%■ ?. 0^ c " " • v^^ "•r^^*'' ^ •1 o 'V^ -I o A^ ..... V . (1 . « • • , •^ "■f^o' o ,0^ c' • • i v* %4 ^"^ ^ - ^^' ^^^-jv .. ^;. ..-■• ^^^^ . ^->, ..,-!>,^, ^^^ :fr -'■ "^-^0^ ;,,--•>-- -' A •=*"•' -f-^^^ / /f^\ ^'^..^^^ / X/ ;■ %,^^ .'>.Ve X/ Z?^^'-. %,^^^ ;>^^^^ %,< •^^0^ ■-. -ov*- -Vo^ -ov^ ; -^Ao^ A-^°- .^0^ 4o^ ^0^^^ V o-^o., ^0^ ' o » o % .To' V^ A"" . ' . A >r^ . ^. A^ ^^ ^' V/' : .\~- •r ■'<^, 1^ v^^ ^^-^ o,^ O. ,0^ c' ^^ ''^^ v^^ .0'' (."""•• O A .' ,0^ ^^ .' ■*iiH"„ %^ .^' ■^. ' .. >' A "°o A^ ^^. '°- »^C* • * » \ ' ^'-. '*b V' A^\' A.- w' <- « - . A vT^ . \ o V "^ - ■:> .' • .V- ^•^^. ^°-n.^ •V'' %''-v-v^ X •— '/' % '--'■/ ' ' ' ' ^-^A ^o',^ ^^^'^^ • %/ A^ ^o ,1^ ... -f- .0 •to '•■ .^^ 'V^^ /X'-- -?-_ A^ .^'^'V .0 ^ • < O .Or,-. •■".. \.. v.^"/^^'. •^"•^■^^ '^ V "it, .^ ./ L-^°<. .-5' BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY OF THE NORTHWEST. BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY OF THE NORTHWEST BEING VOLUME FOUR OF AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY OF REPRESENTATIVE MEN . BY 1/ ALONZO PHELPS, A.M. ^t BOSTON TICKNOR AND COMPANY 211 SCvcmont ^^tvect 1890 ^ij> ? «^ Col'VRIGHT, 1S90, BY TiCKNOR AND COMPANY PREFACE. " I "HE American Biographical History of the Pacii-ic States and the Northwest -*- comprises four quarto vokmies ilUistrated with steel-plate engravings, and handsomely bound in full morocco. The work is pureK' an American idea, and is in the direction of assimilating American literature with American civilization. Viewed merely in the light of its primary purpose, without reference to collateral aims, the present work is simply a valuable and comprehensive Biographical Dictionary and Portrait (iailery ot the eminent men whose eventful lives are interwoven with the annals ot the nation. But this view is quite inadequate because superficial. Biography is the basis of history. It exhibits the political, social, religious, and intellectual condition of the people at every period of national existence. Instead of giving an account, in laborious detail, of all the events that have occurred from time to time in the growth of the State, biography and history are combined, grouping together the most striking and picturesque features that have dis- tinguished the early and more heroic period of pioneer life ; thus illustrating each important stage in the .State's progress and development. A liberal patronage is anticipated for the American Biographical History of the Northwest in Eastern localities. Its perusal will awaken a feeling of mutual regard and sympath)- ; and these memoirs, revealing the toils and privations of pioneer life, in the development of a new civilization, will be read with fraternal interest throughout the Atlantic States antl in luirope. A. P. Boston, Mass. INDEX TO BIOGRAPHIES. Barber, Daniel R. Barrows, Wii.i.ia.m M. Bell, David Cooper Brackett, George Augustus Campbell, Lewis William Chadbourn, 'Charles Hexrv Chute, Richard Cornell, Francis Russell E, Dav, Leonard De Laittre, John . Elwell, Tallmage EusTis, William H. Gale, Samuel Chester Gordon, Hanford Lennox GoTziAN, Hon. Conrad . Griggs, Hon. Chauncev Wright Hart, F. B Heffelfinger, Chriskh'her B. Hodgson, Edward J. Ingersoll, Daniel Wesley Johnson, Asa E. . . . Jones, Edwin S. . . . Jones, Jesse G. . . . Kelly, Anthony Kimball, Hannibal Hamlin, M.D. King, William S. . Lane, James Sargent Lauderdale. Wii.m \\i Hknrv Lewis, M. W. . I20 167 178 79 155 '73 123 68 197 204 192 122 64 139 109 126 154 130 93 78 87 84 101 100 16s 189 114 89 191 IXDEX TO BIOGRAPHIES. Loxo, Fran'kmn IJiiiwKi.i. LowRV, Thomas McNair, William \V. Mendenhai.i,, Richard Jr.\irs Merrill, D. I). Morrison', Doriits MuRPHin'. Dn. I. It. NeLSOX, I!k\JAMI\ I'UWKLIN Norton', Edward Shkldox Oswald, John Conrad . Page, E. H. . Pettit, CiRiis HrssK.v . PiLLSBfRY, Charles Alfred PiLi.sRURv, John SARf.i-.xi- PrAIT, lioRAtK W. Prix( E, JiniN SiorcHi i;\r,rR( Rand, Ai.dxzo C. Russell, Roswki.l P. Seelf.v, Isaac C. Stone, ALEXAxnr.K J., M.D. Thompson, Josiah TuTTLE, James IIarvkv . Upham, Henrv I'. . Walker, Thomas Barlow Washbirx, Cadwallader Coi Washbirn, William Drew Wilson, Thomas Weems 177 132 135 199 48 17- 52 97 72 '53 55 200 n 96 50 102 i88 lis 176 106 183 56 33 184 39 104 BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY OF THE NORTHWEST. Wf^'- ,.# -^'■fij, ^IJjSuTl Sms.yi"-^'^'^ Biographical History of the Northwest. JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY. Two public events which will always remain foremost in the history of Minnesota will ever make the name of John Sargent Pillsbury prominent. Although he has achieved eminence as a man of affairs and of rare business and executive ability, yet to posterity his name will be held in the highest honor on account of two memorable trans- actions. We refer, firstly, to his labors in behalf of the University of Minnesota, whereby he saved it from practical extinction, and placed it among the foremost institutions of the Northwest ; and, secondly, to his actions in bringing about an adjustment of the repudiated State bonds. John Sargent Pillsbury was born at Sutton, Merrimac County, New Hampshire, on July 29, 1838. His parents were John Pillsbury and Susan (Wadleigh) Pillsbury. His ancestors on both sides were of the original Puritan stock, the American branch of the family starting with Joshua Pillsbury, who came to Newburyport, Massachusetts, from Eng- land, in 1640. Joshua received a grant of land at Newburyport, a portion of which remains in the Pillsbury family to this day. From Joshua descended a large family, many of whom have filled positions of honor and trust ; and the Pillsbury family has always been noted for the two characteristics of personal integrity and individual force of character. Micajah Pillsbury, the great-grandfather of John Sargent Pillsbury, settled in Sutton, Ne\v Hamp- shire, in 1790. The father of the subject of this sketch was John Pillsbury, a manufacturer and a man for many years prominent in local and State affairs in New Hampshire, where he held various offices. He died in 1857, leaving a high reputation. To John Pillsbury were born three sons : George A. Pillsbury, one of the most successful business men in Concord, New Hampshire, and Minneapolis, Minnesota, in both of which cities he has held the position of Mayor; Benjamin F. Pillsbury, of Granite Falls, Minnesota; and John Sargent Pillsbury, of whom we write. The opportunities for an education afforded John S. Pillsbury were limited, and during his boyhood were confined to the common schools of his native town. In those days, in the neighborhood of his birth, no such opportunities were afforded for an education as e.xist to-day. Work and application were required of all ; and in his early teens we find John S. commencing to learn the painter's trade. At about sixteen years of age his natural taste for trade and business led him to abandon painting, and enter upon a mercantile life. He commenced as a clerk for his older brother, George A. Pillsbury, in a general country store, at Warner, New Hampshire, continuing for four years in the employ of his brother, and for two or three years with William Carter, Jr., who succeeded his brother in business. Shortly II 12 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. after reaching his majority, John S. entered into a trading partnership with Walter Harri- man, which continued for about two years. A peculiar coincidence of this partnership was that in after life Harriman became Governor of New Hampshire, and Pillsbury Governor of Minnesota. It was in those early experiences of life in a country store that Governor Pillsbury developed that business sagacity which afterwards made the name of Pillsbury coextensive with that of the United States, and everywhere suggestive of business enter- prise and success. The discipline and experience which he obtained in the New-Iuigland country-store of forty years ago, and the long time he was at service as an apprentice and clerk, contrast sharply with the idea which prevails among young men to-dav, wlio seem to think that a year's experience as an employe of others fits them for any position. But it was those long days and nights of hard work which developed the thorough and successful man of later years. After the partnership with Harriman terminated, John S. removed to Concord, New Hampshire, where for four years he was engaged as a merchant-tailor and cloth-dealer. During these years he had been watching the signs of the times, and became convinced that the largest opportunities for business success were in the West, and he then became the pioneer of the Pillsbury family in this region. In 1853 he started on a trip of observation, for the purpose of finding a desirable place in which to locate permanently. After considerable travel, through the Western and Northwestern States, in June, 1855, he visited Minnesota, and when he saw the Falls of St. Anthony he became convinced that sooner or later a large metropolis would be built there. He settled permanently at what was then St. Anthony, but what is now an essential part of the city of Minneapolis. He at once engaged in the hardware business. He succeeded until the panic of 1857, when a loss of about $30,000 bv fire in a single night met him. This loss, occurring in the midst of the financial distress of the time, to most men would have been ruinous. It only served to develop and strengthen his courage, and to nerve him for greater action. In this connection we might sjieak of one of his peculiar traits : his ability to snatch victory out of the very jaws of defeat. In emer- gencies which would have disheartened most men, he has always stood forth to the best ad- vantage. In the every -day events of life, when everything is running smoothh-, he might perhaps pass for an ordinary man ; but all through life, when trying ordeals have come, he has always been recognized as a leader among men. When these financial diflficultics arose he was not disheartened, but applied himself with redoubled vigor, and established himself in business on a larger scale ; and, at the end of five years, he was not only successful again, but by tremendous efforts and indefatigable energy he had met every one of his obliga- tions, and paid all his creditors in full. In after years he often said that one of the highest compliments which was ever paid him was by an Eastern merchant. Shortly after the fire he made a large purchase of goods with which to carry on his business ; in payment for this purchase he gave several thousand dollars of his own personal notes, indorsed by no one. As he was about to return to Minnesota, the Boston merchant handed back his notes, say- ing : " You can keep them as well as I, and as fast as you pay a note and the interest thereon, you can tear up the original note." His reputation for honesty was the only secu- rity the capitalist wanted ; and it is needless to add that the security was ample, and this too in a time when Western credit was not sought in the East. Not only did Mr. Pillsbury attend to his own business matters, but he became prominent in local affairs, and in 1858 was JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY. 13 elected a member of the city council of St. Anthony, a position which he held by successive re-elections for six years. When the War of the Rebellion broke out, he rendered efficient service in organizing the First, Second, and Third Regiments of Minnesota volunteers ; and in 1862 he, with others, raised and equipped a mounted company for service in the Indian outbreak in Minnesota. In 185 1 Congress granted forty-si.K thousand acres of land in the then Territory of Minnesota, for the establishment of a University. In 1856 this land was mortgaged in the sum of forty thousand dollars, and bonds issued thereon for the erection of University build- ings. After the main building was completed, in 1857, a mortgage of fifteen thousand dollars was placed upon it. When the financial crash of 1857 came, various obligations and debts remained outstanding. The trustees of the University were unable to do anything, and creditors East and West grew clamorous for their claims. Matters grew worse and worse with the University. No funds could be raised, the Legislature