Background
George Edmund Royce was born in Orwell, Vermont on 1 January 1829 to Alpheus Royce and Harriet (Moore) Royce.
politician private sector banker
George Edmund Royce was born in Orwell, Vermont on 1 January 1829 to Alpheus Royce and Harriet (Moore) Royce.
He attended public schools in the vicinity of Orwell, and attended two years of college at Troy Conference Academy.
In 1850, he moved to New York City and engaged in a number of business concerns, returning to Vermont in 1864 and purchasing hundreds of acres of land near Rutland, Vermont with funds from his work in New New York In 1866, Royce organized the Steam-Stone Cutter Company along with West.T. Nichols, employing the steam powered stone cutter recently invented by George J. Wardwell, thus pioneering the industrialization of marble building stone quarrying in Vermont. Royce was also the prime investor in the establishment of the True Blue Marble Company near West Rutland in 1884.
In addition to marble quarrying, he was involved with Horace Henry Baxter and Trenor West. Park in the establishment of the Baxter National Bank in Rutland, serving as a founding director from 1870 until his death.
He was also a director of the United States Tube Company in Buffalo, New New York In 1883, Royce was elected as a selectman in Rutland, and served until 1886.
He led the establishment of the water works system of Rutland in the late 1880s, and served as the town"s first water commissioner. Royce also served as a founding director of the City Hospital of Rutland.
Rice was elected to the Vermont Senate in the elections of 1902, and he served until his death on 5 March 1903.
Royce was very active in Democratic Party politics in Vermont as was influential in the state. He was a state delegate to the 1900 Democratic National Convention, and was a staunch supporter of William Jennings Bryan as the party nominee.
He was also a banker, jointly founding the Baxter National Bank of Rutland, and was a member of the Vermont State Senate from 1902 to his death in 1903.