Samuel Turell Armstrong

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Samuel Turell Armstrong

In office
March 1, 1835 – March 13, 1836
Preceded by John Davis
Succeeded by Edward Everett

In office
1833 – 1835
Governor Levi Lincoln, Jr. (1833-1834)
John Davis (1834-1835)
Preceded by Thomas L. Winthrop
Succeeded by George Hull

In office
1836
Preceded by Theodore Lyman
Succeeded by Samuel A. Eliot

Born April 29, 1784(1784-04-29)
Dorchester, Massachusetts
Died March 26, 1850 (aged 65)
Boston, Massachusetts
Political party Democratic-Republican
Whig

Samuel Turell Armstrong (April 29, 1784March 26, 1850) was a U.S. political figure. Born in 1784 in Dorchester, Massachusetts, he was a bookseller in Boston, and among other works published a stereotype edition of Scott's family Bible, which was widely circulated.

Orphaned at the age of thirteen, Samuel Armstrong attended public school and worked as a printer's apprentice in Dorchester, Massachusetts. He operated his own printing business and became a Deacon of the Old South Church, where he fortuitously discovered the original manuscript of the third volume of Governor John Winthrop's History of New England.

Mr. Armstrong entered politics as a Representative in Massachusetts General Court, serving in that body from 1822-1823 and in 1828-1829. He was elected Lieutenant Governor serving from 1833, until Governor John Davis' resignation to leave for the U.S. Senate in 1835. He served as the Governor of Massachusetts between 1835 and 1836.

Because Whig party leader, Daniel Webster supported Edward Everett for the governorship, when Armstrong ran for reelection he lost badly to both Everett and perennial gubernatorial candidate Marcus Morton. Armstrong continued in his successful printing business, being elected Mayor of Boston in 1836 and to the Massachusetts Senate in 1839

He died in 1850 in Boston, Massachusetts.

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Political offices
Preceded by
Theodore Lyman, Jr.
Mayor of Boston, Massachusetts
1836
Succeeded by
Samuel A. Eliot
Preceded by
Thomas L. Winthrop
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts
January 9, 1834January 13, 1836
Succeeded by
George Hull
Preceded by
John Davis
Acting Governor of Massachusetts
March 1, 1835January 13, 1836
Succeeded by
Edward Everett