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Henry Gassaway Davis

Henry Gassaway Davis (November 16, 1823 – March 11, 1916) was a millionaire and Senator from West Virginia. He was the Democratic Party's nominee for Vice President of the United States in 1904.

Henry Davis
United States Senator
from West Virginia
In office
March 4, 1871 – March 3, 1883
Preceded byWaitman T. Willey
Succeeded byJohn E. Kenna
Personal details
Born(1823-11-16)November 16, 1823
Woodstock, Maryland, U.S.
DiedMarch 11, 1916(1916-03-11) (aged 92)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Political partyDemocratic

Born on a farm in Howard County, Maryland, he became a railroad executive before branching out into coal mining and banking as founder of the Potomac and Piedmont Coal and Railway Company. Davis won election to both houses of the West Virginia Legislature before serving as U.S. Senator from 1871 to 1883. His younger brother, Thomas Beall Davis, also served in Congress. After his tenure in the Senate ended, Davis continued to grow his business interests. In partnership with son-in-law, Stephen Benton Elkins, Davis created the Davis Coal and Coke Company and led it to become one of the largest coal companies in the world.

The 1904 Democratic National Convention nominated a ticket of Alton B. Parker for president and Davis for vice president. Davis was chosen primarily for his ability to provide funding to the campaign. At nearly 80 years old, he remains the oldest person to ever serve on a major party's national ticket. The Republican ticket of Theodore Roosevelt and Charles W. Fairbanks prevailed by a wide margin. After the election, Davis helped establish Davis & Elkins College, and he died in 1916.

Biography

Early life

 
Henry G. Davis

Henry Gassaway Davis was born near Woodstock, Howard County, Maryland, the son of Louisa Warfield (née Brown; March 10, 1799 – July 23, 1868) and merchant Caleb Dorsey Davis (March 3, 1792 – September 4, 1850). He was the great-great-great-grandson of Maryland pioneer Thomas Davis, and the great-great-great-great-grandson of Maryland politician and justice Colonel Nicholas Gassaway, both of whom were of Welsh ancestry and emigrated to Maryland in the mid 17th century.[1]

Stage coaches stopped at Woodstock five days a week en route to Washington, D.C., and Davis later often recalled one of his earliest memories: witnessing the groundbreaking of the country's first railroad on July 4, 1828, from atop his father's shoulders in Baltimore.[2]

Davis had three brothers and a sister. His father's business prospered until he won a contract to grade a section of road between Baltimore and Frederick, Maryland, which caused heavy losses. Creditors caused even the family's horses and carriages to be sold, which proved devastating to Caleb Davis's health.[3]

Early career through the Civil War

When his family's finances collapsed, Davis (then 15 years old) abandoned his education and took a job carrying water for workmen at a nearby quarry, then became caretaker of "Waverly" a nearby farm own by Governor Howard.[4] When Davis was 20, the B&O completed track from Frederick to Cumberland, and needed men to run the trains and handle cargo. Thus Davis went to work for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad as a brakeman. His hard work and enthusiasm drew the attention of the railroad's president, Thomas Swann, who promoted him to freight conductor, then passenger conductor. Davis met many statesmen, including Senators Henry Clay of Kentucky (whom Davis came to admire and received invitations to visit at his home), Thomas H. Benton of Missouri, Lewis Cass of Michigan, Benjamin Wade and Thomas Corwin of Ohio, and Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois—all of whom embarked the B&O train in Cumberland to reach Washington, D.C. (or disembarked on the reverse route). Davis also often stayed at a hotel in Washington between trips, and conversed with other notables, including Senators William C. Rives of Virginia, John C. Calhoun of South Carolina, and Daniel Webster of Massachusetts.[5] When the B&O finally completed track to Wheeling on the navigable Ohio River, Davis was put in charge of the Piedmont station. It was a crucial station because it was at the foot of a mountain, where trains traveling eastward added engines to surmount the slope. Until the railroad completed a house for him (so his new wife could join him), Davis lived in a box car, and also came to admire the natural landscape of the Allegheny Mountains. After four years, his brother Thomas joined him, and they established a store, often trading farm products for manufactured goods such as jeans, shoes, calico and sugar. In 1858, Davis resigned his railroad job to concentrate on the firm, Henry G. Davis & Company.[6]

Davis also explored the Alleghenies, particularly the area drained by the Potomac River to the east and the Cheat River on the western side of the eastern continental divide. He purchased land rich in timber or coal (often for $1 an acre). He soon built sawmills to process the lumber and extended branch railroads to new coal mines, and also invested in banking in Piedmont.

