Event class: practice, law, moved, returned, resumed, continued, retired, death, died, business
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
John S. Barry | In 1831, he moved to White Pigeon, Michigan where he became a merchant and was active in politics. |
Thomas H. Herndon | He moved to Mobile, Alabama, in 1853 and resumed the practice of law. |
Orrin Larrabee Miller | He continued the practice of law in Kansas City, Kansas, until his death there on September 11, 1926. |
Rudolph Kleberg | Resuming the practice of law, he moved with his family to Austin, Texas, in 1905. |
Daniel J. Layton | Layton then practiced law in Wilmington until 1915, when he returned to Georgetown to practice until his election as attorney general and later elevation to the Supreme Court. |
John Avery (politician) | He settled in Greenville, Michigan, in 1868 and again engaged in the practice of medicine. |
Thomas Hines | Hines moved to Bowling Green, Kentucky, in 1867, where many of his family lived, and practiced law there. |
Albert Pike | After the war, Pike returned to the practice of law, moving to New Orleans for a time beginning in 1853. |
Kinsley S. Bingham | Bingham moved with his wife, in 1833 to Green Oak Township, Michigan where he was admitted to the bar and began a private practice. |
Ed Karst | Karst did not seek reelection as mayor in 1973 but returned to his law practice and business ventures. |
Solomon White | In 1876, he returned to Windsor where he resumed the practice of law and also operated a farm. |
Henry Smith Van Eaton | In 1865, following his service in the war, he resumed the practice of law in Woodville. |
George B. Martin | After his career in politics, Martin resumed the practice of law in Catlettsburg, where he died in 1945 and was interred in Catlettsburg Cemetery. |
Fuller Warren | After Warren left office on January 6, 1953, he moved to Miami, where he practiced law. |
Ebenezer J. Penniman | He resumed mercantile pursuits until 1871 when he engaged in banking and served as president of the First National Bank of Plymouth. |
Samuel J. Douglas | He opened a law office in 1853, and practiced law on Key West until outbreak the Civil War. |
George Ernest Foulkes | He moved to Hartford, Michigan, in 1920 and engaged in agricultural pursuits. |
Benjamin Stanton | Stanton moved to Martinsburg, West Virginia, in 1865, and practiced law. |
John F. Farnsworth | He moved to Washington, D. C. in 1880 and continued as an attorney until his death. |
Eaton J. Bowers | He moved to New Orleans, Louisiana, and continued the practice of law until his death there October 26, 1939. |
William J. Gilmore | In 1880, after his term expired, Gilmore entered private practice in Columbus, Ohio. |
Harvey C. Garber | He was admitted to the bar in 1921 and commenced practice in Columbus, Ohio. |
William H. Holt | He resumed the practice of law, which he continued until his death on March 6, 1919. |
Elias W. Leavenworth | He declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1876 and resumed business activities in Syracuse. |
Lazarus W. Powell | Powell died at his home near Henderson, Kentucky shortly following a failed bid to return to the Senate in 1867. |
Samuel Anderson Purviance | He resumed the practice of law in Pittsburgh until 1876, when he retired. |
David Kellogg Cartter | He moved to Cleveland, Ohio, in 1856 and continued his law practice. |
Herbert Parsons | A 1910 run for reelection to the Sixty-second Congress was unsuccessful, and Parsons resumed the practice of law in New York City. |
A. Scott Sloan | Sloan moved to Wisconsin in 1854 and settled in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, where he continued the practice of law. |
William Purington Cole, Jr. | He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1928, and resumed the practice of law in Towson. |
Ansel T. Walling | He returned to Ohio in 1861 and settled in Circleville, where he resumed the practice of law. |
Stephen Wallace Dorsey | He engaged in cattle raising and mining in New Mexico and Colorado and subsequently moved to Los Angeles, California, where he resided until his death on March 20, 1916. |
Charles Henry Sloan | He ran and lost in 1930, resuming practice of law in Geneva. |
Halbert S. Greenleaf | He settled in Rochester, New York, in 1867 and resumed the manufacture of locks. |
Hendley S. Bennett | In 1886 returned to Tennessee and settled in Franklin, Williamson County, and continued the practice of his profession. |
Charles E. DeLong | After his return to California from Japan in 1874, he resumed the practice of law at Virginia City, Nevada. |
John F. Nugent | Nugent resumed the practice of law in Washington, D. C. and remained in the area until his death after a brief illness in 1931 at age 63. |
Richard Hongisto | Hongisto left public life to become a full-time businessman and real estate investor, apart from an unsuccessful run for County Supervisor in 2000. |
Ellis E. Patterson | Patterson was an unsuccessful candidate for election to the 81st United States Congress in 1948, and resumed the practice of law. |
John Wilson Farrelly | He engaged in the practice of law in Meadville until his death in 1860. |
Warner Underwood | He returned to Kentucky in 1866 and resumed the practice of law. |
Francis S. Edwards | He settled in Dunkirk, New York, in 1859, and resumed the practice of his profession. |
John D. Fredericks | He resumed the practice of law at Los Angeles where he died August 26, 1945. |
John A. Nicholson | He was not a candidate for renomination in 1868 and continued his practice of the law. |
Stephen Allen Benson | After the end of his presidency Benson retired to his coffee plantation in Grand Bassa County where he died in 1865. |
Green Berry Raum | He engaged in the practice of law in Chicago until his death there on December 18, 1909. |
C. Farris Bryant | Upon his defeat, Bryant returned to the practice of law in Jacksonville, Florida, where he lived until his death in 2002. |
John Crowell (Ohio) | He moved to Cleveland, Ohio, in 1852 and resumed the practice of law. |
