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Alexander Robey Shepherd

Alexander Robey Shepherd (January 30, 1835 – September 12, 1902), was one of the most controversial and influential civic leaders in the history of Washington, D.C., and one of the most powerful big-city political bosses of the Gilded Age. He was head of the DC Board of Public Works from 1871 to 1873 and Governor of the District of Columbia from 1873 to 1874. He is known, particularly in Washington, as "The Father of Modern Washington."

Alexander Robey Shepherd
Shepherd in 1874 when he was Governor of the District of Columbia
2nd Governor of the District of Columbia
In office
September 13, 1873 – June 20, 1874
Preceded byHenry D. Cooke
Succeeded byNone (office abolished)
William Dennison (as President of the Board of Commissioners)
Personal details
Born(1835-01-30)January 30, 1835
Washington, D.C., U.S.
DiedSeptember 12, 1902(1902-09-12) (aged 67)
Batopilas, Mexico
Resting placeRock Creek Cemetery
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Political partyRepublican

Early life and career edit

 
Mary Grice Young

Born in southwest Washington on January 30, 1835, Shepherd dropped out of school at 13 and took a job as a plumber's assistant. Eventually, he worked his way up to becoming the owner of the plumbing firm. He then invested the profits from that firm in real estate development, which made him a wealthy socialite and influential citizen of the city.[1] (One of his luxurious properties was Shepherd's Row, a set of rowhouses on Connecticut Avenue designed by Adolf Cluss;[2] Cluss would later be the star witness at Shepherd's congressional investigation hearings.)

Two days after the Battle of Fort Sumter that initiated the American Civil War, Shepherd and his brother each enlisted in the 3rd Battalion of the District of Columbia volunteers. The term of enlistment at that time was only three months, after which Shepherd was honorably discharged. On January 30, 1861, he was married to Mary Grice Young, with whom he raised seven children.[3] Her niece, Marie Grice Young, was the piano teacher of Theodore Roosevelt's children and a Titanic survivor.[4]

He was an early member of the Republican Party and a member of the Washington City Councils from 1861 to 1871, during which time he was an important voice for D.C. emancipation, then for suffrage for the freed slaves. Frederick Douglass would later say of him, "I want to thank Governor Shepherd for the fair way in which he treated the colored race when he was in a position to help them."[5]

City Boss edit

 
Alexander Robey Shepherd, circa 1864

By 1870, war and mismanagement had caused the finances and infrastructure of the city to deteriorate so badly that the Mayor of Washington, Sayles J. Bowen, had his furniture seized in an attempt to pay the city's debts. Democrats and Republicans were in a rare agreement that a drastic change was needed from Bowen's regime.[6] As a solution, Shepherd and his allies began agitation for the abolition of the elected governments of Washington City and Georgetown, as well as the appointed justices of the peace for Washington County, to be replaced with a unified territorial government to administer the entire District of Columbia. The Shepherd machine was easily able to sway popular support in favor of that notion.

In 1871, Shepherd was able to convince the US Congress to pass a bill that established the territorial government that he desired. The Organic Act of 1871 merged the various governments in the District of Columbia into a single eleven-member legislature, including two representatives for Georgetown and two for the County of Washington, to be presided over by a territorial governor. The legislature and governor would all be appointed by the President. Both frontrunners for the governorship were initially Shepherd, from Washington, and Colonel Jason A. Magruder, from Georgetown; although popular support was behind Shepherd, US President Ulysses S. Grant feared that either appointment would cause a sectional divide that might make governorship of the full district impossible. Thus, Grant's inaugural appointment to the governorship was his friend, the financier Henry D. Cooke, "a gentleman of unimpeachable integrity"[7] and secretly a close political ally of Shepherd.

