m Library of Congress. §§ Chap. Shelf. ^ '^. i y>^UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, c-il S3'*t2 9—167 e-daS /: .1 Printed for Private Circulation. JOEL PARKER: " The War Governor of New Jersey." A Biographical Sketch. / By JAMES S. YARD. FREEHOLD, N. J. : PRINTED AT THE MONMOUTH DEMOCRAT OFFICE 1SM!». 51253 J JOEL PARKER. A MEMORIAL PREPARED AT THE REQUEST OF THE NEW JERSEY HISTORICAL SOCIETY. By James S. Yard. Read at the ineetiiKj of the Societ)/ at Neicark, Ma;/ i7, 1888. BIRTH, PARENTAGE AND EDUCATION. Joel Parker was born in Freehold township on the 24th of iSTovember, 1816, in a house still standing on the Mount Holly road about four miles west of Freehold, in what is now Millstone township. A small village known as Smithburg has grown up around it recently. His father w^as Charles Parker, who was born in the same neighbor- hood, and who was Sheriif of the county, member of the Assembly, and for thirteen years State Treasurer aiul at the same time State Librarian. His mother, who was also a native of the county as it was then constituted, was a daughter of Capt. Joseph Coward, of the Continental Army. He received his primary education at the old Trenton Academy, and was prepared for college at the Lawrenceville High School. In the meantime he spent two years as manager on a farm which his father then owned near Colts jSTeck. He was graduated at Princeton in 1839, and immediately commenced the study of law in the office of the Hon. Henry W. Green, at Trenton, and was admitted to the Bar in 1842, when he located at Free- hold and commenced the practice of his profession. HIS EARLY CAREER. In 1840 he cast his first Presidential vote for Martin Van Buren, the nominee of the Democratic party. In 6 MEMORIAL OF 1844 he entered the political arena in support of the elec- tion of James K. Polk as President, and distinguished himself in that campaign as a public speaker. In 1847 he Avas elected to the Assembly and served one year. He was then the youngest member of the House, but being the only lawyer on the Democratic side, he became the party leader, especially on all questions having a legal bearing. He distinguished himself in the Legislature and gained a State reputation by the introduction of a bill to equalize taxation by taxing personal as well as real property, and by a speech in support of the measure, which was printed in the newspapers throughout the State. At the close of his term in the Assembly he de- clined a nomination as candidate for the State Senate on account of his growing practice, which demanded his entire attention. In 1852 he was appointed Prosecutor of the Pleas, Avhich office he held for one term, and ac- quitted himself therein with marked ability. During his term he tried the celebrated case against James P. Donnelly for the murder of Albert Moses, at the Sep- tember term of 1857. He was assisted by Attorney-Gen- eral William L. Dayton ; the opposing counsel were Joseph P. Bradley (afterward Associate Justice of the IJ. S. Supreme Court), ex-Gov. Pennington and A. C. McLean. The trial lasted nine days. The evidence was largely circumstantial, and the case is still quoted as one of the great trials of the period. The case was prepared and conducted by Mr. Parker, and won for him a leading position at the Bar of the State. EFFORTS TO ORGANIZE THE MILITIA AND TO PROMOTE VOLUNTEERING. At a meeting of the regimental officers of the Mon- mouth and Ocean Brigade, held at Freehold on the 1st of December, 1857, he was unanimously elected Brigadier- General of the Brigade. He subsequently proceeded to JOEL PARKER. 7 thoroughly organize the corps, holding elections in the several regiments, appointing meetings for the instruction of the officers, and organizing uniformed companies, which he subsequently brought together for parade and review.* At the outbreak of the war Major-General Moore, of Ocean county. Commander of the Third Divi- sion of the State Militia, resigned on account of age and infirmity, and on the 7th of May, 1861, General Parker was nominated by Governor Olden and confirmed by the Senate as his successor. The appointment was made with a view to the promotion of volunteering and the organization of forces for the suppression of the Rebel- lion, He encouraged the military spirit of the people within the bounds of his Division, comprising the coun- ties of Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth and Ocean, by holding public meetings, organizing the uniformed com- panies and bringing the latter together for inspection and review at Freehold, on which occasion he had 1,500 men in line, the largest parade of the kind ever held previous to that time in that section of the State. f Referring to these efforts to promote volunteering, the lion. Thomas H. Dudley, of Camden, said : J "The confidence re- posed in him by Governor Olden at that time was not misplaced. It was fully sustained in evei-y way. Joel Parker was true ; he Avas honest and loyal. He under- took the work and he did it. He rallied as many, if not more, men than an}' other man in the State around the standard for the defence of his country. * * He was patriotic and gave his hands and his heart to the work. He did his duty and he did it well, and the people sus- tained him. * * When he came to occupy the Exec- utive Chair he followed in the same patriotic line. He was true and loyal to the State and the country, and the oath of offije he had taken." *MimmoiUh Democrat, August 19, September 2, October 14 aud October 30, 1858. t Ibid. May 29, 1862. t Address before the Bar of Camdeu. 8 MEMORIAL OF While he was Governor he took an active interest in the organization of the militia and in providing heavy ordnance, small arms and other munitions in store in the State Arsenal, ready for any emergency that might call for their use. During his first administration, the militia laws were revised and encouragement was given to the organization of a uniformed corps of militia, of which the present efficient " i^ational Guard " is the outgrowth. He held that a State without a well-organized and eifective militia failed in its duty to the general government. He considered it the duty of every State not oidy to he pre- pared to enforce the law within its own horders when the civil authorities prove powerless to maintain the peace, without calling for aid from regular troops, hut also to be able, in case of emergency, to aid the general government with military power.* NAMED FOR CONGRESSIONAL AND OUBERNATORIAL HONORS. In 1854 he was prominently named for Congress but, in a public letter, declined being considered as a candidate for the nomination on the ground that, if elected, it would destroy his private business, which the claims of his growing family would not warrant. f In 1858 it was again proposed to nominate him for Congress, but this came from the so-called " opposition '' part}', and had in view the division of the Democratic party. In reply to this proposition, which Avas made by a correspondent of a local newspaper, he said that believing the success of the Democratic party contributed to theweltare of the nation, he would exceedingly regret any divisions in its ranks, and that no act of his should tend toward that event. J In 185G his name Avas first mentioned for Governor of the State. He declined being considered as a candidate for the nomination, but recommended for it Col. William C. Alexander, who afterward received it. In 1859 he was again named for this position but he again declined. * Annual Message, 1874. t True American, May 31, 1854. X Letter to the Monmouth Inquirer, March 5, 1858. JOEL PARKER. 9 111 the Presidential campaign of 1860 lie espoused the cause of Mr. Douglas as against a fusion ticket nominated at the suggestion of the Democratic State Central (Jom- mittee and representing the three organizations opposed to the Repuhlican party. lie insisted that the Democratic party of New Jersey was represented only in the conven- tion that nominated Mr. Douglas : that the candidates nominated were Democrats, the platform adopted was Democratic, and therefore that the party in Xew Jersey, by usage and by every principle of honor, was bound to sustain the action of that Convention. He, with others, published during the campaign a small newspaper* which was extensively circulated, gratuitously, throughout Mon- mouth county, in which he maintained his views. On the eve of the election a compromise was effected, both electoral tickets were withdrawn, and a single electoral ticket was agreed upon, composed of three friends of Douglas and two of each of the other candidates. Owing to the fact that a strai^-ht Dou^-las ticket was run in some sections, four of the Democratic electors were defeated, while the Douglas electors were elected by nearly five thousand majority. Joel Parker was one of these, and in the Electoral College cast one of the three Douglas votes of ISTew Jersey. He was again elected one of the Presi- dential electors for New Jersey in 1876, and cast liis vote for Samuel J. Tilden for President. FIRST TERM AS GOVERNOR. In the Fall of 1862 he was nominated by the Demo- cratic State Convention for Governor, and was elected by a majority of 14,600 votes — a majority three times as great as had ever before been given for any candidate for that position. His administration was eminently a successful one and was especiall}^ distinguished for its etficiency in promoting enlistments to aid in the suppression of the rebellion, and for successfully keeping up volunteering *Thc Spirit of Democracy. The only file of this newspaper known to be in existence is in the possession of the New Jersey Historical Society. 