Alsop IV attended the Groton School in Massachusetts and spent a year studying at the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin before receiving the engineering curriculum at the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale University. He graduated in 1898. Alsop then worked for a Colorado ranching company until 1901 and for a manufacturing company in Middletown until 1903, when he moved to Avon, Connecticut, purchased a 150-acre farm, grew tobacco, and raised cattle, specializing in Ayreshires.[1][4]
Career
Alsop worked as president of two insurance companies: the Hartford County Municipal Fire Insurance Company and the Connecticut Valley Mutual Hail Insurance Company. He served on the board of the State Public Utilities Commission for 26 years and chaired the board for twelve of those years. He served as first selectman of Avon for 35 years.[2]
Alsop served one term in the Connecticut House of Representatives (1907), serving on the Committee for Incorporations. He went on to serve two terms in the Connecticut State Senate (1909 and 1911), chairing the Committee on Roads, Bridges, and Rivers. A Republican during his legislative service, Alsop ran unsuccessfully for the US House of Representatives on the Progressive Party ticket in 1912 and served on the Progressive Party's national committee that year as well.[5][1]
Alsop was committed to the cause of Connecticut agriculture. He served as president of the Connecticut Valley Tobacco Association (1922–1927), the Connecticut Dairymen's Association, and the American Ayreshire Breeders Association. He was a long-time member of the board of directors of the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, retiring in 1950.[2]
Alsop served over three decades on the University of Connecticut's Board of Trustees (1909–1942), when the institution's teaching emphasis was on agriculture. The Joseph Wright Alsop Hall on UConn's Storrs campus was named in his honor.[5]