After law school, Curtin began practicing law. He first entered politics during the
1840 election, campaigning for
Whig presidential candidate
William Henry Harrison. In 1855,
Pennsylvania governor James Pollock appointed Curtin Superintendent of Public Schools. Curtin was a strong supporter of President
Lincoln's policies in the
Civil War, and Curtin committed Pennsylvania to the war effort, Curtin organized the
Pennsylvania Reserves into combat units, and oversaw the construction of the first
Union military camp for training
militia. It opened in an agricultural school nearby
Harrisburg as
Camp Curtin on April 18, 1861, and more than 300,000 men were drilled there during 4 years. In the years that followed, Curtin became a close friend and confidant of Abraham Lincoln, visiting the White House several times in order to converse about the status of the war effort.
Ambassador to Russia After the Civil War, Curtin lost his party's
Senate nomination to
Simon Cameron, and was appointed
Ambassador to Russia by
President Ulysses S. Grant.
U.S. Representative Curtin later switched to the
Democratic Party, and served as a
U.S. Representative from 1881 until 1887. ==Personal life==