-40%

August J. Noerenberg Home Insurance Policy Maurice J. Roscoe Minneapolis MN 1920

$ 42.24

Availability: 31 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Condition: CONDITION DESCRIPTION: See pictures. Nominal age related wear and browning. Reverse has small piece of tape over sticky spot.

    Description

    August J. Noerenberg home Insurance Policy Maurice J. Roscoe Minneapolis MN 1920
    CONDITION DESCRIPTION: See pictures. Nominal age related wear and browning. Reverse has small piece of tape over sticky spot.
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    George M. Curtis
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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    George Martin Curtis
    (April 1, 1844 – February 9, 1921) was a two-term
    Republican
    U.S. Representative
    from
    Iowa's 2nd congressional district
    .
    Biography
    Born near
    Oxford, New York
    , to John S. and Elizabeth (Carpenter) Curtis, Curtis moved to
    Ogle County, Illinois
    , in 1856 with his parents, who settled on a farm near
    Rochelle, Illinois
    . He attended the common schools and Rock River Seminary, in
    Mount Morris, Illinois
    . Curtis was a clerk in Rochelle from 1863 to 1865, and subsequently for two years in
    Cortland, Illinois
    . He moved to
    Clinton, Iowa
    , in 1867 and engaged in the manufacture of lumber, founding the Curtis Companies, a conglomerate of associated sash, door, and
    millwork
    companies that eventually consolidated into a single corporation based in Clinton, Iowa.
    [1]
    He was also one of the incorporators of the City National Bank of Clinton in 1880. After initially serving as one of its directors, Curtis was elected vice president of the bank in 1890 and served in that capacity until his death. He also served as director in a number of lumber companies.
    George Martin Curtis married Etta Lewis (1850–1924) on September 4, 1872. They had two sons – George Lewis and Eugene Judson. Etta Lewis was a native of the State of New York. She was the only child of William Lewis. Both parents died in her early childhood. An aunt adopted the orphan girl and took her to Michigan, where she was educated. When she was nineteen years of age, the family moved to Clinton, Iowa. Here she met George M. Curtis, an energetic young business man, afterward prominent in the political affairs of his state, and they were married. They had three sons and one daughter; the daughter and second son died when quite young. Etta Lewis was a member of the Presbyterian church and deeply interested in church and benevolent work. As President of the Associated Benevolent Society of Clinton for five years, she was instrumental in doing much to alleviate the sufferings of the poor of that city.
    [2]
    In 1887, he was elected to the
    Iowa House of Representatives
    , serving in 1888 and 1889. He served as delegate to the
    1892 Republican National Convention
    .
    In 1894, Curtis was nominated to run as a Republican against incumbent Democratic Congressman
    Walter I. Hayes
    in Iowa's 2nd congressional district. After defeating Hayes, he served in the
    54th United States Congress
    , then was re-elected two years later and served in the
    55th United States Congress
    . He refused requests to be a candidate for renomination in 1898. In all, he served in Congress from March 4, 1895 to March 3, 1899.
    He resumed his former business activities in Clinton, and died there on February 9, 1921. He was interred in Springdale Cemetery.
    His house
    in Clinton has been listed on the
    National Register of Historic Places
    .