Shepherd was appointed vice-chair of the city's five-man Board of Public Works. The most powerful public entity in the District of Columbia, the Board of Public Works was actually an independent entity from the territorial government, reporting directly to Congress, but kept within the territory's sphere of influence by making the governor its chairman. Cooke, however, rarely attended the Board's meetings (probably at Shepherd's urging), allowing Vice-Chair Shepherd to preside.[8] He asserted himself as a leader to such an extent that he often did not bother to consult the other members of the Board before he made decisions and took sweeping action. His abilities as a political operator, according to D.C. journalist Sam Smith, were formidable:

Boss Shepherd's persuasive skills were such that upon being called to account by the president of a railroad whose tracks on the Mall had been torn up one night by 200 of Shepherd's men, he left the meeting with an offer to become the line's vice president. His cunning was such that when he heard reports of a planned injunction against the removal of what he called a "wretched old market building" on Mt. Vernon Square, he got a friend to take the one judge currently in the city out for a long ride in the country while the Boss accomplished his mission.... As The Cincinnati Enquirer of the time put it: "Boss Tweed and his gang, to whom Shepherd's enemies are so given to comparing him, were vulgar villians [sic], stupid sneak thieves, by the side of this remarkable man."[8]

City improvements edit

The warworn condition of Washington City in the late 1860s and the early 1870s, when it was little more than a hamlet of dirt roads, wooden sidewalks and open sewers and surrounded by farmland and large country estates, was such that Congress had for several years discussed relocating the seat of the Federal government westward to St. Louis, which would have led to ruin for the District of Columbia.[9] Shepherd believed that if the government was to remain in Washington, the city's infrastructure and facilities had to be modernized and revitalized. He filled in the long-dormant Washington Canal and placed 157 miles (253 km) of paved roads and sidewalks, 123 miles (198 km) of sewers, 39 miles (63 km) of gas mains, and 30 miles (48 km) of water mains. In 1872, Shepherd was responsible for the demolition of the Northern Liberties Market. Two individuals, a butcher who was still on the premises at the time of the demolition and a young boy who had come with his dog to chase the rats who fled the structure, were killed in the process.[10] Under his direction, the city also planted 60,000 trees, built the city's first public transportation system in the form of horse-drawn streetcars, installed street lights, and had the railroad companies refit their tracks to fit new citywide grading standards for the District.[citation needed]

Governorship and fall from power edit

 
Shepherd later in life

In 1873, the Washington writer Mary Clemmer Ames wrote that "the majority of people believe that Governor Cooke would retain his position only until the fusion of irritated factions [i.e., whites and blacks; Washington, Georgetown, and Washington County] was effected, and that in the event of his resignation, Mr. Shepherd would be appointed his successor. Whether Governor Cooke retires before the end of his term or not, it is the universal belief that Mr. Shepherd will be the second governor of the District of Columbia."[11] Sure enough, that September, Cooke resigned as Governor of the District and Shepherd, having befriended Grant, was promoted by the President to the governorship.[citation needed]

Once in office, Governor Shepherd engaged in a series of social reforms and campaigns that were progressive even by Radical Republican standards. He "integrated public schools, supported the vote for women, sought representation for D.C. in Congress and a Federal payment to the city."[5] Generally, however, his gubernatorial term was "principally occupied in avoiding embarrassments in the conduct of the District's official business due to the inadequacy of the revenue which had been entailed by the demands for funds to meet the cost of executing street improvements."[12]

However, despite the lack of finances, the massive public works project continued and intensified during Shepherd's term as governor of the District of Columbia. Although the Organic Act of 1871 had given the governor power to issue construction bonds in the city to the consternation of white landowners, but Shepherd put it to a referendum to demonstrate his widespread popular support in the city thanks to the black voters, who backed him.[citation needed]

However, the cost of the modifications was excessive. Initially, Shepherd had estimated them at a $6.25 million budget, but by 1874, costs had ballooned to $9 million, despite the national Panic of 1873. District residents gathered 1,200 signatures to petition an audit from Congress; when the audit was conducted, the legislature discovered that the city was in arrears by $13 million and declared bankruptcy[13] on its behalf. Shepherd was investigated for financial misappropriation and mishandling, and it was discovered that the project and its funding had been carried to absurd extremes. Shepherd had raised taxes to such a degree that citizens had to sell their own property to pay them. Street grading had been executed such that some homes' front yards were as much as 15 feet (4.6 m) lower than the front door, and others found their homes standing in trenches with the street at the second-floor. In addition, Congress discovered that Shepherd had given preference to neighborhoods and areas of the District in which he or his political cronies held financial interests.[citation needed]

