Harold Eugene Edgerton | Nash Edgerton | Elisha Cuthbert | Elisha Warfield | Elisha Hopkins House | Joel Edgerton | Elisha Whittlesey | Elisha Mills Huntington | Elisha ben Abuyah | Elisha Smith Robinson | Elisha Gray | Elisha Ben Yitzhak | Edgerton L. "Bubba" Henry | Thomas Elisha Hogg | Michael Edward Edgerton | Francis Elisha Baker | Elisha Phelps | Elisha P. Ferry | Elisha Perkins | Elisha M. Pease | Elisha Johnson | Elisha Hunt Allen | Elisha Cook, Jr. | Elisha Boyd | Edgerton, Wisconsin | Edgerton's | Edgerton, Ohio | "Doc" Edgerton |
He was appointed U.S. Senator from Minnesota as a Republican, and served from March 12, 1881 to October 30, 1881 in the 47th congress.
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By January 1864 he had risen to the rank of Colonel of the 67th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops.
Originally called Fulton Station, Edgerton was named after a 19th-century businessman, Elisha W. Edgerton.
A former president of the Asheville, North Carolina chapter of the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), he is on the board of the Southern Legal Resource Center.
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By 2000, Edgerton was appointed the chairman of the board of directors of the Southern Legal Resource Center, headed by Kirk Lyons, who has defended Confederates in court.
Edgerton also served as president of the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad and the Ohio Railroad, which were constructed to connect major cities of the Midwest, especially the booming industrial city of Chicago, through which many natural resources flowed to the East.
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In 1854 he became a member of the board of directors for the Fort Wayne and Chicago Railroad, and later was selected as its president.
The three men, Edgerton, Hawkins, and Kelly are depicted in a painting, Three Medals of Honor by artist Don Troiani.
In 1934, high-speed photographer "Doc" Edgerton took the now-classic photograph "Wes Fesler Kicking a Football."