Jeremiah Langhorne
Jeremiah Langhorne (died 1742) was a prominent landowner and jurist in colonial Pennsylvania. He is the namesake of present-day Langhorne, Pennsylvania,[1] which adopted his name in 1876, and neighboring Langhorne Manor.
A Quaker, Langhorne settled with his family in Bucks County in 1684. Records show that he purchased 7,200 acres (29 km2) there in 1724. He represented Bucks County in the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly, of which he served twice as Speaker. He was a justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court from 1726, and served as chief justice from 1739 until his death in 1742.
References
- ^ Gannett, Henry (1905). The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 181.
Preceded by James Logan | Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Pennsylvania 1739–1742 | Succeeded by William Allen |
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- David Lloyd
- Jeremiah Langhorne
- James Logan
- William Allen
- Benjamin Chew
- Thomas McKean
- Edward Shippen IV
- William Tilghman
- John Bannister Gibson
- Jeremiah S. Black
- Ellis Lewis
- Walter H. Lowrie
- George W. Woodward
- James Thompson
- John M. Read
- Daniel Agnew
- George Sharswood
- Ulysses Mercur
- Isaac G. Gordon
- Edward M. Paxson
- James P. Sterrett
- Henry Green
- J. Brewster McCollum
- James T. Mitchell
- D. Newlin Fell
- J. Hay Brown
- Robert von Moschzisker
- Robert S. Frazer
- John W. Kephart
- William I. Schaffer
- George W. Maxey
- James B. Drew
- Horace Stern
- Charles Alvin Jones
- John C. Bell Jr.
- Benjamin R. Jones
- Michael J. Eagen
- Henry X. O'Brien
- Samuel J. Roberts
- Robert N. C. Nix Jr.
- John P. Flaherty Jr.
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