10 MEMORIAL OF for this purpose for a year after all other States had re- sorted to drafting to fill up their regiments. In 1863, learning that the General Government was about to assign quotas to the several districts in New Jersey and to draft for the troops, Governor Parker ap- plied for authority to raise volunteers, to be credited to the (piota in case a draft should be ordered. The au- thority was granted, and under it he issued a proclama- tion to the people and an appeal to municipal authorities and individuals to make special etforts to promote volun- teering by public meetings and the payment of bounties. This aj)peal was responded to generally throughout the State, and was generously aided by the press without distinction of party. Two-thirds of the quotas subse- quently assigned were thus obtained, and the draft which had been ordered was postponed. This was at a season when labor was fully employed, and under circumstances that were discouraging.* Another assignment of quotas later in the same year was filled in like manner. Through these etforts Xew Jersey is enabled to boast that no man was ever taken unwillingly from the State to fill the quota of troops demanded by the geiieral government.f THE INVASION OF PENNSYLVANIA. It was during Governor Parker's first year (1863) that the great battle of Gettysburg was fought. When Lee invaded Pennsylvania, Governor Curtin, of that State, had but few troops at his command, and in the imminent peril that threatened. Governor Parker came to his assist- ance by inducing several regiments that had just returned to retrace their steps. lie also issued a proclamation to the people, and before the citizens of Philadelphia had recovered from their panic or had raised a single company to defend their State, thousands of Jerseymen were march- ing through that city to the scene of action, for which * Aminal Message, 1864. t For the official correspondence upon this and kindred subjects see Appendix to the Governor's Message, Legislative Locumeiits, 1865. • JOEL PABKER. 11 service he received tlirougli Governor Cartiii the thanks of the people of Pennsylvania, and of President Lincoln, who wrote : " Please accept my sincere thanks for what you have done and are doing to get troops forward." Col. William R. Murphy, commanding a portion of the New Jersey troops in Pennsylvania during this emergency, in a letter to Governor Parker dated at Camp Curt hi, June 20th, said: u * * ^y^ have received every attention because we are Jersey men. ' A citizen of iSTew Jersey ' is a prouder title than that of ' a Roman Citizen.' "* THE INVASION OF MARYLAND. In the summer of 186-1: the rebels under Ewell and Mosby invaded Maryland and the battle of Monocacy was fought, in which our Fourteenth Regiment was so badly cut up. In the absence of any definite information re- garding this invasion, and anticipating the necessity that appeared to be imminent, Governor Parker, without wait- ing to hear from the military authorities at Washington, immediately issued his proclamation calling for troops at a moment's notice. Of this proclamation the Philadelphia Inquirer, a Republican newspaper, said : Joel Parker, Governor of New Jersey, deserves the thanks of the loyal people of the United States. His proclamation, published yes- terday, is conceived in the genifine spirit of patriotism, and has a ring that will gladden every loyal heart. HOW HE CARED FOR JERSEY SOLDIERS IN THE FIELD. In 1863, after the battle of Gettysburg, and without waiting for the action of the Legislature, Governor Par- ker dispatched an agent to the battle-tield to personally superintend, with great care, the removal of the remains of the i!^e\v Jersey dead, a plot of ground was secured on the field, the bodies were carefully re-interred, and the ground was set apart for this sacred purpose, with appro- priate ceremonies, in the presence of a vast concourse of people assembled to witness them. * Legislative Documents, 18C5. 12 MEMORIAL OF During his first year as Governor lie organized a State Agency, with headquarters at Washington City, to look after the welfare of the IS^ew Jersey troops in the field, to facilitate transfers and discharges in deserving cases, and to alleviate in many ways the sufl:erings of the sick and wounded in the hospitals. This agency was assisted at Washington hy an association of resident Jerseynien, without expense to the State. The agency also received money from the soldiers in the field and transmitted it to their families without expense to them, and during the war many hundreds of thousands of dollars were thus received and transmitted without loss. Thousands of N^ew Jersey soldiers and their families to-day Idess Gov- ernor Parker for his kindly sympathy and foresight in organizing this agenc}'. These are only examples of his constant and unremit- ting care and watchfulness over the interests of the brave Jerseymen who breasted the storm during the nation's peril. After every battle, and at intervals when circum- stances seemed to require it, special agents were dis- patched to the headquarters of the several regimental organizations in the field to ascertain their condition, to minister to the wants of the soldiers, and to relieve their sufferings. ]\Iost of this action was taken upon his own motion and at the dictates of 'his own heart and mind. He instituted incpiiries into the condition of the disabled soldiers and their families, and appointed a commission to report what legislation was necessary. In his second annual message he recommended the establishment of a soldiers' home, or retreat, which recommendation was acted upon, and homes were established which have since been the means of comfort and sustenance to hundreds of l^e\y Jersey soldiers Avho otherwise, in their declining years, would have had no home that they could properly call their own. JOEL PARKER. 13 VIEWS AS TO THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR. Gov. Parker was frank and outspoken in his sentiments as to the conduct of the war. While ditfering frequently with the administration at Washington in regard to mat- ters of policy, he was very decided in his views as to the principles involved, and never faltered in his belief that the Union would be ultimately restored. In analyzing the causes which led to the war he held that the misguid- ed agitators in the Xorth for the abolition of slavery provoked the hatred of the South, severed the bonds of Christian fellowship and silenced the counsels of moder- ation and conciliation, thus enabling a minority of fanat- ical and ultra men in each section to control the current of events and to l)ring the Government to the verge of destruction. At the same time he insisted that the res- toration and maintenance of the Union of the States Avas the chief duty of the citizen. Failure in the proper ad- ministration of a good government did not discharge us from an obligation to perpetuate that government. It should rather increase our exertions to bring its rulers back to the true principles on which the government was founded. We should not be afraid of peace — an honor- able and permanent peace — whether it come by the exer- cise of power or the exercise of conciliation ; but it should be a peace on the basis of " the Union as it was ;" not a union of States where part are held in subjection as con- quered provinces, adding nothing to the material inter- ests and prosperity of the nation, and only furnishing a theatre of action for swarms of military otHcials ; but a Union of all the States, with their equality and rights un- impaired, and bringing with it such unity as will have the Constitution for its foundation and obedience to law its corner-stone.* He differed with the Administration at Washington in regard to the amnesty proclamation, because it dictated terms that honorable men, in his judg- ment, could not accede to, and to the emancipation proc- * Inaugural , 1863. 14 MEMORIAL OF lamation, because the line of argument rendered the Con- stitution inoperative in time of war, and made all our rights subject to executive discretion.* He considered these measures calculated to prolong the war. He did not sympathize with the idea, entertained by some, that the war would destroy all liope of union, nor that it was to the interests of the country that our armies should be withdrawn from the South, with the idea that the South would at some future time voluntarily return to the Union. On the contrary he believed that such a policy would be a confession of weakness and would result in perpetual disunion, continual war and the overthrow of our system of government. He insisted upon " the duty of the State authorities to furnish the men necessary to destroy the armed power of the rebellion," and that it was " equally the duty of the general government to accompany the exercise of the power entrusted to it with proper terms of conciliation. "f Referring to the obstruc- tionists, who insisted among other things that the Union should not be restored under the old Constitution, and who denounced as traitors those who protested against such a policy, he urged that : Wise men will not l)e driven from the path of duty by the errors or vituperation of others. Whatever others may now say or do will not palliate the crime of those who took up arms against the government, or lessen the obligations of patriotic men to aid in their overthrow. We should not abandon the government of our country, engaged in war with those who would destroy our national existence, whether temporarily administered to our liking or not. The government is designed to be perpetual, while administrations are transient. We must subdue the rebellion and save the country in spite of all difficul- ties. That M'hich interferes with the speedy restoration of the Union under the Constitution, whether it proceeds from the enemy or exists among ourselves, must be overcome. Every obstacle in the way, whether it be the rebel armies, or the fatal policy of those in power, should be swept from existence by the peoi)le ; in the one case by the use of military force, and" in the other by the untrammeled exercise of the elective franchise. However strong our armies may become, suc- * Annual Message, 18G4. t Ibid. JOEL PARKER. 