Bushrod W. Lott
Bushrod Washington Lott was an American politician in the Minnesota Territory in Saint Paul, Minnesota, who served as United States Consul from 1862 to 1865. An active Democrat, Lott was elected Chief Clerk of the Minnesota Territorial House of Representatives and served as a member of that body in 1853 and 1856; he also was elected mayor of Saint Paul, Minnesota in 1852.
Early life
Bushrod W. Lott was born May 1, 1826, in Pemberton, New Jersey, to Dr. Charles Francis Lott and Edith Newbold Lamb Lott. Bushrod W. Lott's family moved to St. Louis, Missouri in 1837. Lott and two of his brothers were educated at St. Louis University and studied law in Quincy, Illinois.Political career
Bushrod W. Lott was admitted to the practice of law in 1847. His brother, Peter Lott, served in the Mexican War, served as Judge of Courts in Quincy, Illinois, and was appointed by his personal friend, President Abraham Lincoln as United States Consul to Tehuantepec, Mexico, where Peter Lott died. His brother, Charles F. Lott traveled over the California Trail as California Gold Rush pioneer, lawyer, and judge who helped form California's government, started the first Citrus Exchange in California, and served as a California State Senator).As one of the early pioneers of Saint Paul, Minnesota, in 1848, Bushrod W. Lott, accompanied Gen. Samuel Leech, who had been appointed Receiver of United States Land Office, St. Croix Falls, Wisconsin, where Bushrod W. Lott served as Clerk. In the fall of 1848, Lott settled in Saint Paul, Minnesota where he practiced law ; he was elected Justice of the Peace in 1851; and served as the third mayor of Saint Paul, Minn. from 1852 to 1854. In 1862, Bushrod Lott was appointed by President Lincoln to serve out his brother Peter Lott's term as U.S. Consul to Tehuantepec, Mexico, a post he held until 1865.