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FIELD, Benjamin, politician, born in Dorset, Vt.; 12 June 1816; died in Albion, New York, in August 1876. He early settled in Albion, where he became a stonecutter and carver. Later he obtained contracts for building railroads, thereby acquiring wealth, and was associated with George M. Pullman in the construction of his railway sleeping cars. In 1854'5 he was elected to the New York state senate, and in 1867 was a member of the Constitutional convention. He was a prominent member of the Republican state committee, and was well known as a party manager, devoting the larger share of his time to the promotion of the interests of public men and the political organization of which he was a member.
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