Michael Doran

This article is about the 19th-century Minnesota politician. For the American Middle East expert, see Michael Scott Doran.

Michael Doran (November 1, 1827 1915), Minnesota politician and businessman, was born in County Meath, Ireland. He emigrated to New York in 1850, then moved to Norwalk, Ohio the following year. In 1855, he married Helen Brady of Norwalk. He took out a land claim in Kilkenny, Minnesota (Le Sueur County) in 1856, and established a farm there the following year. His first wife died in 1862, leaving four young children.

Doran was elected county treasurer of Le Sueur County on the Democratic ticket in 1862, serving four successive terms. In 1864 he married his second wife, Catherine O'Grady. Nine children were born of this marriage.

In 1870 Doran was elected state senator from Le Sueur County, and served several terms. In 1870 he moved from Kilkenny township to Le Sueur, Minnesota, and entered the banking business. In 1875, he went into the milling business at Le Sueur. Late in the 1870s he entered into partnership in a banking and brokerage business in St. Paul, Minnesota.

He lived in Le Sueur until 1888, when he sold out his local interests, and moved to St. Paul, where he continued with his banking concerns.

Doran was chairman of the Minnesota Democratic State Central Committee on numerous occasions and was chairman of the National Democratic Committee from 1888 to 1896, when he resigned over differences with his party on bimetallism. He was a close political and personal friend of Grover Cleveland, who gave him the principal credit for procuring his third presidential nomination in 1892.

Doran died in St. Paul in 1915. He is the namesake of the city of Doran, Minnesota.[1]

References

  1. Upham, Warren (1920). Minnesota Geographic Names: Their Origin and Historic Significance. Minnesota Historical Society. p. 578.

External links

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