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Henry Jarvis Raymond

Henry Jarvis Raymond (January 24, 1820 – June 18, 1869) was an American journalist, politician, and co-founder of The New York Times, which he founded with George Jones. He was a member of the New York State Assembly, Lieutenant Governor of New York, Chairman of the Republican National Committee, and elected to the US House of Representatives. For his contribution towards the formation of the Republican Party, Raymond has sometimes been called the "godfather of the Republican Party."

Henry Jarvis Raymond
Lieutenant Governor of New York
In office
1855–1856
GovernorMyron H. Clark
Preceded bySanford E. Church
Succeeded byHenry R. Selden
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 6th district
In office
March 4, 1865 – March 3, 1867
Preceded byElijah Ward
Succeeded byThomas E. Stewart
2nd Chairman of the Republican National Committee
In office
1864–1866
Preceded byEdwin D. Morgan
Succeeded byMarcus L. Ward
Member of the New York State Assembly
from the New York County, 7th district
In office
January 1, 1850 – December 31, 1851
Preceded byAbraham Van Orden
Succeeded byFreeborn G. Luckey
Personal details
Born(1820-01-24)January 24, 1820
Livingston County, New York
DiedJune 18, 1869(1869-06-18) (aged 49)
New York City, New York
Political partyRepublican
SpouseJuliette Weaver
ChildrenEdward Henry Raymond
Mary Elizabeth Raymond
Lucy Margaret Raymond
Henry Warren Raymond
Walter Jarvis Raymond
Aimee Juliette Arteniese Raymond
Arthur William Raymond
Parent(s)Jarvis Raymond
Lavinia Brockway
Alma materGenesee Wesleyan Seminary
University of Vermont
Columbia Law School
OccupationWriter, Editor, Politician, Publisher and Founder of The New York Times

Biography

Early life and ancestors

 
Henry Jarvis Raymond in his younger years

He was born on January 24, 1820, on the family farm near Lima, New York, a son and the eldest child of Lavinia Brockway, the daughter of Clark Brockway and Sally Wade and Jarvis Raymond, the son of Jonathan P. Raymond and Hannah Jarvis.[1][2]

He was an 8th generation direct lineal descendant of Captain Richard Raymond (1602–1692) and his wife, Judith. There is no evidence to suggest that he was born in Essex, England, although Samuel Raymond's family history makes that claim, and he arrived in Salem, Massachusetts, about 1629/30, possibly with a contingent led by the Rev. Francis Higginson. The first actual date given for Richard is on August 6, 1629, when he is on the list of the 30 founding members of the First Church (Congregational) of Salem. He was about 27 years old. He was made a Freeman of Salem in 1634 and was later a founder of Norwalk, Connecticut, and an "honored forefather of Saybrook".

Education

Raymond gave early evidence of his superior intellectual skills: it is said that he could read by the age of three and deliver speeches when he was five. He enrolled at age twelve in the Genesee Wesleyan Seminary at Lima, New York, a school established by the Methodist Episcopal Church which would later grow into Syracuse University.

He graduated from the University of Vermont in 1840 with high honors. Between 1841 and 1851, Raymond worked for various newspapers, including Horace Greeley's New York Tribune and James Watson Webb's Courier and Enquirer, as a journalist and associate editor. He had known George Jones since their time at the Tribune and the two had often discussed the possibility of starting a newspaper themselves. In 1851, Raymond convinced Jones to become his partner and publish a new paper that would report the news in a neutral manner. In 1851, Raymond formed Raymond, Jones & Company, Inc. and founded The New York Times. He was the newspaper's editor until his death.[3]

Marriage and family

On October 24, 1843, in Winooski, Vermont, Raymond married Juliette Weaver (April 12, 1822 – October 13, 1914), who was a daughter of John Warren Weaver and Artemisia Munson. Henry and Juliette were the parents of seven children.

