John M. Sell

This article is about the Socialist housepainter and legislator from Milwaukee. For other people with similar names, see John Sell.

John M. Sell (October 9, 1862 September 1930) was a house painter, interior decorator and trade union activist from Milwaukee, Wisconsin who served one term as a Socialist member of the Wisconsin State Assembly.[1]

Background

Sell was born October 9, 1862, in Concord, Wisconsin He attended the Concord and Fifth Ward of Milwaukee public schools, and Hoffman's Business College in Milwaukee, after which he learned the house painting trade. He had been an interior decorator and a member of the Painter's Union for 19 years, had been a trustee for years, and was a member of the executive board, when elected to the Assembly.

Legislative service

Sell was elected in 1918, to represent the Thirteenth Milwaukee County district (the 13th Ward of the City of Milwaukee), receiving 1,057 votes to 958 for Democrat Leander J. Pierson (Dem.) and 677 for incumbent Republican Assemblyman Hugo Jeske. He was assigned to the standing committee on transportation.[2]

He ran for re-election in 1920, but was defeated by Pierson, who won 2894 votes to 2031 for Sell.[3]

Death

He died Milwaukee in September 1930 from injuries sustained in a fall, and was buried on September 22.[4]

References


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