Elias B. D. Ogden
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of New Jersey
In office
1848–1865
Appointed byDaniel Haines
Rodman M. Price
Charles Smith Olden
Preceded byIra Condict Whitehead
Succeeded byJoseph D. Bedle
Personal details
Born
Elias Bailey Dayton Ogden

May 22, 1800
Elizabethtown, New Jersey
DiedFebruary 24, 1865, age 64
Elizabethtown, New Jersey
NationalityAmerican
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)
Susan Dayton Beasley
(m. 1826; died 1848)

Louisa Augusta Ford
Alice DeHart
ChildrenFrederick B. Ogden
Alma materPrinceton University
ProfessionAttorney

Elias Bailey Dayton Ogden (May 22, 1800 – February 24, 1865) was an American attorney and jurist who served three terms as an associate justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court from 1848 until his death in 1865.[1][2]

Early life

He was the son of Elizabeth Chetwood (1766–1826) and the 5th New Jersey Governor and United States Senator Aaron Ogden (1756–1839).[3] Ogden graduated from Princeton College in 1819.[1][4]

Career

Immediately after graduation, Ogden began the study of law and was admitted to the bar in 1824, and later was admitted as a counselor in 1829 and Sergeant-at-law in 1837[5] He practiced law in Paterson, New Jersey and in 1834 was appointed as Prosecutor of the Pleas for Essex County.[6] He was briefly a candidate for Governor of New Jersey in 1843, eventually withdrawing in favor of his first cousin, Daniel Haines.[7]

Ogden was twice elected to the New Jersey State Legislature and was a delegate from Passaic County to the New Jersey Constitutional Convention in 1844.[8]

Ogden served three terms as an associate justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court, first being appointed in 1848, reappointed in 1855, and serving until his death in 1865.[1]

Ogden was a director of the Paterson and Hudson River Railroad at the time of its incorporation in 1831, and was the railroad's president in 1852.[9]

Upon his retirement, he returned to live at his family home in Elizabeth, New Jersey, where he was born, in 1858.

Personal life

On August 23, 1826, Ogden was married to Susan Dayton Beasley (1805–1848), the daughter of Rev. Frederick Beasley.[4] Together, they were the parents of:

After the death of his first wife, he remarried to Louisa Augusta Ford (1820–1857), the daughter of Henry A. Ford. She died soon thereafter in 1857 at the age of 31. Ogden married for the third time to Alice De Hart (d. 1891), daughter of W. Chetwood De Hart.[4]

He died there of pneumonia in 1865.[3]

Descednants

Through his daughter Susan, he was the grandfather of U.S. Army general John Biddle.[10]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Proceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society. New Jersey Historical Society. 1894. p. 259.
  2. Van Alstyne, Lawrence (1907). The Ogden family in America. J.B. Lippincott company. p. 373.
  3. 1 2 Elmer, Lucius Quintius Cincinnatus (1872). The constitution and government of the province and state of New Jersey. M. R. Dennis and company. pp. 351–352.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Wheeler, William Ogden; Van Alstyne, Lawrence; Ogden, Charles Burr (1907). The Ogden family in America, Elizabethtown branch, and their English ancestry; John Ogden, the Pilgrim, and his descendants, 1640-1906. Philadelphia, Printed for private circulation by J.B. Lippincott company. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  5. Clayton, W. Woodford; Nelson, William (1882). History of Bergen and Passaic counties, New Jersey. Everts & Peck. p. 353.
  6. Journal of the proceedings of the Legislative-Council of the State of New-Jersey. New Jersey Governor's Privy Council. 1834. p. 24.
  7. Lee, Francis Bazley (1902). New Jersey as a colony and as a state: one of the original thirteen. Vol. 3. Publishing Society of New Jersey. p. 385.
  8. Whitehead, John (1897). The judicial and civil history of New Jersey. Vol. 1. Boston History Co. pp. 445–446.
  9. The laws of the states of New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey: specially relating to the New York and Erie Railroad Company. Press of the Erie Railway Company. 1863. pp. 3, 47.
  10. Owen Picton (May 2004). "Descendants of William Biddle III". Archived from the original on November 18, 2010. Retrieved March 16, 2011.
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