H. Doc. 108-222

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

H. Doc. 108-222 FIFTY-FIFTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1897, TO MARCH 3, 1899 FIRST SESSION—March 15, 1897, to July 24, 1897 SECOND SESSION—December 6, 1897, to July 8, 1898 THIRD SESSION—December 5, 1898, to March 3, 1899 SPECIAL SESSION OF THE SENATE—March 4, 1897, to March 10, 1897 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—GARRET A. HOBART, of New Jersey PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—WILLIAM P. FRYE, of Maine SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—WILLIAM R. COX, of North Carolina SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—RICHARD J. BRIGHT, of Indiana SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—THOMAS B. REED, 1 of Maine CLERK OF THE HOUSE—ALEXANDER MCDOWELL, 2 of Pennsylvania SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—BENJAMIN F. RUSSELL, of Missouri DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—WILLIAM J. GLENN, of New York POSTMASTER OF THE HOUSE—J. C. MCELROY ALABAMA Thomas C. McRae, Prescott CONNECTICUT William L. Terry, Little Rock SENATORS SENATORS Hugh A. Dinsmore, Fayetteville John T. Morgan, Selma Stephen Brundidge, Searcy Orville H. Platt, Meriden Edmund W. Pettus, Selma Joseph R. Hawley, Hartford REPRESENTATIVES CALIFORNIA REPRESENTATIVES George W. Taylor, Demopolis SENATORS E. Stevens Henry, Rockville Jesse F. Stallings, 3 Greenville Stephen M. White, Los Angeles Nehemiah D. Sperry, New Haven Henry D. Clayton, 4 Eufaula George C. Perkins, Oakland Charles A. Russell, Killingly 5 T. S. Plowman, Talladega REPRESENTATIVES Ebenezer J. Hill, Norwalk 6 William F. Aldrich, Aldrich John A. Barham, Santa Rosa Willis Brewer, Hayneville Marion De Vries, Stockton DELAWARE John H. Bankhead, Fayette Samuel G. Hilborn, Oakland SENATORS Milford W. Howard, Fort Payne James G. Maguire, San Francisco George Gray, Wilmington Joseph Wheeler, Wheeler Eugene F. Loud, San Francisco Richard R. Kenney, Dover Oscar W. Underwood, 7 C. A. Barlow, San Luis Obispo REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Birmingham C. H. Castle, Merced Levin Irving Handy, 8 Newark ARKANSAS COLORADO SENATORS SENATORS FLORIDA James K. Jones, Washington Henry M. Teller, Central City SENATORS James H. Berry, Bentonville Edward O. Wolcott, Denver Samuel Pasco, Monticello 9 REPRESENTATIVES REPRESENTATIVES Stephen R. Mallory, Pensacola Philip D. McCulloch, Marianna John F. Shafroth, Denver REPRESENTATIVES John S. Little, Greenwood John C. Bell, Montrose Stephen M. Sparkman, Tampa 1 Reelected March 15, 1897. 5 Served until February 9, 1898; succeeded by William 9 Elected to fill vacancy in the term beginning March 2 Reelected March 15, 1897. F. Aldrich who contested his election. 4, 1897, and took his seat May 25, 1897; John A. Hender- 3 Election unsuccessfully contested by Thomas H. Clark. 6 Successfully contested the election of T. S. Plowman, son presented credentials as a Senator-designate on March 4 Election unsuccessfully contested by George L. Comer. and took his seat February 9, 1898. 16, 1897, which were referred to the Committee on Privi- 7 Election unsuccessfully contested by Grattan B. Crowe. leges and Elections; no further action was taken. 8 Election unsuccessfully contested by Jonathan S. Wil- lis. [ 244 ] FIFTY-FIFTH CONGRESS 245 Robert W. Davis, Palatka Charles W. Fairbanks, Walter Evans, Louisville Indianapolis Albert S. Berry, Newport GEORGIA REPRESENTATIVES Evan E. Settle, Owenton SENATORS James A. Hemenway, Boonville George M. Davison, Stanford Augustus O. Bacon, Macon Robert W. Miers, Bloomington Samuel J. Pugh, Vanceburg Alexander S. Clay, Marietta William T. Zenor, Corydon Thomas Y. Fitzpatrick, Prestonburg REPRESENTATIVES William S. Holman, 12 Aurora David G. Colson, Middlesboro Rufus E. Lester, Savannah Francis M. Griffith, 13 Vevay