When the Civil War began, even the B & O's President, John Work Garrett initially sympathized with the Southern cause. However, the B&O was crucial for the Union armies. Davis favored the Union and also admired the new President Abraham Lincoln. When Confederate raiders attacked the B&O and destroyed track and bridges, part of Davis' job was to restore service and keep the supplies moving. Many in western Virginia likewise favored the Union, and met in two Wheeling Conventions, then adopted a statehood referendum and constitution, eventually becoming the 35th state. In 1865, Davis would be elected to the West Virginia House of Delegates as one of Hampshire County's representatives.[7]

Personal life

On February 22, 1853, in Frederick County, Maryland. Davis married Katherine Ann Salome Bantz.[8] Henry and Katherine had eight children, three of whom died in infancy. Seven of their eight children have been identified, as follows:

  • (1) - Mary Louise "Hallie" Davis (December 9, 1854 – March 1, 1933) (Her married name was Hallie Davis Elkins) - She married industrialist and politician Stephen Benton Elkins (September 26, 1841 – January 4, 1911) on April 14, 1875, in Baltimore. Hallie Davis was Stephen's second wife, his first wife having died in 1872. Stephen Elkins had married Sarah Simms "Sallie" Jacobs (1845 – October 1872) on June 10, 1866, and had two children by her. His marriage with Hallie Davis produced five children. Elkins, a Republican, would become his father-in-law's protege and business partner and die 22 years before his wife.
  • (2) - Kate Bantz Davis (December 1, 1856 – January 21, 1903)
  • (3) - Anderson Cord Davis (born January 14, 1865) (twin) (died in infancy)
  • (4) - Ada Kate Davis (born January 14, 1865) (twin) (died in infancy)
  • (5) - Grace Thomas Davis (October 19, 1869 – 1931) (a.k.a. Gracie Davis)
  • (6) - Henry Gassaway Davis Jr. (May 1871 – April 24, 1896) (a.k.a. Harry Davis)
  • (7) - John Thomas Davis (March 31, 1874 – June 27, 1935)

Political and commercial life

In 1865 Davis was elected a member of the West Virginia House of Delegates. The following year, he founded the Potomac and Piedmont Coal and Railway Company with the intent of furnishing transportation to his coal mining and timbering interests. The company was given the right to construct railroad grades in Mineral, Grant, Tucker and Randolph counties. He became a state senator in 1869. In 1870, he was elected to the United States Senate, serving two terms, with his service ending in 1883.

 
Parker/Davis campaign poster

Following his service in the Senate, Davis retired to Elkins, West Virginia, where he resumed banking and coal mining. Davis’ company now controlled 135,000 acres (550 km2), employed 1,600 men of sixteen nationalities, operated two power plants, and worked over 1,000 coke ovens and 9 mines within one mile (1.6 km) of the central office at Coketon in Tucker County. By 1892, the Davis Coal and Coke Company, a partnership between Davis and his son-in-law, Senator Stephen Benton Elkins, was among the largest coal companies in the world.

Davis represented the U.S. at the Pan-American Conferences of 1889 and 1901.

Candidate for Vice President

In 1904, Davis became the Democratic nominee for vice president on a ticket with Alton B. Parker. Parker and Davis lost to the Republican ticket of Theodore Roosevelt and Charles Fairbanks by a wide margin. At the age of 80, Davis was and remains the oldest person to be nominated for president or vice president on a major party ticket. He was chosen primarily because of his ability to provide much needed funds to the campaign.

 
Davis in 1911

Later years

Davis in his last years acted as chairman of the permanent Pan American Railway Committee (1901–1916) and also donated land to build Davis and Elkins College in Elkins, West Virginia. He died in Washington, D.C. on March 11, 1916, at the age of 92. He was interred in the Maplewood Cemetery in Elkins. A bronze equestrian statue of Davis was erected in 1927, at Sycamore Street and Randolph Avenue in Elkins, with an identical twin in Davis Park in downtown Charleston, West Virginia.[9][10]