was not able to appropriate money, and, after two or three years of hopeless efforts to go on, the friends of the University finally despaired of being able to extricate its affairs, and it was generally believed that the in- stitution would have to go down, and the creditors allowed to take whatever assets there were. AH this while Mr. Pillsbury, who li^'ed not far from the University, was watching its situa- tion v/ith an eagle eye ; although possessed of but a common-school education himself, which had been enlarged by such knowledge as reading and observation could give him, he never- theless felt a great interest in high-grade schools and colleges, and wished that others might enjoy the facilities of which he was deprived in his youth. In his own mind he determined that the University should not go down, at least not until he had made every possible effort to avert it. He became possessed of an ambition to afford the youth of Minnesota a uni- versity of which they should not be ashamed. In 1862 Governor Ramsey, in his annual message, was forced to say in substance to the Legislature that he could see no other way )ut of the financial embarrassment of the University than to sell the lands which had been -granted it in payment of its existing debts. It is not necessary to say what would have Cjeen the result if this policy had prevailed. In justice to Governor Ramsey, it should be said that this view then prevailed with most of those who were familiar with the affairs of the University, and at the time the recommendation was made it really seemed to be the only way. In 1863 Mr. Pillsbury was appointed one of the regents of the University, and he then commenced to investigate the details of the institution, the situation and amount of its debts, and the location and characteristics of the land which had been granted it ; and, in short, he looked into every detail as thoroughly as a n,ian would do with his own affairs. All this time he was conducting his own private business as assiduously as ever, and during these years there was not a time in his waking hours when his mind was not engrossed with the financial problems of the University. He applied to it that judgment and financial ability which through life have characterized his private affairs. In 1863 he was elected a member of the State Senate, when he at once proposed a plan to the Legislature whereby the whole affairs of the University were placed in the hands of a new board of regents, composed of Hon. John Nicols of St. Paul, Hon. O. C. Merrinian of St. Anthony, and himself. He found a strong friend and ally in the person of Hon. John M. Berry, then a lawyer at Faribault, but afterwards and for many years one of the justices of the Supreme Court of Minnesota. 14 NORTH IVEST BIOGRAPIIV. Mr. Berry entered enthusiastically into Governor Pillsbury's plan for the restoration of the University, imicI drew up and introduced a measure which resulted in the new board of regents. This act became a law March 4, 1S64, and is found in Chapter XVIII. of the General Laws of Minnesota, for the year 1864. \Vc refer to it thus definitely as it is a memorable act in the history of the University, and many of its provisions arc well worthy the attention and consideration of those who may afterwards study the history of the insti- tution. The act itself appointed the gentlemen of whom we have spoken, as the sole regents of the University; compelled them to give bonds to the State of Minnesota in the sum of twenty-five thou.sand dollars ; and placed all of the affairs of the University " in their discre- tion, to compromise, settle, and pay any and all claims and demands of whatsoever nature against the University of Minnesota or the regents thereof ; " and the regents " are hereby fully authorized and empowered to sell at public or private sale, and convey in settlement of any of said claims or demands, or for cash, or on credit, the whole or any part of the lands donated to the State of Minnesota by an act of Congress, entitled, An Act Donating to the States of Minnesota and Oregon certain lands reserved by Congress for the Territory of Minnesota and Oregon for University purposes." This act further provided that " said Board of Regents I shall have the right to convey by deed, under the seal of the University, sucli lands as they *, may sell;" and, in short, virtually placed all of the affairs of the University as completely in their hands as if the matters involved were their own private business. Some of the claims had been due for many years, and were in dispute as to the items. Mr. Pillsbury took upon himself the difficult and delicate task of adjusting these claims. Many were held by parties outside of the State, and in order to adjust them he was compelled to visit various parts of the country. This he did, often spending months, and, finally, after a great deal of effort, he succeeded in fully discharging all outstanding bonds, liens, judgments, and claims of every kind, to the entire satisfaction of those holding the claims, as well as the friends of the University. This he did without compensation to himself, and he thereby saved to the University upwards of thirty thousand acres of the land-grant which Congress had made, and the present site of the University of twcnt^'-five acres, with the campus and buildings, which are to-day valued at fully half a million of dollars. Thus was the University freed from the burdens which threatened to destroy it. From that time on, its success was assured. Mr. Pillsbury's efforts did not abate one whit after the financial affairs of the institution were thus settled. From 1863 till 1876 he was a member of the State Senate (excepting one and a half terms), and during this entire period he made the affairs of the University and its man- agement his study. After he went to the Capitol, no matter how hard the times or how strong the opposition, and at times when most men would have been afraid to ask for a penny's aid from the State, somehow or other before the close of the session he managed to secure a generous appropriation for the University. Mr. Pillsbury was always a Republican in politics. His splendid success in business and his wonderful management of the affairs of the University had made him one of the prominent men of the State, and his name was often mentioned in connection with the govern- orship. He was not a politician, however, and never adopted the methods of politicians, but was quiet and unobtrusive in all his habits. In 1875 he was elected governor of the State of Minnesota. JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY. 13 To the discharge of his new duties Governor Pillsbiiry brought remarkable qualifi- cations. Uniting breadth of view with prompt business sagacity, he was peculiarly fitted for the guidance of a young commonwealth struggling with unwonted difficulties. Following the financial panic of 1873 the people had emerged from an experience of feverish inflation to find themselves harassed with local debt, and confronted with reduced values. To this was added the grasshopper scourge, which in many localities inflicted poverty upon the people ; while everywhere, in town and country, all avocations, especially agriculture, the basis of the common prosperity, suffered a depression wholly without precedent. Never, even amid the Civil War and Indian outbreaks, was discouragement deeper or more wide- spread among the people. In this condition of affairs the inauguration of Governor Pillsbury was looked forward to with unusual interest. His reputation for liberality and high integrity, and his useful career as a State senator in the promotion of educational, charitable, and other enlightened legislation, justified popular expectation and inspired new hopes for the future. His inaugural address speedily won favor as a sensible and statesmanlike document. In comprehensive grasp it evinced at once a clear apprehension of principle and a close discernment of the people's practical needs. In an elevated tone of thoughtful dignity he urged the necessity both of rigid economy and liberal expenditures ; and, while recognizing all corporate franchises in their just application, the governor took high ground in favor of the great principle of governmental control of railroads, which was afterwards affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States. But the most remarkable of the governor's utterances were those in which he pleaded for the honor of the State, and urged with cogent force and earnestness the just and speedy liquidation of her long-repudiated railroad bonds. Several propositions before made for the settlement of these old obligations had been so emphati- cally rejected by the people that candidates for popular favor shrank from a consideration of the matter as from political suicide. The Legislature, while according respectful attention to the governor's recommendation, was not then ready to give it effect, and the sequel proved that years of persistent effort were requisite to prepare the way for what is now generally acknowledged as an act of obvious public justice. Many important measures occupied the attention of the Legislature of 1876, some of them resulting in crude and ill-considered bills appropriating money to furnish seed-wheat to the grasshopper sufferers. These the governor felt it his duty to veto. With the manifest increase of the scourge and the reasonable certainty of continued ravages in those districts where the insects had already thickly deposited their eggs, to again seed the ground seemed like inviting renewed destruction from the insatiable pests. In the absence of attempted remedies, to make appropriations for such purpose was deemed a useless depletion of the public treasury, and it would, moreover, be accompanied by the hurtful weakening of private e.xertion and increased dependence upon public relief. The result proved the wisdom of the governor's course ; for the following season witnessed a more thorough destruction of the wheat crop in the ravaged districts than had ever been known. But with his disapproval of futile appropriations the governor applied himself anew in the effort to devise plans for defence against the growing encroachments of the enemy. He invited correspondence from investigators and sufferers, encouraged an interchange of views and i6 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. comparison of proposed remedies, and, after the accumulation and study of a mass of various information, issued a proclamation embodying the results and recommending such measures of protection as had been best attested by experience. This tended to arrest discourage- ment and to attract renewed attention to the subject. Meanwhile the widening area of devastation along the entire frontier, and the increasing gravity of the situation, seemed to demand a more general consideration of the matter, and accordingly Governor Pillsbury issued invitations to the governors of the States and Territories which had most suffered, to meet him in general conference to consider the evil and endeavor to concert measures of mutual protection. A cordial response having been received from the invited executives, it was agreed that the proposed conference should be held the following October at Omaha, Nebraska. Meanwhile prompt executive action was demanded for public protection in a different direction. Early in September a band of daring robbers and hardened outlaws (commonly called the Younger brothers), who had pursued a long and successful career of pillage, an(? terrorized successive communities in the Southwestern States and Territories, rode into the village ot Northfield, Minnesota, and attempted to rob the bank. This was prevented by the heroic .esistance of the cashier, at the cost of his life, when, by a prompt rally of the citizens, two of the bandits were killed and the others compelled to take flight. At once the whole country was aroused in the effort to capture the outlaws. Conducting their retreat through the night and under cover of the "Big Woods," they kept at large for some days, and the governor was repeatedly urged to order out the militia. But, rightly judging that it was an occasion for vigilance and celerity of