George Burrows was born in Springfield, Vermont, in October 1832. He received a common school education and went to work at a young age. He was employed as a clerk in a series of country stores until 1853, when he moved to New York City and went into business for himself.[1]
He left New York in 1856, moving west and settling in Sauk City, Wisconsin, where he partnered with M. D. Miller in establishing the Sauk City Bank. Miller served as president of the bank Burrows was cashier.[2] The bank lasted for nearly a decade until a change in the banking laws in 1865. That year, Burrows moved to Madison, Wisconsin, where he purchased the Northwestern Land Agency from James Richardson. Burrows vastly expanded the real estate portfolio of the company, dealing real estate in Madison and throughout the northwest quadrant of the state.[1][3]
Political career
While living in Sauk City, Burrows had become active in the Republican Party of Wisconsin.[4] In 1870, he ran for his first public office, seeking election to the Madison city council; he lost the general election by 7 votes.[5] In the mid-1870s, Burrows purchased the home now known as the Carrie Pierce House, which was then owned by Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Orsamus Cole.
In 1876, Burrows became the Republican nominee for Wisconsin Senate in the 25th Senate district. At the time, the district comprised roughly the eastern half of Dane County and the city of Madison. Burrows prevailed in the general election, defeating Democrat J. J. Naset with 53% of the vote.[6] He was re-elected in 1878 and 1880.[7][8]
At the start of the 1882 legislative term, Burrows was elected President pro tempore of the Senate. During that term, however, the legislature passed a redistricting act which drew Burrows out of his Senate district. After redistricting, Burrows resided in the 26th Senate district, which comprised all of Dane County. The 26th district was represented by a Democrat but was not up for election again until 1884, meaning Burrows had no seat to run for in 1882. Burrows did make a run for the seat in 1884, but was defeated by Democrat James Conklin, who had recently completed three years as mayor of Madison.[9]
He did not run for elected office again until 1894, when he was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly from Dane County's 1st Assembly district, which then comprised the city of Madison, the town of Madison, and the town of Blooming Grove.[10] After the election, the Republican caucus elected him speaker of the Assembly. Burrows was hurt by another redistricting act passed during the 1895 legislature, as Dane County lost an Assembly district and his district gained more central-Dane townships. He ran for re-election in 1896 and was defeated by Blooming Grove farmer Daniel Bechtel.[11]
Later years
Burrows died February 25, 1909, at the Madison Sanitarium, where he had been a patient for several months, suffering from Catarrh of the stomach.[1][12] He was buried at Madison's historic Forest Hill Cemetery.[13]
Burrows bequeathed a large plot of land on the shore of Lake Mendota to the Madison Park and Pleasure Association, which converted the plot into what is now Burrows Park.[14]
Personal life and family
George Burrows was a son of Reverend Baxter Burrows and his wife Lydia (née Boynton). Baxter Burrows was an ordained Baptist minister and a staunch abolitionist who supported the Liberty Party and worked as part of the Underground Railroad.[1][3] George Burrows' maternal grandfather was John Boynton, a colonel of the Massachusetts militia in the American Revolutionary War. The Boynton family descended from an earlier John Boynton, who emigrated from England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1638.[15]
On January 13, 1857, George Burrows married Alma Thompson, the daughter of Daniel Pierce Thompson. They had only one known child together before her death in 1883. Their son George Thompson Burrows went on to become a lawyer.[1]