James M. Griggs, Dawson George W. Faris, Terre Haute LOUISIANA E. B. Lewis, Montezuma Henry U. Johnson, Richmond SENATORS William C. Adamson, Carrollton Jesse Overstreet, Indianapolis Donelson Caffery, Franklin Leonidas F. Livingston, Kings Charles L. Henry, Anderson Samuel D. McEnery, New Orleans Charles L. Bartlett, Macon Charles B. Landis, Delphi REPRESENTATIVES John W. Maddox, Rome E. D. Crumpacker, Valparaiso Adolph Meyer, 15 New Orleans William M. Howard, Lexington George W. Steele, Marion Robert C. Davey, New Orleans Farish Carter Tate, Jasper James M. Robinson, Fort Wayne Robert Broussard, New Iberia William H. Fleming, Augusta Lemuel W. Royse, Warsaw Henry W. Ogden, Benton William G. Brantley, Brunswick S. T. Baird, Bastrop IOWA Samuel M. Robertson, Baton Rouge IDAHO SENATORS SENATORS William B. Allison, Dubuque MAINE George L. Shoup, Boise John H. Gear, Burlington SENATORS Henry Heitfeld, Lewiston REPRESENTATIVES Eugene Hale, Ellsworth REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Samuel M. Clark, Keokuk William P. Frye, Lewiston James Gunn, Boise George M. Curtis, Clinton REPRESENTATIVES David B. Henderson, Dubuque Thomas B. Reed, Portland ILLINOIS Thomas Updegraff, McGregor Nelson Dingley, Jr., 16 Lewiston Robert G. Cousins, Tipton SENATORS Seth L. Milliken, 17 Belfast John F. Lacey, Oskaloosa Shelby M. Cullom, Springfield Edwin C. Burleigh, 18 Augusta John A. T. Hull, Des Moines William E. Mason, Chicago Charles A. Boutelle, Bangor REPRESENTATIVES William P. Hepburn, Clarinda Alva L. Hager, Greenfield MARYLAND James R. Mann, Chicago Jonathan P. Dolliver, Fort Dodge William Lorimer, Chicago George D. Perkins, Sioux City SENATORS Hugh R. Belknap, Chicago Arthur Pue Gorman, Laurel Daniel W. Mills, Chicago KANSAS George L. Wellington, Cumberland George E. White, Chicago SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES Edward D. Cooke, 10 Chicago Lucien Baker, Leavenworth Isaac A. Barber, Easton Henry S. Boutell, 11 Chicago William A. Harris, Linwood William B. Baker, Aberdeen George E. Foss, Chicago REPRESENTATIVES William S. Booze, Baltimore Albert J. Hopkins, Aurora William W. McIntire, Baltimore Robert R. Hitt, Mount Morris Case Broderick, Holton Sydney E. Mudd, La Plata George W. Prince, Galesburg M. S. Peters, Kansas City John McDonald, Rockville Walter Reeves, Streator E. R. Ridgely, Pittsburg Charles Curtis, Topeka Joseph G. Cannon, Danville MASSACHUSETTS Vespasian Warner, Clinton William D. Vincent, Clay Center Joseph V. Graff, Pekin N. B. McCormick, Phillipsburg SENATORS Benjamin F. Marsh, Warsaw Jerry Simpson, Medicine Lodge George F. Hoar, Worcester William H. Hinrichsen, At Large–Jeremiah D. Botkin, Henry Cabot Lodge, Nahant Jacksonville Winfield REPRESENTATIVES James A. Connolly, Springfield 19 KENTUCKY Ashley B. Wright, North Adams Thomas M. Jett, Hillsboro George P. Lawrence, 20 North Andrew J. Hunter, Paris SENATORS Adams James R. Campbell, McLeansboro William Lindsay, Frankfort Frederick H. Gillett, Springfield Jehu Baker, Belleville William J. Deboe, Marion Joseph H. Walker, Worcester George W. Smith, Murphysboro REPRESENTATIVES George W. Weymouth, Fitchburg Charles K. Wheeler, Paducah William S. Knox, Lawrence INDIANA John D. Clardy, Newstead William H. Moody, Haverhill SENATORS John S. Rhea, 14 Russellville William E. Barrett, Melrose David Turpie, Indianapolis David H. Smith, Hodgensville Samuel W. McCall, Winchester 10 Died June 24, 1897. 13 Elected to fill vacancy caused by death of William 17 Died April 18, 1897. 11 Elected to fill vacancy caused by death of Edward S. Holman, and took his seat December 6, 1897. 18 Elected to fill vacancy caused by death of Seth L. D. Cooke, and took his seat December 6, 1897. 14 Election unsuccessfully contested by W. Godfrey Milliken, and took his seat July 1, 1897. 12 Died April 22, 1897. Hunter. 19 Died August 14, 1897. 