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Senator Lawrence Brainerd

Free Soil | Vermont

Senator Lawrence Brainerd - Vermont Free Soil

Here you will find contact information for Senator Lawrence Brainerd, including email address, phone number, and mailing address.

NameLawrence Brainerd
PositionSenator
StateVermont
PartyFree Soil
StatusFormer Representative
Term StartJanuary 1, 1854
Term EndMarch 3, 1855
Terms Served1
BornMarch 16, 1794
GenderMale
Bioguide IDB000760
Senator Lawrence Brainerd
Lawrence Brainerd served as a senator for Vermont (1853-1855).

About Senator Lawrence Brainerd



Lawrence Brainerd served as a Senator from Vermont in the United States Congress from 1853 to 1855. A member of the Free Soil Party, Lawrence Brainerd contributed to the legislative process during 1 term in office.

Lawrence Brainerd’s service in Congress occurred during a significant period in American history. As a member of the Senate, Lawrence Brainerd participated in the democratic process and represented the interests of constituents.

Lawrence Brainerd (March 16, 1794 – May 9, 1870) was an American businessman, abolitionist and United States Senator from Vermont. A longtime anti-slavery activist, after leaving the Jacksonians in the 1830s, Brainerd was active in the Whig, Liberty, and Free Soil parties, and was one of the organizers of the Republican Party when it was formed as the main anti-slavery party in the mid-1850s. Brainerd’s longtime commitment to the cause of abolition was recognized in 1854, when opponents of slavery in the Vermont General Assembly chose him to fill a five-month vacancy in the United States Senate. A native of East Hartford, Connecticut, Brainerd was raised by an uncle from the age of nine, and grew up in Troy, New York and St. Albans, Vermont. He taught school and worked as a store clerk, then began a business career of his own while still a teenager. He operated a successful store, then expanded his holdings to include a successful farm, as well as interests in banking, railroads, railroad construction, and steamships on Lake Champlain. Brainerd had extensive real estate holdings in and around St. Albans, including farms where he raised horses. In 1856, he was chosen to serve as president of the Vermont Agricultural Society. Brainerd became involved in the Congregational church at a young age and was a prominent advocate of temperance. Brainerd became active in politics first as a Jacksonian, and he represented St. Albans in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1834 to 1835. An opponent of slavery, Brainerd joined the Whigs, but became dissatisfied with the party’s attempts to chart a middle ground on the issue, and became an adherent of the abolitionist Liberty Party, and later the Free Soil Party. Brainerd was the unsuccessful Liberty Party candidate for governor of Vermont in 1846, 1847, 1848, 1852, and 1854, but his candidacies served to increase awareness of the abolitionist position on slavery. In October 1854, Brainerd’s years of advocacy in the cause of anti-slavery were recognized when anti-slavery Whigs, Liberty Party members, and Free Soil Party members in the Vermont General Assembly combined to elect Brainerd to fill a short term vacancy in the United States Senate. He served until March 1855, and was succeeded by Jacob Collamer. In 1855, Brainerd was one of the organizers of the new Republican Party when it was created as the main anti-slavery political organization. He served as the first chairman of Vermont’s Republican Party, and was one of the handful of state chairmen who issued the call for the party’s first national convention in 1856. Brainerd was a delegate, and called the convention to order as its temporary chairman. Brainerd died in St. Albans on May 9, 1870. He was buried at Greenwood Cemetery in St. Albans.