Sylvester Pennoyer
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Sylvester Pennoyer | |
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Born | July 6, 1831 New York |
Died | May 31, 1902 |
Occupation | Politician |
Sylvester Pennoyer (July 6, 1831 - May 31, 1902) was a populist Democrat and served as Governor of Oregon (1886 - 1894) and then as mayor of Portland, Oregon (1896 - 1898).
Pennoyer was born in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, and studied law at Harvard, graduating in 1854 from the law school.[1] After graduating, he moved to Oregon where he practiced law and ran local businesses. He was the petitioner in the Supreme Court case Pennoyer v. Neff which defined legal jurisdiction over citizens in different cases.
As typical for that time, Pennoyer acted in a stridently partisan manner while governor. He pointedly snubbed President Benjamin Harrison when Harrison visited Oregon in 1891. He refused to use his resources to protect Chinese Americans when asked to do so by Grover Cleveland's Secretary of State on May 3, 1893. He again refused to intervene at the request of Cleveland when a group of unemployed workers, part of "Coxey's Army", hijacked a train to travel east and join a mass march on Washington, D.C..
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Preceded by Z. F. Moody |
Governor of Oregon 1887-1895 |
Succeeded by William Paine Lord |
Preceded by George P. Frank |
Mayor of Portland, Oregon 1896-1898 |
Succeeded by William A. Storey |
Governors of Oregon | ![]() |
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Whiteaker • Gibbs • Woods • Grover • Chadwick • Thayer • Moody • Pennoyer • Lord • Geer • Chamberlain • Benson • Bowerman • West • Withycombe • Olcott • Pierce • I. Patterson • Norblad • Meier • Martin • Sprague • Snell • Hall • McKay • P. Patterson • Smith • Holmes • Hatfield • McCall • Straub • Atiyeh • Goldschmidt • Roberts • Kitzhaber • Kulongoski |