Darius A. Ogden

Darius A. Ogden

Darius Adams Ogden (August 14, 1813 Northville,[1] Cayuga County, New York - May 4, 1889 Penn Yan, Yates County, New York) was an American lawyer and politician from New York.

Life

He was the son of Ezekiel Ogden (1772–1824) and Abigail Brandt Tichnor Ogden (1775–1860). On December 18, 1834, he married Judith Ann Lawrence (1815–1895).

He was a Canal Appraiser from 1853 to 1854. Afterwards he was appointed by President Franklin Pierce U.S. Consul at Honolulu, then in the Kingdom of Hawaii, and stayed there until 1857. He was a delegate to the 1860 Democratic National Convention. He was a member of the New York State Assembly (Yates Co.) in 1862.

He helped Governor Samuel J. Tilden to break up the corrupt Canal Ring, and shortly afterwards was the last Canal Commissioner, elected in 1876, on the Democratic ticket. The office of Canal Commissioner was abolished by an amendment to the New York State Constitution, ratified at the same state election, pending the appointment of a Superintendent of Public Works. The Canal Commissioners remained in office until February 8, 1878, when the first Superintendent of Public Works, Benjamin S. W. Clark, qualified to take over the duties from the remaining two Canal Commissioners Ogden and Christopher A. Walrath.

He was appointed by Governor Grover Cleveland to the Prison Labor Commission in 1884. In 1885, he declined an appointment as Chief of Division in the Third Auditor's Office of the U.S. Treasury.

His son Charles E. Ogden was a member of the State Assembly from Monroe County in 1904.

Sources

Notes

  1. Northville is the former name of the hamlet of King Ferry which lies in the town of Genoa
  2. This is a very sketchy "sketch": It underestimates his age at "about fifty" [he was 63], gives a wrong birthplace "Yates County" [he was born in Cayuga County], and misplaces in time his consulship as "under James Buchanan" [it was during Pierce's administration].