15 Election unsuccessfully contested by Joseph Gazin and 20 Elected to fill vacancy caused by death of Ashley B. Armand Romain. Wright, and took his seat December 6, 1897. 16 Died January 13, 1899, before the commencement of the Fifty-sixth Congress, to which he had been reelected. 246 Biographical Directory MASSACHUSETTS—Continued MISSOURI NEW JERSEY REPRESENTATIVES—Continued SENATORS SENATORS John F. Fitzgerald, Boston Francis M. Cockrell, Warrensburg James Smith, Jr., Newark Samuel J. Barrows, Boston George G. Vest, Kansas City William J. Sewell, Camden Charles F. Sprague, Brookline REPRESENTATIVES REPRESENTATIVES William C. Lovering, Taunton James T. Lloyd, 31 Shelbyville Henry C. Loudenslager, Paulsboro John Simpkins, 21 Yarmouth Robert N. Bodine, Paris John J. Gardner, Atlantic City William S. Greene, 22 Fall River Alexander M. Dockery, Gallatin Benjamin F. Howell, New Charles F. Cochran, St. Joseph Brunswick MICHIGAN William S. Cowherd, Kansas City Mahlon Pitney, 32 Morristown SENATORS David A. De Armond, Butler James F. Stewart, Paterson James McMillan, Detroit James Cooney, Marshall Richard W. Parker, Newark Julius C. Burrows, Kalamazoo Richard P. Bland, Lebanon Thomas McEwan, Jr., Jersey City REPRESENTATIVES Champ Clark, Bowling Green Charles N. Fowler, Elizabeth John B. Corliss, Detroit Richard Bartholdt, St. Louis George Spalding, Monroe Charles F. Joy, St. Louis NEW YORK Albert M. Todd, Kalamazoo Charles E. Pearce, St. Louis SENATORS Edward L. Hamilton, Niles Edward A. Robb, Perryville Edward Murphy, Jr., Troy William Alden Smith, Grand Willard D. Vandiver, Cape Thomas C. Platt, Owego Girardeau Rapids REPRESENTATIVES M. E. Benton, Neosho Samuel W. Smith, Pontiac Joseph M. Belford, Riverhead Horace G. Snover, Port Austin Denis M. Hurley, 33 Brooklyn Ferdinand D. Brucker, Saginaw MONTANA Francis H. Wilson, 34 Brooklyn Roswell P. Bishop, Ludington SENATORS Edmund H. Driggs, 35 Brooklyn Rousseau O. Crump, West Bay City Lee Mantle, Butte Israel F. Fischer, Brooklyn William S. Mesick, Mancelona Thomas H. Carter, Helena Charles G. Bennett, Brooklyn Carlos D. Shelden, Houghton REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE James R. Howe, Brooklyn MINNESOTA Charles S. Hartman, Bozeman John
Recommended publications
  • Kalamazoo College W.E. Upjohn Center for the Study Of
    This digital document was prepared for Kalamazoo College by the W.E. Upjohn Center for the Study of Geographical Change a division of Western Michigan University College of Arts and Sciences COPYRIGHT NOTICE This is a digital version of a Kalamazoo College yearbook. Kalamazoo College holds the copyright for both the paper and digital versions of this work. This digital version is copyright © 2009 Kalamazoo College. All rights reserved. You may use this work for your personal use or for fair use as defined by United States copyright law. Commercial use of this work is prohibited unless Kalamazoo College grants express permission. Address inquiries to: Kalamazoo College Archives 1200 Academy Street Kalamazoo, MI 49006 e-mail: [email protected] .Ko\aVV\ti.XOO Co\\ege. ~a\C\mazoo \ V'f\~c."'~g~V\ Bubbling over, Steaming hot­ Our Indian name t-Jolds likely as not: Kalamazoo Is a Boiling Pot, Where simmering waters Slowly rise, Then nearly burst The cauldron's sides ; And where, after all, The aim and dream Bubbling, all in a turmoil, unquestionably alive, Is sending the lukewarm the Kalamazoo Coll ege program in the academic Up in steam. year 1963-64 has resembled nothing so much as M. K. a great cauldron of simmering water coming to a rolling boil. Much of the credit for this new energy and activity belongs to President Weimer K. Hicks, to whom, in this tenth year of his asso­ ciation with the College, this edition of the Boiling Pot is dedicated. MCod~m \ cs ACt '\Vi ti ~s Dff Cam?V0 Sports 0e\\\OrS \Jr\der c\o~~J\\e,r\ Summer Summer employment for caption writers.
