Mark Trafton
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts's 11th district
In office
March 4, 1855  March 3, 1857
Preceded byJohn Z. Goodrich
Succeeded byHenry L. Dawes
Personal details
Born(1810-08-01)August 1, 1810[1]
Bangor, Massachusetts (now Maine)[1]
DiedMarch 8, 1901(1901-03-08) (aged 90)[2]
West Somerville, Massachusetts[3]
Resting placePeabody Cemetery, Springfield, Massachusetts
Political partyAmerican Party
SpouseEliza Young[1]
Children
OccupationShoemaker[1][5]
ProfessionMethodist Episcopal pastor

Mark Trafton (August 1, 1810 – March 8, 1901) was a Methodist Episcopal minister who, as a member of the American Party served one term as a U.S. Representative from Massachusetts.

Family history

Trafton's mother Margaret Dennett,[1] was the daughter of Jacob Dennett, one of Bangor, Maine's original settlers.[6]

Early life

Trafton was born in Bangor (then in Massachusetts' District of Maine) to Theodore[1][5] and Margaret (Dennett) Trafton.[1] When he was fifteen years old he was apprenticed to a Mr. Weed, a shoemaker[1][5] of Bangor, Maine.[5]

Education

Trafton studied at Kent's Hill Seminary, and was ordained pastor of the Methodist Episcopal church in Westfield, Massachusetts. In the early 1850s he traveled in Europe and published his letters home as Rambles in Europe: In a Series of Familiar Letters (Boston, 1852). The volume is dedicated to George W. Pickering, a cousin and prominent merchant in Bangor, Maine, who may have financed the trip.[7] Trafton never lost touch with his home town of Bangor, returning to speak at its centennial celebration in 1869.[8]

Family life

In 1836[1] Trafton married Eliza Young of East Pittston, Maine.[1] The Traftons had six children including sons John and James Trafton,[1] and daughter, writer Adeline Trafton.[1][4] Eliza Trafton died in 1882.[1]

Member of Congress

Trafton was elected as the candidate of the American Party (aka the Know-Nothing Party) to the Thirty-fourth Congress (March 4, 1855 – March 3, 1857). All eleven U.S. Representatives in the Massachusetts delegation were members of the American Party, including Speaker of the House Nathaniel P. Banks. According to his New York Times obituary, Trafton "had been an active leader in the anti-slavery reform, and while a member of Congress he secured the cordial hate of his opponents by his bold assaults upon the slave power".[2] He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1856 to the Thirty-fifth Congress, and resumed his ministerial duties as pastor of a church in Mount Wollaston, Massachusetts.

Career as a Clergyman

Trafton served as the pastor of the Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church in Charlestown. Trafton served as pastor for the North Russell St. M. E. church in Boston in 1850 and 1851. The ladies of the church presented he and his wife with a red and white signature quilt upon his leaving his tenure there. The quilt now resides at the International Quilt Museum, in Lincoln, Nebraska.

Death and burial

Trafton died in West Somerville, Massachusetts, March 8, 1901. He was interred in Peabody Cemetery, in Springfield.

References

  • United States Congress. "Mark Trafton (id: T000351)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Boston Evening Transcript (March 9, 1901), Rev. Mark Trafton., Boston, Massachusetts: Boston Evening Transcript, p. 6
  2. 1 2 Special to The New York Times (March 9, 1901), "DEATH LIST OF A DAY.; The Rev. Mark Trafton.", The New York Times, New York, New York
  3. The Lewiston Daily Sun (March 9, 1901), Reverend Mark Trafton., Lewiston, Maine: Lewiston Daily Sun, p. 3
  4. 1 2 John William Leonard, ed. (1903), Who's Who in America, 1903-1905, Chicago, Illinois: A N Marquis, p. 853
  5. 1 2 3 4 George Bancroft Griffith, ed. (1888), The Poets of Maine: A Collection of Specimen Poems from over Four Hundred Verse-Makers of the Pine-Tree State: With Biographical Sketches, Portland, Maine: Elwell, Pickard & company, p. 143
  6. James Vickery, ed., The Journals of John Edwards Godfrey, ft. p. 279
  7. See Adams-Pickering Block
  8. Centennial Celebration of Bangor (Me.) (1869), p. 90

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