Their son Henry Warren Raymond (1847–1925) was an 1869 graduate of Yale College, and, in the same year, was initiated as a member of the Skull and Bones secret society. He also graduated from Columbia University School of Law in 1871. He was a reporter for The New York Times from 1869 to 1872, and he also served as private secretary to the Secretary of the Navy Benjamin F. Tracy from 1889 to 1893. He entered private law practice in 1893.[4]: 1311–13 

Their daughter Mary Elizabeth Raymond (September 10, 1849 – June 13, 1897) was born in New York City and died in Morristown, New Jersey. She married Earl Philip Mason (August 5, 1848 – March 17, 1901) on April 18, 1872, in New York City.[5] Mason was born in Providence, Rhode Island and died in San Antonio, Texas. His father was the founder of the Rhode Island Locomotive Works in 1865 in Providence, Rhode Island, and Mason joined the company in 1872 and remained with the company until 1895, eventually becoming vice-president.

Their daughter Aimee Juliette Arteniese Raymond (1857–1903) was a physician, writer and editor. She graduated from New York Medical College in 1889. She was married to Dr. Henry Harmon Schroeder.[6]

Politics

New York State politics

Raymond was a member of the New York State Assembly in 1850 and 1851, and in the latter year was elected Speaker. A member of the Whig Party's Northern radical anti-slavery wing, his nomination over Greeley on the Whig ticket for Lieutenant Governor of New York in 1854 led to the dissolution of the political partnership of Seward, Weed, and Greeley. Raymond was elected lieutenant governor and served from 1855 to 1856.

Raymond has sometimes been called "the godfather of the Republican Party,"[7] as Raymond had a prominent part in the formation of the Republican Party and drafted the Address to the People, adopted by the Republican organizing convention that met in Pittsburgh on February 22, 1856. In 1862, he was again Speaker of the New York Assembly.[8]

Federal politics

He was among the first to urge the adoption of a broad and liberal postwar attitude toward the people of the South and opposed the Radical Republicans, who wanted harsher measures against the South. In 1865, he was a delegate to the National Republican Convention and was made Chairman of the Republican National Committee. He was a member of the US House of Representatives from 1865 to 1867.

On December 22, 1865, he attacked Thaddeus Stevens's theory of the dead states in which states that had seceded were not to be restored to their former status in the Union, and, agreeing with the President, Raymond argued that the states never left the Union since the ordinances of secession were null. Raymond authored the Address and Declaration of Principles issued by the Loyalist Convention (or National Union Convention) at Philadelphia in August 1866. His attack on Stevens and his prominence at the Loyalist Convention caused him to lose favor with the Republican Party. He was removed from the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee in 1866, and in 1867, his nomination as minister to Austria, which he had already refused, was rejected by the US Senate.

He retired from public life in 1867 and devoted his time to newspaper work until his death in New York City in 1869.

Journalistic career

Raymond began his journalistic career on Horace Greeley's Tribune and gained further experience in editing James Watson Webb's Courier and Enquirer. Then, with the help of friends, Raymond raised $100,000 capital, a hundred times what Greeley staked on the Tribune ten years earlier, and founded The New York Times on September 18, 1851.

Editorially, Raymond sought a niche between Greeley's open partisanship and Bennett's party neutrality. In the first issue of the Times Raymond announced his purpose to write in temperate and measured language and to get into a passion as rarely as possible. "There are few things in this world which it is worthwhile to get angry about; and they are just the things anger will not improve." In controversy he meant to avoid abusive language. His editorials were generally cautious, impersonal, and finished in form.

President Lincoln wrote, "The Times, I believe, is always true to the Union, and therefore should be treated at least as well as any."[9]

Raymond's moderation was evident during the period after Lincoln's election and before his nomination. He wrote to the Alabama secessionist William L. Yance, "We shall stand on the Constitution which our fathers made. We shall not make a new one, nor shall we permit any human power to destroy the one.... We seek no war—we shall wage no war except in defense of the constitution and against its foes. But we have a country and a constitutional government. We know its worth to us and to mankind, and in case of necessity we are ready to test its strength."[10]

"That sentiment guided the editorial course of The Times through the turbulent winter between Lincoln's election and the attack on Fort Sumter. Raymond deprecated, as all sensible men deprecated, any hasty aggression which might provoke to violence men who could still, perhaps, be brought back to reason; but he insisted that as a last resort the union must be maintained by any means necessary. To the proposals for compromise he was favorable, on condition that they did not compromise the essential issue—that they did not nullify the election of 1860 and give back to the slave power the control of the national government which it had lost. Because no other compromise would have been acceptable the issue inevitably had to be fought out, and from Sumter to Appomattox The Times was unwavering in its support of Lincoln and its determination that the Federal union must and should be preserved."[10]