Although none of his actions was found to have violated any laws, the territorial government was abolished in favor of a three-member Board of Commissioners, which remained in charge of the District for nearly a century. Although Grant nominated Shepherd to the first Board of Commissioners,[14] the appointment was rejected by the US Senate on the same day.[15] The appointment of Shepherd became one of the many corruption scandals surrounding Grant's administration.[16]

The civic improvements, however, had sufficiently modernized the city that relocation of the capital was never again discussed as a serious option. It also created a decades-long real estate boom in Washington (until about the turn of the 20th century), with wealthy Americans coming from all over the United States to build large and expensive mansions, some for year-round residency and some for winter vacation only (leading Washington to be called "the winter Newport").[17]

Last years edit

 
Shepherd during his years in Batopilas, Mexico

Shepherd remained in Washington for a further two years, still a real-estate magnate and a celebrated and influential member of Washington society. In 1876, however, he declared personal bankruptcy and, once his accounts were settled, moved with his family to Batopilas, Mexico, where he made a fortune in silver mining and instituted many of the same reforms he had championed in the District of Columbia.[citation needed]

He died in Batopilas in Mexico on September 12, 1902, from complications of a surgery to remove his appendix.[18] His body was returned to Washington and buried in a large personal (not family) vault in Rock Creek Cemetery.

 
Shepherd's tomb

Legacy edit

Shepherd's legacy has been a matter of some debate since his death more than one hundred years ago. He has long been maligned as a corrupt, cronyist political boss, often compared[by whom?] to Boss Tweed, the leader of the Tammany Hall political machine of the same time period.[citation needed]

A statue of Shepherd currently stands on Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, in front of the John A. Wilson Building, which now houses the offices and chambers of the Council and the Mayor of the District of Columbia), and has served as a symbol of his fluctuating reputation.[citation needed]

 
Alexander Robey Shepherd

In 1979, during the first year of Mayor Marion Barry's administration, the statue was removed from its perch on Pennsylvania Avenue and warehoused in city storage. It reappeared in the mid-1980s near an otherwise-obscure D.C. Public Works building on Shepherd Avenue, S.W., in the District's remote Blue Plains neighborhood.[19]

Near the beginning of the 21st century, Washington historian Nelson Rimensnyder started to argue for a restoration of Shepherd's reputation, calling him an "urban visionary" who single-handedly transformed Washington into a major American city and championed aggressive social reform.[citation needed]

Largely as a result of the efforts of Rimensnyder and those he persuaded, the Shepherd statue was returned in January 2005 to its previous place of honor.[20] The statue now stands on its pedestal next to the sidewalk of Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, close to 14th Street, NW, and the northwest corner of the Wilson Building.[21]