Legacy

References

  1. ^ Pepper, Charles Melville. The life and times of Henry Gassaway Davis, 1823-1916. The Century Company, New York, New York, 1920, p.7
  2. ^ Oscar D. Lambert, Pioneer Leaders of Western Virginia (Parkersburg, 1935), pp. 204-205
  3. ^ Lambert p. 206
  4. ^ Lambert pp. 206-207
  5. ^ Lambert pp. 207-209
  6. ^ Lambert pp. 209-211
  7. ^ Lambert pp. 212-213
  8. ^ Katherine Ann Salome "Kate" Bantz (December 22, 1829 – December 10, 1902) was a daughter of Gideon Bantz Sr. (February 9, 1792 – October 13, 1854) and Anna Maria Sowers (January 4, 1796 – October 11, 1873). Gideon Bantz Sr., a leading merchant of Frederick, Maryland, was often referred to as "Judge Bantz" because between 1843 and 1847 he had been one of the three judges serving on the bench of the Frederick County Orphans' Court. Gideon Bantz Sr., also served in other public offices in Frederick County, as follows: (1) Boards of Common Council (1831) (2) Board of Aldermen (1832–1838, 1844–1850) (3) Frederick County House of Delegates (1847–1848). It is sometimes mistakenly stated that Katherine Bantz (1829–1902) was a daughter of Gideon Davis Bantz (September 19, 1854 – August 7, 1898), who also is frequently referred to as "Judge Bantz." Gideon Davis Bantz was a lawyer in St. Louis, Missouri, who moved to Silver City, New Mexico, in 1886 and took up the practice of law there. He became presiding Territorial Judge of the 3rd Judicial District of New Mexico, and in February 1895 was appointed by President Grover Cleveland as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory of New Mexico.
  9. ^ David L. Taylor (October 2005). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Wees Historic District" (PDF). State of West Virginia, West Virginia Division of Culture and History, Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2011-09-10.
  10. ^ Ross, Thomas Richard. "Henry Gassaway Davis". West Virginia Encyclopedia. West Virginia Humanities Council. Retrieved July 24, 2017.
  11. ^ Kenny, Hamill (1945). West Virginia Place Names: Their Origin and Meaning, Including the Nomenclature of the Streams and Mountains. Piedmont, WV: The Place Name Press. p. 260.

Further reading

  • Williams, John Alexander. West Virginia and the Captains of Industry (1976)

Williams, John Alexander. "Davis and Elkins of West Virginia: businessmen in politics" (PhD dissertation, Yale University, 1967)  ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1967. 6708432.