    [Show full text]
  • BEAN Eatepeaten
    The Weather To-Day: Generally Fair. SECTION 2— Pages 5 to 12. The News and Observer. VOL. XLVIII. NO. Id. RALEIGH. N. 0.. THURSDAY MO(USING, AUGUST 9.1900. PRICE FIVE CENTS. Leads all M©pth(Dar©lmaDaili®s inWews andGimilation Democrat who was associated with This year we have coming to us the might indicate that there were no regu- Ihe great leaders of the party in oth- people who now see. the dangerous lar troops engaged in the assault and er years, the Hon. David Turpie. It tendencies of the Republican party, that the rifle fire spoken of by Mr. Con- is although they did sec those ten- MESSAGE ger might be simply the sniping of dis- NOMINEES BRYAN the wish of every citizen of this SICK OF RANNA AND not A STERN Ktyte that this grand old man may dencies in 1896. We pointed out in gruntled irregulars who were engaged in yet be spared long- to serve bis coun- 1896 that if the Republican party guerilla tactics. try. You are in a city and in a State won it would have to give the trusts a Two dispatches were received during AND STEVENSON whose Democracy is true and is pre- HIS FREEBOOTERS chance to get back out of the people IS SENT Tfl CHINA Ahe day, one from Admiral Remey and pared to take its full part in the win- .the money they had contributed to the other from General Chaffee. Both I ning of the victory this year which the campaign fund. related to the fighting at Peit Sang.
    [Show full text]
  • The Historic Failure of the Chicago School of Antitrust Mark Glick
    Antitrust and Economic History: The Historic Failure of the Chicago School of Antitrust Mark Glick1 Working Paper No. 95 May 2019 ABSTRACT This paper presents an historical analysis of the antitrust laws. Its central contention is that the history of antitrust can only be understood in light of U.S. economic history and the succession of dominant economic policy regimes that punctuated that history. The antitrust laws and a subset of other related policies have historically focused on the negative consequences resulting from the rise, expansion, and dominance of big business. Antitrust specifically uses competition as its tool to address these problems. The paper traces the evolution of the emergence, growth and expansion of big business over six economic eras: the Gilded Age, the Progressive Era, the New Deal, the post-World War II Era, the 1970s, and the era of neoliberalism. It considers three policy regimes: laissez-faire during the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era, the New Deal, policy regime from the Depression through the early 1970s, and the neoliberal policy regime that dominates today and includes the Chicago School of antitrust. The principal conclusion of the paper is that the activist antitrust policies associated with the New Deal that existed from the late 1 Professor, Department of Economics, University of Utah. Email: [email protected]. I would like to thank members of the University of Utah Competition Group, Catherine Ruetschlin, Marshall Steinbaum, and Ted Tatos for their help and input. I also benefited from suggestions and guidance from Gérard Duménil’s 2019 seminar on economic history at the University of Utah.