The D.C. neighborhood of Shepherd Park, where Shepherd once lived, is named for him, as is Alexander Shepherd Elementary School in that neighborhood.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-08-21. Retrieved 2007-02-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ http://www.adolf-cluss.org/index.php?sub=3.5.38&lang=en&content=w&topSub=washington
  3. ^ Tindall, William. Standard History of The City of Washington. Knoxville: H.W. Crew & Co., 1914, p. 262-63.
  4. ^ "The Misses Young Safe - 17 Apr 1912, Wed • Page 8". Evening Star: 8. 1912. Retrieved 6 January 2018.
  5. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2007-10-01. Retrieved 2007-02-06.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-01-06. Retrieved 2007-02-06.
  7. ^ Ames, Mary Clemmer. Ten Years in Washington: Life and Scenes in the National Capital, As a Woman Sees Them. Hartford: A.D. Worthington & Co., 1873, p.78
  8. ^ a b Smith, Sam. . Archived from the original on 2011-07-21.
  9. ^ http://www.washingtonlife.com/2007/05/01/the-boss-of-dc/ Evers, Donna. "The Boss of DC." Washington Life Magazine, 1 May 2007.
  10. ^ Farquhar, Michael. A Treasury of Foolishly Forgotten Americans. Penguin Books Ltd., 2008, p. 145-152.
  11. ^ Ames, p.81-82
  12. ^ Tindall, p.263
  13. ^ Touring Hidden Washington, Mark David Richards, June 2001 November 29, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ http://www.h-net.org/~dclist/graphics/shep1.gif Message from President Grant to the Senate on the nomination of Alexander Shepherd to the SC Board of Commissioners, June 23, 1874.
  15. ^ http://www.h-net.org/~dclist/graphics/shep2.gif Record of the Senate's rejection of Alexander Shepherd's nomination, June 23, 1874.
  16. ^ "The scandals - Ulysses S. Grant - war, election, second".
  17. ^ James M. Goode, Capitol Losses: A Cultural History of Washington's Destroyed Buildings, Washington: Smithsonian Institution (2003).
  18. ^ "A.R. Shepherd Is Dead. He Was ex-Governor of District of Columbia. Man to Whom Credit Is Given of Having Made Washington a Beautiful Capital Passes Away In Mexico". The New York Times. September 13, 1902. Retrieved 2012-09-08. A dispatch received here late this afternoon announced the death this morning, at Batopilas, Mexico, of Alexander R. Shepherd, second Governor of the Territorial Government of the District of Columbia. Death was due to peritonitis, brought on by appendicitis.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-12-04. Retrieved 2007-02-06.
  20. ^ "Rimensnyder Asks for New Respect for Washington’s "Boss" Shepherd" in "Lecture Series" page 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine of official website of The Ruth Ann Overbeck Capitol Hill History Project, Washington, D.C. Accessed August 5, 2008.
  21. ^ Coordinates of Shepherd Statue: 38°53′43″N 77°01′54″W / 38.8952874°N 77.0316482°W / 38.8952874; -77.0316482 (Alexander Robey Shepherd statue)

External links edit

  • "Boss" Shepherd Memorial in Washington, D.C.
  • The Silver King of Batopilas – Shepherd's life in Mexico
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of the District of Columbia
1873–1874
Succeeded by
William Dennison
as President of the D.C. Board of Commissioners

