Background
Howe was born in Livermore, Maine (then, part of the commonwealth of Massachusetts), to Timothy Howe and Betsey Howard, attended Readfield Seminary now Kents Hill School, in Readfield, Maine, and studied law with local judges.
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Howe was born in Livermore, Maine (then, part of the commonwealth of Massachusetts), to Timothy Howe and Betsey Howard, attended Readfield Seminary now Kents Hill School, in Readfield, Maine, and studied law with local judges.
He also served as United States. Postmaster General from 1881 until his death in 1883. In 1839, Howe was admitted to the Maine Bar and began practicing law in Readfield. In 1845, he was elected to the Maine House of Representatives.
Shortly thereafter, Howe moved to Green Bay, Wisconsin, and opened a law office.
He was an ardent Whig and ran an unsuccessful campaign for United States. Congress in 1848. Howe married Linda Ann Haines and together the couple had 2 children, Mary East. Howe and Frank K. Howe.
Howe was elected circuit judge in Wisconsin and served in that position from 1851 to 1855. As a circuit judge, he also served as a justice on the Wisconsin Supreme Court until a separate Supreme Court was organized in 1853.
In 1857, Howe ran unsuccessfully for the United States. Senate.
During his time in the Senate, he was an abolitionist and supporter of the Fifteenth Amendment. While in the Senate, President Ulysses South. Grant offered Howe the position of Chief Justice of the United States. Supreme Court. However, Howe declined the offer because he feared his successor to the Senate would be a Democrat.
Howe lost his senate seat in 1877.
In 1881, he was appointed United States Postmaster General, a position he held until his death in Kenosha, Wisconsin on March 25, 1883.