henry, gassaway, davis, november, 1823, march, 1916, millionaire, senator, from, west, virginia, democratic, party, nominee, vice, president, united, states, 1904, henry, davisunited, states, senatorfrom, west, virginiain, office, march, 1871, march, 1883prece. Henry Gassaway Davis November 16 1823 March 11 1916 was a millionaire and Senator from West Virginia He was the Democratic Party s nominee for Vice President of the United States in 1904 Henry DavisUnited States Senatorfrom West VirginiaIn office March 4 1871 March 3 1883Preceded byWaitman T WilleySucceeded byJohn E KennaPersonal detailsBorn 1823 11 16 November 16 1823Woodstock Maryland U S DiedMarch 11 1916 1916 03 11 aged 92 Washington D C U S Political partyDemocraticBorn on a farm in Howard County Maryland he became a railroad executive before branching out into coal mining and banking as founder of the Potomac and Piedmont Coal and Railway Company Davis won election to both houses of the West Virginia Legislature before serving as U S Senator from 1871 to 1883 His younger brother Thomas Beall Davis also served in Congress After his tenure in the Senate ended Davis continued to grow his business interests In partnership with son in law Stephen Benton Elkins Davis created the Davis Coal and Coke Company and led it to become one of the largest coal companies in the world The 1904 Democratic National Convention nominated a ticket of Alton B Parker for president and Davis for vice president Davis was chosen primarily for his ability to provide funding to the campaign At nearly 80 years old he remains the oldest person to ever serve on a major party s national ticket The Republican ticket of Theodore Roosevelt and Charles W Fairbanks prevailed by a wide margin After the election Davis helped establish Davis amp Elkins College and he died in 1916 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 2 Early career through the Civil War 3 Personal life 3 1 Political and commercial life 3 1 1 Candidate for Vice President 3 2 Later years 4 Legacy 5 References 6 Further readingBiography EditEarly life Edit Henry G Davis Henry Gassaway Davis was born near Woodstock Howard County Maryland the son of Louisa Warfield nee Brown March 10 1799 July 23 1868 and merchant Caleb Dorsey Davis March 3 1792 September 4 1850 He was the great great great grandson of Maryland pioneer Thomas Davis and the great great great great grandson of Maryland politician and justice Colonel Nicholas Gassaway both of whom were of Welsh ancestry and emigrated to Maryland in the mid 17th century 1 Stage coaches stopped at Woodstock five days a week en route to Washington D C and Davis later often recalled one of his earliest memories witnessing the groundbreaking of the country s first railroad on July 4 1828 from atop his father s shoulders in Baltimore 2 Davis had three brothers and a sister His father s business prospered until he won a contract to grade a section of road between Baltimore and Frederick Maryland which caused heavy losses Creditors caused even the family s horses and carriages to be sold which proved devastating to Caleb Davis s health 3 Early career through the Civil War EditWhen his family s finances collapsed Davis then 15 years old abandoned his education and took a job carrying water for workmen at a nearby quarry then became caretaker of Waverly a nearby farm own by Governor Howard 4 When Davis was 20 the B amp O completed track from Frederick to Cumberland and needed men to run the trains and handle cargo Thus Davis went to work for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad as a brakeman His hard work and enthusiasm drew the attention of the railroad s president Thomas Swann who promoted him to freight conductor then passenger conductor Davis met many statesmen including Senators Henry Clay of Kentucky whom Davis came to admire and received invitations to visit at his home Thomas H Benton of Missouri Lewis Cass of Michigan Benjamin Wade and Thomas Corwin of Ohio and Stephen A Douglas of Illinois all of whom embarked the B amp O train in Cumberland to reach Washington D C or disembarked on the reverse route Davis also often stayed at a hotel in Washington between trips and conversed with other notables including Senators William C Rives of Virginia John C Calhoun of South Carolina and Daniel Webster of Massachusetts 5 When the B amp O finally completed track to Wheeling on the navigable Ohio River Davis was put in charge of the Piedmont station It was a crucial station because it was at the foot of a mountain where trains traveling eastward added engines to surmount the slope Until the railroad completed a house for him so his new wife could join him Davis lived in a box car and also came to admire the natural landscape of the Allegheny Mountains After four years his brother Thomas joined him and they established a store often trading farm products for manufactured goods such as jeans shoes calico and sugar In 1858 Davis resigned his railroad job to concentrate on the firm Henry G Davis amp Company 6 Davis also explored the Alleghenies particularly the area drained by the Potomac River to the east and the Cheat River on the western side of the eastern continental divide He purchased land rich in timber or coal often for 1 an acre He soon built sawmills to process the lumber and extended branch railroads to new coal mines and also invested in banking in Piedmont When the Civil War began even the B amp O s President John Work Garrett initially sympathized with the Southern cause However the B amp O was crucial for the Union armies Davis favored the Union and also admired the new President Abraham Lincoln When Confederate raiders attacked the B amp O and destroyed track and bridges part of Davis job was to restore service and keep the supplies moving Many in western Virginia likewise favored the Union and met in two Wheeling Conventions then adopted a statehood referendum and constitution eventually becoming the 35th state In 1865 Davis would be elected to the West Virginia House of Delegates as one of Hampshire County s representatives 7 Personal life EditOn February 22 1853 in Frederick County Maryland Davis married Katherine Ann Salome Bantz 8 Henry and Katherine had eight children three of whom died in infancy Seven of their eight children have been identified as follows 1 Mary Louise Hallie Davis December 9 1854 