William M. Gwin | Gwin retired to California and engaged in agricultural pursuits until his death in New York City in 1885. |
George F. Williams | He resumed the practice of law until his retirement in 1930. |
Frank E. Wilson | He resumed the practice of medicine in Brooklyn, New York, until his death there July 12, 1935. |
Richard Terrin | After leaving Japan, he practiced law in Chicago until his retirement in 1954. |
John T. Stuart | Following his defeat in 1864, Stuart resumed the practice of law in Springfield. |
Warren A. Haggott | He resumed the practice of law until his retirement in 1951. |
Sidney T. Holmes | He resumed the practice of law in Morrisville, New York, for a short time, and in Utica, New York, until 1872, when he moved to Bay City, Michigan, continuing the practice of law. |
Horace B. Smith | He resumed the practice of law in Elmira, New York, until 1883. |
Samuel Shellabarger (congressman) | He continued the practice of law until his death in Washington, D. C., August 7, 1896. |
Robert Wilson (Missouri) | He engaged in agricultural pursuits and in 1870 he died in Marshall, Missouri. |
William Josiah MacDonald | MacDonald resumed the practice of law in Springfield, Illinois in 1917. |
John H. Clifford | thumb | right | upright | Clifford's house in New Bedford In 1867 Clifford retired from the legal profession and became president of the Boston and Providence Railroad. |
Hervey C. Calkin | After leaving Congress, Calkin resumed his former business pursuits in New York City until retiring in 1904. |
George Henry Craig | He resumed the practice of law in Selma, Alabama, and died there January 26, 1923. |
Solomon F. Prouty | He moved to Des Moines, Iowa, in 1891 and practiced law there. |
Abram Williams | When he returned to California he resumed the wholesale mercantile business in San Francisco, where he died October 17, 1911. |
Charles Elwood Brown | He was not a candidate for renomination in 1888 and resumed the practice of law. |
Isaac D. Young | He resumed the practice of law in Beloit, Kansas, until his death December 10, 1927. |
Kenneth A. Roberts | He resumed the practice of law until his retirement in 1979. |
Lindley Beckworth | Beckworth was a resident of Gladewater, Texas, where he practiced law until his death at Tyler, Texas on March 9, 1984. |
George F. Richardson | He moved to Ellensburg, Washington and in 1916 engaged in agricultural pursuits. |
Vincent Luke Palmisano | After his tenure in Congress, Palmisano resumed the practice of law and served on the Baltimore Zoning Board until his resignation in 1952. |
James M. Robinson (Indiana) | He continued the practice of law in Fort Wayne, Indiana, until 1908. |
Charles Holland Duell | He resumed his private practice in New York City until 1915. |
Solomon L. Spink | He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1870, and returned to Yankton to practice law. |
Edward J. Robeson, Jr. | He was a resident of Newport News, Virginia, until 1964, at which time he returned to Waynesville, North Carolina. |
John Franklin Miller (senator) | He returned to South Bend in 1855 and resumed his practice. |
John DeWitt Clinton Atkins | He returned to agricultural pursuits ; retired from active pursuits in 1898, and moved to Paris, Tennessee. |
Robert J. Tracewell | He moved to Evansville, Indiana, in 1914 and resumed the practice of law. |
Edward Stanly | He declined to run for a sixth term in the elections of 1853 and instead moved to California and practiced law in San Francisco. |
Roeliff Brinkerhoff | He was admitted to the bar in 1852, and remained in active practice from that time until after the outbreak of hostilities during the American Civil War. |
Charles Merian Cooper | He resumed the practice of law in Jacksonville, Florida, until his death there November 14, 1923. |
Hubert H. Peavey | He moved to Washburn, Wisconsin, in 1909 and continued the real estate business. |
Socrates N. Sherman | After the war, Sherman resumed the practice of medicine in Ogdensburg, where he died on February 1, 1873. |
James Knox (Illinois politician) | He continued the practice of law until his death in Knoxville, Illinois, October 8, 1876. |
Thomas E. Fairchild | Following his defeat in the 1952 Senate race, he resumed private law practice in Milwaukee. |
James Montgomery (colonel) | After the war, Montgomery returned to his Linn County, Kansas, farm, where he died on December 6, 1871. |
Frank J. Magill | He then worked in private law practice in Fargo, North Dakota until 1986. |
Albert R. Anderson | Anderson moved to Sidney, Iowa, in 1866 and resumed the practice of law. |
John Martin Broomall | He resumed the practice of law, and was a delegate to the State constitutional convention in 1874. |
Francis G. Newlands | In 1888 he moved to Nevada to serve Sharon's interests, and continued to practice law. |
Carlos Bee | He returned to the practice of law in San Antonio, working until his death there on April 20, 1932. |
Henry F. French | In 1867 he resumed his law practice in Boston. |
Simeon K. Wolfe | He moved to New Albany in 1870 and continued the practice of law. |
Lucien Lester Ainsworth | He resumed the practice of law in West Union, and died there on April 19, 1902. |
Barzilla W. Clark | He left office January 2, 1939, and returned to Idaho Falls and his private interests. |
Charles A. Hill | He returned to Will County, Illinois, in 1865 and resumed the practice of law in Joliet. |
James B. McCreary | Following the expiration of his term as governor, McCreary continued to practice as a private attorney until his death on October 8, 1918. |
Tic Forrester | After his discharge from the Army, Forrester returned to his home town, where he established a law practice, opening his office in 1919. |
Levi Maish | He was engaged in the practice of law in Washington, D. C., until his death there in 1899. |
John Goff Ballentine | Ballentine moved to Panola County, Mississippi about 1854, continued the practice of law, and engaged in the extensive family agricultural pursuits. |
Orsamus Cole | He resumed the practice of law in Potosi until 1855. |