^"Elias Langham". Ohio History Central. January 8, 2007. Retrieved August 22, 2011.
Jeffrey P. Brown and Andrew R.L. Cayton, ed. (1994). The Pursuit of public power: political culture in Ohio, 1787-1861. Kent State University Press. p. 8. ISBN0-87338-496-2. LCCN94006142. Governor Tiffin and Elias Langham, state house speaker in the 1803-4 assembly, were political enemies, and the governor wrote that Langham's election as speaker had occurred only because the house was full of inexperienced men. ...
Hammond, John Craig (2007). Slavery, freedom, and expansion in the early American West. University of Virginia Press. p. 81. ISBN978-0-8139-2669-8. Perhaps hoping for a more favorable hearing for the petitioners, some member, most likely Elias Langham, motioned to place himself on the committee. If Langham hoped to influence the committee's decision and open the Virginia Military ...
External links
"Elias Langham". Papers of the War Department 1784–1800. Archived from the original on October 4, 2011. Retrieved August 22, 2011.