Background
Alexander was born in 1806 in Prince Edward County, Virginia, the second son of noted Presbyterian theologian Archibald Alexander and his wife Janetta Waddel.
Alexander was born in 1806 in Prince Edward County, Virginia, the second son of noted Presbyterian theologian Archibald Alexander and his wife Janetta Waddel.
Alexander graduated from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) in 1824 and was admitted to the bar of New Jersey as an attorney in 1828.
He served as President of the New Jersey State Senate and as President of the Equitable Life Assurance Society. Another brother, Joseph Addison Alexander (1809–1860), would become a biblical scholar. The family then moved to Princeton, New Jersey when Archibald Alexander was named the first professor of the Princeton Theological Seminary in 1812.
He opened an office in Princeton and attended to his professional business there for about thirty years.
Alexander never obtained his license as counsellor and took a greater interest in politics than law. He entered the New Jersey General Assembly in 1836 as a Democrat from Middlesex County (before the formation of Mercer County).
In 1856 he was drafted to run as the Democratic candidate for Governor of New Jersey. He lost to the Republican candidate William A. Newell by less than 3,000 votes.
Alexander was a delegate to the 1860 Democratic National Convention and at the second Convention in Baltimore he received one vote for the Vice Presidency.
He was a delegate to the Peace Conference of 1861, after which time he withdrew from political life and devoted himself to a career as a life insurance executive. Alexander was chosen President of the Equitable Life Assurance Society when it was organized in 1859. Alexander did not assume an active role in management of Equitable business, leaving that to the much younger Hyde, who was named vice president and manager.
Alexander served as president until his death at his New York City residence in 1874 at the age of 68.
Alexander never married. He was buried in the family plot at Princeton Cemetery.
In 1851 he succeeded Charles Smith Olden as a member of the New Jersey Senate from Mercer County, serving as president of that body for four terms.