About: Montrose Garner   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Garner was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania on 15 May 1829, to Virginia Montrose and Benjamin Garner, a couple of second-generation English American settlers. While pursuing a political career in his home town, he met Jo Muncher; the two would later move to Omaha, Nebraska and get married. After the marriage, Garner largely abandoned the political activity, until 1875, when he, along with Edwin Lanceton and Daniel Bergmann, established the Rioblancoan Independence Congress (later Home Guard Party), after statehood ambitions were thwarted by President Andrew Johnson.

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  • Montrose Garner
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  • Garner was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania on 15 May 1829, to Virginia Montrose and Benjamin Garner, a couple of second-generation English American settlers. While pursuing a political career in his home town, he met Jo Muncher; the two would later move to Omaha, Nebraska and get married. After the marriage, Garner largely abandoned the political activity, until 1875, when he, along with Edwin Lanceton and Daniel Bergmann, established the Rioblancoan Independence Congress (later Home Guard Party), after statehood ambitions were thwarted by President Andrew Johnson.
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  • Garner was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania on 15 May 1829, to Virginia Montrose and Benjamin Garner, a couple of second-generation English American settlers. While pursuing a political career in his home town, he met Jo Muncher; the two would later move to Omaha, Nebraska and get married. After the marriage, Garner largely abandoned the political activity, until 1875, when he, along with Edwin Lanceton and Daniel Bergmann, established the Rioblancoan Independence Congress (later Home Guard Party), after statehood ambitions were thwarted by President Andrew Johnson. In 1876, after the ratification of the Treaty of Springfield, Lanceton chose Garner as his vice presidential nominee for the election of the year; four years later, he decided to run for President in 1880 and won, defeating Progressive candidate John S. Vynn, who would later succeed him to the post. After his term as President expired, Garner quit politics and stayed in his house in Denver, dying there in 1903.
is nominee of
is Founder of
is before election of
is inaugural of
is after election of
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