Commencement1910.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Commencement1910.Pdf THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY BALTIMORE Conferring of Degrees At the Close of the Thirty-fourth Academic Year JUNE 14, 1910 IN THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC AT 4 P. M, Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation http://archive.org/details/commencement1910 ORDER OF EXERCISES Music i Prayer Ecverend 0. C. S. Wallace, D. D. Pastor of the First Baptist Church II Conferring of Degrees Bachelors of Arts, presented by Professor Griffin Masters of Arts, presented by Professor Bloomfield Doctors of Philosophy, presented by Professor Bloomfield Doctors of Medicine, presented by Professor Howell hi Music IV Address Count Johahh Hetnrtch von Bernstorff German Ambassador at Washington " Historical Development of the German Empire" v Music VI Announcements The President of the University VII Music Candidates for the Degree of Doctor of Medicine Mary Dayton Allen, of New York. Edward McPherson Armstrong, of Maryland. Moses Haven Baker, of Indiana. Henry Gray Barbour, of Connecticut. Emil Boehm, of Missouri. William Symington Bole, of Montana. Carl Ferdinand Bookwalter, of Illinois. Ethan Flagg Butler, of the District of Columbia. Walter Austin Calihan, of New York. Ross Stagg Carter, of California. Thomas Rodney Chambers, of Baltimore. Joseph Lynn Choate, of California. Claude Carr Cody, Jr., of Texas. Henry Theodore Collenberg, of Baltimore. Haskett Lynch Conner, of New Albany, Ind, Henry Nicholas Costello, of Connecticut. Walter Edward Dandy, of Missouri. Clinton Demas Deming, of Connecticut. Bernard Solomon Denzer, of New York. Thomas Alan Devan, of New Jersey. Baruch Mordecai Edlavitch, of Baltimore. Ralph Landis Engle, of Pennsylvania. Horace Burnett Fenton, of Oregon. Edgar Lorrington Gilcreest, of Texas. Hyman Ginsberg, of Florida. Lemuel Whittington Gorham, of New York. William Lawrence Grimes, of North Carolina. Crowell Clairinton Hall, Jr., of Maine. Runkle Fisher Hegeman, of New Jersey. Henry Gildersleeve Jarvis, of Connecticut. Albert Eugene Johann, of Missouri. Samuel Laban Ledbetter, Jr., of Alabama. Ralph Herman Major, of Missouri. Albert Francis Mattice, of Washington. Sidney Robotham Miller, of New Jersey. Dana Elbra Monroe, of Texas. Raymond Bartlett Morris, of New York. t Angus W ashburn Morrison, of Minnesota. Douglass Howell Morse, of California. James Craig Neel, of Ohio. William Bradford Newcomb, of Virginia. Firmadge King Nichols, of Baltimore. Samuel Timothy Nicholson, Jr., of North Carolina. WlLLEY HlGBY NORTON, of Ohio. Thomas Grover Orr, of Missouri. Jean Paul Pratt, of Ohio. Chesney Macaulay Ramage, of West Virginia. Robert Lewis Rhodes, of Georgia. Harry Hungate Robinson, of Washington. Walter Black Rogeks, of Pennsylvania. Alice Rohde, of Illinois. James Wendel Rosenfeld, of Oregon. Raymond Sanderson, of Florida. Raphael Eustace Semmes, Jr., of Tennessee. Herbert Milford Senseny, of Ohio. John William Sheetz, of Pennsylvania. Henry Augustus Stephenson, of Virginia. Howard Lester Taylor, of New York. William