15 eess will be delayed unless we have the right civil policy. In fact, without the right civil policy, victory will not give us a Union worthy of the name.* Ao-ain lie said : After the country shall have recovered from its present excitement it surely will be discerned that to restore the nation to its former hap- py condition of peace and unity the conquest of the territory alone will not suffice, but the hearts of the people must also be won back from their estrangement. But whatever difference of opinion may exist as to questions of policy, we should be united in the determina- tion to maintain the Union of the States. If those in rebellion desire to return they should not be prevented by unconstitutional and unjust conditions. Should they refuse to accept the offer of proper and just terms, upon them will be the responsibility. The Union mu.st be pre- served. The Union should be the sole condition of peace, and that must be adhered to with unswerving fidelity, as the only foundation of our strength, security and happiness as a nation. f Later in the progress of reconstruction he said : To give peace to the South and prosperity to the whole country, the Christian spirit of charity must be invoked. Magnanimity and for- giveness should take the place of hate and vengeance. Love and good- will can accomplish more than proseription.J A CLOSE ADHERENT TO THE ESTABLISHED PRINCIPLES OF FREE GOVERNMENT. Gov, Parker was a firm supporter of the fundaniental principles of our government as expounded by the fath- ers. He insisted upon maintaining the freedom of speech even in the throes of our civil war — not only as a sasred principle, but as a measure of public safety. He said : There would be a much better state of feeling and greater unity of sentiment among the people of the loyal States should it become more generally understood that men may oppose the policy of an adminis- tration and still be firm friends of the government and steadfast lovers and supporters of the Union. Minorities have an important work to do in opposing and checking the assumptions of arbitrary power and the errors of administration which continued success usually produces. None of us have a right to be idle or listless spectators of passing events. We all have an interest in the welfare of the nation, and should put forth every effort to maintain the integrity of the Union and perpetuate the government of our fathers. If we believe that measures have been inaugurated which, if persisted in, will continue * Annual Message, 1864. f Annual Message, 18C5. | Inaugural, 1872. 16 MEMORIAL OF indefinitely tlie terrible strife between the sections, and finally produce separation, it is not only our right but our solemn duty to use every lawful means to induce a change of measures. Such action, when not taking the form of factious interference, is perfectly consistent with obedience to law and the fulfilment of every obligation imposed by the highest type of loyalty, and will result not in weakening the govern- ment but in giving it strength and stability by correcting the errors of those who administer it. AVe should never despair of the republic The greater the exigency the higher should our patriotism rise.* INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND ARBITRARY ARRESTS. He was always jealous of the rights of the individual citizen as guaranteed by the Constitution. He at all times firmly and earnestly maintained personal liberty as one of the absolute rights of man, and its protection one of the primary objects of government.f Referring to the arbitrary seizure of citizens of the State without due pro- cess of law he said :l " It concerns every man in the community. It is the privilege as well as the solemn duty of a free people to inquire into any claim of power which infringes upon the well defined guards of personal liber- ty," and while recognizing the necessity for the suspen- sion of the writ of Jiabcas corpus when public safety rerpiired it, he held that it was " of vital importance to the people to know by what power tlie privilege of this great writ can be suspended, and at whose will their lib- erties are lield. ^ * It is as much a departure from the Constitution, and almost as dangerous in its tendency, for one department of government to infringe upon the province and assume the powers delegated to another department, as it is to usurp powers that have never passed from the people ;"§ and referring to the alleged "military necessity" as a justification for the suspension of the writ, he concluded: " As this alleged power [the war power] is limited only by the will and discretion of him who exercises it, there is no conceivable form of out- rage upon individual rights or public interests that cannot be perpetrated under it." While admitting that the mo- * Annual Message, 1865. f Inaugural, 1863. X Ibid. § Ibid. JOEL PARKER. 17 tive of the Executive might be pure he urged that there might be a radical error of judgment, and it was against the principle that he protested, " in the name of the peo- ple of a sovereign State,"* In an address delivered at Freehold, in 1864, he said : No inmate of Fort Lafayette has been more violent in his denuncia- tions of the exercise of arbitrary power than are the able Chairmen of . the Senate and House Committees on the rebellious States. And yet these very men, leaders in the respective houses of Congress, in com- mon with the majority of the dominant party, have upheld the Exec- utive in repeated encroachments on the rights of the people, more dangerous in their character than those of which they complain. Cit- izens have been violently dragged from their houses without warrant, without the semblance of a trial, merely at the whim of some Secretary — ^the ringing of his little bell — and for long weary months have been confined in the damp cell of a prison, and at length discharged with- out so much as being informed of the nature of the accusation, or even of the ground of suspicion against them. This has been done in com- munities far removed from the seat of war, in States where no armed rebel had ever set his foot, where the courts were open, and where the laws were faithfully and impartially administered by pure and learned judges. And this has occurred in the nineteenth century, under what is called a republican government, in a land where there is a written constitution, and among a people sprung from an ancestry who for centuries contended against kingly power, and at last secured in Magna Charta the liberty of the people.f And on another occasion he said : Vest in one man the discretion when he will suspend the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus in any part of the country ; give him au- thority to silence the courts and render the civil law powerless ; then place the army and navy at his command to carry his mandates into execution, and you constitute a ruler clothed with kingly powers more absolute than those possessed by any monarch who has ruled in Eng- land since Magna Charta.^ At the close of his first term of ofHce he was able to boast, with truthfulness, that not a single right of the State had been yielded, and not one of her citizens during his administration had been deprived of his liberty with- out due process of law.§ * Inaugural, 1863. f Monmouth Democrat, Aug. 25, 1864. I Inaugural, 1872. § Annual Message, 1866. 18 MEMORIAL OF A FIRiM SUPPORTER OF STATE RKiHTS. Governor Parker was a strong adherent to the doctrine of State Rights. He maintained that the sovereignty of a State is as complete and real in its proper sphere as is the sovereignty of the United States within its sphere, but he referred cases of doubt or controversy as to the extent of those powers to the supreme legal tribunal pro- vided for their adjudication, and insisted that in deiining them the Constitution of the United States must be our guide. And this not only in times of peace — the reserved rights of the States- and the rights of the people were to be protected at all times, and especially in times of discord and angry strife, when passion often rules the hour, and power is prone to encroach on law. At the same time he denounced the doctrine of secession as a political heres3',~ at variance with the letter and spirit of the Con- stitution.* And again, referring to the growing disposi- tion to ignore the political existence of the States, to treat them as subordinate to the Federal Government, and to centralize power in the President and Congress, he said : The time has come when all who value the institutions established through trial and privation by the wisdom of our ancestors, and who cherish the principles on which our government is reared, should for- get minor differences of opinion, and unite in opposing the progress of this dangerous doctrine. Whenever the reserved rights of the States are encroached upon, the citizens of every State are interested, and should remonstrate without waiting the execution of the impending unconstitutional laws.f The States have rights which should be firmly maintained, but it has been settled for all time that to secede from the Union at pleasure, without the consent of the other States, is not a right.J As an instance of his firm adherence to this principle, at a period in our nation's history when strong men quailed and sought by silence to avoid the storm, his con- troversy, since famous, with Secretary of War Stanton, is referred to. In March, 1864, at the Jersey City depot, a soldier attached to a Massachusetts regiment shot and * Inaugural, 1872. t Hjid. t Annual Message, 1871. JOEL PARKER. 