George V. N. Lothrop
George Van Ness Lothrop was a politician in the U.S. state of Michigan, serving as the seventh Michigan Attorney General from 1848 until 1851 and US ambassador to Russia.
Biography
Lothrop was born in Easton, Massachusetts, the son of Howard Lothrop and Sally Lothrop. George grew up on the family farm in Easton. George's sister Sarah married Oliver Ames Jr., a railroad industrialist.George studied for one year at Amherst College, and graduated from Brown University in 1838. He started law school at Harvard College, but didn't finish due to ill health. He was a member of Alpha Delta Phi and Phi Beta Kappa.
He moved to live on his brother Edwin's farm in Prairie Ronde, Michigan, to recover.
In 1843, Lothrop moved to Detroit to finish his law studies, and found success as a lawyer. Lothrop was married in 1847 to Almira Strong of Rochester, New York.
Lothrop was a candidate for U.S. Representative from Michigan's 1st congressional district, losing to Republican William Alanson Howard in 1856 and to Bradley F. Granger in 1860. He was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention from Michigan in 1860 and a delegate to the Michigan State Constitutional convention in 1867. Lothrop served as U.S. Minister to Russia from 1885 to 1888.
He died on July 12, 1897, in Detroit of hyperthermia. He is interred Elmwood Cemetery in Detroit.