John Alfred Foot
John Alfred Foot was an American politician.
Early life and education
Foot was born in New Haven, Connecticut, on November 22, 1803, and baptized in his mother's hometown, Cheshire, in 1804. He was the eldest child of Samuel A. Foot, a Senator of the United States and Governor of Connecticut, and his wife Eudocia, daughter of General Andrew Hull. His next younger brother was Admiral Andrew Hull Foote of the US Navy. His father removed to Cheshire about 1813. Foot graduated from Yale College in 1823, and, after studying law at the Litchfield Law School, he began to practice law in Cheshire in 1826.Career
Foot was twice elected to the Connecticut State Legislature by the Whigs, but in 1833 he removed to Cleveland, Ohio, where he formed a law partnership with Sherlock J. Andrews, which continued until 1848, when Andrews became a judge. In 1837, Foot was elected to the Ohio Legislature, but declined a re-nomination the next year. In 1839 and 1840 he was a member of the Cleveland City Council, serving in the former year as president of that body, and in 1853 he was elected to the Ohio State Senate.In 1854 he retired from the practice of his profession, and his later years were largely devoted to the promotion of various public interests. He was in 1856 one of three commissioners selected by Governor Salmon P. Chase to consider the establishment of a State Reform School, and he served for nearly twenty years from the organization of the well-known Ohio Reform School as one of the Board of Commissioners. He was an elder of the First Presbyterian Church in Cleveland.