movement, rather than military display, the governor sensibly declined the expensive resort to troops, and, by the prompt offer of rewards, — the responsibility of which he assumed, — and with the information obtained from detectives and the persistent use of the telegraph, most of the surviving robbers were discovered, driven into a swamp, and captured. Escaping from trial by the expedient of pleading guilty, the robbers were sentenced for life, and sent to the State prison at Stillwater, where they still remain. The Omaha conference, composed of the governors and scientific representatives of the States and Territories of the Northwest, was held according to appointment. Choosing Governor Pillsbury as its chairman, the assemblage continued its session several days, and joined in a memorial to the President and Congress of the United States, asking a thorough investigation of the matter, with a view to such governmental action as might promise protection. At the same time a large fund of information, elicited from various quarters, with suitable instructions, was published with the proceedings in pamphlet form, and widely disseminated as a basis of future action. But the immediate relief of the grasshopper sufferers was yet unprovided for. Succes- sive raids of the insects had driven many settlers from their homes and reduced the scanty means of those who remained. Upon his return to the Capitol the governor was met with renewed appeals for aid. They daily increased in number and urgency. A cry of distress arose in unmistakable tones from the afflicted counties of the southwest. A long Northern winter was just .setting in, and to avert severe suffering prompt action was imperiously demanded. But how was such action to be taken in the absence both of specific knowledge JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY \j of the distress and of the means to relieve it ? The emergency required at once a clear head and a big heart. Fortunately Governor Pillsbury possessed both in rare degree. The agents he had sent out to investigate having failed to report the definite and extended information required, the governor resolved to go in person among the people and see for himself. So, providing himself with a storm-cap, a suit of rough clothing, and a sum of money for direct emergencies, the governor left his office and went forth on his mission of mercy. For greater convenience and to insure more searching work, he resolved to travel incognito. It was zero weather, in' the middle of December ; and the people, with dire experience of blizzards on the bleak prairies, warned him against venturing on any but the shortest journeys. It was sometimes only by offering considerable rewards that he could induce them to drive him from house to house, where they were widely separated. But, persevering through all difficulties, sharing the shelter of their desolate cabins, and partaking of their scanty food, the governor was not long in discovering a people on the verge of actual starvation. In some instances with thin and ragged clothing and without shoes, they were dependent upon twisted grass for fuel and coarse bran and shorts for food. In others only a few potatoes and garden-vegetables were left to appease the gnawings of hunger. Over broad acres all grain crops had been destroyed, year after year, and farm- stock and even the family cows had been sold to provide food and clothing. The reports of this extreme destitution sent back by Governor Pillsbury, and published in the news- papers, created a profound sensation and melted the stoutest hearts. All the idle and shiftless settlers who were inclined to alms-seeking had left the country, and those who remained were a noble and self-respecting class, ready to endure all things rather than resort to beggary. Sometimes stout men would disclaim their own poverty, and, averring their ability to "pull through," would bid the governor go on to their neighbors, who, they declared, were in greater need ; but upon a kindly inquiry for wife or children, or the sudden appearance of the cherished ones in their rags and misery, the brave fathers would break down with emotion, and accept for their families what they had declined for themselves. In one notable case, while the governor was questioning a proud sufferer who had more than once refused proffered aid, a little child, whose tender limbs were exposed through her tattered garments, suddenly entered the room. " You refuse help for yourself," said the governor, "but how about your children .' " The poor man struggled hard for self-control, and, catching the child in his arms, exclaimed in broken accents, " My children, my children ! O God ! help my poor children ! " The governor, too deeply affected to prolong the interview, pressed a bank-bill into the parent's hand and hurried away; and it is needless to add that further succor speedily reached that suffering household. Furnishing immediate relief from his private purse, in the most urgent cases, the governor made arrangements in different neighborhoods for a systematic and extended rescue of the people from their perilous condition. And here Governor Pillsbury exhibited the rare common sense and practical sagacity for which his whole career has been noted. Avoiding local politicians, who would be tempted to use their position to further their political ends, and also country storekeepers, who might thus seek to collect old debts, and 18 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. declining the proffered agency of boards and committees, by whose labor and machinery benevolent contributions are so often wasted and delayed, the governor searched among the country physicians and clergymen for agents to receive and distribute the relief goods to be forwarded. Then returning to St. Paul, he issued an eloquent and touching appeal in behalf of the settlers, in circular form, which was sent to churches and charitable organizations, and widely published by the press East and West. In this call the governor stated that he would personally attend to the distribution of such aid as should be sent. The response was prompt and generous. Contributions in money, clothing, and provisions poured in from all quarters, accompanied often with sympathetic assurances and offers of further aid. At first the Capitol was made the receptacle for the supplies, but, the public apartments being encumbered with their rapid accumulations, the governor secured the use of a large building in Minneapolis, where, after the labors of the day were over, he and his devoted wife, who heartily joined in the good work, nightly applied themselves to the task of assorting, packing, and forwarding the contributed articles. For weeks the noble work w-ent on ; railroads and e.xpress-companics transferred the goods free of charge, and generous individuals tendered their .services in various capacities. Thousands of families in extreme destitution were thus saved from their sufferings, and it would be difficult to exaggerate the touching manifestations of gratitude exhibited by the recipients. In his message to the Legislature of 1877, which shortly convened. Governor Pillsbury discussed the grasshopper question exhaustively, making many practical recommendations for the counteraction of the scourge and the relief of its victims. An appropriation was promptly voted to supplement the volunteer charity the governor had carried forward, and further pro- vision to meet the emergency was made, pursuant to his suggestions. In that message, too, the governor earnestiy renewed his recommendation for the prompt liquidation of the dishonored railroad bonds. First summarizing a formidable array of precedents and judicial authori- ties, showing the State's legal liability, he forcibly exhibited its moral obligation, and urged anew the performance of a duty commanded by the imperative " voice of law, equity, and honor." ]5ut the people's representatives were still averse to taking up the subject, which endangered their political prospects by arousing bitter prejudice in opposition, and they again adjourned without taking action. With the approach of spring, the people of the ravaged districts watched the movements of the grasshoppers with deep anxiety. The worst-raided localities could endure no further inflictions. The subject everywhere commanded wider and closer attention, and the governor, complying with the expressed wishes of various religious bodies, and following a time-honored custom of his Puritan ancestors, issued a proclamation for a day of fasting and prayer, invit- ing the people to unite in asking Divine protection, and in seeking greater humility and new consecration in the service of a merciful I-'ather. Such an executive utterance, unusual out- side of New England, attracted much attention, and provoked some criticism, but the recom- mendation was generally heeded throughout the State, and in many neighborhoods inspired new hope for the future. As the season advanced, the insects entirely disappeared. As a whole, the crops of 1877 of all kinds were among the most bountiful ever gathered in the State, especially in the counties repeatedly afflicted by the grasshopper scourge, and people be- lieved that the hand of Divine Providence was in it. Thus perished the pests from the sight JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY. 19 and thoughts of the people they had so long afflicted ; and only feeble stragglers have since been seen, and these too few and scattered to create alarm. The State Republican Convention of 1877 renominated Governor Pillsbury by acclama- tion, an] at the ensuing election he was chosen for a second term by an increased popular majority. The inauguration was conducted with unusual I'cli'.t by direction of a committee of the Legislature, under whose supervision the re-elected executive was escorted by a mili- tary and civic procession to the Opera House at St. Paul, where the assembled members of the Legislature of 1878 listened to the gubernatorial message. This, in high conception of principle, and the wisdom and force of practical suggestion, was among the ablest state papers ever addressed to a legislative body, and it received deserved commendation at home and abroad. The bountiful crops of the previous season had renewed the hopes of the people, and there was danger that with aroused energies they would be impelled into new habits of extravagance, and indulge in schemes of speculation which would tend to renew the disasters of the former days. This the governor sought to avert by an eloquent plea in behalf of re- publican simplicity, and more rational habits in public and private life. In this message, too, he urged for the third time, with unabated zeal, the speedy adjustment of the outstanding railroad bonds, while among other important matters submitted were his recommendations for the creation of the office of public examiner ; for the establishment of a high-school board ; for the construction of another State prison, as well as further provisions for the care of the insane ; for a well-considered loan of seed-wheat to the impoverished victims of the grasshopper scourge ; and the renewal of his former recommendation for submission to the popular vote of a constitutional amendment providing for biennial in lieu of annual sessioins of the Legislature. Governor Pillsbury's recommendations received the prompt consideration of the Legis- lature, and most of them were adopted. The office of public examiner, first filled by Henry M. Kno.x, a gentleman of exceptional capacity, by securing supervision of the public offices as well as uniformity of their accounts, has achieved incalculable good by the moral as well as financial improvement of the public service. The high-school board, by aiding graded schools to fit pupils for the University, supplied a missing link in the ascending scale of instruction, and promoted unity in a magnificent school-system. The loan of seed-wheat to the grasshopper sufferers, now that the insects had gone, was a wise measure in aid of a deserving people too destitute for self-help. The bond question, through the persistent appeals of Governor Pillsbury, was at length taken up for consideration. But the most that could then be achieved was the passage of a bill submitting to the people a proposition to grant the half-million acres of Internal-Improvement Lands held by the State, in exchange for the outstanding railroad bonds. This was promptly voted down by the people. And finally the substitution of biennial for annual sessions of the Legislature, a change repeatedly recommended by Governor Pillsbury, has produced most of the benefits here which have re- sulted in the many other States which have adopted it. Aside from the heavy expense saved, the escape from tampering with laws before they have been long enough in operation to be fairly tried tends to promote more respect and better administration of their just provisions. But it was not alone these commanding public questions which occupied his attention. 