Edward Lewis (30 July 1650 – July 1674) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1669 to 1674.
10-492: (Redirected from Ed Lewis ) Edward Lewis may refer to: Politicians [ edit ] Edward Lewis (Devizes MP) (1650–1674), British MP for Devizes, 1669–1674 Edward Lewis (Radnor MP) , British MP for Radnor, 1761–1768, 1769–1774 and 1775–1790 Edward Parke Custis Lewis (1837–1892), U.S. Ambassador to Portugal Edward Norman Lewis (1858–1931), Canadian politician Edward T. Lewis (politician) (1834–1927), member of
20-404: A seat on the state supreme court vacated by the death of Justice Washington Adams , serving on that tribunal for a few months. In January 1875, Governor Woodson appointed Lewis a judge of the newly established St. Louis Court of Appeals, winning reelection the following year and presiding for nearly twelve years. In 1888, physical infirmity and increasing deafness compelled his resignation from
30-479: The Supreme Court of Missouri Edward Lewis (Sir) (1508–1561), Welsh landowner and sheriff of Glamorgan See also [ edit ] Ted Lewis (disambiguation) Eddy Louiss (1941–2015), French jazz musician [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about people with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
40-2596: The United States House of Representatives from Louisiana Edward Lewis (Australian politician) (born 1936), member of the Victorian Legislative Council Ed Lewis (Missouri politician) , member of the Missouri House of Representatives Edward Zammit Lewis , Maltese politician Sports [ edit ] Ed Lewis (basketball) (1910–2006), All-American center for Oregon State College in 1932–33 Ed Lewis (wrestler) (1891–1966), American wrestler best known as Ed "The Strangler" Lewis Eddie Lewis (footballer, born 1935) (1935–2011), English footballer Eddie Lewis (American soccer) (born 1974), former American soccer player Eddie Lewis (footballer, born 1926) (born 1926), English footballer Eddie Lewis (American football) (born 1953), former professional American football defensive back Edward John Lewis (1859–1925), Welsh international rugby player Edward M. Lewis (1872–1936), Welsh-born, American baseball pitcher, professor of English literature and academic administrator Edward Lewis (cricketer) (born 1959), American cricketer of Antiguan origin Music [ edit ] Ed Lewis (musician) (1909–1985), American jazz trumpeter Edward Lewis (Decca) (1900–1980), founder of Decca Records in 1929 Others [ edit ] Edward T. Lewis (college president) , college president, poet, educator Edward B. Lewis (1918–2004), American geneticist and Nobel Prize winner Edward Gardner Lewis (1869–1950), American promoter, publisher, and political activist Edward J. Lewis (1937–2006), American businessman and real estate developer from Pittsburgh Ed Lewis, British Committee of 100 signatory Edward Lewis (filmmaker) , American news photographer and documentary filmmaker who made films about African Americans for Million Dollar Productions Edward Lewis (producer) (1919–2019), film producer Edward Lewis (publisher) (born 1940), American magazine publisher Edward Lewis (minister) (1831–1913), New Zealand bootmaker and Church of Christ minister Ed Lewis (1914–1976), "Bim" from Jamaican double-act Bim and Bam Edward Mann Lewis (1863–1949), U.S. Army officer Edward Lincoln Lewis (1865–1938), archdeacon of St Davids Edward Augustus Lewis (1820–1889), justice of
50-400: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Edward_Lewis&oldid=1256635626 " Category : Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Edward Lewis (Devizes MP) Lewis was
60-680: The next year he moved to Yazoo City, Mississippi , where he gained admission to the bar in 1841. He was "a self–made and self–educated man". In 1845, he settled in Richmond, Missouri . After serving in a number of county offices, he accepted editorial charge of the Intelligencer , a newspaper in St. Louis in 1851, where he participated in the formation of the International Typographical Union . In 1853, he entered
70-452: The practice of the law in earnest, and "soon attained an enviable rank in his profession". He moved to St. Charles, Missouri , in 1856, where he "purchased 200 acres of land, which he developed into the town of New Florence, which was named after his daughter". He was a Presidential Elector twice, and the unsuccessful candidate of the minority party for the Supreme Court in 1868. In September 1874, Governor Silas Woodson appointed Lewis to
80-593: The son of William Lewis of The Van Glamorgan, also an MP for Devizes. He succeeded to the estates of his father in 1661 and travelled abroad from 1663 to 1666. In 1669 he was elected Member of Parliament (MP) for Devizes . He became a freeman of Devizes in 1670 and was Deputy Lieutenant for Glamorgan from 1670 until his death. He was J.P. for Monmouthshire, Glamorgan and Breconshire from 1672 and commissioner for assessment for Monmouthshire and Glamorgan from 1673. Lewis died in London before 23 July 1674, when his will
90-596: Was a justice of the Supreme Court of Missouri in 1874. Born in Washington, D.C. , Lewis was orphaned in 1829, around the age of nine, and sent to Charlotte Hall, Maryland , for schooling. In 1835, at the age of fifteen, he became an apprentice to the printer's trade in the office of Duff Green, and in 1836 he became a private tutor. In 1838, he was a clerk in the Government Land Office;
100-566: Was proved by his brother-in-law William Jephson , who inherited Boarstall , his Buckinghamshire estate. His younger brother had predeceased him, and the estates in Wales went to his uncle Richard Lewis . This article about a 17th-century Member of the Parliament of England (up to 1707) is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Edward Augustus Lewis Edward Augustus Lewis (February 22, 1820 – September 21, 1889)
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