Oswald Langdon Woodford
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Oswald Langdon Woodford (Oct. 31st, 1827-Oct. 21st, 1870) was an American minister, teacher, and politician. Woodford was the son of Zerah and Minerva (Potter) Woodford, born on October 31, 1827. He was a teacher for two years in the Cherokee Male Seminary, and then entered the Andover Theological Seminary. He returned to the Cherokees, and was principal of the Male Seminary until August 1856. He then came to New Haven, to attend Theological lectures, and in May 1857, went to Kansas as a Home Missionary. He settled in Grasshopper Falls, organizing a Congregational Church in 1858, however in 1859, he returned to his native town due to his health. He spent his remaining years with his parents, engaged in farming. In 1865 he was a member of the
Connecticut State House of Representatives The Connecticut State House of Representatives is the lower house in the Connecticut General Assembly, the state legislature of the U.S. state of Connecticut. The house is composed of 151 members representing an equal number of districts, with ea ...
. In 1870, he died in West Avon of typhoid fever. He was married, first, to Pauline Avery in 1856. She died in Kansas in 1858. He again married in May 1859 to Esther Butler.


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* {{DEFAULTSORT:Woodford, Oswald Langdon 1827 births 1870 deaths Yale University alumni Andover Newton Theological School alumni People from Avon, Connecticut American Congregationalist ministers Members of the Connecticut House of Representatives 19th-century American legislators People from Valley Falls, Kansas 19th-century American clergy 19th-century Connecticut politicians