20 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. His reputation as a just and capable business man, as well as his well-known love of work, induced the Legislature to impose upon him manv labors not usually within the scope of ex- ecutive duties. He had already, in connection with the attorney-general and railroad commissioner, adjusted numerous claims of creditors against the Urainerd ]5ranch Railroad (now a part of the system of the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway), and con- ducted land sales to provide for their payment. He also endured the discomforts of frontier life during a long, hot summer in securing justice to innocent settlers upon railroad lands, in order that the claimants might be accommodated near their homes. The lands which had been previously granted by Congress to aid in the construction of the St. Paul & Pacific Railroad had remained forfeited to the State for several years. During this time the gov- ernment had permitted filings and homesteads to be made. In 1877 the Legislature con veyed these lands to the Western Railway Company, with a provision for the pri)tection oi settlers. Out of this matter arose a large number of controversies. The companv and set tiers could not agree, and to adjust these differences the Legislature passed an act which imposed upon Governor Pillsbury the duty of adjusting these differences. Although not in the line of his duties, he undertook the task, ami spent eighteen months in making these settle- ments. He thus secured homes for three hundred an.\ious settlers. He was now called upon to execute the provisions of the act for distributing seed-grain, which demanded attention to more than six thousand applicants, in thirty-four counties, and required much labor to make just awards and supply the needed grain in time for the sowing of an early spring. ]5ut these additional duties, thus promptly discharged, were not more cheerfully or faithfully performed than those which were voluntarily assumed by the governor himself. Notwithstanding the claims of an enormous private business, no public man ever spent more hours at his official post, or applied himself more assiduously. Indeed, the exercise of his functions as a public and a private citizen seemed with Governor Pillsbury but the conscientious performance of a single duty. And thus it was that he was equally prepared to furnish his private means in aid of grasshopper sufferers ; to supply from the same source an omitted appropriation for the State prison amounting to fiftv-five thousand dollars, in order to avoid calling an extra session ; and to urge the payment of an honest public debt for the same reasons as those for which he would preserve private honor. The accumulating business of a rapidly growing State had long been overcrowding tlie several apartments in the Capitol, and additional accommodations had become an imperative necessity. To provide these it was proposed to erect an addition to the west wing, of sufficient size to afford more office-rooms on the first floor, and an enlarged chamber above for the House of Representatives, with committee-rooms. I'or all this the Legislature voted fourteen thousand dollars. How it was possible to accomplish so much it was difficult to imagine, and it was supposed that the project must either be abandoned or the restriction as to cost be disregarded. But Governor Pillsbury, with his strict ideas of public trust, managed the matter with such business shrewdness that the whole work was done in good and substantial style within the limits of the appropriation. \\'hen the impro\-cmcnts were completed and examined, experienced judges placed the figures at three or four times the sum actually expended, and, notwithstanding the low prices then prevalent, the achievement continues to be incomprehensible. This enlargement of the Capitol having been completed JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY. 21 in time, the Legislature assembled in joint convention in the commodious new chamber, and there received the governor's message for the session of 1879. Governor Pillsbury, referring to the agricultural results of the past season, repeated his recommendation for less ex'clusive wheat culture, and a more diversified husbandry ; reiterated his condemnation of the practice of granting appropriations in excess of receipts of public funds ; enlarged upon popular education ; renewed his recommendation for speedy action looking to the creation of another State prison, and enlarged accommodations for the insane ; referred to the salutary results produced by the new office of public examiner; urged amendments in the tenure-of- office and election laws to conesjDond with the biennial sessions ; and, while expressing his regret at the recent vote of the people, rejecting the proposed "bond settlement," declared that his convictions upon the subject had "undergone no change," and that he hoped for a better result "in the near future." After practical suggestions touching agriculture, wheat inspection, lake navigation, insolvency, and matters affecting the welfare of future settlers, the governor closed with an impressive reference to the national affairs, invoked " a renewed recognition of those fundamental principles which gave us political existence," and appealed to "that particular love of justice which shall ignore parallels of latitude, and enforce ever)- where under the flag the equal rights of all men before the law." Klany unexpected matters incident to frontier life, and closely concerning the people's welfare, continued to occupy the governor's attention. As the year advanced, there were increasing indications of coming political excitement. The approaching termination of the terms of most of the State officers created an early canvass among candidates for nomination by the Republican convention. Governor Pillsbury had already been solicited by many friends of good government, and especially by those favoring the maintenance of the highest public credit, to consent to his nomination for a third term. But, in justice to his private business, he felt reluctant to continue longer in public service, expressed his wish to retire, and pledged his cordial support to any nominee who should aim to consummate an honorable settlement of the "bond question." The nomination was, however, pressed upon him, and after due consideration of the "bond question" he reluctantly accepted a nomination for a third term. His opponent was Hon. Edmund Rice of St. Paul, an estimable gentleman, long and widely known throughout the State, and respected by persons of all parties. Governor Pillsbury was, however, re-elected by a large majorit)-. This was the first and only instance in the histor)' of Minnesota in which any governor has been given three terms of office ; but the people had such confidence in Governor Pillsbury that they cared nothing for political precedent. The constitutional amendment providing for biennial sessions having been adopted by popular vote, no legislative session was held in the year 1880, but there was no cessation of the demands upon the labors of the executive. That officer was yet busy with the adjustment of various settlers' claims when the public was startled with the news of the burning of the State Hospital for the Insane, at St. Peter. The ruins had not ceased smoking when Governor Pillsbury was on the ground. Taking in the situation at a glance, he exhibited the business decision ever characteristic of him, nor was he less ready with his money than with his mental resources. With the rapid approach of winter there was the utmost necessity for prompt action. One entire wing of the immense asylum was in ruins, and immediate shelter for its helpless 22 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. inmates was a pressing necessity. To furnish this the governor promptly advanced his private funds, as he had done before to the grasshopper victims and to the State prison. Slielter and other urgent wants having been provided, permanent provision for their future care was deferred to the coming Legislature. That body convened in its first biennial session early in January, 1881. The election of Governor Pillsbury was rightly deemed to bctoivcn persistence in the attempted liquidation of the old railroad bonds, and both its friends and enemies prepared for the renewal of the contest. The tireless efforts and appeals of the governor had not been without their educational effects upon the people. Their moral sense had been quickened. The Pioneer Press, the leading journal of the State, had long taken noble and fearless ground for the honor of Minnesota ; several religious bodies joined in swelling the voice of delayed justice ; and there began to be indications of a more dispassionate feeling upon the part of the people. With this aroused attention and advanced public sentiment, the words of the governor were awaited with new interest. They came, in the form of a fervid peroration in his fifth regular message, in which he, for the fifth time, urged that faith be kept with those who had served the State in her need. In order to remove all honest doubt respecting the legality of the bonds, he recommended that an authoritative expression be obtained from the Supreme Court of the State ; and then to a strong appeal upon lofty moral considerations he added a persuasive entreaty in a manner that secured the earnest and candid attention of the assemblage. Manifestations of ajiproval had marked the governor's most pronounced sentiments on the bond question, and their closing expression was followed by such warm and prolonged applause as encouraged new hopes. The limits of this sketch do not admit of a detail of all the i>roceedings connected with the long-pending question of the Minnesota State railroad bonds, but some reference to their origin and history seems necessary here. The Congress of the United States in March, 1857, made a grant of public lands to the then Territory of Minnesota to aid the construction of certain designated lines of railroad. Railroads are the first necessity of new Stater,, and the objects they most urgently strive for; so, as the Legislature had already adjourned its regular annual session, its members were speedily summoned in extra session, to lose no time in profiting by the land grant. In due time a general transfer of the lands was made to various railroad companies, conditional upon their construction of the roads; and there seemed a good prospect for the vigorous prosecution of the work, when the great financial 1 evulsion of 1857 so paralyzed financial centres, arrested enterprise, and destroyed credit, that it was found impossible to render the granted lands available. This was believed to be a temporary collapse, which might and should be bridged over by public assistance so that the work could go on. Accordingly, at the session of 1858 an elaborate bill was presented in the form of a constitutional amendment, providing for the issue of bonds to the amount of five million dollars, to be divided among the railroad companies as a loan of credit to enable them to proceed. This, it was generally believed, would at once give employment and wages to a discouraged people, and expedite the completion of necessary roads. Minnesota had already adopted a State Constitution and elected a State Legislature, but was not yet formally admitted into the Union. For the payment of the bonds it pledged