Mark Langdon Hill | |
State1: | Maine |
Term Start1: | March 4, 1821 |
Term End1: | March 3, 1823 |
Predecessor1: | District created |
Successor1: | Ebenezer Herrick |
State2: | Massachusetts |
Term Start2: | March 4, 1819 |
Term End2: | March 3, 1821 |
Predecessor2: | Benjamin Orr |
Successor2: | District eliminated until 1913[1] |
Birth Date: | 30 June 1772 |
Birth Place: | Biddeford, Province of Massachusetts Bay, British America |
Death Place: | Phippsburg, Maine, U.S. |
Party: | Democratic-Republican |
Occupation: | Merchant |
Mark Langdon Hill (June 30, 1772 - November 26, 1842) was United States Representative from Massachusetts and from Maine. He was born in Biddeford (then a part of the Province of Massachusetts Bay) on June 30, 1772. He attended the public schools, then became a merchant and shipbuilder in Phippsburg. He was an overseer and trustee of Bowdoin College. He is the nephew of John Langdon. New Hampshire governor, Senator and patriot.
Hill was elected a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, and served in the Massachusetts State Senate. He served as judge of the court of common pleas in 1810. He was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1816.[2] He was elected as a Democratic-Republican from Massachusetts to the Sixteenth Congress (March 4, 1819 – March 3, 1821). Hill and John Holmes were the two of the seven representatives from the district of Maine willing to vote for the Missouri compromise, which on a 90-87 vote allowed Maine to become a state at the cost of letting Missouri be a slave state. They were both strongly attacked in the Maine press for this compromise.
Hill was elected as a Democratic-Republican to the Seventeenth Congress from Maine after the state was admitted to the Union (March 4, 1821 - March 3, 1823). He was postmaster of Phippsburg 1819-1824. He was appointed as a collector of customs at Bath in 1824. Hill died in Phippsburg on November 26, 1842. His interment was in the churchyard of the Congregational Church in Phippsburg Center.