Works

Raymond was an able public speaker; one of his best known speeches was made to greet Hungarian leader Lajos Kossuth, whose cause he defended, during Kossuth's visit to New York City in December 1851.[11]

In addition to his work with The New York Times, he wrote several books, including:

  • A Life of Daniel Webster (1853)
  • Political Lessons of the Revolution (1854)
  • A History of the Administration of President Lincoln (1864)
  • The Life and Public Services of Abraham Lincoln (1865)

Death

Raymond died in New York City, New York on June 18, 1869 from a heart attack,[12] and his death became a subject of controversy.[13] He was buried in Brooklyn's Green-Wood Cemetery.

Publications

  • Augustus Maverick, Henry J. Raymond and the New York Press for Thirty Years, A.S. Hale & Company, 1870.

Notes

  1. ^ Raymond, Samuel (1886). Genealogies of the Raymond families of New England, 1630-1 to 1886. J.J. Little & Co. p. 75. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  2. ^ Maverick, Augustus (1870). Henry J. Raymond and the New York Press, for Thirty Years. A.S. Hale & Co. p. 15. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  3. ^ The New York Public Library (2007). Megan O'Shea (ed.). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-12-15.
  4. ^ "Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year 1924-1925" (PDF). Bulletin of Yale University. New Haven: Yale University. 21 (22). 1 August 1925. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  5. ^ Rhode Island Historical Society (1902). Proceedings of the Rhode Island Historical Society. Vol. 5. Rhode Island Historical Society. pp. 1–72. ISSN 0275-1550. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  6. ^ Kelly, H.A. (1920). A Cyclopedia of American Medical Biography: Comprising the Lives of Eminent Deceased Physicians and Surgeons from 1610 to 1910. Vol. 1. W.B. Saunders Company. p. 960. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  7. ^ Widmer, Ted. "A Very Mad-Man". Opinionator. Retrieved 2017-03-12.
  8. ^ Peter R. Eisenstadt; Laura-Eve Moss (2005). The Encyclopedia of New York State. Syracuse University Press. p. 1287. ISBN 978-0-8156-0808-0.
  9. ^ Basler, 360
  10. ^ a b Davis, 50–51
  11. ^ Maverick, Augustus. Henry J. Raymond and the New York Press, for Thirty Years: Progress of American Journalism from 1840 to 1870. Hartford, Conn: A.S. Hale, 1870, pp. 114–119.
  12. ^ Talese, Gay. The Kingdom and the Power: Behind the Scenes at the New York Times, the Institution That Influences the World. New York: Random House, 2007, p. 160.
  13. ^ David T.Z. Mindich. Raymond, Henry Jarvis., American National Biography Online, February 2000. Retrieved January 24, 2016.

Further reading

  • Davis, Elmer. History of the New York Times, 1851–1921 (1921)
  • Dicken-Garcia, Hazel. Journalistic Standards in Nineteenth-Century America (1989)
  • Douglas, George H. The Golden Age of the Newspaper (1999)
  • Maverick, Augustus. Henry J. Raymond and the New York Press, for Thirty Years: Progress of American Journalism from 1840 to 1870 (1870), 501pp online
  • Sloan, W. David and James D. Startt. The Gilded Age Press, 1865–1900 (2003)
  • Summers, Mark Wahlgren.The Press Gang: Newspapers and Politics, 1865–1878 (1994)
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Raymond, Henry Jarvis". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • This article also copies from Newspapers, 1775–1860 by Frank W. Scott (1917), which is also in the public domain

External links

  • Works by or about Henry Jarvis Raymond at Internet Archive
  • Henry Jarvis Raymond at Find a Grave
  • George Jones and Henry J. Raymond papers, Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library.
  • Henry J. Raymond papers, Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library.
New York State Assembly
Preceded by
Abraham Van Orden
New York State Assembly
New York County, 7th District

1850–1851
Succeeded by
Freeborn G. Luckey
Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the New York State Assembly
1851
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lieutenant Governor of New York
1855–1856
Succeeded by
Preceded by Speaker of the New York State Assembly
1862
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Chairman of the Republican National Committee
1864–1866
Succeeded by
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 6th congressional district

