George Logan

George Logan
United States Senator
from Pennsylvania
In office
July 13, 1801 – March 4, 1807
Preceded by Peter Muhlenberg
Succeeded by Andrew Gregg
Personal details
Born September 9, 1753(1753-09-09)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died April 9, 1821(1821-04-09) (aged 67)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Political party Democratic-Republican

George Logan (September 9, 1753 – April 9, 1821) was an American physician, farmer, legislator and politician from Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania. He served in the Pennsylvania state legislature and represented Pennsylvania in the United States Senate. He was a founder of the Democratic-Republican Societies in 1793. An accomplished farmer, he was a founder of the Pennsylvania Society for the Promotion of Agriculture.

In 1798, he went to Paris to negotiate peace with the French to settle the Quasi-War. On his return, he found he had been denounced by the opposition Federalists, who had passed a statute informally known as the "Logan Act", which made it a crime for an individual citizen to interfere in a dispute between the United States and a foreign country.

In 1781, he married Deborah Norris, a historian and diarist, and the friend to whom Sally Wister addressed her Journal.[1] She was the first woman elected to membership in the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.

Logan was the grandson of James Logan, who was the secretary of William Penn.

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References

  1. ^ Albert Cook Myers, ed., Introduction, Sally Wister's Journal: A True Narrative: Being a Quaker Maiden's Account of Her Experiences with Officers of the Continental Army, 1777-1779, Ferris & Leach, Philadelphia, 1902.

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United States Senate
Preceded by
J. Peter Muhlenberg
United States Senator (Class 3) from Pennsylvania
1801–1807
Served alongside: James Ross, Samuel Maclay
Succeeded by
Andrew Gregg