Background
Sawyer, Frederick Adolphus was born on December 12, 1822 in Bolton, Worcester County, Massachusetts, United States.
politician teacher United States senator
Sawyer, Frederick Adolphus was born on December 12, 1822 in Bolton, Worcester County, Massachusetts, United States.
Born in Bolton, Massachusetts, he attended the public schools, graduated from Harvard University in 1844, taught school in New England from 1844 to 1859, and took charge of the State normal school at Charleston, South Carolina in 1859.
He returned to the North during the Civil War, and returned to Charleston in February 1865 where he was active in advancing Reconstruction measures. On the night of April 14, 1865, Sawyer was at Ford"s Theater in Washington District of Columbia and witnessed the assassination of President Lincoln. He was appointed collector of internal revenue in the second South Carolina district in 1865, and upon the readmission of the State of South Carolina to representation, Sawyer was elected as a Republican to the United States. Senate, serving from July 16, 1868, to March 4, 1873.
Sawyer was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under William Adams Richardson from 1873–1874 and was employed in the United States Coast Survey from 1874 to 1880.
From 1880 to 1887 he was special agent of the War Department. He conducted a preparatory school in Ithaca, New York and gave private instruction to students in Cornell University.
He moved to Tennessee and became president of a company at Cumberland Gap to promote the sale of agricultural lands in that vicinity. Their elder daughter Myra married Charles Eugene Hamlin, grandson of Vice President Hannibal Hamlin.
Isaiah K. Stetson owned a lumber and shipbuilding company in Bangor, Maine, and served as Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives in 1899–1900.
Frederick Sawyer died suddenly at Shawanee, Tennessee in 1891. Interment was in "Sawyer Heights," on the property of his land company, near East Cumberland Gap.
While in the Senate, he was chairman of the Committee on Education (Forty-first Congress) and a member of the Committee on Education and Labor (Forty-second Congress).