Lawson Thornton, of Alabama. Thomas Palmer Tredway, of Pennsylvania. Arthur de Talma Valk, of Maryland. Herbert Francis Vanorden, of Brazil. Clyde Emil Watson, of West Virginia. Helen Watson, of Massachusetts. Milton Weinberg, of South Carolina. Theodore Henry Wenning, of Ohio. Miley Barton Wesson, of Texas. James Harvey Whitcraft, of Ohio. Luke V. Zartman, of Ohio. (69) Candidates for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy David Simon Blondheim, of Baltimore. Oscar Ellis Bransky, of Baltimore. George William Brown, of Baltimore. William Henry Brown, of Virginia. William Mansfield Clark, of Connecticut. Arthur Howard Estabrook, of Massachusetts. Rogers Harrison Galt, Jr., of Virginia. Arthur Mathews Gates, of Connecticut. Benjamin Harrison Grave, of Indiana. Joseph Ellis Hodgson, of Virginia. Henry Royer Kreider, of Baltimore. Andrew Hoffman Krug of Baltimore. Thomas Albert Lewis, of Missouri. Homer PaysoxN Little, of Massachusetts. Sylvester Kline Loy, of Pennsylvania. Chester Newton Myers, of New York. Henry Clarence Robertson, Jr., of South Carolina. Joseph Eugene Rowe, of Maryland. Karl Singewald, of Baltimore. Edward Raymond Turner, of Baltimore. Anthony Pelzer Wagener, of South Carolina. George Frederic White, of Massachusetts. Charles Branch Wilson, of Massachusetts. (23) Candidates for the Degree of Master of Arts Frank Gottlob Breyer, of Baltimore. William Stuart Gorton, of Baltimore. John B. Lalime, of Montreal, Canada. (3) Candidates for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts* Otis Herbert Draper, of Maryland. Raymond Fon Dersmith Gable, of Pennsylvania. John Mallory Holmes, of Baltimore. Carl Henry Levan, of Baltimore. Norman Clyde Marvel, of Maryland. Austin Ralph Middleton, of Baltimore. Francis Key Murray, of Maryland. Aaron Robinson, of Baltimore. Gilbert White Rosenthal, of Baltimore. George Ross Veazey, of Baltimore. August Vogeler, of Maryland. Benjamin Franklin Wallis, of Baltimore. Theodore Sinclair Will, of Baltimore. Alan Churchill Woods, of Baltimore. (14) *Three years ago the normal period of residence for undergraduates was changed from three to four years. The effect of this was to make the present year an interregnum. Students who entered the University in October, 1906, were, for the most part, graduated in 1909 ; those who entered in 1907 will be, for the most part, graduated in 1911. Hence the small number receiving the bachelor's degree this year. MARSHALS Professor E. B. Mathews Chief Marshal Aids Professor M. P. Brush Professor J. C. Ballagh Professor "W. W. Ford Dr. E. T. Abercrombie USHERS J. Fred Hunter, CJiicf Usher A ids Lingurn B. Bobbitt Alfred C. Hatch Leo Brady John G. Huck James J. Corner, Jr. John G. Murray, Jr. James W. Easter George E. Pickering Edwin L. Frederick Benjamin Tappan John S. Fulton, Jr. Gabriel H. Todes Charles L. Warner RECEPTION TO THE GRADUATES The President and the Faculty will receive the graduates of the year and their friends in McCoy Hall at half-past eight o'clock. Special cards of invitation must be shown at the door on Druid Hill Avenue, between Eutaw and Howard Streets..
