John Boyd Thacher

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John Boyd Thacher
John Boyd Thacher

John Boyd Thacher (1847-09-11–1909-02-25) was the Mayor of Albany, New York and New York State Senator as well as an American manufacturer, writer, and book collector. He was the son of Albany mayor, George Thacher, and the uncle of Albany mayor, John Boyd Thacher II.

John Boyd Thacher was born in Ballston, New York, graduated from Williams College in 1869 and settled in Albany, New York. He became an active scholar in writing after college and also became active in his father's business, the Thacher Car Wheel Works, which was one of the leading industries in Albany. When his father died in 1887, John and his brother George became proprietors of the business.

[edit] Politics

Thacher became interested in politics and public life and was elected to the New York State Senate in 1883 and then was elected mayor of Albany, serving from 1886-05-04 to 1888-04-20. In 1890, President of the United States Benjamin Harrison appointed Thacher to be a member of the World's Columbian Exposition. Several years later, Thacher was elected mayor of Albany again, serving from 1896-01-01 to 1897-12-31.

[edit] Writing

An authority on U.S. history, Thacher's publications include:

  • The Continent of America, Its Discovery and Its Baptism; An Essay on the Nomenclature of the Old Continents, etc. (1896)
  • A drama, Charlecote: or the Trial of William Shakespeare (1896)
  • The Cabotian Discovery (1897)
  • Christopher Columbus, His Life, His Works, His Remains, together with an Essay on Peter Martyr of Anghera and Bartolomé de las Casas, the first Historians of America (two volumes, 1903)
  • Outlines of the French Revolution told in Autographs (1905)

The French Revolution autograph publication highlighted Thacher's extensive collection of autographs which also included those of every signer of the United States Declaration of Independence.

Thacher purchased a large plot of land in central Albany County, New York which his widow, Emma Treadwell Thacher, donated in 1914, and is now known as John Boyd Thacher State Park. [1]

John Boyd Thacher is interred in Albany Rural Cemetery.

[edit] References


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