Portrait: Courtesy, Lycoming County Bar Association
Sessions | Office | Position | District | Party |
---|---|---|---|---|
1793-1794 | 10 | Democratic-Republican | ||
1794-1795 | 10 | Democratic-Republican |
COUNTIES: Huntingdon, Mifflin, Luzerne, Northumberland
William Hepburn (Democratic-Republican10) Huntingdon, Luzerne and Northumberland Counties 1793-1794 (Democratic-Republican10) Luzerne, Mifflin and Northumberland Counties 1794-1795.
Early Life:
William Hepburn born 1753 Donegal, Ireland; son of Samuel Hepburn (mother and sister were lost in a shipwreck off the Jersey coast) moved, Sunbury, then moved north to Williamsport; colonel, local militia company, commander, Fort Muncy, 1778; 300-acre farmer, distiller, merchant, Justice of the Peace; Commissioner, Northumberland County, 1789-1791; Pennsylvania State Senate, 1793-1795; appointed associate judge, Lycoming County Court, first president judge of Lycoming County; married, Elizabeth Huston Hepburn, children, Elizabeth Hepburn Stewart, Matilda Hepburn Stewart, James Hepburn, Charles William Hepburn; died, June 25, 1821 (aged 68) Williamsport, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania; internment, Wildwood Cemetery, Williamsport, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania.
Professional titles; business ownership; board memberships; local government; club memberships:
Member, Lycoming Presbyterian Church; founder of the first Masonic lodge, Lycoming County, then elected, first Worshipful Master of Lodge 106, Free and Accepted Masons.
Pennsylvania Politics:
Justice of the Peace.
Commissioner, Northumberland County, 1789-1791.
Elected, Democratic-Republican, Pennsylvania State Senate, Huntingdon, Luzerne and Northumberland Counties, 10th disrict, 1793-1794; William Montgomery resigned or died and was replaced by William Hepburn on 20 January 1794.
Elected, Democratic-Republican, Pennsylvania State Senate, 10th district, Luzerne, Mifflin and Northumberland Counties, 1794-1795.
Appointed associate judge, Lycoming County Court, Governor Thomas Mifflin; colleagues then elected him to be the first president judge of Lycoming County. Had no formal legal training.
Legacy:
During his Senate tenure, he played a critical role in the formation of Lycoming County, which was to be carved from territory taken from Northumberland County. selected to a group of five state senators whose task was to prepare the division of Northumberland County. The committee prepared a report that became a bill that established Lycoming County. Governor Thomas Mifflin signed it into law on April 13, 1795. Regarded as the "Father of Lycoming County."
Cited:
https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/catalog/HW0312
Cox, Harold. "Senate Members H". Wilkes University Election Statistics Project. Wilkes University.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21009644/william-hepburn