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Joseph Medill

Joseph Medill (April 6, 1823 – March 16, 1899) was a Canadian-American newspaper editor, publisher, and Republican Party politician. He was co-owner and managing editor of the Chicago Tribune, and he was Mayor of Chicago from after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 until 1873.

Joseph Medill
26th Mayor of Chicago
In office
1871–1873
Preceded byRoswell B. Mason
Succeeded by(Lester L. Bond), Harvey Doolittle Colvin
Personal details
Born(1823-04-06)April 6, 1823
Saint John, New Brunswick, British North America
DiedMarch 16, 1899(1899-03-16) (aged 75)
San Antonio, Texas
Political partyFree Soil, Whig, Republican
SpouseKatherine "Kitty" Patrick
Children3
Residence(s)Wheaton, Illinois
Signature

Personal life

Joseph Medill was born April 6, 1823, in Saint John, New Brunswick, British North America to a Scots-Irish family. He read law in Ohio and was admitted to the Ohio Bar in 1846.[1]

Medill married Katherine "Kitty" Patrick on September 2, 1852, and they had three daughters, Katherine, Elinor and Josephine.[1]

 
Medill taught at this school in Navarre, Ohio in the 1840s

Publishing career

In 1859 Medill purchased the Coshocton Democratic Whig then renamed the paper as the Democratic Whig. In 1853, Medill and Edwin Cowles started the Leader, a newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio. (It was later absorbed by The Plain Dealer.) In 1854, the Tribune's part-owner, Captain J. D. Webster, asked Medill to become the paper's managing editor. Medill was further encouraged to come to Chicago by Dr. Charles H. Ray of Galena, Illinois, and editor Horace Greeley of the New York Tribune.

In 1855, Medill sold his interest in the Leader to Cowles and bought the Tribune in partnership with Dr. Ray and Alfred Cowles (Edwin's brother).[2]

Under Medill's management, the Tribune flourished, becoming one of the largest newspapers in Chicago. Medill served as its managing editor until 1864, when Horace White became editor-in-chief. At that time Medill left day-to-day operations of the Tribune for political activities.

But White clashed with Medill over the presidential election of 1872. So, in 1873 Medill bought additional equity from Cowles and from White, becoming majority owner. In 1874, he replaced White as editor-in-chief. Medill served as editor-in-chief until his death.

Political activity

Under Medill, the Tribune became the leading Republican newspaper in Chicago. Medill was strongly anti-slavery, supporting both the Free-Soil cause and Abolitionism. Medill was a major supporter of Abraham Lincoln in the 1850s. Medill and the Tribune were instrumental in Lincoln's presidential nomination, and were equally supportive of the Union cause during the American Civil War. The Tribune's chief adversary through this period was the Chicago Times, which supported the Democrats.

Medill was among Chicago's Protestant elites. His rabid anti-Irish sentiment was published daily in The Chicago Tribune. He regularly dismissed the Irish as lazy and shiftless. “Who does not know that the most depraved, debased, worthless and irredeemable drunkards and sots which curse the community are Irish Catholics?” This came even as Irish laborers worked feverishly to complete Chicago's stately St. Patrick's church at Adams and Desplaines Streets in the mid-1850s.[3]

In 1864, Medill left the Tribune editorship for political activity, which occupied him for the next ten years. He was appointed by President Grant to the first Civil Service Commission. In 1870, he was elected as a delegate to the Illinois Constitutional convention.[1]

Mayoralty

In 1871, after the Great Chicago Fire, Medill was elected mayor of Chicago as candidate of the temporary "Fireproof" party, defeating Charles C. P. Holden, and served as mayor for two years.