its unreserved faith and credit ; and, in order to be indemnified for such payment in case of JOHN SARGENT PILL SB TRY. 23 default by the companies, the State was secured by a lien upon their several roadbeds, lands, and franchises. The proposition, after a long and thorough discussion in the Legislature, in the newspapers, and in public meetings, was enthusiastically adopted by the people. Charges were made that the scheme was carried through by corrupt influences, but its success was far more due to a zealous public spirit. Pursuant to the provisions of the amendment so voted, the bonds were issued under the great seal of the State ; they were at first negotiated at little or no sacrifice, and the work went forward. It was soon found, nevertheless, that the undertaking was too great for so young a State, and that the whole scheme was premature and unwise, especially in the face of a monetary depression so radical and severe. Successive issues of the bonds suffered necessary discount, the opposition sentiment continued with increased bitterness, and finally the bonds could not be negotiated except at a ruinous sacrifice ; then, after a total bond-issue amounting to ;g2, 275,000, the whole scheme broke down. Banks which had been established upon the security of the deposited bonds collapsed, leaving depreciated bills in the people's hands ; business failures everywhere multiplied, and rage and despair took possession of a people lately buoyant with pluck and hope. The bonds had been issued by degrees, as the work progressed ; but, unfortunately, instead of being withheld until the completion of sections of operating roads, the scheme required the separate issue of bonds for grading and for finishing the road as distinct contracts. The result was that, while the companies did their work faithfully, in strict compliance with all stipulations, they had constructed no completed road. They had done a vast amount of work, and had expended large sums in building substantial bridges, but with the stoppage of operations the people saw only disconnected sections of roadbeds without a mile of completed track. They were incensed ; they felt that they had been swindled, and, refusing to see that the fault was in the terms of the contract, they demanded both that the outstanding bonds shoidd not be paid without their consent and that the securities pledged for their payment should be forfeited. It was nothing that forfeiture was conditional upon payment, and that the forfeited property belonged to the State only as its indemnity for paying the bonds ; and they were blind to the injustice of seizing upon the securities, and refusing the payment which alone warranted such a seizure. For the bonds already issued, the stipulated grading had been duly performed. But the people saw only the defeat of their fond purposes, and so in a spirit of spiteful chagrin they forbade the further issue of bonds, and repudiated those already issued, while the property and franchises of the companies were taken by the State under foreclosure. These were subsequently transferred to new companies, without requiring their assumption of the bond payment; and after this failure to improve the last chance of honorable avoidance of liquidation there seemed to ensue a sullen mood of refusal by the State to entertain just terms of settlement. It was out of this unworthy attitude that Governor Pillsbury sought to arouse the citizens. He had full faith in the people's ultimate sense of justice. After their heroic sacrifices and sturdy persistence in the darkest hours of the Nation's life-struggle, nothing seemed to him too much to expect of their patriotism and honesty of purpose ; and to these he resolved to appeal without ceasing. For five years he had labored to avert threatened dishonor, and now he was cheered with multiplying promises that his generous faith in 24 NORTHWEST DIOGRAPIIY. popular virtue was to find its reward. Tlic governor's recommendations regarding the bonds were referred to a committee of just antl able men, wlio gave the matter considerate attention, while soon after an opportunity was affordeil for the bondholders to be heard before the members of the Legislature. There Hon. Gordon ]•". Colo, attorney for Mr. Selah Chamberlain, the holder of about one-half of the outstanding bonds, gave an c.xhanstive exposition of the question, and made a moving appeal for prompt settlement upon a basis of liberal concessions from his client and other bondholders. The matter thus committed to legislative action was considered in all its bearings, the chief difficulty being to place the question in proper shape before the courts, so as to obtain an authoritative opinion upon the legal liability of the State. A sovereignty not being suable, this was not a slight obstacle. But, with due willingness on both sides, hinderances to honorable adjustments are not insurmountable. After due consultation, involving all legal and equitable considerations, a bill was at length elaborated providing for the executive ajipointment of five judges from the Supreme or District Courts to compose a tribunal, whose duty it was to first decide upon the legal character of the bonds, and, if found valid, to then proceed with the settle- ment of them by an allowance of fifty cents on a dollar of principal and interest upon past due coupons. Provision was, moreover, made for the adjustment of unpaid claims for labor and materials used in the original construction of the roads, as well as for the enlist- ment of eminent counsel in protecting the interests of the State. After a lengthy discus- sion, the bill passed the Legislature, and had just been enrolled in readiness for the executive signature, when, on the night of March i, 1881, the Capitol suddenly took fire, and was reduced to ruins. The destruction was so sudden that some members of the Legislature had difficulty in effecting their escape, while much anxiety was felt for the rescue of the records and unsigned acts of the session, especially the " Bond Bill." All these, however, were saved, and. Mayor Dawson of St. Paul having promptly tendered the use of the newly completed Market House, the rescued property was removed to that structure, and there, the day following, the Legislature resumed its deliberations. The next day the great Act of Adjust- ment received the governor's signature. The pending legislation of most urgency being attended to, the sudden destruction of the State Capitol was recognized as an occasion for prompt action. It was .so near the end of the regular session that only tw^o or three days were left for legislative action, while to call an extra session would be to attempt an angry wrangle among contending localities as to the location of a new Capitol, and incur a cost which would go far toward rebuilding the burned edifice. In this emergency the governor acted characteristically. Having directed a competent architect to inspect the standing walls, and report the estimated cost of rebuilding, he transmitted the result to the Legislature with an earnest recommendation to appropriate at once such a sum as would best secure the restoration of the burned property, leaving all calculations contemplating permanent recon- struction to more deliberate consideration. The governor's advice was followed, and the Capitol was speedily restored upon its old site. And now an extraordinary pressure of duties devolved upon the governor, following the adjournment of the Legislature. That body had jirovided for the enlargement of the Supreme Court by the immediate addition of two members, to be at first appointed by the executive. It had required him to choose the five members of the tribunal for the final adjustment of the railroad bonds, and it had JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY. 25 imposed other extra duties upon liim as the result of new legislation. And now the newly inaugurated President Garfield, by the appointment of Senator Windom as a member of his Cabinet, added the further duty of filling a vacancy in the United-States Senate. So, what with despatching the added business usually left by a legislative session, with preparing to rebuild the olil quarters, anil providing accommodations in the new, and with hearing and reading applications for, and considering the api)i)inlmcnt of, a senator and seven judges, the governor had his hands full. Practically, he did more ; for, while promoting experienced district judges to the Supreme Bench, he was obliged to supply their places. In the selec- tion of appointees to the Supreme Bench, Governor Pillsbury was specially fortunate, his selections being Hon. Grccnleaf Clark of St. Paul, a lawyer of eminent standing, and Judges William Mitchell of Winona and Daniel A. Dickinson of Mankato, both of whom had won high reputations as judges of the district court.s, and both of whom are still on the Supreme Bench. These appointments gave great .sati.sfaction throughout the State ; and the fact that Governor Pillsbury had dared to disregard political custom by the selection of two of the three men from outside the Repul)lican party was an additional evidence that he was looking solely to the best interests of the State. lie also appointed several leading Demo- cratic lawyers to positions on the District-Court Bench. The excitement and exposure attending the burning of the Capitol had inflicted severe illness upon some of the State officers ; and at length the governor, with his added responsibilities, was obliged to succumb. But he was absent from his post only a few days. It soon became apparent that he was to encounter obstacles to the formation of the bond tribunal. It might have been supposed, after so long a struggle, terminating in a favorable public sentiment, that with the final passage of the bond measure all practical obstacles were over. In reality they were but just begun. The proposed tribunal was abnormal in character and purpose. It was clothed with doubtful power, and its members were asked to exercise mixed functions. It lacked precedent. Under its fair semblance some feared there might lurk dangerous consequences ; and there were )'et ominous threatenings from a bitter opposition press. And so most of the judges first chosen to comprise the bond tribunal declined to serve. Others appointed in their places refused to act in so peculiar a capacity ; and so judge after judge fought shy of the doubtful honor, until nearly the whole judicial panel of the State was exhausted. The entire summer thus passed away. Devoted friends of the measure, men who had nobly striven to avert dishonor from the State, grew faint with still deferred hop?, and at length the whole thing was supposed to have failed for want of a beginning. But no one who knew Governor Pillsbury believed that his cherished issue was doomed to any such pitiful miscarriage. He had labored too long and earnestly for the noble result to accept defeat. He had not for a moment thought of giving up the struggle. Biding his time and maturing well his plans, he returned to the contest with renewed resources. Skilful plan- ning and persistence had at length overcome one objection after another, until four of the judges had been secured, leaving but one to complete the tribunal. With due respect for conscientious scruples, or other valid reasons for non-action, the governor made no effort to influence such of the judges as had urged these for refusing to serve, and hence he confined his exertions to such as had interposed no such objections. Finally, however, the tribunal was made up of the five judges. Hon. Austin H. Young of Minneapolis was made president of the tribunal. 