Sessions | Office | Position | District | Party |
---|---|---|---|---|
1811-1812 | 10 | Democratic-Republican | ||
1812-1813 | 10 | Democratic-Republican | ||
1813-1814 | 10 | Democratic-Republican | ||
1814-1815 | 10 | Democratic-Republican | ||
1823-1824 | 13 | Democrat | ||
1824-1825 | 13 | Democrat | ||
1825-1826 | Speaker | 13 | Democrat |
COUNTIES: Centre, Tioga, Clearfield, McKean, Potter
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania Judge Thomas Burnside, Sr. (Democratic-Republican10) Centre, Clearfield, Lycoming, McKean, Potter, Tioga Counties 1811-1815 (D13) Centre, Clearfield, Lycoming, McKean, Potter Counties 1823-1826
Early Life:
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania Judge Thomas Burnside, Sr., born July 28, 1782, Newton Stewart, County Tyrone, Ireland, immigrated, United States with family, settled, Norristown, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, 1793; studied law; admitted, bar, 1804, commenced practice, Bellefonte Pennsylvania; married, Mary Fleming, 1807, (d.1813) children, James Burnside, Jane Burnside Mann, remarried, Eleanor Winter, 1814, children, Lucy W. Burnside, Frances A. Burnside Boal, Thomas Burnside, Jr.; appointed, deputy attorney general, 1809; Pennsylvania State Senate, 1811-1814; elected, Republican, United States House of Representatives, 1815-1816, resigned; appointed, president judge, Luzerne district courts, 1816, resigned, 1819; Pennsylvania State Senate, 1823-1826; Speaker, Pennsylvania Senate 1825; unsuccessful campaign, Pennsylvania Senator, United States, 1825; president judge, fourth judicial district, 1826-1841 president judge, seventh judicial district, 1841-1845; appointed, associate justice, Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1845-1851; died, March 25, 1851, Germantown, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania; interment, Union Cemetery, Bellefonte, Centre County, Pennsylvania.
Early Life:
Studied law while convalescing from a broken leg due to a horse-fall, borrowing books for several months to acquire legal knowledge. Understudy, Honorable Robert Porter, Philadelphia, who sponsored him before the bar, admitted, 1804. Porter immediately accepted him as a law partner. Moved, Bellefonte, Centre County, opened a private practice.
Pennsylvania Politics:
Appointed, deputy attorney general, 1809.
Elected, Democratic-Republican, Pennsylvania State Senate, 10th district, Centre, Clearfield, Lycoming, McKean, Potter, Tioga Counties 1811-1815.
Appointed, president judge, Luzerne district courts, 1816, resigned, 1819.
Elected, Democrat, Pennsylvania State Senate, 13th district, Centre, Clearfield, Lycoming, McKean, Potter Counties 1823-1826; Speaker, Pennsylvania Senate 1825.
President judge, fourth judicial district, 1826-1841, president judge, seventh judicial district, 1841-1845.
Appointed, associate justice, Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1845-1851.
Continued Government Service/National Politics:
Elected, Republican, United States House of Representatives, Fourteenth Congress, vacancy, death, David Bard, 1815-1816, resigned.
Unsuccessful campaign, Pennsylvania Senator of the United States, 1825; defeated by, Brigadier General William Marks, Esquire, Speaker of Senate of Pennsylvania, elected, 32nd ballot.
Legacy:
Son, Thomas, Jr., married, Rachel Cameron, daughter of Simon and Margaret Cameron.
Cited:
Cox, Harold. "Senate Members B". Wilkes University Election Statistics Project. Wilkes University.
A New Nation Votes (tufts.edu)
Thomas Burnside (1782-1851) - Find a Grave Memorial
After 7 session(s) serving in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, Thomas Burnside Sr. went on to serve in congress