alexander, robey, shepherd, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, a. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alexander Robey Shepherd January 30 1835 September 12 1902 was one of the most controversial and influential civic leaders in the history of Washington D C and one of the most powerful big city political bosses of the Gilded Age He was head of the DC Board of Public Works from 1871 to 1873 and Governor of the District of Columbia from 1873 to 1874 He is known particularly in Washington as The Father of Modern Washington Alexander Robey ShepherdShepherd in 1874 when he was Governor of the District of Columbia2nd Governor of the District of ColumbiaIn office September 13 1873 June 20 1874Preceded byHenry D CookeSucceeded byNone office abolished William Dennison as President of the Board of Commissioners Personal detailsBorn 1835 01 30 January 30 1835Washington D C U S DiedSeptember 12 1902 1902 09 12 aged 67 Batopilas MexicoResting placeRock Creek CemeteryWashington D C U S Political partyRepublican Contents 1 Early life and career 2 City Boss 2 1 City improvements 2 2 Governorship and fall from power 3 Last years 4 Legacy 5 References 6 External linksEarly life and career edit nbsp Mary Grice YoungBorn in southwest Washington on January 30 1835 Shepherd dropped out of school at 13 and took a job as a plumber s assistant Eventually he worked his way up to becoming the owner of the plumbing firm He then invested the profits from that firm in real estate development which made him a wealthy socialite and influential citizen of the city 1 One of his luxurious properties was Shepherd s Row a set of rowhouses on Connecticut Avenue designed by Adolf Cluss 2 Cluss would later be the star witness at Shepherd s congressional investigation hearings Two days after the Battle of Fort Sumter that initiated the American Civil War Shepherd and his brother each enlisted in the 3rd Battalion of the District of Columbia volunteers The term of enlistment at that time was only three months after which Shepherd was honorably discharged On January 30 1861 he was married to Mary Grice Young with whom he raised seven children 3 Her niece Marie Grice Young was the piano teacher of Theodore Roosevelt s children and a Titanic survivor 4 He was an early member of the Republican Party and a member of the Washington City Councils from 1861 to 1871 during which time he was an important voice for D C emancipation then for suffrage for the freed slaves Frederick Douglass would later say of him I want to thank Governor Shepherd for the fair way in which he treated the colored race when he was in a position to help them 5 City Boss edit nbsp Alexander Robey Shepherd circa 1864By 1870 war and mismanagement had caused the finances and infrastructure of the city to deteriorate so badly that the Mayor of Washington Sayles J Bowen had his furniture seized in an attempt to pay the city s debts Democrats and Republicans were in a rare agreement that a drastic change was needed from Bowen s regime 6 As a solution Shepherd and his allies began agitation for the abolition of the elected governments of Washington City and Georgetown as well as the appointed justices of the peace for Washington County to be replaced with a unified territorial government to administer the entire District of Columbia The Shepherd machine was easily able to sway popular support in favor of that notion In 1871 Shepherd was able to convince the US Congress to pass a bill that established the territorial government that he desired The Organic Act of 1871 merged the various governments in the District of Columbia into a single eleven member legislature including two representatives for Georgetown and two for the County of Washington to be presided over by a territorial governor The legislature and governor would all be appointed by the President Both frontrunners for the governorship were initially Shepherd from Washington and Colonel Jason A Magruder from Georgetown although popular support was behind Shepherd US President Ulysses S Grant feared that either appointment would cause a sectional divide that might make governorship of the full district impossible Thus Grant s inaugural appointment to the governorship was his friend the financier Henry D Cooke a gentleman of unimpeachable integrity 7 and secretly a close political ally of Shepherd Shepherd was appointed vice chair of the city s five man Board of Public Works The most powerful public entity in the District of Columbia the Board of Public Works was actually an independent entity from the territorial government reporting directly to Congress but kept within the territory s sphere of influence by making the governor its chairman Cooke however rarely attended the Board s meetings probably at Shepherd s urging allowing Vice Chair Shepherd to preside 8 He asserted himself as a leader to such an extent that he often did not bother to consult the other members of the Board before he made decisions and took sweeping action His abilities as a political operator according to D C journalist Sam Smith were formidable Boss Shepherd s persuasive skills were such that upon being called to account by the president of a railroad whose tracks on the Mall had been torn up one night by 200 of Shepherd s men he left the meeting with an offer to become the line s vice president His cunning was such that when he heard reports of a planned injunction against the removal of what he called a wretched old market building on Mt Vernon Square he got a friend to take the one judge