1^ wounded a youth. The 3'oung man died. The soldier was arrested by the civil authorities, committed to jail, and indicted by the Hudson connty court. Before the trial came on Secretary Stanton wrote to Governor Parker requesting him to order the delivery of the prisoner into the custody of the United States military authorities, add- ing : " It is not supposed the Governor will decline this request, but should he do so it will be the duty of the department to urge it," and claiming that Governors of other States had not hesitated to comply with similar requests. Governor Parker replied at length to this communication, taking the ground that the Executive and Judicial branches of the government were distinct and independent, and that he had no right to interfere in the case. That the decision of the court that it had jurisdiction must stand until reversed by its own action or by the action of some competent tribunal of review, and concluding with the words: "I respectfully decline to order the prisoner remitted to the military author- ities."* The request of the Secretary of War was not renewed, and so the time-honored doctrine of the fathers was maintained by Xevv Jersey, and the law had its due course. ARMING THE NEGROES AND THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION. Governor Parker doubted the expediency of arming the Southern negroes. In a letter to a Township Committee in Hunterdon county he said he was satisfied that the Union army would then have been stronger, both in numbers and eificiency, if the Government had never recruited in the rebel States. To insure success, he thought the people should be willing to do their own fighting, and not place reliance on a distinct and inferior race, while the Emancipation Proclamation and the con- sequent arming of the negroes added to the desperation * Legislative Documents, 1865. 20 MEMORIAL OF of the enemy and tended to build up an almost insur- mountable barrier of terms to paciiication, and at the same time quenched the spirit of volunteering in the Xorth.* SOLDIERS VOTING IN THE FIELD. Under the Constitution of the State, as it then stood, (since amended), there was no provision for taking the votes of the soldiers in the field. The subject was dis- cussed at length by the Legislature and resolutions were adopted requesting the militar}- authorities to permit the soldiers who were legal voters to visit their homes on days of election, so far as it could be done without detriment to the service. In transmitting these resolutions to the President, Governor Parker expressed the wish that all ISTew Jersey soldiers, without distinction of party, who could be spared, should be allowed to come home on elec- tion day, and especial reference was made to soldiers in hospitals who were able to travel. He also wrote to the State Agent requesting him to look after the soldiers al)out Washington and assist them in obtaining furloughs for this purpose. t EXEMPTION OF GOVERNMENT BONDS. Upon other public questions growing out of the war he was equally frank and outspoken. He objected to the exemption of Government bonds from taxation as unwise, because it tended to increase the riches of the wealthy at the expense of the poorer classes, but the faith of the Gov- ernment having been pledged the agreement should be strictly adhered to ; at the same time he urged that the policy should be abandoned, and that new loans by the Government should be expressly subjected to State tax- ation at a rate equal to the assessment on other property. He also recommended the passage of an act by the Legis- lature taxing the shares of the capital stock of all ]!^ational banks within the State. | * Legislative Documents, 1865, p. 132. t Ibid. p. 148. X Annual Message, 186G. JOEL PARKER. 21 AN ADMIRER AND FRIEND OF McCLELLAN. Governor Parker was a warm admirer and friend of General McClellan. He believed that his removal from the command of the army was instigated by civilians and politicians, and was a mistake upon the part of the mili- tary authorities. " This Jersey exile," he said, " will live in the hearts of his countrymen, and his memory will be cherished by mankind so long as the country to whose welfare he has devoted his life shall have a history."* HIS SUCCESSFUL FINANCIAL POLICY. His administration continued until after the close of the war. During" his term of office not a sins-le bond of the State was sold below par, while the premiums on them amounted to over |100,000, and at its close the State did not owe a dollar on civil account and had in its treas- ury an actual cash balance of over $164, 000. f lu his first annual message he recommended the passage of a law providing for the redemption and payment of the bonds issued for the expenses of raising and equipping the State troops serving in tlie war, and outlined a plan for that purpose. The Legislature adopted the plan and recom- mendation, and created the fand known as the Sinking Fund, by which the entire war debt of the State, amount- ing to 13,000,000, has been practically paid oif without resorting to a direct tax upon the people for that purpose, the fund now in hand being nearly or quite sufficient to meet the outstanding bonds as they fiill due ; in addition the fund has paid in interest an amount exceeding the original debt. PROPOSED FOR THE NOMINATION FOR PRESIDENT. At the close of his first gubernatorial term Governor Parker at once resumed his professional practice. In 1868, in the National Democratic Convention at New York, he received the unanimous vote of the jSTew Jersey * Address at Freehold, 1864. t Annual Message, 1866. 22 MEMORIAL OF deletjation for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States on every ballot. In 1876, he again received the same vote for the same position. In that year he was placed at the head of the electoral ticket and voted for Samuel J. Tilden. In 1884 he was again strongly urged as the Democratic Presidential candidate. RE-ELECTED GOVERNOR. In 1871, prior to the assembling of the Democratic State Convention, he positively declined to be a candidate for nomination for Governor, but the enthusiasm of that Convention compelled him to yield, and he was nomi- nated by acclamation, all the other candidates having been withdrawn by their friends. At the election which followed he was successful by about six thousand major- ity, which, although less than his majority in 1862, was yet a more decisive victory for him, in consideration of all the circumstances. At no time had the Republican party been so powerful as in that year, carrying every other Northern State by strong majorities. In that year, for the first time, colored men voted in New Jersey, and that vote (about 7,000 strong) was cast solidly against Governor Parker, who ran about nine thousand ahead of his ticket, the other Democratic candidates being beaten by about three thousand votes. HIS SECOND TERM. His second term as Governor was conspicuously suc- cessful. The exciting questions which presented them- selves during his first term did not exist, but there were many topics of legislation which were important and ex- cited much interest. The statute books show that more laws were passed in 1872, '73 and '74 than ever before or since in the same length of time. It was under his ad- ministration that the General Railroad Law (of which he was an advocate) was passed, and the constitutional amendments which brought about important reforms were • JOEL PARKER. 23 adopted. The National Guard was also, under his ad- ministration, brought to a high degree of etRciencj. The same frankness that characterized his treatment of public questions during the excitement of the Civil War was apparent in his administration of civil affairs during his second term. THE LABOR QUESTION. Upon the Labor question just then coming into promi- nence he heldthat there should be no conflict between labor and capital ; that the interests of both could be so harmonized as to benefit both ; that the rights of capital should be protected, jet it was so powerful that the watch- ful care of legislation was necessary to defend labor from its impositions. Among other things he recommended the abandonment of all class legislation as inimical to the interest of the laboring classes, and a rigid inquirj^ into the treatment of children in workshops and factories — their minds should not be left untutored, and the cupidi- ty of employers or the necessities of parents should not be permitted to overtax their energies.* MUNICIPAL BOARDS AND COMMISSIONS. He earnestly opposed the system which had grown up during the war of governing cities by municipal boards or commissions appointed by the Legislature. Being ir- responsible to the people, they became a vast political machine, exercising a dangerous power beyond the bounds of their jurisdiction, and imposing burdens of taxation for the benefit of a favored few, without the consent of the people, and which they were powerless to resist. He denounced it as the worst form of tyranny, and urged that the nearer the ballot-box we bring the responsibility of the ofiicer, the better administration we would have, * Inaugural, 1872. 24 MEMORIAL OF and that we should not be afraid to trust the people to govern themselves.