Recommended publications
  • Congressional Self-Discipline: the Power to Expel, to Exclude and to Punish
    Fordham Law Review Volume 41 Issue 1 Article 2 1972 Congressional Self-Discipline: The Power to Expel, to Exclude and to Punish Gerald T. McLaughlin Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/flr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Gerald T. McLaughlin, Congressional Self-Discipline: The Power to Expel, to Exclude and to Punish, 41 Fordham L. Rev. 43 (1972). Available at: https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/flr/vol41/iss1/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by FLASH: The Fordham Law Archive of Scholarship and History. It has been accepted for inclusion in Fordham Law Review by an authorized editor of FLASH: The Fordham Law Archive of Scholarship and History. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Congressional Self-Discipline: The Power to Expel, to Exclude and to Punish Cover Page Footnote Associate Professor of Law, Fordham University. Professor McLaughlin received his B.A. from Fordham University, and his LL.B from New York University, where he was Managing Editor of the Law Review. This article is available in Fordham Law Review: https://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/flr/vol41/iss1/2 CONGRESSIONAL SELF-DISCIPLINE: THE POWER TO EXPEL, TO EXCLUDE AND TO PUNISH GERALD T. McLAUGHLIN* R ECENT events have again focused attention on Congress' power to discipline its members for personal misconduct. On April 19, 1972, the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct1 recommended that Texas Representative John Dowdy be stripped of his right to vote on the floor of the House or in committee as a result of his conviction for bribery and perjury.2 On that same day, two Senators argued before the Supreme Court that the Constitution forbids the executive branch from investigating the official conduct of a member of Congress, and delegates all responsibil- ity for punishing members' wrongdoing to each house of Congress.3 Finally, on June 29, 1972, a Supreme Court majority in United States v.
    [Show full text]
  • Expulsion and Censure Actions Taken by the Full Senate Against Members
    Order Code 93-875 Expulsion and Censure Actions Taken by the Full Senate Against Members Updated November 12, 2008 Jack Maskell Legislative Attorney American Law Division Expulsion and Censure Actions Taken by the Full Senate Against Members Summary The authority of the United States Senate (as well as of the House) to establish the rules for its own proceedings, to “punish” its Members for misconduct, and to expel a Member by a vote of two-thirds of Members present and voting, is provided in the Constitution at Article I, Section 5, clause 2. This express grant of authority for the Senate to expel a Senator is, on its face, unlimited — save for the requirement of a two-thirds majority. In the context of what the Supreme Court has characterized as, in effect, an “unbridled discretion” of the body, expulsions in the Senate, as well as the House, have historically been reserved for cases of the most serious misconduct: disloyalty to the government or abuses of one’s official position. The Senate has actually expelled only 15 Members — 14 of those during the Civil War period for disloyalty to the Union (one of these expulsions was subsequently revoked by the Senate), and the other Senator during the late 1700s for disloyal conduct. The House of Representatives has expelled only five Members in its history, three during the Civil War period, one in 1980, and another in 2002, after convictions for bribery and corruption offenses related to official congressional duties. In the Senate, as well as in the House, however, other Members for whom expulsion was recommended have resigned from office prior to official, formal action by the institution.
    [Show full text]
  • K:\Fm Andrew\21 to 30\27.Xml
    TWENTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1841, TO MARCH 3, 1843 FIRST SESSION—May 31, 1841, to September 13, 1841 SECOND SESSION—December 6, 1841, to August 31, 1842 THIRD SESSION—December 5, 1842, to March 3, 1843 SPECIAL SESSION OF THE SENATE—March 4, 1841, to March 15, 1841 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—JOHN TYLER, 1 of Virginia PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—WILLIAM R. KING, 2 of Alabama; SAMUEL L. SOUTHARD, 3 of New Jersey; WILLIE P. MANGUM, 4 of North Carolina SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—ASBURY DICKENS, 5 of North Carolina SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—STEPHEN HAIGHT, of New York; EDWARD DYER, 6 of Maryland SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JOHN WHITE, 7 of Kentucky CLERK OF THE HOUSE—HUGH A. GARLAND, of Virginia; MATTHEW ST. CLAIR CLARKE, 8 of Pennsylvania SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—RODERICK DORSEY, of Maryland; ELEAZOR M. TOWNSEND, 9 of Connecticut DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—JOSEPH FOLLANSBEE, of Massachusetts ALABAMA Jabez W. Huntington, Norwich John Macpherson Berrien, Savannah SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE REPRESENTATIVES 12 William R. King, Selma Joseph Trumbull, Hartford Julius C. Alford, Lagrange 10 13 Clement C. Clay, Huntsville William W. Boardman, New Haven Edward J. Black, Jacksonboro Arthur P. Bagby, 11 Tuscaloosa William C. Dawson, 14 Greensboro Thomas W. Williams, New London 15 REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE Thomas B. Osborne, Fairfield Walter T. Colquitt, Columbus Reuben Chapman, Somerville Eugenius A. Nisbet, 16 Macon Truman Smith, Litchfield 17 George S. Houston, Athens John H. Brockway, Ellington Mark A. Cooper, Columbus Dixon H. Lewis, Lowndesboro Thomas F.