Medill was sworn in as mayor on December 4, 1871.[4]

As mayor, Medill gained more power for the mayor's office, created Chicago's first public library, enforced blue laws, and reformed the police and fire departments.[1][5]

During his mayoralty, Medill worked successfully to have the Illinois General Assembly modify the city charter to increase mayoral authority.[5] As mayor-elect, on December 4, 1871, he tapped Judge Murray F. Tuley to draft a "Mayor's Bill" to be submitted to the General Assembly in its next session.[5] After successful lobbying by Medill and Tuley, the bill passed on March 9, 1872.[5] It went into effect July 1 1872,[5] and provided the mayor with the new authority to,

  • Serve as presiding officer of the Chicago City Council; to appoint all unelected city officials with the advice and consent of the City Council[5]
  • Remove all unelected city officials, with only the requirement that they provide the City Council with reasons for such a removal[5]
  • Appoint the standing committees of the City Council and serve as an ex officio member of those committees[5]
  • Veto any ordinance, including all or part of an appropriations ordinance, with a two-thirds vote of the City Council required to override such as veto[5]
  • Exercise special police powers[5]

In his first year as mayor, Medill received very little legislative resistance from the Chicago City Council.[5] While he vetoed what was an unprecedented eleven City Council ordinances that year, most narrowly were involved with specific financial practices considered wasteful and none of the vetoes were overridden.[5] He used his new powers to appoint the members of the newly constituted Chicago Board of Education and the commissioners of its constituted public library. His appointments were approved unanimously by the City Council.[5]

Medill sought funding for the recovery of Chicago.[5] Medill had strongly lobbied on behalf of the city to receive state financial aid, taking advantage of his connections with state legislators in the state capitol of Springfield, Illinois.[5] While, at the time, state law prohibited the direct appropriation of state funds to the city, Medill was able to get the legislature to pass a special act reimbursing the city for $2.9 million the city had expended on the state-owned Illinois and Michigan Canal.[5] Medill also sought federal financial help.[5] Medill took advantage of his connections in Washington, D.C. to seek such aid.[5] In his third month in office, he wrote Vice President Schuyler Colfax to urge the passage of a tariff rebate that would help increase the supply of inexpensive material for the reconstruction of the city.[5] Despite strong opposition from lumber interests, the legislation succeeded in passing.[5] Medill also convinced President Grant to give a personal $1,000 contribution to aid the city's reconstruction.[5] More than $5 million in gifts an loans were collected from people and cities across the world.[5]

Taking Medill's lead, on February 12, 1872, the City Council approved 26-6 an ordinance that prohibited the construction of wood frame buildings in city limits.[5]

Medill was a strong Republican loyalist who supported President Grant for re-election in 1872. The breach with White came because White supported the breakaway Liberal Republicans, reformists who nominated Horace Greeley for president. It was also at this time that Medill broke with Greeley.[citation needed]

In his second year as mayor, tensions arose as he began to further utilize the new powers given to the mayor.[5] At the first 1873 meeting of the City Council, Medill announced that he would be using the power to select the chairmen of members of the council committees. He appointed his loyalists to lead most important committees, while aldermen of wards consisting of immigrant populations received lesser consideration for appointments.[5] In the first three months of 1873 alone, Medill practiced his veto power on five City Council ordinances.[5]

Medill and his police superintendent Elmer Washburn cracked down on gambling.[3]

Medill met not only resistance from a City Council divided over his exercise of power and aspects of his agenda, but also resistance from citizens.[5] Anton C. Hesing derided him as "Joseph I, Dictator".[3]

The stress of the job of mayor impaired Medill's health. In August 1873, he appointed Lester L. Bond as Acting Mayor for the remaining 3½ months of his term, and went to Europe on a convalescent tour.[1][5]

Post-mayoral politics

Medill died on March 16th,1899 at the age of 75 in San Antonio,Texas.