1865–1867
Succeeded by

henry, jarvis, raymond, january, 1820, june, 1869, american, journalist, politician, founder, york, times, which, founded, with, george, jones, member, york, state, assembly, lieutenant, governor, york, chairman, republican, national, committee, elected, house. Henry Jarvis Raymond January 24 1820 June 18 1869 was an American journalist politician and co founder of The New York Times which he founded with George Jones He was a member of the New York State Assembly Lieutenant Governor of New York Chairman of the Republican National Committee and elected to the US House of Representatives For his contribution towards the formation of the Republican Party Raymond has sometimes been called the godfather of the Republican Party Henry Jarvis RaymondLieutenant Governor of New YorkIn office 1855 1856GovernorMyron H ClarkPreceded bySanford E ChurchSucceeded byHenry R SeldenMember of the U S House of Representativesfrom New York s 6th districtIn office March 4 1865 March 3 1867Preceded byElijah WardSucceeded byThomas E Stewart2nd Chairman of the Republican National CommitteeIn office 1864 1866Preceded byEdwin D MorganSucceeded byMarcus L WardMember of the New York State Assembly from the New York County 7th districtIn office January 1 1850 December 31 1851Preceded byAbraham Van OrdenSucceeded byFreeborn G LuckeyPersonal detailsBorn 1820 01 24 January 24 1820Livingston County New YorkDiedJune 18 1869 1869 06 18 aged 49 New York City New YorkPolitical partyRepublicanSpouseJuliette WeaverChildrenEdward Henry RaymondMary Elizabeth RaymondLucy Margaret RaymondHenry Warren RaymondWalter Jarvis RaymondAimee Juliette Arteniese RaymondArthur William RaymondParent s Jarvis Raymond Lavinia BrockwayAlma materGenesee Wesleyan Seminary University of Vermont Columbia Law SchoolOccupationWriter Editor Politician Publisher and Founder of The New York Times Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and ancestors 1 2 Education 1 3 Marriage and family 2 Politics 2 1 New York State politics 2 2 Federal politics 3 Journalistic career 4 Works 5 Death 6 Publications 7 Notes 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography EditEarly life and ancestors Edit Henry Jarvis Raymond in his younger years He was born on January 24 1820 on the family farm near Lima New York a son and the eldest child of Lavinia Brockway the daughter of Clark Brockway and Sally Wade and Jarvis Raymond the son of Jonathan P Raymond and Hannah Jarvis 1 2 He was an 8th generation direct lineal descendant of Captain Richard Raymond 1602 1692 and his wife Judith There is no evidence to suggest that he was born in Essex England although Samuel Raymond s family history makes that claim and he arrived in Salem Massachusetts about 1629 30 possibly with a contingent led by the Rev Francis Higginson The first actual date given for Richard is on August 6 1629 when he is on the list of the 30 founding members of the First Church Congregational of Salem He was about 27 years old He was made a Freeman of Salem in 1634 and was later a founder of Norwalk Connecticut and an honored forefather of Saybrook Education Edit Raymond gave early evidence of his superior intellectual skills it is said that he could read by the age of three and deliver speeches when he was five He enrolled at age twelve in the Genesee Wesleyan Seminary at Lima New York a school established by the Methodist Episcopal Church which would later grow into Syracuse University He graduated from the University of Vermont in 1840 with high honors Between 1841 and 1851 Raymond worked for various newspapers including Horace Greeley s New York Tribune and James Watson Webb s Courier and Enquirer as a journalist and associate editor He had known George Jones since their time at the Tribune and the two had often discussed the possibility of starting a newspaper themselves In 1851 Raymond convinced Jones to become his partner and publish a new paper that would report the news in a neutral manner In 1851 Raymond formed Raymond Jones amp Company Inc and founded The New York Times He was the newspaper s editor until his death 3 Marriage and family Edit On October 24 1843 in Winooski Vermont Raymond married Juliette Weaver April 12 1822 October 13 1914 who was a daughter of John Warren Weaver and Artemisia Munson Henry and Juliette were the parents of seven children Their son Henry Warren Raymond 1847 1925 was an 1869 graduate of Yale College and in the same year was initiated as a member of the Skull and Bones secret society He also graduated from Columbia University School of Law in 1871 He was a reporter for The New York Times from 1869 to 1872 and he also served as private secretary to the Secretary of the Navy Benjamin F Tracy from 1889 to 1893 He entered private law practice in 1893 4 1311 13 Their daughter