    [Show full text]
  • Diary of William Owen from November 10, 1824 to April 20, 1825 Ed. by Joel W
    Library of Congress Diary of William Owen from November 10, 1824 to April 20, 1825 ed. by Joel W. Hiatt. INDIANA HISTORICAL SOCIETY PUBLICATIONS. VOLUME IV. NUMBER 1. DIARY OF WILLIAM OWEN From November 10, 1824, to April 20, 1825 EDITED BY JOEL W. HIATT LC INDIANAPOLIS: THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY. 1906. 601 25 Pat 14 F521 .I41 114026 08 iii PREFACE. 3 456 Part 2 8 The manuscript of this diary of William Owen has remained in the hands of his only daughter—formerly Mary Francis Owen, now Mrs. Joel W. Hiatt—for many years and its existence, save to a few, has been unknown. It is fragmentary in form. It is possibly the close of a journal which had been kept for years before. Its first sentence in the original is an incomplete one, showing that there was an antecedent portion. The picture of the times is so graphic than the Indiana Historical Society publishes it, on account of its historical value. Mr. Owen was 22 years old at the time of its composition. Diary of William Owen from November 10, 1824 to April 20, 1825 ed. by Joel W. Hiatt. http://www.loc.gov/resource/lhbtn.14024 Library of Congress William Owen was the second of four sons born to Robert and Ann Caroline Owen, of Scotland. Their names were Robert Dale, William, David Dale, and Richard. Three of them, Robert Dale, David Dale and Richard are known where ever the sun shines on the world of literature or science. William, who, because of habit or for his own amusement, wrote this diary is not known to fame.
    [Show full text]
  • John W. Foster, Soldier and Politician by DANIELW
    John W. Foster, Soldier and Politician By DANIELW. SNEPP Indiana’s sons have occupied a number of important gov- ernmental offices in Washington and diplomatic posts abroad. No Hoosier, however, has served his country longer or more faithfully than John Watson Foster. His public life spans a half century of diplomatic conflict in which the United States rose to the undisputed position of a world power. In the pres- ent generation, few, except students of diplomatic history and international law, have heard the name of John W. Foster or read his scholarly works on diplomacy and world peace. No published biography has yet recorded his achievements and no monument has been raised to perpetuate his memory. Nevertheless this obscure man was regarded by Ambassador James Bryce as “the most distinguished diplomat of our time,” and by Secretary of State Frelinghuysen as the most valuable man in foreign service in his day. Mr. Foster represented the United States upon more different missions of first rank than any other person, and was accordingly called by Chauncey M. DePew, “the handy-man of the State Department.” Andrew Johnson excepted, Foster served in one capacity or another under every president from Abraham Lincoln to Theodore Roosevelt. Diplomacy was to Foster not merely a calling, it was a profession. This article, however, is concerned only with that part of his life spent in Indiana. Foster’s English ancestry may be traced to the hardy tradespeople on his mother’s side and to the staunch yeoman class on his father’s side. The strain of the depression which followed on the heels of the Napoleonic Wars in England, fell most severely upon the middle class, great numbers of whom migrated to America.
    [Show full text]
  • Analysis of Timber Depredations in Montana to 1900
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1967 Analysis of timber depredations in Montana to 1900 Edward Bernie Butcher The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Butcher, Edward Bernie, "Analysis of timber depredations in Montana to 1900" (1967). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 4709. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/4709 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. / 7y AN ANALYSIS OF TIMBER DEPREDATIONS IN MONTANA TO 1900 by Edward Bernie Butcher B. S. Eastern Montana College, 1965 Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA 1967 Approved by: (fhe&d j Chairman, Board of Examiners Deaf, Graduate School JU N 1 9 1967 Date UMI Number: EP40173 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI EP40173 Published by ProQuest LLC (2014). Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author.
    [Show full text]
  • Congressional Record
    ... CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. FIRST SESSION. He is, therefore, to have and to hold the said office, together with all the SENATE. rights, :powers, and privileges thereunto belonging, or by law in anywise ap~ertaming, until the next meeting of the legislature of the Common wealth 1\IONDAY, December 4, 1899. of Pennsylvania, or until his successor shall be duly elected and qualified, i! he shall so long behave himself well. The first Monday of December being the day prescri.bed by the 'l'his appointment to compute from the day of the date hereof. Constitution of the United States for the annual meetmg of Con­ Given under my hand and the great seal of the State at the city of Harris­ burg, this 21st day of April, in the year of our Lord 1899, and of the Common­ gress, the first session of the Fifty-sixth Congress commenced wealth the one hundred and twenty·third. this day. [SEAL.] WILLIAM A. STONE. The Senate assembled in its Chamber at the Capitol. By the governor: The PRESIDENT pro "tempore (Mr. WILLIAM P. FRYE, a Sen­ W. W. GRIEST, ator from the State of Maine) took the chair and called the Secretary of the Commonwealth. Senate to order at 12 o'clock noon. Mr. COCKRELL. I move that the credential'! be referred to the Committee on Privileges and Elections. PRAYER. Mr. CHANDLER. '!'here isnoobjection to that course. I sub­ Rev. W. H. MILBURN, D. D., Chaplain to the Senate, offered mit a resolution which I ask may be referred at the same time.
