Erasmus Richardson
Erasmus Darwin Richardson was an American banker in Geneva, Wisconsin, who served as a member of the 1st Wisconsin Legislature in the Wisconsin State Assembly, as well as holding various local offices.
Background and personal life
Richardson was born February 26, 1810, in Burlington, New York, son of Caleb and Clarissa Richardson. He attended the local public primary school, and taught school himself until the age of 21. At that time, he took charge of a small school in Cooperstown, New York, where he was assisted by Elizabeth "Betsy" W. Spafford for three years. Ill health forced him to leave the teaching profession. He married Spafford on October 23, 1834, in Cooperstown; they had one child, Elizabeth. He wandered in the unsettled western territories for a while, recovering his health; then returned to Cooperstown and worked some years as a bookkeeper. On August 30, 1841, Betsy died there.In 1842, the widowed Richardson came to Walworth County, Wisconsin, settling on farmland in Hudson which was annexed by [Lake Geneva, Wisconsin|Geneva, Wisconsin|the political subdivisions of Wisconsin|village of Geneva] in 1844. He soon found work at a store owned by the Spafford family, and on February 16, 1843, he married Alma O. Spafford, sister of his first wife, Elizabeth, in Geneva. He was an Episcopalian, and in 1850 was one of the officers elected on the organization of an Episcopalian church in Geneva.
Public office
Soon after coming to Walworth County, Richardson was elected a justice of the peace, a position he held for thirteen years. In 1845 and 1846, he was town clerk of Geneva. Richardson was a Democrat, and was elected from the Walworth County Assembly district that included the Towns of Bloomfield, Geneva, and Hudson (now Lyons). He was succeeded in the next session by Samuel D. Hastings, a Freesoiler. He was again elected town clerk in 1850, and became village president of the village of Geneva (now Lake Geneva) in 1856, although he left office early.In 1869, he was elected clerk of the village. In 1870, he served as chairman of the county board of supervisors. He was village president from 1870–71, and once more in 1877.