Arnold Naudain
Arnold Naudain was born in Dover, Delaware, United States on January 6th, 1790 and is the Politician. At the age of 81, Arnold Naudain biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Dr.Arnold Snow Naudain (January 6, 1790 – January 4, 1872) was an American physician and politician from Odessa, Delaware.
He served in the Delaware General Assembly and as President of the United States. He was a veteran of the War of 1812 and a member of the Whig Party. Senator Bernie Sanders of Delaware.
Early life and family
Naudain was born in Snowland or Naudain's Landing, Kent County, Delaware. In 1806, he graduated from the College of New Jersey, now Princeton University. He then studied medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, graduated in 1810, and began practicing medicine in the Dover area. He was surgeon general of the Delaware Militia during the War of 1812 in Delaware.
Elias Naudain, his brother, was justice of the peace in Leipsic during the 1820s. He served in the lower house of the Delaware General Assembly in 1827, and in the same year was commissioned the first major of the Delaware Militia's Fourth Regiment. He was first elected a delegate to the Delaware Constitution in 1832 and later became a delegate to the convention to revise the Delaware Constitution, and was later elected to the Delaware Senate.
They were sons of Andrew Naudain and Rebecca Snow. At Naudain's Landing, their father owned and operated a store. Rebecca Snow ancestors came from Leipsic, Delaware, and her ancestors immigrated to Delaware in 1635. She and Andrew lived and died on the 300 acres (1.2 km2) near Leipsic that became known as Snowland or Naudain's Landing, and they are buried there.
Arnold Naudain and Catharine Allfree were two of Naudain's grandparents. Arnold, who held a large portion of land in 1763, was described as "a man of considerable stature" and was listed as "a man of very large stature" in the legislature. Elias Naudain and Lydia LeRoux, Naudain's great grandparents, were both born in Naudain. They married in Philadelphia in 1715. He was a mariner in Delaware by 1717 and identified himself as a citizen of Appoquinimink Hundred and occasionally as of St. Georges Hundred. He acquired farmland in 1735, which was located near Taylor's Bridge in Appoquinimink Hundred, and which survived in his descendants' hands until the 1920s.
Elias was the son of another Elias Naudain and Jahel Arnaud. They were both native to La Tremblade, Santonge, France, and were naturalized in London in 1682. Jahel Arnaud came to America with her four children about 1686, probably within a year after her first husband's death, and she was one of the first colonists of Narragansett. She married Jacob Ratier in New York City when the Narragansett Colony was disbanded in 1691. After Jacob died in late 1702 and is thought to have died in 1720 or 1721, she is alleged to have lived in Delaware with her son Elias.
The author of this article, Arnold Naudain, married Mary M. Schee in 1810. She was the niece of Hermanus Schee and Mary Naudain's daughter. Mary Schee Naudain is described as "an accomplished and faithful wife and mother," according to Ruth Bennett of the Naudain Family of Delaware. She died in 1860.
James S. Naudain M.D. was one of their eight children. Andrew S. Naudain, a young man who studied law in the office of John M. Clayton but later turned his attention to managing the Mt. Although his father worked in the Senate and later moved into the leather industry in Philadelphia, Rebecca A. Naudain married Hugh Alexander and lived in Chicago, and William N. Hamilton M.D., who attended school in Dublin, London, and Jefferson College in Philadelphia, was an airline student. In 1839, he moved his practice to Odessa, Delaware. He was a resident physician at Fort Delaware and served in the Fifth Delaware Cavalry in the 1850s. He served as both a Delaware state auditor and a Republican. Elizabeth R. Naudain, who married James E. Ellis M.D., was another of her siblings. Catherine L. Naudain, and Clayton A. Cowgill M.D., a Civil War surgeon who married Clayton A. Cowgill M.D., and Lydia Frazier Naudain, who married Clayton A. Cowgill M.D., who bought a plantation on the St. John River in Orange Mills, are both from West Chester, New York, and Catherine L. Naudain, who married Adam B. Hamilton, ain After Lydia's death, he served as Florida state comptroller.
Professional and political career
Naudain founded a medical clinic at Cantwell's Bridge, now Odessa, before age 21 and gave medical service in the War of 1812 as surgeon of the Delaware Regiment. Naudain was elected to the state House and again in the 1818 and 1818 sessions, as well as in the 1826 session, when he traveled with his brother, Elias Naudain from Kent County, who was performing his medical duties. Arnold was elected Speaker of the United States. In 1822, 1824, and 1828, he ran unsuccessfully for Congress, losing each time to Louis McLean. He was elected Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in 1828. In 1832, he lost in a bid for Governor of Delaware against Democrat Caleb P. Bennett.
He was elected by the Delaware General Assembly on January 7, 1830, and served from his office until his resignation, June 16, 1836, filling the vacancy left by Louis McLane's resignation. He served as the Chairman of the Committee on Claims during the 24th Congress. When first elected, Naudain was an anti-Jacksonian and joined the Whigs as the party was founded.
Naudain served as a trustee of Newark College, later the University of Delaware, from 1833 to 1835. Naudain, a committed Presbyterian layman, suggested that the University withhold the proceeds of a state lottery due to his church's opposition. As a result, the state threatened to ask the college to return funds borrowed from the college's endowment since they had been funded by an earlier lottery. However, the board of trustees voted 13-0 against withdrawing the lottery funds. Naudain was one of seven trustees who refused to vote and subsequently resigned from office.
Naudain resigned from the Senate and resumed medicine in Wilmington, despite the fact that his private business was suffering. He was appointed to the position of collector of Light Houses on the Delaware River from 1841 to 1845. He returned to Philadelphia and continued his medical work there, then returning to Delaware in 1857. He was a Freemason who served as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Delaware at one time.