* JURY COMMISSIONS. During the session of 1873 he vetoed a bill to take the power of selecting grand and petit jurors from the hands of the Sheriff of Hudson County and vest it in a com- mission of two persons, to be appointed by the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas. In this case Governor Parker said : If we have just and fair men to select and impanel our jurors, it makes but little difference, practically, by whom they are chosen, or whether they are called by the name of commissioner or sheriff. But suppose the officer entrusted with this delicate and important duty shall abuse his trust, and use his office for corrupt or selfish purposes, it is very important that the people get rid of him as soon as possible. The sheriff is elected annuallyf by a direct vote of the people, and if he prove unfit or unworthy, the position may be filled by another at the next election ; but an incompetent or corrupt commissioner, ap- pointed in the way this bill proposes, would be beyond the power of removal by the people. He may be retained as long as the major part of the Common Pleas Judges shall determine. The Judges themselves are independent of the people of the county, for they are appointed for five years by a body of representatives from every section of the State. I have no doubt that the framers of the law so long existing in this State, which allows the Sheriff to hold the office for three years, and yet requires his election every year, had in view this vital ques- tion, and intended that the people should not part with their control over the officer who had the selection of the jurors, to whom their dearest rights and privileges are committed. The trial by jury has justly been denominated the principal bulwark "of the people's liber- ties. * * * I am not willing to affix my signature to a bill which, in effect, if not in words, declares that the people of that county are incapable of self-government.J BRIBERY AT ELECTIONS. lie held that bribery at elections imperilled the exist- ence of free governments, and that unless the elective franchise could be protected from corrupt influences our whole system would be destroyed. He denounced cor- * Inaugural, 1872. f The law in this respect has since been changed. X Legislative Documents, 1873. JOEL PARKER. '-^0 ruption in office as the prevailing sin of the da}', which had become a national reproach. Men whose characters in private life were above suspicion seemed to lose moral tone as soon as they obtained official position. They did not appear to realize the fact that peculation from the public treasury was infinitely worse than robbing from their neighbor's person, and a morbid public sentiment had grown up, especially among the young, that prevent- ed them from realizing the heinousness of official fraud, while a failure of public officials to duplicate their legal pay was by many considered as evidence of incapacity. The chief cause of the increase of corruption he attrib- uted to the fact that guilty persons when discovered were allowed to go unwhipped of justice, and it would not cease until the men who thus abused their trusts were compelled not only to disgorge their ill-gotten gains, but were dealt with as common felons. " He who robs the people of their treasure should certainly stand no better before the law, or in society, than the vagrant whom ne- cessity drives to crime. Equal justice should be adminis- tered to all, without regard to high position, respectable connections, aristocracy of birth and association, or ad- ventitious wealth."* " PUBLIC OFFICE A PUBLIC TRUST." Governor Parker was essentially a party man and neglected no opportunity to advance the interests of his party, yet his iirst consideration was always the public interests. In all of his appointments, military and civil, he carefully scrutinized the character and qualifications of the applicants for positions, and the fitness of the ap- pointee generally silenced the clamor of the friends of disappointed candidates. The distribution of official patronage is the rock upon which the popularity of the Executive is generally wrecked, and it is a noteworthy fact that Governor Parker retired at the close of both of * Inaugural, 1872. 26 MEMORIAL OF Lis terms Avith his popularity unimpaired, and yet he made more appointments than any other man who has ever filled the Executive chair of our State. During his first term he made thousands of appointments and promo- tions in the I^ew Jersey regiments in the field, and in not one of them was it ever charged that it was made for political reasons only, A FRIEND OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS AND REFORMATORIES. He w^as always a warm and earnest friend of our public school system, and neglected no opportunity to advance its interests and to commend it to the fostering care of the State. The schools became free at the opening of his second term as Governor, and in his Inaugural he recom- mended that whatever was required to keep them free should be done. He commended the appropriation of the rentals and sales of riparian rights to the school fund, and believed that if the fund thus created was wisely administered it would, in addition to the income of the fund from other sources, produce a sum sufficient to make the schools free forever, without taxation for that purpose.* He was also warmly interested in the reformation of youthful criminals, and urged that their incarceration in the State Prison, in contact with hardened oftenders, pre- vented reformation. f In 1864 he appointed a commission in accordance with an act of the Legislature of that year, to inquire into the methods adopted by other States, and to report a system of reform adapted to our own State. In his message of 1865, referring to the report of this committee, he recommended the establishment of a Re- form School, out of which grew the present excellent institution under that name, and which has been the means of reclaiming and restoring to society, as useful members thereof, hundreds of youths who otherwise would have grown up in the ranks of the criminal classes. * Inaugural, 1872. t Auuual Message, 1864. JOEL PARKER. 27 FOR A NON-PARTISAN JUDICIARY. In the gubernatorial campaign of 1859 the leading issue in the State was the question of a non-partisan judi- ciary, growing out of a difference between the Executive and the Senate on the appointment of a Chancellor dur- ing the Legislative session of that year, which left the office vacant and temporarily closed the Court, Mr. Parker took the ground that the people of N^ew Jersey did not desire to have a change in the constitution of the Court with ever}^ change of the Executive. The Judi- ciary, he maintained, should be composed of competent and experienced men, the farthest removed from political bitterness ; that such offices should not be regarded as the property of a party, and that the only inquiry should be : " What is best for the interests of the public ?"* Subsequently, when he became Governor, he carried this principle out in practice and made his judicial appoint- ments from the ranks of both parties. Referring to the well-deserved reputation throughout the country of our courts of justice, he said : There is not on record a single decision of our courts open to the faintest suspicion of partisanship or corrupt influence. The importance of maintaining the high character of the Judiciary cannot be over-esti- mated. Where the fountain of justice becomes impure there cannot be good government. The property, liberty and lives of the people are in the hands of the courts. To insure respect for judicial decisions, there should not be even the appearance of partiality or bias. Should all the judges be of the same political organization, the usefulness of the court would be impaired, and in times of excitement its opinions be shorn of that degree of weight which should always accompany the administration of justice.f ENCOURAGED FOREIGN IMMIGRATION. He did not sympathize with the idea that foreign im- migration was injurious to the general interests or sub- versive of American institutions. On the other hand, he welcomed the industrious immigrant to assist in develop- ing the inexhaustible resources of the "West and South. * Letter in Newark Evening Journal, September 12, 1859. f Inaugural, 1872. 28 MEMORIAL OF Our territory was capable of sustaining hundreds of mil- lions of prosperous and happy people, and every induce- ment should be held out to promote its settlement. " Why wait a century for what may be accomplished in a generation ? Why delay our manifest destiny ? * * Welcome them to our shores. Bid them come and occu- py the land, build up the waste places and obliterate the ravages of war."* And again, after referring to the report of Prof. Geo. H. Cook,t that over a million acres of land in New Jersey, within convenient distance of marl, were unimproved, and might be brought under cultivation with profitable result, he said : The time has come for the Legislature to inaugurate a system by means of which immigration shall be invited and encouraged. * * * AVith proper exertion, the sparsely settled districts so near the two great cities, possessing, in addition to the advantages already men- tioned, a salubrious climate, free schools and good laws administered by a learned and incorruptible judiciary, can soon be filled with hon- est, hardy and industrious colonists. As population adds to the real wealth of a State, the subject is worthy the attention of the Legis- lature.J HOW HE EXERCISED THE VETO POWER. He did not hesitate to use the veto power whenever he deemed it to be necessary. Among the notable instances in which he exercised this prerogative were the vetoes of the bills repealing the law requiring joint resolutions to be submitted to the Governor for his approval ;§ creating a jury commission for Hudson County ;|| and extending the provisions of the act last named to Essex County.