    [Show full text]
  • Mr. Justice Stanton by James W
    At Sidebar Mr. Justice Stanton by James W. Satola I love U.S. Supreme Court history. Sometimes, the more arcane the better. So, for my At Sidebar con- tribution, I want to share a little bit of what I love.1 Perhaps calling to mind the well-known story behind Marbury v. Madison, here is a lesser-known story of a presidential commission not delivered on time (though in this case, it was not anyone’s fault). The story of Mr. Justice Edwin M. Stanton.2 James W. Satola is an As one walks through the Grand Concourse of attorney in Cleveland, Ohio. From 2010 to the Ohio Supreme Court building in Columbus, Ohio 2016, he served as (officially, the Thomas J. Moyer Ohio Judicial Center, an FBA Circuit Vice which had a first life as the “Ohio Departments Build- President for the Sixth ing,” opening in 1933, then restored and reopened as Circuit, and from 2002 the home of the Ohio Supreme Court in 2004), one’s to 2003, he was Presi- dent of the FBA Northern eye is drawn to nine large bronze plaques mounted District of Ohio Chapter. on the East Wall, each showcasing one of the U.S. © 2017 James W. Satola. Supreme Court justices named from Ohio.3 This story All rights reserved. is about the fourth plaque in that series, under which reads in brass type on the marble wall, “Edwin Mc- Masters Stanton, Justice of the United States Supreme Court, 1869-1869.” Justice Stanton? One finds no mention of “Justice Stanton” among the lists of the 113 men and women who have served on the Supreme Court of the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • The Politics of Early Justice, Federal Judicial Selection, 1789-1861
    University of North Carolina School of Law Carolina Law Scholarship Repository Faculty Publications Faculty Scholarship 2015 The olitP ics of Early Justice, Federal Judicial Selection, 1789-1861 Michael J. Gerhardt University of North Carolina School of Law, [email protected] Michael Ashley Stein Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.law.unc.edu/faculty_publications Part of the Law Commons Publication: Iowa Law Review This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at Carolina Law Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of Carolina Law Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A4_GERHARDTSTEIN.DOCX (DO NOT DELETE) 12/8/2014 9:41 AM The Politics of Early Justice: Federal Judicial Selection, 1789–1861 Michael J. Gerhardt & Michael Ashley Stein I. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................. 552 II. AN OVERVIEW OF EARLY FEDERAL JUDICIAL SELECTION............... 555 III. JUDICIAL NOMINATIONS FROM 1789 TO 1861 ............................. 564 A. GEORGE WASHINGTON AND JOHN ADAMS, 1789–1801 ............ 564 B. THOMAS JEFFERSON, JAMES MADISON, AND JAMES MONROE, 1801–1825 ........................................................................... 572 C. JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, 1825–1829 ......................................... 576 D. ANDREW JACKSON AND MARTIN VAN BUREN, 1829–1841 ........ 581 E. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON AND JOHN TYLER,
    [Show full text]
  • CHAIRMEN of SENATE STANDING COMMITTEES [Table 5-3] 1789–Present
    CHAIRMEN OF SENATE STANDING COMMITTEES [Table 5-3] 1789–present INTRODUCTION The following is a list of chairmen of all standing Senate committees, as well as the chairmen of select and joint committees that were precursors to Senate committees. (Other special and select committees of the twentieth century appear in Table 5-4.) Current standing committees are highlighted in yellow. The names of chairmen were taken from the Congressional Directory from 1816–1991. Four standing committees were founded before 1816. They were the Joint Committee on ENROLLED BILLS (established 1789), the joint Committee on the LIBRARY (established 1806), the Committee to AUDIT AND CONTROL THE CONTINGENT EXPENSES OF THE SENATE (established 1807), and the Committee on ENGROSSED BILLS (established 1810). The names of the chairmen of these committees for the years before 1816 were taken from the Annals of Congress. This list also enumerates the dates of establishment and termination of each committee. These dates were taken from Walter Stubbs, Congressional Committees, 1789–1982: A Checklist (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1985). There were eleven committees for which the dates of existence listed in Congressional Committees, 1789–1982 did not match the dates the committees were listed in the Congressional Directory. The committees are: ENGROSSED BILLS, ENROLLED BILLS, EXAMINE THE SEVERAL BRANCHES OF THE CIVIL SERVICE, Joint Committee on the LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, LIBRARY, PENSIONS, PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS, RETRENCHMENT, REVOLUTIONARY CLAIMS, ROADS AND CANALS, and the Select Committee to Revise the RULES of the Senate. For these committees, the dates are listed according to Congressional Committees, 1789– 1982, with a note next to the dates detailing the discrepancy.
