Leicester King

Leicester King (born in Suffield, Connecticut, May 1, 1789 – September 19, 1856)[1] was a 19th-century businessman, judge, and state senator in the Ohio General Assembly.

Married to Julia Ann Huntington, he moved to Warren, Ohio in 1817, where he worked as a mercantilist until 1833.

After leaving the mercantile business, he devoted his time to the building of the Pennsylvania and Ohio Canal until being appointed associate judge of the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas.

In 1835, King, a staunch abolitionist, was elected to the Ohio Senate, where he served two terms, until 1839.

[2] King was nominated as Vice President on the Liberty Party ticket for the 1848 United States Presidential Election but declined the nomination.