Isaac Newton Coston (September 22, 1832 – January 10, 1910), often known as I. N. Coston, was an American politician who was a pioneer of the Idaho Territory.

Isaac N. Coston
Delegate to the Idaho Constitutional Convention
In office
July 4, 1889 – August 6, 1889
ConstituencyAda County
Member of the Idaho Territorial House of Representatives
In office
1882–1883
ConstituencyAda County
Member of the Idaho Territorial Council
In office
1870–1873
ConstituencyAda County
Personal details
Born(1832-09-22)September 22, 1832
Ithaca, New York, U.S.
DiedJanuary 10, 1910(1910-01-10) (aged 77)
Boise, Idaho, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)
Weltha Maynard
(m. 1865; died 1867)

Mary S. Drake
(m. 1872)
Children5
Professionfarmer, stock raiser, and politician
Signature
Coston Cabin, in Julia Davis Park, pictured in 2018.

Biography

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Coston was born on September 22, 1832, in Ithaca, New York. He attended Alfred University for a time before reading law with the firm of Dana, Beers & Howard in Ithaca. While he was admitted to the bar, he did not practice. He traveled extensively, and arrived in Walla Walla, Washington Territory, in 1862. He mined the Idaho Territory's Boise Basin in 1863 before returning East. He married Weltha Maynard in 1865 before returning to the Idaho Territory, moving to a ranch in Ada County, where he began his longterm profession of farming and stock raising. Weltha had one daughter with Coston before she died in 1867. He remarried in 1872, to Mary S. Drake, and they would have four daughters.[1]

He was elected by Ada County to the Idaho Territorial Council in 1870, and re-elected in 1872, when his fellow councilors elected him president of that body. He was later elected to the Idaho Territorial House of Representatives in 1882. He lost a race for territorial council in 1888 before being elected to represent Ada County as a delegate to the Idaho Constitutional Convention. He also spent fourteen years on the board of the Idaho Insane Asylum at Blackfoot.[2][1]

Coston suffered a debilitating stroke in 1903 and never fully recovered. He died on January 11, 1910, in Boise, Idaho.[1]

Coston Cabin, which Coston built along with his brothers-in-law in the 1860s, remains standing in Julia Davis Park.[3] Coston's papers were gifted to the Idaho Historical Society in 1960.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c "I. N. Coston Joins Vast Majority". The Idaho Statesman. January 12, 1910.
  2. ^ Curtis, George H.; Wells, Merle (1944). "The Political Founders of Idaho". Twenty-Seventh Biennial Report of the Secretary of State of Idaho. pp. 59–77.
  3. ^ "Tea Party in Historical Setting". The Idaho Statesman. September 28, 1969.
  4. ^ The National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections. 1970. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)