Legacy and honors

During World War II, the Liberty ship SS Joseph M. Medill was built in Panama City, and named in his honor.[6]

The Medill School of Journalism, Media, and Integrated Marketing Communications at Northwestern University is also named in his honor.[7]

Family tree

The tree omits Medill's third daughter, Josephine, who died in 1892.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f McKinney, Megan (2011). The Magnificent Medills. New York, New York: Harper Collins. p. 10. ISBN 9780062097750. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  2. ^ Rushton, Wyatt (1916). Joseph Medill and the Chicago Tribune (thesis). University of Wisconsin-Madison. Retrieved 2007-10-24. and White, James Terry (1895). The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography: Being the History of the United States. James T. White & Company, via New York Public Library via Internet Archive full view. p. 224. Retrieved 2007-10-24.
  3. ^ a b c Lindberg, Richard C. (2009). The Gambler King of Clark Street: Michael C. McDonald and the Rise of Chicago's Democratic Machine. SIU Press. pp. 6, 36–37, 82. ISBN 978-0-8093-8654-3. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  4. ^ "Mayor Joseph Medill Inaugural Address, 1871". www.chipublib.org. Chicago Public Library. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Green, Paul M.; Holli, Melvin G. (2013). The Mayors: The Chicago Political Tradition, fourth edition. SIU Press. pp. 1–14. ISBN 978-0-8093-3199-4. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  6. ^ Williams, Greg H. (25 July 2014). The Liberty Ships of World War II: A Record of the 2,710 Vessels and Their Builders, Operators and Namesakes, with a History of the Jeremiah O'Brien. McFarland. ISBN 978-1476617541. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
  7. ^ "Our History". www.medill.northwestern.edu.

Further reading

  • McKinney, M. The Magnificent Medills (2011)
  • Anderson, Jeffrey Justin. Joseph Medill: How one man influenced the Republican presidential nomination of 1860 (Ph.D. Diss.) Roosevelt University, 2011.
  • Tebbel, John William. An American dynasty: the story of the McCormicks, Medills, and Pattersons Greenwood Pub. Group, 1968.