    [Show full text]
  • Brief on Merits of Echols, Et
    No. 02-1676 and consolidated cases IN THE Supreme Court o f the United States FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION, et al. Appellants vs. SENATOR MITCH MCCONNELL, et al. Appellees. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Columbia Joint Brief on the Merits of Appellees Emily Echols and Barret Austin O’Brock, et al., Urging Affirmance of the Judgment that BCRA Section 318 is Unconstitutional JAMES BOPP, JR. JAY ALAN SEKULOW RICHARD E. COLESON Counsel of Record THOMAS J. MARZEN JAMES M. HENDERSON, SR. JAMES MADISON CENTER STUART J. ROTH FOR FREE SPEECH COLBY M. MAY BOPP, COLESON & BOSTROM JOEL H. THORNTON 1 South 6th Street WALTER M. WEBER Terre Haute, IN 47807-3510 AMERICANCENTER FOR LAW (812) 232-2434 & JUSTICE 201 Maryland Avenue NE Attorneys for Appellee Barrett Washington, DC 20002-5703 Austin O’Brock (202) 546-8890 Attorneys for Appellees Emily Echols, et al. APPELLEES’ COUNTER-STATEMENT OF QUESTION PRESENTED Prior to the effective date of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA), Pub. L. No. 107-155, 116 Stat. 81, minors had the right to contribute to the committees of political parties and to candidates for federal office, subject to the same limitations that also applied to persons who had attained their majority. Section 318 of BCRA completely prohibits donations to committees and to candidates by minors. In the view of these Appellees, all of whom are minors, the question presented is: Whether the three judge district court erred in its judgment that the absolute ban on donations by minors was unconstitutional? (i) PARTIES These Appellees incorporate by reference the listing of the parties set out in the Jurisdictional Statement of the FEC, et al., at II-IV.
    [Show full text]
  • Sidney M. Owen, an Editor in Politics / Carl H. Chrislock
    MR. CHRISLOCK, who is associate professor of history in Augsburg College at Minneapolis, was the winner of the Minnesota Historical Society's Solon J. Buck Award in 19-57, given for the best article published in this magazine. Like that below, his prize-winning contribution dealt with the politics of protest in Minnesota during the 1890s. SIDNEY M. OWEN An Editor in Politics CARL H. CHRISLOCK IN 1910, when Sidney Mark Owen died, he have not completely ignored him, but most seemed to have a secure place in Minnesota of their attention has been reserved for history. Ex-governor John Lind, who was Ignatius Donnelly. In the long run, Don­ not by habit an effusive man, said he re­ nelly's pre-eminence can no doubt be de­ garded "Mr. Owen ... as the one man fended. But this much can be claimed for who has contributed more to the uplifting Owen: within Minnesota he successfully of the people's ideals than any other man" challenged Donnelly's leadership of Alliance- he had encountered in public life. The first Populism. In the 1890s many who adhered of the famous Wallaces of Iowa attributed to this movement regarded Owen rather the strength of progressivism in Minnesota than his more famous rival as their authen­ "largely" to the "seed sown by Mr. Owen" tic leader. in the 1890s. The Minneota Mascot praised Thus justice, if there is such a thing in Owen's capabflities as editor of Farm, Stock the historiographic sense, would seem to re­ and Home in exalted terms, describing that quire a re-evaluation of Owen's significance.