Mary Elizabeth Raymond September 10 1849 June 13 1897 was born in New York City and died in Morristown New Jersey She married Earl Philip Mason August 5 1848 March 17 1901 on April 18 1872 in New York City 5 Mason was born in Providence Rhode Island and died in San Antonio Texas His father was the founder of the Rhode Island Locomotive Works in 1865 in Providence Rhode Island and Mason joined the company in 1872 and remained with the company until 1895 eventually becoming vice president Their daughter Aimee Juliette Arteniese Raymond 1857 1903 was a physician writer and editor She graduated from New York Medical College in 1889 She was married to Dr Henry Harmon Schroeder 6 Politics EditNew York State politics Edit Raymond was a member of the New York State Assembly in 1850 and 1851 and in the latter year was elected Speaker A member of the Whig Party s Northern radical anti slavery wing his nomination over Greeley on the Whig ticket for Lieutenant Governor of New York in 1854 led to the dissolution of the political partnership of Seward Weed and Greeley Raymond was elected lieutenant governor and served from 1855 to 1856 Raymond has sometimes been called the godfather of the Republican Party 7 as Raymond had a prominent part in the formation of the Republican Party and drafted the Address to the People adopted by the Republican organizing convention that met in Pittsburgh on February 22 1856 In 1862 he was again Speaker of the New York Assembly 8 Federal politics Edit He was among the first to urge the adoption of a broad and liberal postwar attitude toward the people of the South and opposed the Radical Republicans who wanted harsher measures against the South In 1865 he was a delegate to the National Republican Convention and was made Chairman of the Republican National Committee He was a member of the US House of Representatives from 1865 to 1867 On December 22 1865 he attacked Thaddeus Stevens s theory of the dead states in which states that had seceded were not to be restored to their former status in the Union and agreeing with the President Raymond argued that the states never left the Union since the ordinances of secession were null Raymond authored the Address and Declaration of Principles issued by the Loyalist Convention or National Union Convention at Philadelphia in August 1866 His attack on Stevens and his prominence at the Loyalist Convention caused him to lose favor with the Republican Party He was removed from the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee in 1866 and in 1867 his nomination as minister to Austria which he had already refused was rejected by the US Senate He retired from public life in 1867 and devoted his time to newspaper work until his death in New York City in 1869 Journalistic career EditRaymond began his journalistic career on Horace Greeley s Tribune and gained further experience in editing James Watson Webb s Courier and Enquirer Then with the help of friends Raymond raised 100 000 capital a hundred times what Greeley staked on the Tribune ten years earlier and founded The New York Times on September 18 1851 Editorially Raymond sought a niche between Greeley s open partisanship and Bennett s party neutrality In the first issue of the Times Raymond announced his purpose to write in temperate and measured language and to get into a passion as rarely as possible There are few things in this world which it is worthwhile to get angry about and they are just the things anger will not improve In controversy he meant to avoid abusive language His editorials were generally cautious impersonal and finished in form President Lincoln wrote The Times I believe is always true to the Union and therefore should be treated at least as well as any 9 Raymond s moderation was evident during the period after Lincoln s election and before his nomination He wrote to the Alabama secessionist William L Yance We shall stand on the Constitution which our fathers made We shall not make a new one nor shall we permit any human power to destroy the one We seek no war we shall wage no war except in defense of the constitution and against its foes But we have a country and a constitutional government We know its worth to us and to mankind and in case of necessity we are ready to test its strength 10 That sentiment guided the editorial course of The Times through the turbulent winter between Lincoln s election and the attack on Fort Sumter Raymond deprecated as all sensible men deprecated any hasty aggression which might provoke to violence men who could still perhaps be brought back to reason but he insisted that as a last resort the union must be maintained by any means necessary To the proposals for compromise he was favorable on condition that they did not compromise the essential issue that they did not