External links

joseph, medill, april, 1823, march, 1899, canadian, american, newspaper, editor, publisher, republican, party, politician, owner, managing, editor, chicago, tribune, mayor, chicago, from, after, great, chicago, fire, 1871, until, 1873, 26th, mayor, chicagoin, . Joseph Medill April 6 1823 March 16 1899 was a Canadian American newspaper editor publisher and Republican Party politician He was co owner and managing editor of the Chicago Tribune and he was Mayor of Chicago from after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 until 1873 Joseph Medill26th Mayor of ChicagoIn office 1871 1873Preceded byRoswell B MasonSucceeded by Lester L Bond Harvey Doolittle ColvinPersonal detailsBorn 1823 04 06 April 6 1823Saint John New Brunswick British North AmericaDiedMarch 16 1899 1899 03 16 aged 75 San Antonio TexasPolitical partyFree Soil Whig RepublicanSpouseKatherine Kitty PatrickChildren3Residence s Wheaton IllinoisSignature Contents 1 Personal life 2 Publishing career 3 Political activity 3 1 Mayoralty 3 2 Post mayoral politics 4 Legacy and honors 5 Family tree 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksPersonal life EditJoseph Medill was born April 6 1823 in Saint John New Brunswick British North America to a Scots Irish family He read law in Ohio and was admitted to the Ohio Bar in 1846 1 Medill married Katherine Kitty Patrick on September 2 1852 and they had three daughters Katherine Elinor and Josephine 1 Medill taught at this school in Navarre Ohio in the 1840sPublishing career EditIn 1859 Medill purchased the Coshocton Democratic Whig then renamed the paper as the Democratic Whig In 1853 Medill and Edwin Cowles started the Leader a newspaper in Cleveland Ohio It was later absorbed by The Plain Dealer In 1854 the Tribune s part owner Captain J D Webster asked Medill to become the paper s managing editor Medill was further encouraged to come to Chicago by Dr Charles H Ray of Galena Illinois and editor Horace Greeley of the New York Tribune In 1855 Medill sold his interest in the Leader to Cowles and bought the Tribune in partnership with Dr Ray and Alfred Cowles Edwin s brother 2 Under Medill s management the Tribune flourished becoming one of the largest newspapers in Chicago Medill served as its managing editor until 1864 when Horace White became editor in chief At that time Medill left day to day operations of the Tribune for political activities But White clashed with Medill over the presidential election of 1872 So in 1873 Medill bought additional equity from Cowles and from White becoming majority owner In 1874 he replaced White as editor in chief Medill served as editor in chief until his death Political activity EditUnder Medill the Tribune became the leading Republican newspaper in Chicago Medill was strongly anti slavery supporting both the Free Soil cause and Abolitionism Medill was a major supporter of Abraham Lincoln in the 1850s Medill and the Tribune were instrumental in Lincoln s presidential nomination and were equally supportive of the Union cause during the American Civil War The Tribune s chief adversary through this period was the Chicago Times which supported the Democrats Medill was among Chicago s Protestant elites His rabid anti Irish sentiment was published daily in The Chicago Tribune He regularly dismissed the Irish as lazy and shiftless Who does not know that the most depraved debased worthless and irredeemable drunkards and sots which curse the community are Irish Catholics This came even as Irish laborers worked feverishly to complete Chicago s stately St Patrick s church at Adams and Desplaines Streets in the mid 1850s 3 In 1864 Medill left the Tribune editorship for political activity which occupied him for the next ten years He was appointed by President Grant to the first Civil Service Commission In 1870 he was elected as a delegate to the Illinois Constitutional convention 1 Mayoralty Edit In 1871 after the Great Chicago Fire Medill was elected mayor of Chicago as candidate of the temporary Fireproof party defeating Charles C P Holden and served as mayor for two years Medill was sworn in as mayor on December 4 1871 4 As mayor Medill gained more power for the mayor s office created Chicago s first public library enforced blue laws and reformed the police and fire departments 1 5 During his mayoralty Medill worked successfully to have the Illinois General Assembly modify the city charter to increase mayoral authority 5 As mayor elect on December 4 1871 he tapped Judge Murray F Tuley to draft a Mayor s Bill to be submitted to the General Assembly in its next session 5 After successful lobbying by Medill and Tuley the bill passed on March 9 1872 5 It went into effect July 1 1872 5 and provided the mayor with the new authority to Serve as presiding officer of the Chicago City Council to appoint all unelected city officials with the advice and consent of the City Council 5 Remove all unelected city officials with only the requirement that they provide the City Council with reasons for such a removal 5 Appoint the standing committees of the City Council and serve as an ex officio member of those committees 5 Veto any ordinance including all or part of an appropriations ordinance with a two thirds vote of the City Council required to override such as veto 5 Exercise special police powers 5 In his first year as mayor Medill received very little legislative resistance from the Chicago City Council 5 While he vetoed what was an unprecedented eleven City Council ordinances that year most narrowly were involved with specific financial practices considered wasteful and none of the vetoes were overridden 5 He used his new powers to appoint the members of the newly constituted Chicago Board of Education and the commissioners of its constituted public library