Ralph Isaacs Ingersoll


Ralph Isaacs Ingersoll was a lawyer, politician, and diplomat who served as a member of the Connecticut House of Representatives, where he was Speaker of the House, a United States Representative from Connecticut for four consecutive terms from 1825 to 1833, and was the U.S. Minister to the Russian Empire under President James K. Polk in the late 1840s.

Early life

Ingersoll was born in New Haven, Connecticut on February 8, 1789. He was the son of Judge Jonathan Ingersoll and Grace Ingersoll. His father was a judge of the Supreme Court and Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut up until his death in 1823.
His maternal grandfather, and namesake, was Ralph Isaacs, Jr., a Yale educated merchant who was prominent in New Haven and Branford, and his paternal grandfather was Rev. Jonathan Ingersoll, chaplain for the Connecticut Troops during the French and Indian War who was the brother of Jared Ingersoll Sr., a British colonial official. His grand-uncle's son, Jared Ingersoll, served as Attorney General of Pennsylvania and was the father of fellow U.S. Representative, Charles Jared Ingersoll, and grandfather of his second cousin, author Edward Ingersoll. His cousin, Ralph Isaacs III, was the father of Mary Esther Malbone Isaacs, who married Chancellor and U.S. Senator Nathan Sanford in 1813.
He pursued classical studies, and was graduated from Yale College in 1808. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1810 and commenced practice in New Haven.

Career

Ingersoll was a member of the State house of representatives from 1820 until 1825 and served as speaker during the last two years. He was elected as an Adams candidate to the Nineteenth and Twentieth Congresses and reelected as an Anti-Jacksonian to the Twenty-first and Twenty-second Congresses, serving from March 4, 1825 until March 3, 1833. He was not a candidate for renomination in 1832.
He resumed the practice of law and was later appointed State's attorney for New Haven County in 1833. He declined the appointment as United States Senator tendered by Governor Henry W. Edwards upon the death of Senator Nathan Smith in 1835.
On August 8, 1846, he was appointed by Democratic President James K. Polk to serve as the sixteenth U.S. Minister to the Russian Empire. He presented his credentials in Russia on May 30, 1847 and served until he resigned and left his post on July 1, 1848. He again engaged in the practice of law and was Mayors of New Haven in 1851.

Personal life

In 1814, Ingersoll married Margaret Catharine Eleanora Van den Heuvel. Margaret was the daughter of Charlotte Augusta and Jan Cornelis Van den Heuvel, the former governor of the Dutch province of Demerara from 1765 to 1770 who later moved to New York. Her maternal grandfather was prominent New York landowner Charles Ward Apthorp and her siblings included younger sisters, Maria Eliza van den Heuvel, who married John Church Hamilton, and Susan Augusta Van den Heuvel, the mother of Charlotte Augusta Gibbes, wife of John Jacob Astor III, from her marriage to Thomas Stanyarne Gibbes II. Together, Ralph and Margaret were the parents of seven children:
Ingersoll died in New Haven on August 26, 1872 and was buried in Grove Street Cemetery.