Darwin Scott Hall was a United States. Representative from Minnesota; born in Mound Prairie, Town of Wheatland, Kenosha County, Wisconsin, January 23, 1844; moved with his parents to Waukau, Wisconsin, in Winnebago County, in 1847, thence to Grand Rapids, Wisconsin, in 1856; attended the common schools, the local academy at Elgin, Illinois, and Markham Academy, Milwaukee, Wisconsin served as a private in Company K, 42nd Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment, during the Civil War; settled near Birch Coulee, Renville County, Minnesota, in 1866 and engaged in agricultural pursuits until 1868; auditor of Renville County 1869 – 1873; clerk of the district court 1873 – 1878; member of the Minnesota House of Representatives in 1876; editor of the Renville Times, which he founded in 1876.
Membership
He was register of the United States land office at Benson, Minnesota, 1878 – 1886. Served in the Minnesota Senate in 1886. Elected as a Republican to the 51st congress, (March 4, 1889 – March 3, 1891).
Unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1890 to the 52nd congress.
Appointed chairman of the Chippewa Indian Commission by President Benjamin Harrison in 1891 and served until 1893 and again in 1897. Delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1892.
Member of the board of managers of the Minnesota State Agricultural Society 1905 – 1910. Again a member of the state senate in 1906.
Engaged in agricultural pursuits near Olivia, Renville County, Minnesota, until his death there on February 23, 1919.
Interment in Olivia Cemetery.