William Knight (Wisconsin politician)
William Knight (December 7, 1843 – January 13, 1941) was a businessman from Bayfield, Wisconsin, involved at one time or another as a merchant, in lumbering, banking, selling real estate, and orchardist, who served one term as a Republican member of the Wisconsin State Assembly.
Background and early years
[edit]Knight was born December 7, 1843, on a farm in Kent County, Delaware, near Dover.[1] Until the age of twelve, he attended his local public schools. At that time, he switched to academies in Camden and then Dover, followed by two years at the Hudson River Institute in Claverack, New York.
After leaving school, he moved to Detroit, where he worked as a clerk at a mustering and disbursement office of the United States government. He left Detroit in 1867, going first to St. Louis, then to Wyoming (where he operated as a merchant). He left there in 1869, coming to Bayfield, where he settled (except for a year in Ashland, spending most of the ensuing decades in the banking[2] and lumbering trades. By 1910, he had shifted to selling real estate and developing fruit orchards.
Public office
[edit]Knight had already served on his town board and his county board of supervisors, as well as county clerk and treasurer (appointed to fill a vacancy in 1896)[3] of Bayfield County, Wisconsin when he was elected in 1910 to represent the Assembly seat for Bayfield, Sawyer and Washburn counties. A Republican, he received 2,558 votes to 355 for Social Democrat H. Johnson (Republican incumbent Frank Hammill was not a candidate). He was assigned to the standing committee on banks, and the joint committee on finance.[4]
His Assembly district was divided up in the 1911 redistricting of the Assembly, and he was not a candidate for re-election. In his home county of Bayfield (now its own district), he was succeeded by Hubert Peavey, a self-described Progressive Republican.
Orchardist
[edit]Knight was a member of the Bayfield Peninsula Horticultural Society and a life member of the Wisconsin State Horticultural Society, although as an orchardist he described himself as "a layman in this business." He was an avid advocate of orchard fruit growing in Bayfield County's "Fruit District."[5][6] He was honored by the Wisconsin Horticultural Society for his achievements in 1930.[7]
Knight died at Dousman, Wisconsin on January 13, 1941.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b A Joint Resolution Relating to the Life and Public Service of William Knight. 1941. Wisconsin Session Laws. Madison, p. 606.
- ^ Kidd, Edward I., et al. "Fifth annual report of the bank examiner of the state and private banks of Wisconsin" p. 192: "Bayfield - Lumbermen's Bank; WM. KNIGHT, Proprietor." in, Public documents of the state of Wisconsin for the fiscal term ending September 30, 1900, Volume III (1901 [Covers 1898/1900])
- ^ "The News Condensed". The New North. September 24, 1896. p. 7. Retrieved November 5, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Beck, J. D., ed. The blue book of the state of Wisconsin Madison: Democrat Printing Company, State Printer, 1911; pp. 344, 352, 751
- ^ Knight, Wm., presenter, et al. "The Outlook in the Extreme North" Commercial Orchard Session, Winter Meeting of the Wisconsin State Horticultural Society; afternoon of February 5, 1905; reported in Annual Report of the Wisconsin State Horticultural Society for the Year 1908 (Volume 38) Madison: Democrat Printing Company, State Printer, 1908; pp. xxv, 97-106, 147
- ^ Knight, Wm. "Bayfield County's Fruit Possibilities" The Wisconsin Municipality Madison: League of Wisconsin Municipalities, 1914. Vol. XIV, No. 1 (January 1914); pp. 611-612
- ^ "Horticultural Society Honors Three in State". Manitowoc Herald-Times. November 21, 1930. p. 16. Retrieved November 5, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
External links
[edit]- American bankers
- American orchardists
- Businesspeople from Wisconsin
- County supervisors in Wisconsin
- Republican Party members of the Wisconsin State Assembly
- People from Bayfield, Wisconsin
- People from Kent County, Delaware
- 1843 births
- 1941 deaths
- Claverack College alumni
- Farmers from Wisconsin
- 19th-century American merchants