Samuel Jackson Randall was an American politician from Pennsylvania. He served as the 29th Speaker of the United States House of Representatives from 1876 to 1881. Randall was a staunch defender of protective tariffs designed to assist domestic producers of manufactured goods.
About Samuel J. Randall in brief

His maternal grandfather, Joseph Worrell, was also a prominent citizen, active in politics for the Democratic party during Thomas Jefferson’s presidency. His paternal grandfather, Matthew Randall, was a judge on the Pennsylvania Courts of Common Pleas and county prothonotary in that city in the early 19th century. In 1851, Randall assisted his father in the election campaign for a local judge, a Whig, was elected despite considerable opposition from a candidate of the nativist American Party. The strength of this group, combined with the Whig’s declining fortunes, led Randall to call himself an \”American Whig\” when he ran for Philadelphia Common council the following year. He held office for four one-year terms from 1852 to 1856. Randall married Fannie Agnes Ward, the daughter of Aaron and Mary Watson Ward of Sing Sing, New York. His new father-in-law was a major general in the New York militia and had served in Congress as a Jacksonian Democrat for several terms between 1825 and 1843. Both Randall and his father attended the Democratic National Convention in 1856 to work for James Buchanan’s nomination for president, which was successful. Randall and Buchanan were friendly with James Buchanan and his family was later serving as the Democratic’s envoy in Great Britain. He died in Philadelphia in 1890, aged only 30 years old, still old, and had risen rapidly in politics in the late 1800s and early 1900s. His family and his friends are still living in Philadelphia.
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