President John Tyler appointed Floyd as Secretary of the Wisconsin Territory on October 30, 1843, and served in this capacity until February 24, 1846, when a successor was appointed.[4][5] He continued to live in Dane County, Wisconsin Territory, and served as colonel of the Dane County militia from 1846 to 1847.[4] He returned to Wythe County, Virginia, where he became a farmer.[4] He operated a coal and salt property in Warfield, Kentucky, but the business did not do well. Augustus C. Dodge, of Iowa brought forward a joint resolution in the United States Senate on July 12, 1852, for the "relief of George R. C. Floyd, late Secretary of Wisconsin Territory, and sureties..." It was referred to the Committee on Finance.[6] It passed the Senate, for on July 27, 1852, it was presented to the United States House of Representatives.[7] He sold his property to his brother John B. Floyd on March 3, 1857, and moved to Logan County, West Virginia, to look after some mineral and timber property he had an interest in.[4][8] In 1872, he was elected as a delegate to the West Virginia House of Delegates, serving in the 11th West Virginia Legislature, which convened shortly after the election in 1872 and adjourned in December 1873.[9][4]
Notes
^'The New York Freeman's Journal and Catholic Register', June 8, 1895, obituary of George Rogers Clark Floyd
^Ambler, Charles Henry The Life and Diary of John Floyd page 81