March 1 1933 Her married name was Hallie Davis Elkins She married industrialist and politician Stephen Benton Elkins September 26 1841 January 4 1911 on April 14 1875 in Baltimore Hallie Davis was Stephen s second wife his first wife having died in 1872 Stephen Elkins had married Sarah Simms Sallie Jacobs 1845 October 1872 on June 10 1866 and had two children by her His marriage with Hallie Davis produced five children Elkins a Republican would become his father in law s protege and business partner and die 22 years before his wife 2 Kate Bantz Davis December 1 1856 January 21 1903 3 Anderson Cord Davis born January 14 1865 twin died in infancy 4 Ada Kate Davis born January 14 1865 twin died in infancy 5 Grace Thomas Davis October 19 1869 1931 a k a Gracie Davis 6 Henry Gassaway Davis Jr May 1871 April 24 1896 a k a Harry Davis 7 John Thomas Davis March 31 1874 June 27 1935 Political and commercial life Edit In 1865 Davis was elected a member of the West Virginia House of Delegates The following year he founded the Potomac and Piedmont Coal and Railway Company with the intent of furnishing transportation to his coal mining and timbering interests The company was given the right to construct railroad grades in Mineral Grant Tucker and Randolph counties He became a state senator in 1869 In 1870 he was elected to the United States Senate serving two terms with his service ending in 1883 Parker Davis campaign poster Following his service in the Senate Davis retired to Elkins West Virginia where he resumed banking and coal mining Davis company now controlled 135 000 acres 550 km2 employed 1 600 men of sixteen nationalities operated two power plants and worked over 1 000 coke ovens and 9 mines within one mile 1 6 km of the central office at Coketon in Tucker County By 1892 the Davis Coal and Coke Company a partnership between Davis and his son in law Senator Stephen Benton Elkins was among the largest coal companies in the world Davis represented the U S at the Pan American Conferences of 1889 and 1901 Candidate for Vice President Edit In 1904 Davis became the Democratic nominee for vice president on a ticket with Alton B Parker Parker and Davis lost to the Republican ticket of Theodore Roosevelt and Charles Fairbanks by a wide margin At the age of 80 Davis was and remains the oldest person to be nominated for president or vice president on a major party ticket He was chosen primarily because of his ability to provide much needed funds to the campaign Davis in 1911 Later years Edit Davis in his last years acted as chairman of the permanent Pan American Railway Committee 1901 1916 and also donated land to build Davis and Elkins College in Elkins West Virginia He died in Washington D C on March 11 1916 at the age of 92 He was interred in the Maplewood Cemetery in Elkins A bronze equestrian statue of Davis was erected in 1927 at Sycamore Street and Randolph Avenue in Elkins with an identical twin in Davis Park in downtown Charleston West Virginia 9 10 Legacy Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry G Davis Davis and Elkins College in Elkins WV named for Senators Davis and Elkins Graceland Elkins West Virginia the summer home for Davis and a National Historic Landmark Henry Gassaway Davis House Davis home at Piedmont West Virginia built in 1871 He is the namesake of the town of Gassaway West Virginia 11 He is the namesake for Davis West VirginiaReferences Edit Pepper Charles Melville The life and times of Henry Gassaway Davis 1823 1916 The Century Company New York New York 1920 p 7 Oscar D Lambert Pioneer Leaders of Western Virginia Parkersburg 1935 pp 204 205 Lambert p 206 Lambert pp 206 207 Lambert pp 207 209 Lambert pp 209 211 Lambert pp 212 213 Katherine Ann Salome Kate Bantz December 22 1829 December 10 1902 was a daughter of Gideon Bantz Sr February 9 1792 October 13 1854 and Anna Maria Sowers January 4 1796 October 11 1873 Gideon Bantz Sr a leading merchant of Frederick Maryland was often referred to as Judge Bantz because between 1843 and 1847 he had been one of the three judges serving on the bench of the Frederick County Orphans Court Gideon Bantz Sr also served in other public offices in Frederick County as follows 1 Boards of Common Council 1831 2 Board of Aldermen 1832 1838 1844 1850 3 Frederick County House of Delegates 1847 1848 It is sometimes mistakenly stated that Katherine Bantz 1829 1902 was a daughter of Gideon Davis Bantz September 19 1854 August 7 1898 who also is frequently referred to as Judge Bantz Gideon Davis Bantz was a lawyer in St Louis Missouri who moved to Silver City New Mexico in 1886 and took up the practice of law there He became presiding Territorial Judge of the 3rd Judicial District of New Mexico and in February 1895 was appointed by President Grover Cleveland as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory of New Mexico David L Taylor October 2005 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Wees Historic District PDF State of West Virginia West Virginia Division of Culture and History Historic Preservation Retrieved 2011 09 10 Ross Thomas Richard Henry Gassaway Davis West Virginia Encyclopedia West Virginia Humanities Council Retrieved July 24 2017 Kenny Hamill 1945 West Virginia Place Names Their Origin and Meaning Including the Nomenclature of the Streams and Mountains Piedmont WV The Place Name Press p 260 United States Congress Henry Gassaway Davis id D000103 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Further reading EditWilliams John Alexander West Virginia and the Captains of Industry 1976 Williams John Alexander Davis and Elkins of West Virginia businessmen in politics PhD dissertation Yale University 1967 ProQuest Dissertations Publishing 1967 6708432 U S SenatePreceded byWaitman T Willey U S Senator Class 2 from West Virginia1871 1883 Served alongside Arthur I Boreman Allen T Caperton Samuel Price Frank Hereford Johnson N Camden Succeeded byJohn E KennaPreceded byWilliam Windom Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee1879 1881 Succeeded byWilliam B AllisonParty political officesPreceded byAdlai Stevenson I Democratic nominee Vice President of the United States1904 Succeeded byJohn W Kern Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Gassaway Davis amp oldid 1130398981, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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