    [Show full text]
  • Arthur Tappan
    ARTHUR TAPPAN Lewis Tappan and Arthur Tappan were descendants of Benjamin Franklin (which is perhaps why their father, and another brother, happened to be named Benjamin Tappan). Arthur received a common-school education and then served a 7- year apprenticeship in the hardware business in Boston, before establishing himself in Portland, Maine, and subsequently in Montreal, Canada, where he would remain until the beginning of the war of 1812. In 1814 he would engage with his brother Lewis in importing British dry-goods into New-York City, and after that partnership was dissolved he successfully continued the business alone. He was known for his public spirit and philanthropy. He was a founder of the American tract society, the largest donor for the erection of its 1st building, and was identified with many charitable and religious bodies. He was a founder of Oberlin College, also erecting Tappan Hall there, and endowed Lane Seminary in Cincinnati, and a professorship at Auburn Theological Seminary. With his brother Lewis he founded the New-York Journal of Commerce in 1828, and established The Emancipator in 1833, paying the salary of the editor and all the expenses of its publication. He was an ardent abolitionist, and as the interest in the anti-slavery cause deepened he formed, at his own rooms, the nucleus of the New-York antislavery society, which was publicly organized under his presidency at Clinton Hall on October 2, 1833. He was also president of the American Anti-Slavery Society, to which for several years he contributed $1,000 per month, but withdrew in 1840 on account of the aggressive spirit that many members manifested toward the churches and the Union.
    [Show full text]
  • H. Doc. 108-222
    TWENTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1843, TO MARCH 3, 1845 FIRST SESSION—December 4, 1843, to June 17, 1844 SECOND SESSION—December 2, 1844, to March 3, 1845 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES 1 PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—WILLIE P. MANGUM, of North Carolina SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—ASBURY DICKINS, 2 of North Carolina SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—EDWARD DYER, of Maryland SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JOHN W. JONES, 3 of Virginia CLERK OF THE HOUSE—MATTHEW ST. CLAIR CLARKE, of Pennsylvania; CALEB J. MCNULTY, 4 of Ohio; BENJAMIN B. FRENCH, 5 of New Hampshire SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—ELEAZOR M. TOWNSEND, of Connecticut; NEWTON LANE, 6 of Kentucky DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—JESSE E. DOW, of Connecticut ALABAMA CONNECTICUT John B. Lamar, 13 Macon 14 SENATORS Absalom H. Chappell, Macon SENATORS Howell Cobb, Athens William R. King, 7 Selma Jabez W. Huntington, Norwich Hugh A. Haralson, Lagrange Dixon H. Lewis, 8 Lowndesboro John M. Niles, Hartford William H. Stiles, Cassville Arthur P. Bagby, Tuscaloosa REPRESENTATIVES John H. Lumpkin, Rome Thomas H. Seymour, Hartford John Millen, 15 Savannah REPRESENTATIVES John Stewart, Middle Haddam Duncan L. Clinch, 16 St. Marys James Dellet, Clairborne George S. Catlin, Windham Mark A. Cooper, 17 Columbus James E. Belser, Montgomery Samuel Simons, Bridgeport Alexander H. Stephens, 18 9 Dixon H. Lewis, Lowndesboro Crawfordville William L. Yancey, 10 Wetumpka DELAWARE William W. Payne, Cainesville SENATORS ILLINOIS George S. Houston, Athens SENATORS Reuben Chapman, Somerville Richard H. Bayard, Wilmington Thomas Clayton, New Castle Samuel McRoberts, 19 Danville Felix G.