26 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. Public interest in the bond question was quickly revived. The day was fixed for the organization, counsel for both sides made due preparation, and proceedings were about to commence, when, suddenly, an actor not on the programme gave a wholly new turn to affairs. All the proceedings had been closely watched by a legal gentleman, well known for his acumen, and also as an opponent of the adjustment of the bond question. This gentle- man, without reference to the counsel arrayed against the bondholders, of his own motion applied for a writ to arrest all proceedings. This brought the competency of the tribunal at once into question before the Supreme Court of the State. In order to a right decision, it was necessary to review the origin, scope, and purpose of the tribunal, and to this end it was of course requisite to consider the whole question, including the original issue and validity of the bonds, and the State's liability. Thus there was suddenly obtained that adequate standing before the Supreme Court which legal ingenuity had failed to devise. The application for this writ was fortunate, since an experimental process of settlement was to give way to the unquestioned adjudication of the highest State court. Proceedings went forward, and after long and able arguments by Hon. William J. Hahn, the Attorney-General of Minnesota, Hon. Thomas Wilson, and David A. Seacombe, Esq., for the State, and Hon. Gordon E. Cole and Hon. John M. Gilman for the bondholders, a decision was made which put all legal questions at rest. Chief Justice Gilfillan, in a profound and exhaustive opinion, declared the Adjustment Act of March 2, 1881, to be void ; reiterated the judgment of the United-States Supreme Court as to the constitutionality of the amendment making payment of the bonds to depend on the popular vote as impairing the obligations of contracts ; and solemnly averred not only that the Legislature alone was vested with power to pay the bonds, but that it was the bounden duty of that body to perform such act of justice. The Supreme Court having itself made the decision which was required of the bond tribunal as a condition of settlement. Governor Pillsbury resolved to call an extra session of the Legis- lature to complete the adjustment. Here a new difficulty presented itself. The Act of Adjustment had required, as a pledge of good faith, a certain deposit of bonds, with an accompanying agreement by their holders to accept fifty per cent of their nominal claims in full settlement. Many holders of these deposited bonds now demanded their return, both because the act requiring the deposit had been pronounced void, and because of their unwillingness to accept half-payment, since the decision of the Supreme Court obligin_g the Legislature to settle, and in view of the ability of the State to pay in full. This demand the governor refused, on the ground that the transaction between the bondholders and the State was essentially a contract, which continued to bind the parties, as only the mode of performance had been affected by the decision of the court. This conclusive edict from the highest authority had vastly stimulated the market value of the bonds, which now reached with interest an aggregate exceeding eight million dollars. But, upon prompt consultation with leading holders, the governor obtained from them a promise to adhere to their original arrangements to abate half the amount, provided the adjustment was immediately consum- mated. Upon this, the governor at once issued his call for an extra session of the Legis- lature, to meet on the eleventh day of October, 1S81. On that day the two bodies assembled, and on the next day the governor delivered his last formal message. It was brief and pointed, and referred to nothing but the business of adjustment. Upon that JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY. 27 subject it was masterly and convincing in a rare degree. Reciting the action of the Supreme Court, and referring to the offer of the bondholders, he urged that there could no longer be any reasonable doubt as to the duty to be performed. The court of last resort had affirmed the validity of the bonds and enjoined upon the Legislature the duty of providing for their payment. The duty had been simplified by the judicial command ; what had been conditional, and to some extent of doubtful procedure, now rested upon " the immutable basis of adjudicated law and justice." The governor declared his individual preference to be that every dollar of the State's indebtedness should be paid in full, principal and interest. Such he thought the only course consistent with the honor of the sovereign body, so far as its own voluntary action was concerned. But when creditors, of their own motion, offered to accept less payment, there was an opportunity for easy liquida- tion without necessary compromise of reputation, and therefore expediency, justice, and honor united in the demand for prompt action. Continuing, the^governor said, "The prac- tical question simply is, whether we shall now save some four millions of dollars to the State without loss of honor, or incur the reproach of repudiation, keep going a source of constant annoyance and an opportunity for political jugglery, and in the end pay the debt in full; for it cannot be possible that an intelligent and progressive people, with moral and religious convictions, can refuse the final payment of an honest debt. An individual who does this while able to pay, justly incurs the scorn of his honest neighbors. What must be thought of a prosperous State which does it, using its sovereignty as its shield ? " The governor then, after showing how readily payments could be made from the proceeds of the half- million acres of internal improvement lands, added a parting appeal : " Unless therefore the pending settlement be now completed, we will be confronted with the bald chance between total payment and naked repudiation. Dare we contemplate this final alternative 1 What are our fair possessions — what the bountiful gifts of nature and the proud achievements of industry —if we preserve not our honor as their crown and shield .' Of what avail are the institutions and the prosperity of which we boast .'' " For the enduring welfare of the fair State we have chosen as our home ; as we would justly share in that national heritage of financial honor which is the wonder of the world ; that we may deserve the reward of a generous prosperity and invoke the blessings of Almighty God, — I entreat you as a parting word to perform a simple act of justice, which shall forever put to rest the haunting spectre of repudiation, and place our young common- wealth irrevocably in the sisterhood of honorable States." With such an, impressive entreaty following arguments so unanswerable, the incentives to action proved irresistible. The question seemed no longer to possess two sides, and the Legislature went to work with every disposition to insure an honorable consummation. Considerable difficulty was encountered in the arrangements of details. It had been pro- posed to take up the old bonds and replace them with new obligations, bearing five per cent interest, which was assented to by the claimants. But, in settling with so many creditors, a large sum in cash would be required to meet fractional excesses. Not only to provide this sum, but to insure the negotiable status of the new bonds, it was reported that they should be placed on the same footing as other obligations supported by the faith and credit of the 28 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. State. To this end Governor Pillsbiiry arranged with Mr. Chamberlain, and other leading creditors, that one million dollars of renewed bonds should be invested in the State school- fund, in consideration of which they agreed to accept four and one-half, in lieu of five per cent interest. This proposition raised a storm. The school-fund of the State had long been regarded with an awe akin to superstition ; and to desecrate the sacred treasure by any connection of the hated bond matter seemed too much for popular endurance. But the answer was that this final settlement was made in either good or bad faith. If the first, there could not be a more fitting disposition made of the promises secured by the honor and credit of the State, and so, one difficulty after another being successfully met, the act passed the Legislature. The public was not long in discovering that in the exchange of securities commanding a high premium and low interest, for the more profitable new bonds, a gain was assured to the State which must soon appro.ximate half a million dollars ; and so sensible a transaction accordingly received the applause it merited. All obstacles being overcome, the settlement was completed in the closing days of Governor Pillsbury's admin- istration, and to the leader in the noble triumph it must have been a proud and grateful reflection that, excepting a few unpresented bonds in unknown hands, not an unredeemed obligation remained to dishonor his State. To the crowding labors of the eventful year was added the care of the sufferers from a fear- ful cyclone which in July destroyed the town of New Ulm, and inflicted misery upon a long reach of neighboring counties. With all his cares Governor Pillsbury was not too much absorbed to organize a system of relief, and to collect and forward timely aid for the victims. The incessant rains and high winds following the burning of the Capitol had so wrecked the standing walls that their removal and the construction of a new building became neces- sary ; and, in order to insure a substantial edifice, a foundation of massive masonry was laid under the direction of the governor. The obstructions to the practical settlement of the bond issue had assumed at one time such formidable shape that its advocates seriously con- templated the necessity of a fourth term for Governor Pillstairy, to insure the completion of the adjustment, and some ardent friends went so far as to propose his name in the Republi- can convention. But this was against the governor's wishes ; and, as he had faith in the completion of his special work, he looked to the close of his third term as a welcome release from his toils. That these toils with their attendant responsibilities were of an unusurd character, will not be doubted by those who care to know the facts. It is seldom, indeed, that the highest ofificer of an American commonwealth is charged witii so -man)- and impor- tant duties as those which crowded the six years' administration of Governor Pillsbury. What with the labor of repelling the grasshopper invasions ; the efforts to rescue the sufferers from their ravages ; the duty of adjusting the claims of numerous settlers of railroad lands ; the appointment of many new judicial and other officers ; the trials following the destruction of the State Capitol ; the demands pertaining to the care for new accommodations ; the providing for the inmates of the burned insane asylum ; and the various labors and responsibilities in adjusting a long-standing indebtedness which saved the credit of the State and subserved public justice — there was a ceaseless demand upon the governor's time and attention. Governor Pillsbury always jjosscssed the happy faculty of doing his work easily ; he never got excited, and always commanded his temper. In the most excited crowd he never lost JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY. 29 his self-poise, and was always quiet and unruffled. Nor could such labors have fallen to more capable or willing hands, or have been more assiduously and conscientiously performed. While the most paternal of all Minnesota's executives. Governor Pillsbury was happy in ex- tending timely aid to the people without undermining their self-dependence. He elevated their moral sense, while relieving their personal wants. He united large comprehension with rare capacity for practical details. With such warm s)'mpathics as are apt to blind the judgment, he has a knowledge of men almost unerring, and the excellence of his judicial and other appointments, lifted above party bias, won applause from all parties. While not possessed of the showy qualities which challenge popular intoxication, he possessed ad- ministrative and executive abilities of the highest order. These, impelled by kindly im- pulses toward his fellows, have gix'en his many wise and good deeds an imperishable lodgement in the hearts of the grateful people whose best welfare he labored to promote. No man ever possessed a safer judgment, or had more of that old-fashioned quality some- times called common sense. During all of the time of which we have been speaking, Governor Pillsbury still managed his large financial interests. His hardware business had