John G. McCullough was born on September 16, 1835, in Newark, Delaware, to Albert and Rebecca (Griffith) McCullough.[1][2] His father was Scotch-Irish, and his mother Welsh.[1] An ancestor on his mother's side had fought in Oliver Cromwell's army.[1]
His father died when he was three years old, and his mother four years later.[3] Relatives and family friends took him in, and provided him with a private school education.[3]
His public speech-making in support of Sumner led to his election to the California State Assembly the same year.[1][2][3] He was re-elected in 1862.[1][2][3] In 1863, he was elected Attorney General, but lost re-election in 1867.[1][3] He moved to San Francisco, where he established a lucrative legal practice.[1][3]
Move to Vermont and governorship
He moved to Vermont in 1873, where he devoted himself to business.[1][2][3] He had married Eliza Hall Park, daughter of Panama Railway president Trenor W. Park, on August 30, 1871.[1][2][3] The couple had four children: a son, Hall Park McCullough, and daughters Elizabeth Laura McCullough, Ella Sarah "Sallie" McCullough, and Esther Morgan McCullough.[1][3]
His father-in-law appointed him vice-president and general manager of the Panama Railway.[1][3] After Park's death in 1882, he became the railroad's president.[1] He helped reorganize the Erie Railroad in 1884 and 1893, becoming chairman of the company's executive committee.[1][2][3] He was president of the Bennington and Rutland Railway from 1883 to 1900, and president of the Chicago and Erie Railroad from 1890 to 1900.[1]
McCullough was elected Governor of Vermont in 1902.[1][2] During his administration, Vermont abandoned statewide prohibition in favor of a local option law.[1]
McCullough died in New York City on May 29, 1915.[1][4] He is interred in the family vault at Bennington's Old First Church Cemetery.[5]
Notable placenames
The Park-McCullough Historic House, where Trenor Park and (after his death) Governor McCullough lived, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.
^ abcdefghijklmDuffy, John J.; Hand, Samuel B.; and Orth, Ralph H. The Vermont Encyclopedia. Lebanon, N.H.: University Press of New England, 2003. ISBN1-58465-086-9
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrst"McCullough, General John." History of Bennington County, VT. Lewis Cass Aldrich, ed. Bennington, Vt.: 1889.
^Information Annual: A Continuous Cyclopedia and Digest of Current Events 1915–16. New York: R.R. Bowker Co., 1916.