His appointments were approved unanimously by the City Council 5 Medill sought funding for the recovery of Chicago 5 Medill had strongly lobbied on behalf of the city to receive state financial aid taking advantage of his connections with state legislators in the state capitol of Springfield Illinois 5 While at the time state law prohibited the direct appropriation of state funds to the city Medill was able to get the legislature to pass a special act reimbursing the city for 2 9 million the city had expended on the state owned Illinois and Michigan Canal 5 Medill also sought federal financial help 5 Medill took advantage of his connections in Washington D C to seek such aid 5 In his third month in office he wrote Vice President Schuyler Colfax to urge the passage of a tariff rebate that would help increase the supply of inexpensive material for the reconstruction of the city 5 Despite strong opposition from lumber interests the legislation succeeded in passing 5 Medill also convinced President Grant to give a personal 1 000 contribution to aid the city s reconstruction 5 More than 5 million in gifts an loans were collected from people and cities across the world 5 Taking Medill s lead on February 12 1872 the City Council approved 26 6 an ordinance that prohibited the construction of wood frame buildings in city limits 5 Medill was a strong Republican loyalist who supported President Grant for re election in 1872 The breach with White came because White supported the breakaway Liberal Republicans reformists who nominated Horace Greeley for president It was also at this time that Medill broke with Greeley citation needed In his second year as mayor tensions arose as he began to further utilize the new powers given to the mayor 5 At the first 1873 meeting of the City Council Medill announced that he would be using the power to select the chairmen of members of the council committees He appointed his loyalists to lead most important committees while aldermen of wards consisting of immigrant populations received lesser consideration for appointments 5 In the first three months of 1873 alone Medill practiced his veto power on five City Council ordinances 5 Medill and his police superintendent Elmer Washburn cracked down on gambling 3 Medill met not only resistance from a City Council divided over his exercise of power and aspects of his agenda but also resistance from citizens 5 Anton C Hesing derided him as Joseph I Dictator 3 The stress of the job of mayor impaired Medill s health In August 1873 he appointed Lester L Bond as Acting Mayor for the remaining 3 months of his term and went to Europe on a convalescent tour 1 5 Post mayoral politics Edit Medill died on March 16th 1899 at the age of 75 in San Antonio Texas Legacy and honors EditDuring World War II the Liberty ship SS Joseph M Medill was built in Panama City and named in his honor 6 The Medill School of Journalism Media and Integrated Marketing Communications at Northwestern University is also named in his honor 7 Family tree EditvteMedill Chicago family treeJoseph Medill 1823 1899 Katherine PatrickRobert Wilson Patterson 1850 1910 Elinor Medill 1855 1933 Katherine van Etta Medill 1853 1932 Robert Sanderson McCormick 1849 1919 Joseph Medill Patterson 1879 1946 Eleanor Josephine Medill Patterson 1884 1948 Ruth Hanna 1880 1944 Joseph Medill McCormick 1877 1925 Robert Rutherford McCormick 1880 1955 Alicia Patterson 1906 1963 Harry Frank Guggenheim 1890 1971 Jay Frederick Reeve 1893 1956 Josephine Medill Patterson 1913 1996 Ivan Le Lorraine Albright 1897 1983 James Joseph Patterson 1923 1992 Madeleine Jana Korbel 1937 2022 Joseph Medill Patterson Reeve later Albright born 1937 Alice Reeve later Albright 1940 2016 Michael J Arlen born 1930 Notes The tree omits Medill s third daughter Josephine who died in 1892 1 References Edit a b c d e f McKinney Megan 2011 The Magnificent Medills New York New York Harper Collins p 10 ISBN 9780062097750 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Rushton Wyatt 1916 Joseph Medill and the Chicago Tribune thesis University of Wisconsin Madison Retrieved 2007 10 24 and White James Terry 1895 The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography Being the History of the United States James T White amp Company via New York Public Library via Internet Archive full view p 224 Retrieved 2007 10 24 a b c Lindberg Richard C 2009 The Gambler King of Clark Street Michael C McDonald and the Rise of Chicago s Democratic Machine SIU Press pp 6 36 37 82 ISBN 978 0 8093 8654 3 Retrieved 19 May 2020 Mayor Joseph Medill Inaugural Address 1871 www chipublib org Chicago Public Library Retrieved 26 May 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Green Paul M Holli Melvin G 2013 The Mayors The Chicago Political Tradition fourth edition SIU Press pp 1 14 ISBN 978 0 8093 3199 4 Retrieved 26 May 2020 Williams Greg H 25 July 2014 The Liberty Ships of World War II A Record of the 2 710 Vessels and Their Builders Operators and Namesakes with a History of the Jeremiah O Brien McFarland ISBN 978 1476617541 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Our History www medill northwestern edu Further reading EditMcKinney M The Magnificent Medills 2011 Anderson Jeffrey Justin Joseph Medill How one man influenced the Republican presidential nomination of 1860 Ph D Diss Roosevelt University 2011 Tebbel John William An American dynasty the story of the McCormicks Medills and Pattersons Greenwood Pub Group 1968 External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Joseph Medill Medill Joseph New International Encyclopedia 1905 Medill Joseph Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Medill amp oldid 1116681304, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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