    [Show full text]
  • Missouri State Archives Finding Aid 5.20
    Missouri State Archives Finding Aid 5.20 OFFICE OF SECRETARY OF STATE COMMISSIONS PARDONS, 1836- Abstract: Pardons (1836-2018), restorations of citizenship, and commutations for Missouri convicts. Extent: 66 cubic ft. (165 legal-size Hollinger boxes) Physical Description: Paper Location: MSA Stacks ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION Alternative Formats: Microfilm (S95-S123) of the Pardon Papers, 1837-1909, was made before additions, interfiles, and merging of the series. Most of the unmicrofilmed material will be found from 1854-1876 (pardon certificates and presidential pardons from an unprocessed box) and 1892-1909 (formerly restorations of citizenship). Also, stray records found in the Senior Reference Archivist’s office from 1836-1920 in Box 164 and interfiles (bulk 1860) from 2 Hollinger boxes found in the stacks, a portion of which are in Box 164. Access Restrictions: Applications or petitions listing the social security numbers of living people are confidential and must be provided to patrons in an alternative format. At the discretion of the Senior Reference Archivist, some records from the Board of Probation and Parole may be restricted per RSMo 549.500. Publication Restrictions: Copyright is in the public domain. Preferred Citation: [Name], [Date]; Pardons, 1836- ; Commissions; Office of Secretary of State, Record Group 5; Missouri State Archives, Jefferson City. Acquisition Information: Agency transfer. PARDONS Processing Information: Processing done by various staff members and completed by Mary Kay Coker on October 30, 2007. Combined the series Pardon Papers and Restorations of Citizenship because the latter, especially in later years, contained a large proportion of pardons. The two series were split at 1910 but a later addition overlapped from 1892 to 1909 and these records were left in their respective boxes but listed chronologically in the finding aid.
    [Show full text]
  • Populism and Politics: William Alfred Peffer and the People's Party
    University of Kentucky UKnowledge American Politics Political Science 1974 Populism and Politics: William Alfred Peffer and the People's Party Peter H. Argersinger University of Maryland Baltimore County Click here to let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Thanks to the University of Kentucky Libraries and the University Press of Kentucky, this book is freely available to current faculty, students, and staff at the University of Kentucky. Find other University of Kentucky Books at uknowledge.uky.edu/upk. For more information, please contact UKnowledge at [email protected]. Recommended Citation Argersinger, Peter H., "Populism and Politics: William Alfred Peffer and the People's Party" (1974). American Politics. 8. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_political_science_american_politics/8 POPULISM and POLITICS This page intentionally left blank Peter H. Argersinger POPULISM and POLITICS William Alfred Peffer and the People's Party The University Press of Kentucky ISBN: 978-0-8131-5108-3 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 73-86400 Copyright © 1974 by The University Press of Kentucky A statewide cooperative scholarly publishing agency serving Berea College, Centre College of Kentucky, Eastern Kentucky University, Georgetown College, Kentucky Historical Society, Kentucky State University, Morehead State University, Murray State University, Northern Kentucky State College, Transylvania University, University of Kentucky, University of Louisville, and Western Kentucky University- Editorial and Sales Offices: Lexington, Kentucky
    [Show full text]
  • To Enlarge the Machinery of Government Hoffer, Williamjames Hull
    To Enlarge the Machinery of Government Hoffer, Williamjames Hull Published by Johns Hopkins University Press Hoffer, Williamjames Hull. To Enlarge the Machinery of Government: Congressional Debates and the Growth of the American State, 1858–1891. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007. Project MUSE. doi:10.1353/book.3490. https://muse.jhu.edu/. For additional information about this book https://muse.jhu.edu/book/3490 [ Access provided at 25 Sep 2021 08:37 GMT with no institutional affiliation ] This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To Enlarge the Machinery of Government Reconfiguring American Political History Ronald P. Formisano, Paul Bourke, Donald DeBats, and Paula M. Baker Series Founders To Enlarge the Machinery of Government Congressional Debates and the Growth of the American State, 1858–1891 Williamjames Hull Hoffer The Johns Hopkins University Press Baltimore © 2007 The Johns Hopkins University Press All rights reserved. Published 2007 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper 987654321 The Johns Hopkins University Press 2715 North Charles Street Baltimore, Maryland 21218-4363 www.press.jhu.edu Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Hoffer, Williamjames Hull. To enlarge the machinery of government : congressional debates and the growth of the American state, 1858–1891 / Williamjames Hull Hoffer. p. cm. — (Reconfiguring American political history) Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn-13: 978-0-8018-8655-3 (hardcover : alk. paper) isbn-10: 0-8018-8655-4 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. United States—Politics and government—19th century. 2. Federal government—United States. 3. United States. Congress. 4. Debates and debating—United States.
    [Show full text]