increased in volume and was remarkably successful. In 1872 he engaged in the manufacture of flour in Minneapolis, with his nephew, Hon. Charles A. Pillsbury, and his brother, Hon. George A. Pillsbury, the firm being known as C. A. Pillsbury & Co. To this firm was also admitted Fred C. Pills- bury, a son of George A. Pillsbury. Of the magnitude of this business it is not necessary to speak here, more than to say that the firm is doing the largest business in its line in the world, and the products of its mills (which are over ten thousand barrels a day, when all their machinery is running) are known throughout the world. Governor Pillsbury is also en- gaged heavily in lumbering and real estate ; he has also been identified in the construction of railroads which have tended to develop the Northwest, and is largely interested as a director of the Minneapolis & St. Louis, and the Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Stc. Marie Railroads. For many years he has been a director in several of the leading Minneapolis banks. His business judgment has been sought by all, and he has always exercised great weight in the councils of the various kinds of business with which he has been identified. One of his chief personal traits has been his simplicity of manner, and his sympathy for those in need of sympathy. His personal charities and benevolences to deserving causes have been large Although not a member, he has been a constant attendant and officer of the First Congre gational Church of Minneapolis, to which he has contributed very generously. He has always kept alive his deep interest in the University of Minnesota. As the State increased in population and wealth, and the demands for a higher education also increased, Governor Pillsburv's ambition for the development of the University kept pace with the advanced needs. From September, 1869, to September, 1884, William W. Folwell was president of the Uni- versity, and discharged his duties with credit. In all his efforts he was always seconded by Governor Pillsbury. In 1884, President Folwell, in order that he might more thoroughly study political science, resigned his position to take the chair of Political Economy, which position he still retains. A special committee of the regents, consisting of Governor Pills- bury, Judge Greenleaf Clark, and ex-Governor Sibley, was appointed to select his successor. 30 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. To this question Governor Pillsbury ant! Judge Clark addressed their attention, and visitcil different institutions and put forth special efforts to make a wise selection. The choice finally fell on Prof. Cyrus Northrop, of Yale, w'.io accepted the presidency in 1884. Gov- ernor Pillsbury had always a keen knowledge of men, and no mistake was made in PresiJent Northrop. The University has expanded and developed in many directions, and has its various grades of instruction of a character equal to those of any University, with widening plans for the future. At this time the total number of those attending the University is seven hundred and fift)'. Being a State institution, it has been deprived of those bequests and gifts which arc given to private colleges ; and it is, therefore, dependent upon the State for financial sup- port. Governor Pillsbury has always taken a personal interest in the matter of securing appropriations, and the fact that he is identified with the Universit}' has been a potent factor in securing aid from the Legislature. The demands of the University for new buildings, and particulaily for a large hall of science, became pressing in the winter of 1888-9. April 16, 1889, the matter was under consideration before the regents and a committee of both houses of the Legislature. No one knew what to do; finally Governor Pillsbury arose, and in a quiet way spoke as fol- lows : — ^^ Gentlemen of the Legislature and of the Board of Regents, — The I'fTort of members of the present Legislature to divide the State farms from the State University, which has just come to an unsuccessful end, has aroused me to a feeling that the people of Minnesota should have a better knowledge of the liistory of that University and those farms, so that we may not again incur tiie risk of such an undertaking. I would like to run over the history of this whole institution from its beginning, and give some facts which are known to only a few now living. In 1851 the United-States Congress granted forty-si.K thousand acres of land in Minnesota for the establishment of a university. In 1856 these lands were mortgaged in the sum of forty thousand dollars, and l)onds issued thereon for the erection of University buildings. As soon as these were constructed, in 1857, a mortgage for fifteen thousand dollars was placed upon tiiem. Tiie financial crash of 1857 embarrassed the State very much, and the University and lands were considered lost. The board of regents of i860 were unable to do anything toward paying the debt, and a few of us took up enough of tiie debt lo preserve the property for the State still longer. In 1864 I became a member of the State Senate, and made it my especial work to try to save this property. The late Judge John M. Berry, who had been a regent, and resigned, was with me in this effort. I unfolded a plan to him, and asked him to draw^ a bill authorizing the appointment of three regents, with power to adjust matters. The bill became a law, and John Nicols of St. Paul and O. C. Merriman and myself of Minneapolis were appointed such regents. I knew where all the debts were, and took them up by compromises, and finally settled them all, so that in 1867 we had saved the University building, twenty acres of the campus, and thirty-three thousand acres of tlie forty-si.x thousand of the Congressional grant. In 1862 Congress granted the State a hundred and twenty thousand acres of land for an agri- cultural college, upon which grant the State actually got ninety-four thousand acres of land. In 1868 a consolidation of the grant for an .agricultural college and the Stale University was brougiu about, upon the general feeling that it was better to have one university which would be a credit to the State than to have two inferior institutions of which nobody could be proud. In 1869 we bought the so-called old farm of a hundred and si.xty acres, paying eighty-five hundred dollars for JOHN SARGENT PILLSBURY. 31 it. It proved to be unsatisfactory land for an experiment farm, tlie purpose for wliich we procured it, and we sold it for the magnificent sum of a hundred and twenty-eight thousand dollars. Then we purchased two hundred and fifty acres of ground, paying two hundred dollars per acre for a hundred and fifty-five acres of it, and three hundred dollars for ninety-five acres. -We built upon this the experiment building, wliich, together with other improvements, cost us seventy-five thousand dollars. .Since, we have erected upon the grounds a building for the agricultural school, which cost nineteen thousand dollars. 'J'he whole property, which originally cost eighty-five hundred dollars, can be sold to-day for from four hundred thousand to four hundred a:id fifty thousand dollars. In 1870 Congress gave to the University of Minnesota forty-six thousand acres more of land. Now, gentlemen, here in brief is the history of an institution which lias been fostered and guarded by General Sibley, Judge Clark, and all these honored and respected citizens of Minnesota, through all sorts of discouragements, until we have now something wliieh is beginning to take a high rank among the institutions of learning of the United States. Not one dollar have any of us ever received for our services. We are building a hall of science. We wanted tlie Legislature to appro- priate two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for this structure, but we were allowed only a hundred thousand dollars. The question now is, shall we stop the work where it is, and take our chances on some future Legislature for the remainder of the desired two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, incurring, as it would, the risk of the work standing forever in its present unfinished condition. " .^s the Statfe has not the funds, I want to help this Universiiy myself. I have long had the intention of leaving something for it. I think I cannot do belter for the Slate which has so highlv honored me, and for the University that I so much love, than by making a donation for the completion of these buildings; and I propose to erect and complete Science Hall at an expense of a hundred and fifty thousand dollars, more or jess, and present it to the State; and all I ask is to know tliat these land-grants be kept intact, and this institution be made one that this great State may be proud of ; that may be adequate to the needs of the State, an honor to it, and a lasting monument of the progress which is characteristic of this State now and in the years to come — some assurance that wlien I am dead and gone this institution shall be kept for all time, broad in its scope, powerful in its influence, as firm and substantial in its maturity as it was weak and struggling in the days that saw its birth." It is needless to speak of the effect of the words of Governor Pillsbury upon the people of Minnesota. The Legislature hurried to do him honor, and to place on record a formal vote of thanks. The students of the University, in a public reception, could not find language sufficiently strong to express their feelings of gratitude. During the five years from 1884 to 1889, in which President Northrop has been at the head of the University, Governor Pillsbury has been untiring in his efforts to promote the efficiency of the institution. As chairman of the executive committee, he has had practical control of the finances and the expenditures ; and his unfailing patience in attending to the multitude of its wants, in providing for the payment of bills, and in superintending the construction of new buildings, has been wonderful. With a hearty appreciation of what Governor Pillsbury has done. President Northrop, in his Baccalaureate address, on Sunday, June 2, 1889, referred to him and his noble gift to the University in the following terms : — "The names of George Peabody, whose monument may be seen in Harvard and Yale, and men who within the last few years have done great service to humanity by unprecedented gifts, especially Otis, Hand, and Slater, all of Connecticut, will readily occur to you ; and I am sure that as 32 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. 1 speak all of you are thinking of the recent noble gift to this University by our friend and neighbor Governor Pillsbury. "It is not the first time that he has shown his generous interest in tliis institution ; indeed, it is owing to him that the University exists at all, for by unwearied efforts of his the University was rescued from hopeless debt, e\en before it was organized for work. During all the years in which that able scholar. Dr. FoKvell, the first president of the University, was laying its foundations and wisely planning its educational work. Governor Pillsbury was the sagacious counsellor, the earnest friend, the faithful regent, watching over the financial interests of the institution with ceaseless vigilance, ever ready to sacrifice his time, his business, and his ease to its welfare. ]!y his kindness and charity in his daily life, by his public spirit, his wise services to the State in both legislative and executive p/isitions, his free-handed benevolence to the suffering people of the State in a time of great trial, and his (inn au.l ilcterniined stand for the honor of the State in a time of great public temptation, he deserves to be remembered \vith gratitude by the people of this State to the remotest generation. But for no one of his many noble deeds will he be longer remembered than for this his muniScent gift of a hundred and fifty thousand dollars to the State and the University, at a time when the financial condition of the State made it impossible for the Legislature, however well disposed, to grant the money which it needed to carry forward its enlarging work. He has shown himself wise in making this gift while he lived, and might justly hope to witness in the increased prosperity of the University, the fruits of his own benevolence. He has shown himself wise in estimating money at its just value, — not for what it is, but for what it can do, — not as something to be held and loved and gloated over, or to be expended in personal aggrandizement and luxury, but as something whicii can work mightily for humanity: which can re-enforce even the educational power of a sovereign State ; which can enrich human minds, and can thus lift up into the true greatness of a noble citizenship the sons and daughters of the whole Northwest." Governor Pillsbury was married in Warner, New Hampshire, November 3, 1856, to Miss Mahala Fisk, a lady of rare qualities, who has always been deeply interested in all his projects, and who has seconded all his efforts. Mrs. Pillsbury was the daughter of Captain John Fisk, one of the descendants of Rev. John Fisk, who emigrated to Windham, Massa- chusetts, from Suffolk, England, in 1637. The immediate family of Governor Pillsbury has included Addie, born October 4, 1859, the deceased wife of Charles M. Webster; Susan M., born June 23, 1863, the wife of Mr. Fred B. Snyder, a promising young attorney of Minneapolis ; Sarah Belle, born June 30, 1 866; and Alfred Fisk, born October 20, 1868. THOMAS BARLOW WALKER. 