    [Show full text]
  • Thomas Worthington Father of Ohio Statehood
    THOMAS WORTHINGTON FATHER OF OHIO STATEHOOD Thomas Worthington Father of Ohio Statehood BY ALFRED BYRON SEARS Ohio State University Press Columbus Illustration on p. ii courtesy of the Ohio Historical Society. Copyright © 1998 by The Ohio State University. All rights reserved. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Sears, Alfred Byron, 1900­ Thomas Worthington : father of Ohio statehood / by Alfred Byron Sears. p. cm. Originally published : Columbus ; Ohio State University Press for the Ohio Historical Society, [1958] Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8142-0745-6 (pb : alk. paper) 1. Politicians—Ohio—Biography. 2. Ohio—Politics and government— 1787-1865. I. Worthington, Thomas, 1773-1827. II. Title. F495.W73 1998 977.r03'092—dc21 [B] 97-51221 CIP Cover design by Gore Studio, Inc. Printed by Cushing-Malloy, Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan. The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. ANSI Z39.48-1992. 98765432 1 DEDICATED TO JAMES T. WORTHINGTON 1873-1949 ViRTUTE DiGNUS AVORUM PREFACE IN THE movement to secure Ohio's admission to the Union and in the framing of an enlightened and democratic constitution, which excluded slavery, banished executive tyranny, and safeguarded private and pub­ lic liberties in a comprehensive bill of rights, no one displayed greater leadership than Thomas Worthington. In a very real sense, Ohio is a monument to his memory. Yet his political services have never been adequately recognized, and no biography of him has hitherto appeared. Worthington was a dominant figure in early Ohio politics.
    [Show full text]
  • Daniel Feller
    Daniel Feller Professor of History Editor/Director, The Papers of Andrew Jackson Director, The Center for Jacksonian America Department of History, University of Tennessee 865-974-7077 915 Volunteer Boulevard, Knoxville, TN 37996-4065 [email protected] CAREER HISTORY University of Tennessee: Professor of History and Editor/Director of The Papers of Andrew Jackson, 2003- University of New Mexico: Assistant Professor to Professor, 1986-2003 The Papers of Andrew Jackson: Assistant Editor, 1983-1986 Northland College: Instructor to Assistant Professor, 1980-1983 EDUCATION University of Wisconsin-Madison: PhD, 1981; MA, 1974 Reed College: BA, 1972 PUBLICATIONS: AUTHORED BOOKS The Jacksonian Promise: America, 1815-1840 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995) The Public Lands in Jacksonian Politics (University of Wisconsin Press, 1984) EDITED BOOKS The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Vol. IX: 1831 (University of Tennessee Press, 2013) The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Vol.VIII: 1830 (University of Tennessee Press, 2010) The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Vol.VII: 1829 (University of Tennessee Press, 2007) Harriet Martineau's Retrospect of Western Travel (originally published 1838) - abridged with introduction, notes, & index (M. E. Sharpe, 2000) BOOK CHAPTERS “President Jackson’s Bank Veto” in Greil Marcus and Werner Sollors, eds., A New Literary History of America (2009), 210-215 “Andrew Jackson versus the Senate” in Paul Finkelman and Donald R. Kennon, eds., Congress and the Emergence of Sectionalism: From the Missouri Compromise to the Age of Jackson (2008), 258-281 “James Agee’s ‘Mr. Lincoln’: The Historical Record” in Michael A. Lofaro, ed., Agee Agonistes (2007), 127-130 “The Bank War” in Julian E. Zelizer, ed., The American Congress (2004), 153-165 “Rediscovering Jacksonian America” in Melvyn Stokes, ed., The State of U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Benjamin Tappan, Jr