** All of these measures contained provisions which he con- sidered inimical to the interests of the people or subver- sive of the principles of good government. ATTORNEY-GENERAL AND JUDGE. After the expiration of his second term as Governor he resumed his professional business at Freehold, and soon * Inaugural, 1872. f Report of State Board of Agriculture, 1874. X Annual Message, 1874. § Legislative Documents, 1872. || Ibid, 1874. ** Ibid, 1874. JOEL PARKER. 29 acquired a large practice. On the 27th of January, 1875, he was nominated by Governor Bedle as Attorney-Gen- eral of the State, and was confirmed by the Senate with- out reference. He held this position until the 5th of April following, when he resigned it in order to give exclusive attention to his private practice. In 1880 he was nominated by Governor McClellan and confirmed by the Senate as a Justice of the Supreme Court of the State, and was assigned to the Second Judicial District, com- prising the counties of Gloucester, Camden and Burling- ton, and was reappointed to the same position, on the expiration of his term, by Governor Green, in February of last year. In his judicial career, in all his relations to the Bar, and to its indi- vidual members, he was kind, considerate and courteous, and to his duties in this position he brought to bear the indefatigable industry which had characterized his efforts in other departments of the public service and in his private practice. As a judge he was painstaking, faithful, and sagacious. His strong common sense supplied his judg- ment with qualities which distinguished them as judicial deliverances.* He was always kind and courteous to the younger members of the Bar, and he would not allow any opponent to take unfair advantage of another to defeat the ends of justice, or allow the law to be made an engine of injustice for the oppression of any citizen. If there ever was a man who guarded the liberties of the people upon the Bench, that man was Judge Parker. Cases arising from spite, ill will, or anything of that kind, found no favor in his Court.f Other men have been more profound jurists — more eloquent as orators — more learned — more original — but with their every genius in these directions they have had a corresponding lack in some other quarter, and your man of pro- found learning has often been neglectful in affairs. Your brilliant orator, or even profound jurist, may be unworthy of the trusts that have been confided to him, but Judge Parker, possessing none of these qualities in an exalted degree, more than compensated for them by the profound balance of his character. Like such men as Hampden and Washington, he was valuable because of the sturdy reliability of his temperament, and for the earnestness and zeal with which he entered into the public service, rather than for any startling brilliancy in any one direction ; so that what we all instinctively recognize in him is not some quality or attainment which he happened to possess, but the * Mr. Samuel H. Grey's report to the meeting of the Camden Bar. t Mr. Scovel's addres.s to the ramden Bar. 30 MEMORIAL OF man himself, with his evenly balanced qualities, which make him the type to our minds of all that goes to make up a thoroughly worthy man and the most admirable kind of citizen that any State can pos- sess* HIS DEVOTION TO DUTY. Devotion to duty was a ruling principle of his life. This trait in his character is well expressed in the following extract from Mr. Grey's address : It was Judge Parker's secret pride, expressed in confidential worda to confidential friends, that while he held public ofiice he exercised his power for the public good, to the best of his judgment. * * * This distinguishing characteristic — this faithfulness in the discharge of duty — this self-abnegation and devotion to public service, united with the amiable characteristics of his nature, made him during his life the most conspicuous of Jerseymen, and contributed at his death to that most touching and eloquent manifestation of public appreciation of his character at his funeral, when men from all walks of life — from posi- tions of responsibility — from active, engrossing and responsible pur- suits — all sorts and conditions of men gathered from all quarters of the State of New Jersey, at an inclement season, at an inaccessible place, to testify by their presence to the estimation in which this man Avas held by his fellow-citizens. Not because he was a Judge of the Supreme Court of the State, and as such had faithfully discharged his judicial duty ; not because he was a prominent member of a great po- litical organization, and as such had maintained for years successful leadership, but because in all his positions, many and responsible as they were — because in all his career, lengthened as it was — he had faithfully discharged every duty and fully met every obligation which was put upon him. That lesson is one which he leaves behind.f PRIDE IN HIS NATIVE STATE. Joel Parker was essentially a Jersey man. He was proud of his native State and entertained a profound admiration for its historv. One of his earlier literary eflbrts was the preparation of a lecture on " The Early History of New Jersey," which he delivered in various parts of the State with great acceptability. When he delivered it at Trenton, according to a notice at the time in one of the daily newspapers of that city,| his audience rewarded him at the close " with a vote of thanks and * Mr. Charles G. Garrison's address to the Camden Bar. + Samuel H. Grey's address to the Camden Bar. % State Gazette, March 3, 1859. JOEL PARKER. 31 three hearty cheers," the latter certainly a novelty in con- nection with a purely literary essay, but showing conclu- sively the spirit that pervaded it and the inspiration that was communicated by its delivery. This innate State pride was apparent at all times, and was not to be sup- pressed even in his State papers. At the conclusion of one of his annual messages* he uses the following elo- quent language, which cannot fail to find a response in the heart of every true Jerseyman : The State for which you legislate occupies a proud position. In every emergency she has proved true to her revolutionary fame. In every war in which the country has been engaged, New Jersey has contributed freely of her treasure and her sons. Her people are pa- triotic and conservative, and eminently national. They have always been willing to stand by the contract as our fathers made it. They have always observed the constitutional rights of other States and of the nation. They love the Union and will labor for its preservation as the first great object to be accomplished. And again, at the close of an address delivered at Freehold, he said : I am proud of this gallant little State of New Jersey, and would not to-night exchange my position as her Chief Magistrate for the crown of the most powerful kingdom of the old world.f He always warmly resented any indignity aimed at the State. During the war a bill was introduced in Congress, under the power of the general government to create post routes and military roads, to confer upon certain railroads in New Jersey certain privileges for the transportation of goods and merchandise, in defiance of the laws of the State, Governor Parker at once sent a message to the Legislature | reciting the facts, and concluding as follows : The passage of such an act (although of no binding force, because unconstitutional), would be an insult to the people of New Jersey. It would take the creatures of our law, now under the ban of judicial injunction for violation of our statutes, and, in direct opposition to the decision of our courts, attempt to make them independent of and superior to the power that created them. Such action deserves, and should receive, the strongest legislative remonstrance. Let it be dis- * Annual Message, 1864. t Monmouth Democrat, August 25, 1864. X Special Message, March 23, 1864. 32 MEMORIAL OF tinctly understood by those who would inflict this wrong and indig- nity upon our State, that while New Jersey will comply with every legal obligation, and will respect and protect the rights of all, she will not permit any infringement of her rights without resorting to every lawful means to prevent it. FAITH IN THE FUTURE OF THE COUNTRY. He also loved his country, was proud of its history, and had an abiding faith in its future. Upon this point, and referrino; to the second centennial of its history, he said: At the rate of increase that has marked her progress in the past, she will at the close of the next century contain a population of hundreds of millions. As the leading power of the West, she will announce and maintain the policy that should control America. That policy will surely be annexation to herself or the maintenance of republican gov- ernment in all the countries and islands of this hemisphere. The op- pressed people of every clime, especially those in her own vicinage struggling for independence, will have her sympathy and recognition. Barbarities which disgrace humanity and shock the civilized world will no longer be tolerated. The shackles of the slave will be broken wherever her policy extends. And this, the American policy of the second century of the existence of the nation, will be upheld by her — not for the purpose of aggrandizement — not for the sake of exercising arbitrary force^ — not from motives of ambition that would delight in agitation or conflict of arms — but as a duty imposed by the Supreme Ruler of the Universe on this the great Power of the Western Hemi- sphere, to elevate humanity therein and diffuse the blessings of liberty and Christian civilization.