William Culkin


William Edgar Culkin was an American newspaper editor, historian, and educator. He was raised in New York, and later moved to Minnesota, where he served on the Minnesota Senate between 1895 and 1898 as a Republican.

Early life

William Edgar Culkin was born in Oswego, New York, in 1860, where his early schooling took place. He emigrated to Minnesota in 1880, and he taught there for two years while continuing his studies. Culkin read law and was allowed to practice law from 1882, initially in Waverly, a town in Wright County. He was married in 1886, and soon settled in Buffalo, Minnesota. He and his wife had a daughter, Margaret Culkin Banning, who became a best selling author.

Career

Culkin was elected three times as county attorney of Wright County, beginning in 1886. He belonged to the Republican Party. Culkin was elected to District 38 of the state senate representing Sherburne and Wright counties during the 29th and 30th State Legislative Sessions, which ran from January 1895 to January 1898. He defeated the Democratic and Populist party candidate, David Murdock. He served on several committees, and was chair of the Geological and Natural History Survey committee. In late 1897, he became the Registrar of the United States Land Office, in Duluth.

Later life and death

Culkin was an associate editor of the Duluth Herald Newspaper early in the twentieth century. He became known as a local historian following his government career, and in 1922 was made the first president of the St. Louis County Historical Society. He died in 1949.