    BENJAMIN TAPPAN, JR. After receiving a public-school education, Benjamin Tappan, Jr. was apprenticed to learn copperplate engraving and printing, and devoted some attention to portrait painting. Subsequently he studied law, was admitted to the bar, and began practice in Steubenville, Ohio in 1799. In 1803 he was elected to the legislature, and after the war of 1812, in which he served as aide to General William Wadsworth, he was appointed judge in one of the county courts, and for 7 years was presiding judge of the 5th Ohio circuit. In 1833 he was appointed by President Jackson as the United States judge for the district of Ohio. Being elected to the United States senate as a Democrat, he served from December 2, 1839, till March 3, 1845. He was an active leader of his party, but afterward joined in the free-soil movement at its inception. He was widely known for drollery and wit, and for decided antislavery sentiments. In 1831 Judge Tappan published CASES DECIDED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, WITH AN APPENDIX (Steubenville, Ohio). HDT WHAT? INDEX BENJAMIN TAPPAN, JR. BENJAMIN TAPPAN, JR. 1773 May 25, Tuesday: In Northampton, Massachusetts, Sarah Holmes Tappan gave birth to Benjamin Tappan, Jr. In 1793 he would come away from college with a bachelor’s degree in his pocket, Volt aire as his theologian, and with Thomas Paine’s THE RIGHTS OF MAN as his credo. –He would be the last son the Tappans would offer to any institution of higher education. He would study art for awhile with Gilbert Stuart and learn the dangers of alcohol, then become a lawyer in Connecticut, then become a merchant in Ohio, and a senator, and a judge.
    [Show full text]
  • 31 Objected to Latrobe's Rotunda, They Were Ignorant of the “Earliest Idea
    Fig. 6. Trumbull’s suggestion for how to hang his four Revolutionary War paintings in the Rotunda appeared in a letter he wrote to Latrobe on 25 September 1817. objected to Latrobe’s Rotunda, they were ignorant of the written description. Deleting so many exterior columns “earliest idea of the Capitol as projected by Major [Peter and arches, not to mention the staircase raised on mas- Charles] L’Enfant, drawn by Dr. [William] Thornton, sive arches, would be a great saving in public money. and adopted by General Washington.”7 Trumbull knew that Latrobe’s grand but expensive Mangin and McComb’s much-admired two-story architectural gestures were a critical issue with Monroe vestibule rotunda for the New York City Hall (1803- and several Members of Congress. Bulfinch intended 1812) was Trumbull’s architectural starting point for to avoid undue expenses. Trumbull believed he was his Capitol redesign (fig. 7). Much of his six-page letter providing an economical solution to complete the to Bulfinch described how he fundamentally rethought center building, but it was also one that would leave Latrobe’s rotunda and crypt in order to provide ideal his architectural mark on the Capitol. History has conditions for the approach and display of his four determined that Latrobe was a greater architect than Revolutionary War paintings. The letter is also key to Bulfinch; Trumbull may well have felt the same as he understanding that Busby’s etchings actually reflected pushed the Bostonian to adopt a spatially exciting center Trumbull’s thinking, not an alternative design by Bul- building closer to Latrobe’s aesthetic ethos than Bulfinch’s finch for completing the Capitol as Brown and subse- attachment to elegantly decorated surfaces.9 quent scholars supposed..8 Trumbull proposed entering the Rotunda at ground Trumbull’s response to Bulfinch contained three level via “a hall forty feet by twenty, with apartments explanatory drawings, each described in detail in his for doorkeepers adjoining—to open a passage through text.
    [Show full text]