American judge
William Merchant Richardson (January 4, 1774 – March 15, 1838) was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts and chief justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court .
Biography
He was born in Pelham in the Province of New Hampshire in 1774. He graduated from Harvard University in 1797; studied law; was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Groton, Massachusetts , in 1804. He was elected as a Democratic-Republican to the Twelfth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Joseph B. Varnum ; and was reelected to the Thirteenth Congress and served from November 4, 1811, to April 18, 1814, when he resigned.
Richardson moved to Portsmouth, New Hampshire , in 1814. He became a United States Attorney in 1814; and in 1816 was appointed chief justice of New Hampshire and served as chief justice until his death in 1838 in Chester, New Hampshire , where he is buried in the Old Cemetery. Dartmouth College gave him the degree of LL.D. He was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1819.[ 1]
Publications
He is the author of The New-Hampshire Justice of the Peace (Concord, 1824) and The Town Officer (1824) and was co-reporter of the New Hampshire Superior Court Cases , of which the reports of several volumes are his alone (11 vols., 1819–'44). He is the subject of a Life (Concord, 1839).
Family
He was the father of Anne, grandfather of sculptor Daniel Chester French , and uncle of William Adams Richardson who was United States Secretary of the Treasury from 1873 to 1874.
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References
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