Stephen Booth Cushing (January 1812 – June 9, 1868) was an American lawyer and politician.
Early life
Cushing was born in Pawling in Dutchess County, New York in January 1812. He was the posthumous son of Milton Foster Cushing (1787–1811) and Frances "Fanny" (née Nicholas) Cushing (1788–1848) and grew up in Dover, New York.[1]
He was New York State Attorney General from 1856 to 1857, elected on the American Party ticket.[5] While he was Attorney General, he was the prosecutor in the trial of Emma Cunningham for the murder of Dr. Harvey Burdell, a prosperous dentist in New York City in 1857. The case is considered one of the most famous cases in the American Victorian-era.[6]
In 1836, he married Mary Woodcock (c. 1815–1868), a daughter of Cushing's former law teacher, Democratic-Republican U.S. Representative from New York, David Woodcock.[2] Mary's sister, Elizabeth Cornelia Woodcock, was married to Cushing's law partner, Benjamin G. Ferris.[9] Together, Stephen and Mary were the parents of:[10]
Charles Humphrey Cushing (1847–1917), who became a member of the Producers' Petroleum exchange.[12]
According to Cushing's Williams obituary, "there were few more popular orators in western New York, and as an after-dinner speaker he probably had no equal. Of a genial and enthusiastic nature few men ever enjoyed a wider degree of personal popularity."[1]