He became involved in politics when he was elected state secretary of the
Socialist Party of North Dakota in 1913, serving until 1916. In this position, he hired
flax farmer
Arthur C. Townley as a party organizer, whose efforts in the rural western part of the state laid the foundation of the
Nonpartisan League. Teigan became secretary of the National Nonpartisan League in 1916 and moved to
Minneapolis in 1917, serving in that position until 1923. He continued in newspaper work until 1932, when he was elected to the
Minnesota Senate where he served one term. Bill," an article by Teigan for the
Champion of Youth, published Summer 1937 In 1936, he was elected as a candidate of the
Minnesota Farmer Labor Party to the
75th congress. After one term, he failed to win reelection, and was also defeated in a 1940 bid to regain his seat. After leaving congress, he resumed newspaper and editorial work in Minneapolis, until his death on March 12, 1941. He is interred in
Hillside Cemetery in Minneapolis. The papers of Henry George Teigan are maintained by the
Minnesota Historical Society in
St. Paul, Minnesota. == References ==