nullify the election of 1860 and give back to the slave power the control of the national government which it had lost Because no other compromise would have been acceptable the issue inevitably had to be fought out and from Sumter to Appomattox The Times was unwavering in its support of Lincoln and its determination that the Federal union must and should be preserved 10 Works EditRaymond was an able public speaker one of his best known speeches was made to greet Hungarian leader Lajos Kossuth whose cause he defended during Kossuth s visit to New York City in December 1851 11 In addition to his work with The New York Times he wrote several books including A Life of Daniel Webster 1853 Political Lessons of the Revolution 1854 A History of the Administration of President Lincoln 1864 The Life and Public Services of Abraham Lincoln 1865 Death EditRaymond died in New York City New York on June 18 1869 from a heart attack 12 and his death became a subject of controversy 13 He was buried in Brooklyn s Green Wood Cemetery Publications EditAugustus Maverick Henry J Raymond and the New York Press for Thirty Years A S Hale amp Company 1870 Notes Edit Raymond Samuel 1886 Genealogies of the Raymond families of New England 1630 1 to 1886 J J Little amp Co p 75 Retrieved December 15 2014 Maverick Augustus 1870 Henry J Raymond and the New York Press for Thirty Years A S Hale amp Co p 15 Retrieved December 15 2014 The New York Public Library 2007 Megan O Shea ed Henry J Raymond Papers 1840 1951 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2019 12 15 Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year 1924 1925 PDF Bulletin of Yale University New Haven Yale University 21 22 1 August 1925 Retrieved 3 August 2015 Rhode Island Historical Society 1902 Proceedings of the Rhode Island Historical Society Vol 5 Rhode Island Historical Society pp 1 72 ISSN 0275 1550 Retrieved December 15 2014 Kelly H A 1920 A Cyclopedia of American Medical Biography Comprising the Lives of Eminent Deceased Physicians and Surgeons from 1610 to 1910 Vol 1 W B Saunders Company p 960 Retrieved December 15 2014 Widmer Ted A Very Mad Man Opinionator Retrieved 2017 03 12 Peter R Eisenstadt Laura Eve Moss 2005 The Encyclopedia of New York State Syracuse University Press p 1287 ISBN 978 0 8156 0808 0 Basler 360 a b Davis 50 51 Maverick Augustus Henry J Raymond and the New York Press for Thirty Years Progress of American Journalism from 1840 to 1870 Hartford Conn A S Hale 1870 pp 114 119 Talese Gay The Kingdom and the Power Behind the Scenes at the New York Times the Institution That Influences the World New York Random House 2007 p 160 David T Z Mindich Raymond Henry Jarvis American National Biography Online February 2000 Retrieved January 24 2016 Further reading EditDavis Elmer History of the New York Times 1851 1921 1921 Dicken Garcia Hazel Journalistic Standards in Nineteenth Century America 1989 Douglas George H The Golden Age of the Newspaper 1999 Maverick Augustus Henry J Raymond and the New York Press for Thirty Years Progress of American Journalism from 1840 to 1870 1870 501pp online Sloan W David and James D Startt The Gilded Age Press 1865 1900 2003 Summers Mark Wahlgren The Press Gang Newspapers and Politics 1865 1878 1994 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Raymond Henry Jarvis Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press This article also copies from Newspapers 1775 1860 by Frank W Scott 1917 which is also in the public domainExternal links EditWorks by or about Henry Jarvis Raymond at Internet Archive Mr Lincoln and New York Henry J Raymond Henry Jarvis Raymond at Find a Grave George Jones and Henry J Raymond papers Manuscripts and Archives Division The New York Public Library Henry J Raymond papers Manuscripts and Archives Division The New York Public Library New York State AssemblyPreceded byAbraham Van Orden New York State Assembly New York County 7th District1850 1851 Succeeded byFreeborn G LuckeyPolitical officesPreceded byFerral C Dininny Speaker of the New York State Assembly1851 Succeeded byJoseph B Varnum Jr Preceded bySanford E Church Lieutenant Governor of New York1855 1856 Succeeded byHenry R SeldenPreceded byDeWitt Clinton Littlejohn Speaker of the New York State Assembly1862 Succeeded byTheophilus C CallicotParty political officesPreceded byEdwin D Morgan Chairman of the Republican National Committee1864 1866 Succeeded byMarcus L WardU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byElijah Ward Member of the U S House of Representatives from New York s 6th congressional district1865 1867 Succeeded byThomas E Stewart Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Jarvis Raymond amp oldid 1099524314, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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