1].

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Preceded by
Allen Alexander Bradford
Territorial Delegate to Congress
18711875
Succeeded by
Thomas MacDonald Patterson
Preceded by
none
United States Senator (Class 3) from Colorado
18761879
Served alongside: Henry M. Teller
Succeeded by
Nathaniel P. Hill