currently in the city out for a long ride in the country while the Boss accomplished his mission As The Cincinnati Enquirer of the time put it Boss Tweed and his gang to whom Shepherd s enemies are so given to comparing him were vulgar villians sic stupid sneak thieves by the side of this remarkable man 8 City improvements edit The warworn condition of Washington City in the late 1860s and the early 1870s when it was little more than a hamlet of dirt roads wooden sidewalks and open sewers and surrounded by farmland and large country estates was such that Congress had for several years discussed relocating the seat of the Federal government westward to St Louis which would have led to ruin for the District of Columbia 9 Shepherd believed that if the government was to remain in Washington the city s infrastructure and facilities had to be modernized and revitalized He filled in the long dormant Washington Canal and placed 157 miles 253 km of paved roads and sidewalks 123 miles 198 km of sewers 39 miles 63 km of gas mains and 30 miles 48 km of water mains In 1872 Shepherd was responsible for the demolition of the Northern Liberties Market Two individuals a butcher who was still on the premises at the time of the demolition and a young boy who had come with his dog to chase the rats who fled the structure were killed in the process 10 Under his direction the city also planted 60 000 trees built the city s first public transportation system in the form of horse drawn streetcars installed street lights and had the railroad companies refit their tracks to fit new citywide grading standards for the District citation needed Governorship and fall from power edit nbsp Shepherd later in lifeIn 1873 the Washington writer Mary Clemmer Ames wrote that the majority of people believe that Governor Cooke would retain his position only until the fusion of irritated factions i e whites and blacks Washington Georgetown and Washington County was effected and that in the event of his resignation Mr Shepherd would be appointed his successor Whether Governor Cooke retires before the end of his term or not it is the universal belief that Mr Shepherd will be the second governor of the District of Columbia 11 Sure enough that September Cooke resigned as Governor of the District and Shepherd having befriended Grant was promoted by the President to the governorship citation needed Once in office Governor Shepherd engaged in a series of social reforms and campaigns that were progressive even by Radical Republican standards He integrated public schools supported the vote for women sought representation for D C in Congress and a Federal payment to the city 5 Generally however his gubernatorial term was principally occupied in avoiding embarrassments in the conduct of the District s official business due to the inadequacy of the revenue which had been entailed by the demands for funds to meet the cost of executing street improvements 12 However despite the lack of finances the massive public works project continued and intensified during Shepherd s term as governor of the District of Columbia Although the Organic Act of 1871 had given the governor power to issue construction bonds in the city to the consternation of white landowners but Shepherd put it to a referendum to demonstrate his widespread popular support in the city thanks to the black voters who backed him citation needed However the cost of the modifications was excessive Initially Shepherd had estimated them at a 6 25 million budget but by 1874 costs had ballooned to 9 million despite the national Panic of 1873 District residents gathered 1 200 signatures to petition an audit from Congress when the audit was conducted the legislature discovered that the city was in arrears by 13 million and declared bankruptcy 13 on its behalf Shepherd was investigated for financial misappropriation and mishandling and it was discovered that the project and its funding had been carried to absurd extremes Shepherd had raised taxes to such a degree that citizens had to sell their own property to pay them Street grading had been executed such that some homes front yards were as much as 15 feet 4 6 m lower than the front door and others found their homes standing in trenches with the street at the second floor In addition Congress discovered that Shepherd had given preference to neighborhoods and areas of the District in which he or his political cronies held financial interests citation needed Although none of his actions was found to have violated any laws the territorial government was abolished in favor of a three member Board of Commissioners which remained in charge of the District for nearly a century Although Grant nominated Shepherd to the first Board of Commissioners 14 the appointment was rejected by the US Senate on the same day 15 The appointment of Shepherd became one of the many corruption scandals surrounding Grant s administration 16 The civic improvements however had sufficiently modernized the city that relocation of the capital was never again discussed as a serious option It also created a decades long real estate boom in Washington until about the turn of the 20th century with wealthy Americans coming from all over the United States to build large and expensive mansions some for year round residency and some for winter vacation only leading Washington to be called the winter Newport 17 Last years edit nbsp Shepherd during his years in Batopilas MexicoShepherd remained in Washington for a further two years still a real estate magnate and a celebrated