* AS A POLITICIAN. " He was a politician not in the low sense in which men may be politicians, but in the higher and more exalted sense in which a man as a member of the community acts in the interests of his fellow-citizens for the welfare and weal of the State. In whatever position we find him, whether in the Legislature, as Governor, as Attorney- General or as Judge, we find him alwaj's governed by a desire to do right. His views were not circumscribed by narrow limits — he saw the whole State and its conditions at a glance. His finger was naturally upon the public pulse, and bis discernment enabled him instinctively to * Annual Message, 1874. JOEL PARKER. 33 anticipate the public necessities. As Governor of the State he exhibited in a peculiar way the patriotic instincts of his nature. There was no disloyalty in his composi- tion."* " His public life and doings constitute the most important part of the history of our State for the last quarter of a centur3^ His support came from the people ; he was of them and he preferred them. He boasted of Ms yeoman ancestry. The greatness he desired was the greatness which industry and merit gives. He preferred to be the first of a respected house, rather than the second, living on the prestige of a borrowed light."t AS A LAWYER. " As a lawyer he was not disposed to technicalities, nor was he dogmatic or pertinacious. His chief desire seemed to be to try a case upon its merits, and he tried and argued it with all due respect to the court and the counsel."! HIS PUBLIC AND PRIVATE ECONOMY. A prominent trait of his character was his economy, which was exhibited in his public as well as in his private affairs. It was not a miserly economy that would deny proper and liberal expenditures, but one that guarded carefully against wastefulness or extravagance. In his personal affairs he at all times maintained his family in a style according well with his means and the place that he filled. After he became Governor he rebuilt the family mansion with the proceeds of the inheritance from his father's estate, making it the largest and most impos- ing one in the town, and furnished it in a style consistent with its exterior. In it he entertained his guests in a manner befitting his station. He felt his importance as Chief Magistrate of the Commonwealth of which he was so proud, and magnified his position in all his surround- ings. " He was every inch the Governor," whether at * Mr. Philip S. Scovel's remarks at the meeting of the Camden Bar. t Mr. John W. Wartman's remarks at the meeting of the Camden Bar. X Mr. Philip S. Scovel at the meeting of the Camden Bar. 34 MEMORIAL OF home or abroad, but never in an offensive sense, for tlie people everywhere appeared to be as proud of him as he was of the office which he so nobly filled. In his first inaugural he outlined his views on public economy, and to these he adhered throughout his public career. He said on that occasion : In conducting the operations of our State Government, the strictest economy should be exercised. This is especially important at a time when we are subjected to extraordinary expenses in consequence of the deplorable civil war in which we are involved. In the midst of business depression and financial derangement and in view of increas- ing taxation, unnecessary expenditure of the people's money should be scrupulously avoided. Extravagant appropriations by government not only fasten heavy burthens on the people, but tend to corrupt pub- lic morals and increase private profligacy. At another time, referring to the enormous expenditures incident to the Civil War, he said the people seemed to have lost a proper appreciation of the value of money, and to have become careless of its use — that the economy of former times was now by many considered parsimony. The extravagance in both public and private life, entailed by the war, was a greater burden than the public debt, and while he held that every dollar of the latter, principal and interest, must be paid, he urged that N"ew Jersey, in its legislation involving appropriations of the public mon- ey, should be foremost in rescuing the country from the new danger with which it was threatened.* AS A LEADER IN HIS TOWN AND COUNTY. He always took a warm interest in the public enter- prises of his town and county, and promoted them by every means at his command. During all the earlier years of his active life he was looked up to as the leader, liis well-known perseverance and energy giving promise of success to every movement to which he lent his aid. Among the prominent enterprises in which he was active- ly engaged were the construction of the railroad between Freehold and Jamesburg, which was first opened to the * Inaugural, 1872. JOEL PARKER. 35 public in 1853 ; the County Agricultural Society, of which he was the founder, in the same year, and the Battle Monument, which he originated. Of the success of these enterprises and of his association with them he was always proud. The latter was the crowning enterprise of his life, into which he entered with all the zeal of his nature. The beautiful shaft which now marks the spot where the first engagement of that memorable day took place, is alike a monument to the fame of our revolutionary fathers and to the patriotism and energy of the man who was before all others instrumental in its erection, and forever links his name with those of the heroes of the Revolution. HOW HE BUILT THE BATTLE-MONUMENT. This enterprise was first publicly broached by Governor Parker in an address at a local anniversary in Freehold, in the summer of 1877, and at the same time he suggested the action which resulted in the organization, three months later, of an association of which he was made President, having for its object the solicitation of funds for the erection of the monument. During the three years that ensued he gave much of his time to the work, sometimes under circumstances of the greatest discour- agement. He organized committees of ladies and gentle- men in every township in Monmouth, delivered addresses on every available occasion, personally superintended fairs, festivals, lectures, and other public entertainments for the purpose of raising funds, and even enlisted the school-children throughout the county in the work. He aimed to secure $10,000 by private subscription, and as a last resort to bring up the deficiency of this sum, he went among wealthy persons of his acquaintance outside of his county and State and levied contributions. Havino- secured this amount he next made an appeal to the Legis- lature and then to the Congress of the UnitedjStates, in both of which he was successful. The corner-stone of the monument was laid, wnth imposing civil and military 36 MEMORIAL OF ceremonies, on the centennial anniversary of the battle, in the presence of Governor McClellan and many dis- tinguished guests. The monument was completed, and the unveiling ceremonies, which exceeded in extent and pageantry that of any other public occasion hitherto held in the State, took place on the 13th of IsTovember, 1884, in the presence of Governor Abbett and a great concourse of public oflicials, civil and military organizations, and invited guests.* HIS SOCIAL RELATIONS, MARRIAGE AND DEATH. Although his long and busy life was crowded with great public cares, he did not forget the minor public duties nor the obligations of social life. He was one of the original members of the lodge of Odd Fellows of his town and always retained an interest in its welfare ; in hisjearlier years he took an active part in its atiairs, filling the different official positions and representing it in the State Grand Lodge. lie was also a member of the Ma- sonic lodge of his town. In both of these organizations he remained an honored member up to the time of his death. He was for many 3'ears a member of the Union Fire Company of Trenton, and of the Fire Department of Freehold, aiding both with his counsels and his purse. He was also a member of the Commandery of the State of Pennsylvania of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States ; a member of the Tammany Society of ISTew York City, and an honorary member of the Society of the Cincinnati of the State of ISTew Jersey. In 1881 he united with the Presbyterian Church of Freehold, on confession of faith, and afterward remained an accept- able member and communicant of that church. In 1843 he was married to Maria M., eldest daughter of Samuel R. Gummere, Clerk in Chancery of JS'ew Jersey, who survives him, with two sons, Charles and Frederick, both practicing lawyers of some years' standing at the Bar of * See Memorial of Committee of Arrangements, 1885. JOEL PARKER. 