GEORGE F. WRIGHT was
born in Warren, Vermont, December 5, 1833. He was reared on a farm, and when
eighteen years of age at tended West Randolph Academy. He came to Iowa in 1855,
locating at Keosauqua where he began the study of law in the office of
Judge George G. Wright, and was admitted to the bar in 1857. At the
beginning of the Civil War he helped to raise a military company of which he
was chosen first lieutenant. Later at the request of Governor Kirkwood
Lieutenant Wright organized a company of State militia of which he was
commissioned captain. In 1868 Mr. Wright removed to Council Bluffs where he
became a law partner with Judge Caleb Baldwin; the firm ranked high and became
attorneys for several railroads. In 1875 Mr. Wright was elected to the State
Senate from the district consisting of the counties of Mills and Pottawattamie,
serving in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth General Assemblies. In 1879 Mr. Wright
was appointed by Judge Dillon United States Commissioner, and later held the
same position under Judge Woolson for the Southern District of Iowa. In 1896 he
was chosen vice-president for Iowa of the Trans-Mississippi Exposition at
Omaha. Mr. Wright was one of the organizers of the company which built the
bridge across the Missouri River between Council Bluffs and Omaha.
SOURCE: Benjamin F.
Gue, History of Iowa from the Earliest of
Times to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, Volume 4: Iowa Biography,
p. 296
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