Spokane Pictorial and Biographical 1912

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Spokane Pictorial and Biographical 1912 "**%. i Z'^t • F r" i * If f 4 * * 4 GENEALOGY COLLECTION SPOKANE And The Spokane Country pictorial and biographical De Luxe Supplement VOLUME I 1912 THE S. J. CLARKE PUBLISHING COMPANY SPOKANE CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA 1411104 iti.fa*. <§rafmm ^Barclay ©enms ONTINUOUS progress has characterized the career of Graham Barclay Dennis. His intellect early grasped the eternal truth, that industry wins, and in- dustry became the beacon light of his life. What- ever he has undertaken has found him determined in execution and watchful of all opportunities pointing to legitimate success, and today he is prominently connected with most important corporation and business interests, being numbered among Spokane's capitalists. He was born in London, England, June 1, 1855, his parents being Mendenhall John and Sophia Den- nis. His father, also a native of London, was a man of most liberal education and scholarly attainments, having been graduated from Oxford and Heidelberg Universities. He was a linguist of notable powers and his life was largely devoted to the work of the Presby- terian ministry. His wife was German descent and during the early boyhood of their son Graham, they came with their family to the United States, first to Boston, Massachusetts, and finally settling in Cincinnati, Ohio. Graham B. Dennis pursued his education in the public schools of the latter city until he reached the age of fourteen years, when he began learning the more difficult lessons in the school of experience. He was employed in both Cincinnati and in Dayton, Ohio, but a brief period sufficed to indicate to him how valuable is education as a factor in success. He therefore resumed his studies, pursuing a course in the year 1873-4 at Bethany College in West Virginia. In 1875 he became city editor of the Dayton (Ohio) Daily Journal and after two years spent in that capacity, was made business manager of the paper, which he thus conducted for two years. During the succeeding six years he was associated with different business enter- prises in Dayton and brought his inventive genius into play in pro- ducing and successfully introducing an electrical postage-stamp can- celler. In the further development of his business affairs, he became the head of the firm of G. B. Dennis & Company, comprising the organization of stock companies, stocks and discounts, and at the same time he established, published and edited the Farmer's Home, 5 6 djraftam ffiarclap Bennig an agricultural newspaper. His identification with the northwest be- gan in May, 1885, at which time he arrived in Spokane, the same year becoming actively interested in real estate and mining, and in the publication of the Spokane Miner, a sixteen-page paper devoted to the mining interests of the northwest, which at that time were in their infancy. He likewise organized the Muscovite Mica Mining Company, in which he enlisted Chicago capital, to develop the great mica mines in Idaho. In 1887 he built in Spokane the first electric railway of the northwest, and the first west of Chicago, known as the Ross Park Street Railway Company, of which he was for two years the president. One of the largest enterprises with which he has been closely associated was the organization of the Old Dominion Mining & Milling Company for the development of properties in Stevens county, and of which company he is still the president. He has the ability that enables him to see the possibilities in a project of large proportions and to direct its interests in the best possible manner toward securing results desired. Upon the organization of the Northwestern Mining Association, on the 2d of October, 1895, he was chosen its president and continued in that position for several years. In the following year he was made its delegate to the parlia- ment of British Columbia at Victoria, and had the distinction of suc- cessfully opposing the proposed two per cent tax on the gross output of the British Columbia mines. In 1897 he was one of the committee appointed by the international mining congress to prepare a revision of the federal mining laws, and in that connection was instrumental in drafting the memorial to the United States congress. His mining interests have brought him into active association with various com- panies, invariably holding the position of president. In 1898 he was chosen president and treasurer of the Insurgent Gold Mining Com- pany of Republic, Washington, and still retains that position. Mr. Dennis has for many years been a director in the Exchange National Bank of Spokane, and president of the Warehouse & Realty Com- pany, a one million dollar corporation. While his private business interests have been extensive and of a most important character, Mr. Dennis has also been connected with various enterprises of a public or semi-public character, which have become valuable and significant features in the development and upbuilding of the northwest. From 1886 until 1888 he was a mem- ber of the city council of Spokane and aided in shaping its formative policy during that early period. In 1890 he became a member of the board of public education and served as chairman of its committee graflam ganjag Dennig 7 on buildings, constructing the first high school and five district school buildings in Spokane. In the same year, he became the organizer and first vice president of the Spokane Industrial Exposition, which did much to stimulate trade and business conditions in this part of the Inland Empire. For a number of years, he served as one of the trustees and as a member of the executive committee and treasurer of the Jenkins University. The foresight and untiring efforts of Mr. Dennis resulted, in 1902, through him as the author, in the for- mation of the Publicity Committee, an important organization com- prising the representative citizens of Spokane. Its work has been extensive in making known world-wide, through the daily press and magazines, the resources and advantages of Spokane and the Inland Empire, the expense of exploiting the resources of the country amounting to forty thousand dollars a year. Mr. Dennis' firm faith in the country and its future constitutes his inspiration for the work in which he has been engaged in spreading broadcast a knowledge of the country and promoting specific interests and projects which have had important bearing upon its material growth and progress. On the 20th of May, 1879, Mr. Dennis was united in marriage to Miss Hester L. Bradley, a daughter of Captain John Bradley, and to them have been born a son and two daughters: Howard B. who, married Josephine Wilhelm ; Essie Mernie, the wife of Edward R. Dickson; and Julia B., the wife of Roy C. Lammers, by whom she has one child, Graham Dennis Lammers. While most important and extensive business and public connec- tions have claimed the attention of Mr. Dennis, yet it is not as a financial success that his character appeals most to those who have known, and still know him; nor is it his genial and warm-hearted man- ner that has earned him enduring friendships. It is his broad- minded, public spirit, his fearless initiative in undertaking public work and his indomitable energy in carrying worthy projects to a successful culmination, that command the deep regard of his fellow citizens. Among his public acts were liberal subscriptions to various important enterprises—bonuses to secure projected railways, contri- butions for parks, hospitals, schools. And he was not a subscriber alone, but a leader and coworker in advancing worthy movements, giving of his time and brain, as well as of his financial resources, to make for a greater city and a grander commonwealth. His unfail- ing generosity, his zeal for work and his executive ability have en- tailed on him endless service as chairman of committees for public purposes, and have brought him honors the more dignified because conferred on him, by whom preferment has never been sought. 8 Urafjam ^Barclay Bennig The most recent, and the crowning honor of his lifetime, was ten- dered him on September 26, 1906, on the occasion of his election by acclamation to the distinction of the first presidency of the Pacific Northwest Development League, a public enterprise conceived by the representative men of four sovereign states, to promote their common interests. The spirit that has characterized the entire career of Mr. Dennis has considered first, good citizenship; thereafter, reasonable concern for private interest. And only too often the private interests have suffered, to promote the common weal. Such a character is more than a good citizen; he is a public benefactor—a type that free Amer- ica, perhaps, has developed in more generous plenty than any other country. 7?r^ i/y? fames Mtttk #lober )0 HISTORY of Spokane would be complete with- out extended reference to James Nettle Glover who N|H as the first permanent settler, (pj as the first merchant and as the promoter and supporter of many interests which in subsequent days have advanced the welfare and progress of the city well deserves to be known as "the father of Spokane." His life history in detail would prove as interesting as any wrought by the imagination of a writer of fiction. It would be the story of travel through the primeval forests, of dif- ficulties and dangers encountered and of obstacles overcome. More- over, settlement in a new country always calls out the resourceful- ness of the individual in meeting existing conditions. Mr. Glover was at all times ready for any emergency and on more than one occasion his quick wit and keen insight enabled him to master what seemed a difficult situation.
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