37 Monmouth County, and a daughter, Bessie, unmarried. On Saturday, the 31st day of December, 1887, after hold- ing a special session of the Burlington County Courts, he went to Philadelphia, and feeling unwell he called at the house of a friend, where, in a few minutes, he receiv^ed a stroke of paralysis. He died on the following Monday, shortly after midnight, surrounded by the immediate members of his family. He rallied sufficiently on Satur- day evening to recognize his wife, but afterward never regained consciousness. PERSONAL APPEARANCE AND GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS. His personal appearance was imposing. He was slightly over six feet high, with a massive frame admirably pro- portioned, a head well poised, manly and dignified in his bearing, easy and attractive in his manner ; in public free and self-possessed, easily approached by the humblest member of the community, but never condescending to unseemly familiarity. He was persistent in the pursuit of the object in which he was interested, and in support of the cause which he had espoused ; never domineering, but persuasive and conciliating ; avoiding personal antag- onisms he skilfull}' laid his course between contending factions and reached the goal while others were wrangling by the way. Conservative in all his views and sometimes considered so almost to a fault, he was always a safe lead- er in public affairs and reliable as a personal adviser. Joel Parker was, be^'ond dispute, the foremost man of his generation in his town and county, and in his State, in all those qualities that go to make a man useful to and beloved by his fellow-men. He enjoyed, as no other man of his day, the entire confidence of the people at large, without respect to party lines. In his public life, and in the administration of public affairs, he fully justified this regard, and no act of his cfin be adduced that is npt in 38 MEMORIAL OF entire harmony with his professions of public duty. In his private life he was pure and above reproach. He had the imperfections common to humanit3^ but none that lessened him in the estimation of honorable men. lie Avas industrious in his private calling, and in the dis- charge of his puldic duties. He labored hard during the whole of his long life, rising early and sitting up late. Few men of his day, professional or other, worked more hours or endured more fatigue than he, and to this fact, as much as to the qualities of his head and heart, is his success in life to be largely attributed. He was not wealthy, l)ut he always gave liberally according to his means to public enterprises and public and private chari- ties. Of a sympathetic nature, his heart and his purse were ever open to relieve the distresses of the deserving poor, and it may truly be said of him that he never turned any empty away. He filled a large place in the attections of the people, who recognized him as their friend, and in the aflfairs of the public, and in this regard he will have no successor in this generation. He had fully rounded out his life, and the messenger of death found him at his post, at work almost to the last moment of his existence. He was not a brilliant man, as the world reckons it, but he was a great man, broad, liberal, conscientious, faithful and true, and so he will be rated on the pages of history in the generations to come. " Strong, 'mid the perils that beset his time, Strong, in the chair of State he honored long, Strong, in devotion to his home and friends, AVherever fortune found or placed him, strong. " Kind, with a kindness words cannot express. Kind, with a sweetness born of noble mind, Kind, let the tear-drop pathos started, speak ; To youth and age, to poor and sorrowing, kind. " Great, in the virtues that adorned his life, Great, in the annals of his native State, Great, in his feai-less championship of right, In every trust and station, truly great."* * Frank P. McDcripott, Freehold, iu the M'onmovih Democrat, Jan. 12, 1588. JOEL PARKER. 39 When he died his fellow citizens throughout the State — all ranks and conditions of men — alike pressed forward to lay their tribute of affection and regard upon his bier. The Governor issued a proclamation reciting the eminent services he had rendered the State, and caused public honors to be paid to his memory ; the business of the courts was suspended while eulogies were pronounced and resolutions of respect and condolence were placed upon their records ; organizations, public and social, vied with each other in manifestations of friendship and es- teem, and the press united in one common expression of high appreciation of his life and public services. And so we committed his body to the dust, and com- mended his soul to God who o;ave it. ADDENDA. Since the publication of the foregoing sketch attention has been called to the address delivered by Governor Par- ker on the 6th of March, 1873, on the occasion of the presentation to the State of the old Battle Flags of the jS'ew Jersey Regiments. It is here presented, copied from the report in the Trenton True American of the day follow- ing its delivery, to further illustrate the views sustained by him on the questions involved in the war : SPEECH ON THE PRESENTATION OF THE OLD BATTLE-FLAGS. Veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic : — The eloquent orator* who has just addressed you related the circumstances under which these flags were sent to this State, and it may be well to further notice the fact. At the close of the war I had the honor to occupy the Executive Chair of the State of New Jersey, and hearing that these flags, which had been borne through so many hard-fought battles, were about being put in charge of the United States authorities, and thinking that they might be deposited at the Capitol, where few Jersey men would have opportunity to see them, I thought it proper to request that these New Jersey memorials of the battle fields might be given into the cus- tody of the State. This request, so reasonable, was readily complied with, and the flags, with others, were placed in the charge of the Quar- termaster General of the State. About two years since the Legislature of the State passed a resolution requiring that they should be kept in the State Capitol ; but since that time, in consequence of the unsettled condition of the building, there has been no suitable place to keep them. A room has now, however, been prepared, in which they will in future be kept. I receive from you these colors, and, in conformity with the ex- pressed wish of the Legislature, will deposit them in the Capitol, there to remain in the custody of the State. In looking upon these torn and discolored flags, the question natu- rally arises, why are they deemed so precious ? Why have they been made the subject of official correspondence between the National and * John Y. Foster, Esq., of Newark. 42 MEMORIAL OF State governments ? Why has theii- preservution been provided foi- by legislative action ? Why have they been brought here to-day in the hands of veterans of the Grand Army of the Eepublic, in the pres- ence of a vast concourse of citizens, and accompanied by a grand mili- tary escort? Is it because the material of which they are made is rare and costly ? The bullet scarred stafts and stained shreds of silk, in themselves of little intrinsic worth, are all that remain. Is it because of any practical use to which they might hereafter be put in active service ? They are so frail that if unfolded the gentlest breeze would scatter their fragments. AVhat then gives them a priceless value ? It is because of the memories and associations that cluster around thorn. To you, soldiers of the late war, they recall the scenes through Avhich you passed. They remind you of the time, when in their brightness and beauty, you received them from the State, and of the voms you then solemnly made to guard and protect them, and to bring them back, not in dishonor, but with victory emblazoned on every fold. Through years of varied fortune they were your constant companions. To-day they speak to you of the joys and friendships of camp life, of the wearisome march, the shock of battle, the charge and the deadly assault. Where danger most threatened you advanced your stand- ards and bore them proudly aloft; where shot and shell fell thickest, you rallied around them ; they guided you over the field of carnage, and on them the eyes of your fallen comrades instinctively turned their dying gaze as you hurried past. AVho can wonder, then, that to you these flags are of peculiar interest ? But chiefly are they precious to you, and to all of us, because they are the emblems of our nation- ality — the symbols of governmental power. Mute though they be, they speak to us in language more forcible than human utterance. Each rent and shred of these tattered banners has a voice which to- day says to us, and to all men, " although it cost privation and suffer- ing, exposure and even death itself, come what may, this government must be maintained in its integrity, whether its assailants come from without or within ; though millions of lives and billions of treasure be the sacrifice, the Union shall be preserved." Soldiers of New Jei'sey, your deeds of noble daring are still fresh in memory. These banners borne by you, who here represent the rem- nant of the eighty thousand men whom New Jer.sey sent to the field, testify that you, and such as you, in the hour of the country's peril, left the endearments and comforts of home and bared your bosoms to the storm of battle, that our free institutions might be maintained and tlie nation might live. In the name of the people, I thank you, and, through you, your absent comrades, for the imperishable honor reflected on the State by your patriotism and valor in that dark hour. In closing these interesting ceremonies we must not forget those who, with high hope and patriotic impulse, went forth with you but JOEL PARKER. 43 did not return ; those who for a time with you followed these flags, but fell by your side, sacrificing their lives for their country. A grateful people will ever cherish their memory. In the name of the State of New Jersey, I now take these memorials of valiant deeds, and Avill deposit them in the place set apart for their reception, where, in accordance with the resolutions of the Legisla- ture, they will be tenderly cared for, and where they will remain the objects of gratitude and reverence of future generations. It should have been mentioned in the biography of Governor Par- ker that the Honorary degree of Doctor of Laws was conferred on him by the Trustees of Rutgers College, June 18, 1872. ,,BRABYOFCONGBESS