and influential member of Washington society In 1876 however he declared personal bankruptcy and once his accounts were settled moved with his family to Batopilas Mexico where he made a fortune in silver mining and instituted many of the same reforms he had championed in the District of Columbia citation needed He died in Batopilas in Mexico on September 12 1902 from complications of a surgery to remove his appendix 18 His body was returned to Washington and buried in a large personal not family vault in Rock Creek Cemetery nbsp Shepherd s tombLegacy editShepherd s legacy has been a matter of some debate since his death more than one hundred years ago He has long been maligned as a corrupt cronyist political boss often compared by whom to Boss Tweed the leader of the Tammany Hall political machine of the same time period citation needed A statue of Shepherd currently stands on Pennsylvania Avenue NW in front of the John A Wilson Building which now houses the offices and chambers of the Council and the Mayor of the District of Columbia and has served as a symbol of his fluctuating reputation citation needed nbsp Alexander Robey ShepherdIn 1979 during the first year of Mayor Marion Barry s administration the statue was removed from its perch on Pennsylvania Avenue and warehoused in city storage It reappeared in the mid 1980s near an otherwise obscure D C Public Works building on Shepherd Avenue S W in the District s remote Blue Plains neighborhood 19 Near the beginning of the 21st century Washington historian Nelson Rimensnyder started to argue for a restoration of Shepherd s reputation calling him an urban visionary who single handedly transformed Washington into a major American city and championed aggressive social reform citation needed Largely as a result of the efforts of Rimensnyder and those he persuaded the Shepherd statue was returned in January 2005 to its previous place of honor 20 The statue now stands on its pedestal next to the sidewalk of Pennsylvania Avenue NW close to 14th Street NW and the northwest corner of the Wilson Building 21 The D C neighborhood of Shepherd Park where Shepherd once lived is named for him as is Alexander Shepherd Elementary School in that neighborhood citation needed References edit Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2006 08 21 Retrieved 2007 02 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link http www adolf cluss org index php sub 3 5 38 amp lang en amp content w amp topSub washington Tindall William Standard History of The City of Washington Knoxville H W Crew amp Co 1914 p 262 63 The Misses Young Safe 17 Apr 1912 Wed Page 8 Evening Star 8 1912 Retrieved 6 January 2018 a b Governor Alexander Robey Shepherd Archived from the original on 2007 10 01 Retrieved 2007 02 06 DC ALMANAC Little known or suppressed facts about the colonial city of Washington DC A M Archived from the original on 2017 01 06 Retrieved 2007 02 06 Ames Mary Clemmer Ten Years in Washington Life and Scenes in the National Capital As a Woman Sees Them Hartford A D Worthington amp Co 1873 p 78 a b Smith Sam A Short History of Home Rule Archived from the original on 2011 07 21 http www washingtonlife com 2007 05 01 the boss of dc Evers Donna The Boss of DC Washington Life Magazine 1 May 2007 Farquhar Michael A Treasury of Foolishly Forgotten Americans Penguin Books Ltd 2008 p 145 152 Ames p 81 82 Tindall p 263 Touring Hidden Washington Mark David Richards June 2001 Archived November 29 2006 at the Wayback Machine http www h net org dclist graphics shep1 gif Message from President Grant to the Senate on the nomination of Alexander Shepherd to the SC Board of Commissioners June 23 1874 http www h net org dclist graphics shep2 gif Record of the Senate s rejection of Alexander Shepherd s nomination June 23 1874 The scandals Ulysses S Grant war election second James M Goode Capitol Losses A Cultural History of Washington s Destroyed Buildings Washington Smithsonian Institution 2003 A R Shepherd Is Dead He Was ex Governor of District of Columbia Man to Whom Credit Is Given of Having Made Washington a Beautiful Capital Passes Away In Mexico The New York Times September 13 1902 Retrieved 2012 09 08 A dispatch received here late this afternoon announced the death this morning at Batopilas Mexico of Alexander R Shepherd second Governor of the Territorial Government of the District of Columbia Death was due to peritonitis brought on by appendicitis H Net Review Alan Lessoff lt ahlesso ilstu edu gt on Historical Dictionary of Washington D C Archived from the original on 2006 12 04 Retrieved 2007 02 06 Rimensnyder Asks for New Respect for Washington s Boss Shepherd in Lecture Series page Archived 2011 07 25 at the Wayback Machine of official website of The Ruth Ann Overbeck Capitol Hill History Project Washington D C Accessed August 5 2008 Coordinates of Shepherd Statue 38 53 43 N 77 01 54 W 38 8952874 N 77 0316482 W 38 8952874 77 0316482 Alexander Robey Shepherd statue External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alexander Robey Shepherd nbsp Biography portal Boss Shepherd Remakes the City Boss Shepherd Memorial in Washington D C The Silver King of Batopilas Shepherd s life in MexicoPolitical officesPreceded byHenry D Cooke Governor of the District of Columbia1873 1874 Succeeded byWilliam Dennisonas President of the D C Board of Commissioners Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander Robey Shepherd amp oldid 1170395925, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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