Thomas M. Bowen

Thomas M. Bowen
United States Senator
from Colorado
In office
March 4, 1883 – March 3, 1889
Preceded by Horace Austin Warner Tabor
Succeeded by Edward Oliver Wolcott
4th Governor of Idaho Territory
In office
1871 – 1871 (one week)
Preceded by David W. Ballard
Succeeded by Thomas W. Bennett
Personal details
Born October 26, 1835
Burlington, Michigan Territory (now Iowa)
Died December 30, 1906(1906-12-30) (aged 71)
Pueblo, Colorado
Political party Republican
Profession Attorney
Military service
Service/branch Union Army
Years of service 1861-1865
Rank Colonel (Brevet Brigadier General)
Battles/wars American Civil War

Thomas Mead Bowen (October 26, 1835 – December 30, 1906) was a United States Senator from Colorado.

Contents

Biography

Bowen was born near the present site of Burlington, Iowa, in what was then Michigan Territory. He attended the public schools and the academy at Mount Pleasant, Iowa, and studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1853 and practiced. He moved to Wayne County, Iowa, in 1856 and was a member of the Iowa House of Representatives that year. He moved to Kansas in 1858, and during the Civil War served in the Union Army from 1861–1865, as captain, then as a colonel. He was brevetted a brigadier general.

After the war, Bowen found himself in Arkansas and decided to stay there. He was a member and president of the constitutional convention of Arkansas in 1866; he was also a justice of the Supreme Court of Arkansas from 1867 to 1871.

Bowen, who made a large fortune in business, was appointed governor of Idaho Territory by President Ulysses Grant in 1871, but resigned and returned to Arkansas after only one week in office. He moved to Colorado Territory in 1875 and resumed the practice of law.

Upon Colorado's statehood a year later, Bowen was elected judge of the fourth judicial district and served from 1876 to 1880. He was a member of the state House of Representatives in 1882 and resigned, having been elected as a Republican to the United States Senate, and served in that body from March 4, 1883, to March 3, 1889. While in the Senate, he was chairman of the Committee on Mining (in the Forty-eighth Congress), Committee on Enrolled Bills (Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses). He engaged in mining in Colorado and resided in Pueblo, where he died. His interment was in Roselawn Cemetery.

See also

United States Army portal
American Civil War portal

References

External links

United States Senate
Preceded by
Horace A. W. Tabor
United States Senator (Class 2) from Colorado
1883–1889
Served alongside: Nathaniel P. Hill, Henry M. Teller
Succeeded by
Edward O. Wolcott