Born in
Woonsocket, Rhode Island, Lovering moved with his parents to
Taunton, Massachusetts, in 1837. He attended the Cambridge High School and the Hopkins Classical School,
Cambridge, Massachusetts. He left school in 1859 for employment in his father's mill. During the
Civil War served as quartermaster of Engineers in the Second Massachusetts Brigade, consisting of the Second and Third Regiments. He engaged in cotton manufacturing in Taunton at the
Whittenton Mills. First president of the Taunton Street Railway. He served as president of the American Liability Insurance Co. He was interested in several other business enterprises. He served as president of the New England Cotton Manufacturers' Association (now the
National Textile Association) for two years. He served as member of the
Massachusetts Senate in 1874 and 1875. He served as delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1880. Presided at the Republican State convention in 1892. Lovering was elected as a
Republican to the
Fifty-fifth and to the six succeeding Congresses and served from March 4, 1897, until his death in
Atlanta, Georgia, February 4, 1910 of pneumonia. He was interred in
Mount Pleasant Cemetery,
Taunton, Massachusetts. His daughter, Frances, married
Charles Francis Adams III,
United States Secretary of the Navy under
Herbert Hoover and a member of the
Adams political family. ==See also==