33 THOMAS BARLOW WALKER. WHAT photography is to the human face, biography is to the soul. The one, with the marvellous pen of light, sketches the outward features of physical being ; the other traces the progressive development of mind from infancy to manhood, demonstrating that the diversity of character in individuals is as limitless as the physiognomy of man. In taking notes of the life of Thomas Barlow Walker, it will be found that he comes into the list of American eminent men who have carved their pathway up the hill of fame with energetic and persistent endeavors. He was born in Xenia, Green- County, Ohio, February i, 1840. He is the third child, and second son, of Piatt Bayless and Anstis Barlow Walker. In 1848 the father of the subject of this sketch, en route for California, having embarked nearly all of his worldly wealth in the enterprise, fell a victim to the cholera at Warrensburg, Missouri. In those days, the low ebb of commercial honor was such that not a dollar of the thousands that had been invested came back to the widow and four young children, one scarcely more than a babe. The widow thus bereft was the daughter of Hon. Thomas Barlow, of New York, and sister of Judge Thomas Barlow, of Canastota, New York, and Judge Moses Barlow, of Green County, Ohio. Though young and ine.xperienced in the business of life, she made a brave fight against adversity, and lived many years to enjoy the fruits of her labor, in the homes of her affectionate children. In 1883, May 23, she died at the residence of her son Thomas, of Minneapolis, of whose family she had been an honored member for several years. It is due to the subject of this biography to embrace this brief record of his respected parents. It will help us to explain and understand some of the sources of character which are found in the events of his life, and enable us to appreciate inherited energies and habits of usefulness, and to value the influences of example and practical education. The early days of Mr. Walker were given to industry and study. The activity and bent of his mind may be inferred from the fact that he early discovered a taste and capacity for the most abstruse studies, especially for the higher mathematics. He was not only a natural student, but a practical one. The adverse circumstances surrounding him in these early years rendered his opportunities for gaining knowledge from books extremely limited. But, as some one wisely remarks, obstacles sometimes operate as incentives to success, if the ardent mind is powerful enough to grapple with them. His thirst for learning was insatiable, and from all available sources he gathered up knowledge. In his sixteenth year the family removed to Berea, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, for the better educational advantages to be obtained in the Baldwin University. This change in the locality of the family seems to have been the turning-point in the life of the boy. He, here and then, resolved to drop all the boy out of his life, and take up the man. Here, for the first time, he fully appreciated the worth of an education, and determined at any cost to obtain it. Though at this time financially unable to pursue a collegiate course of study, he 34 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. never lost sight of his books. Aside from the duties of his clerkship, all spare time was rigidly devoted to study. Although his average attendance at school did not exceed one term in the year, he kept pace with, and often outstripped, his regular college classes. He was a most indefatigable student. During these years, while employed as a commercial traveller, his heavy case of books constituted his principal baggage. Throughout life Mr. Walker has been a model of industry. lie rightly considered idleness as a vice, and in every period of life work was his especial delight ; for he fully realized that without persistent mental and physical labor — such as few will voluntarily undertake — lie never could have reached the prosperou eminence of his later years. The department of knowledge in which he especially excelled, and ultimately became eminent in the highest degree, was the higher mathematics, with the kindred branches, astronomy, chemistry, and the mechanical arts. To these studies, thus earnestly pursued and laboriously acquired, he is indebted, no doubt, for the ability which in later life afforded him that clear perception and foresight, combined with continuous and unremitting labor, which have characterized his whole business career. When nineteen years of age, Mr. Walker's commercial-agency travels brought him to the little town of Paris, Illinois, where a profitable business venture opened up to him, in buying timber land and cutting cross-ties for the Terre Kaute & St. Louis Railroad Com- pany. Few boys of his age would have seen the business opening; and fewer still would have thought it possible to overcome the obstacles in the way of the undertaking. A boy without business experience, a stranger in the community, without means, and dependent entirely upon the credit which he might be able to establish with the local banks for funds to prosecute the work, he has probably never in his later business career undertaken any transaction involving so much nerve as well as self-reliance, combined with consummate tact and sound judgment, as this "cross-tie" contract in the wild woods and pathless forests of Illinois. In a brief time he had his plans matured, funds secured, contracts closed, and board- ing camps built ; and the clear music of scores of axes was ringing through the wood.s. This enterprise consumed eighteen months of Time, and was a thoroughly creditable busi- ness, and financial success in every point that could have been foreseen ; but the failure of the company the same month the work was completed robbed him of all, save a small fraction, of the profits arising from the enterprise. With the few hundred dollars thus saved, he returned to his maternal home and books. The following winter he spent in teaching a district school, in which calling he was highly successful. Being himself a care- ful student, practical, clear, and direct in views and aims, he was able to present knowledge and the intricacies of study in so plain and simple a form as to make everything easily understood by his pupils. He rightly ranked the teacher's profession above all others, because of its power to make or mar the young and plastic character. In 1862, enter- taining the idea of making teaching a profession, he made application to the Board of the Wisconsin State University for the chair of the assistant professorship of Mathematics, to which he was subsequently elected. But, the action of the board being delayed, he made arrangements, before their favorable action was reported to him, to engage in the gov- ernment surveys. At this time, while at McGregor, Iowa, Mr. Walker met a citizen of the then almost unknown village called Minneapolis. True to tlie inborn instincts THOMAS BARLOW WALKER. 35 of the Minneapolis citizen, tliis casual acquaintance — Mr. Robinson — so enlarged upon the beauties of this embryo city that Mr. Walker decided at once to visit it, and accordingly took passage upon the first steamer for St. Paul, thence over the whole length of the only line of railway in the State of Minnesota, a distance of nine miles, from St. Paul to Minneapolis. One hour after his arrival he had engaged to go on a government survey, with the leading surveyor of the State, Mr. George B. Wright, and began active preparations for immediately taking the field. Mr. Walker's impressions of Minneapolis were so favora- ble that he wrote back to his Ohio home, and to his affianced wife, "/ have found the spot ivhcre zve will make our hojiic.'^ The expedition, however, was destined to terminate disastrously. The Indian outbreak forced the party for safety into Fort Ripley. Mr. Walker returned to Minneapolis, devoting the summer to the survey of the first trial line of the St. Paul & DuUith Railroad. The following season, T. B. Walker, on revisiting his parental home, was united in wed- lock, Dec. ig, 1863, in Berea, Ohio, by Rev. J. Wheeler, D.D., his former college president, and brother-in-law of his wife, to Harriet G., youngest daughter of Hon. Fletcher Hulet. In 1868, Mr. Walker began his first deal in pine lands. His knowledge of the vast tracts of unlocated pine forests of the State of IMinnesota. gained in his vocation as sur- veyor of government lands, strongly impressed him with their immense value. The vast field of wealth and enterprise thus opened up by Mr. Walker was regarded at this period with little if any interest by the leading lumber-men of Minneapolis. His first pine-land partners were Hon. L. Butler and Howard W. Mills ; they putting their money against his labor, the lands thus found and located becoming the joint property of the three. From this date, during a series of years, the labor of Mr. Walker was severe and unremitting. Himself limited in means, he availed himself of the capital of others to carry forward his gigantic lumber enterprises. All lands thus secured by him he located from actual personal examination, which kept him in the forests with his men many months at a time each year, for some ten consecutive years. In connection with his surveys and pine-land matters, Mr. Walker is also extensively engaged in various sections of the Northwest in the manufacturing of lumber. Mr. Walker has been largely interested in the old Butler Mills and Walker lumber business, afterwards L. Butler & Co., and later Butler & Walker, and the mills built by those firms on the Falls of St. Anthony ; and afterwards in the formation of the Camp & Walker business, and the purchase of the large Pacific Mills, which were afterwards de- stroyed by fire and rebuilt into the finest and most important mills in the city or on the Upper Mississippi. Of late years he has been conspicuously interested in the large lumber mills at Crookston, Minnesota, and Grand Forks, Dakota, both of which are most prominent features in the development of the Northwest. All these mills furnished employment for thousands of men for many years ; while those located in the Red-River Valley cheapened the price of lumber, and aided very materially in the development of that section of the country. It may be remarked in this connection that Mr. Walker's lifelong business career, although extremely prosperous, has, nevertheless, on certain occasions, suffered severe disasters ouu. by fire and flood. Mr. Walker's career has been remarkable for originality of method and strict business integrity. His word has always been as good as his bond. Extremely liberal in the use of 36 NORTHWEST BIOGRAPHY. his wealth, his charities are unlimited ; all classes have been more or less benefited by the subjects of his beneficence. At the time of the grasshopper visitation, by which the farmers of the western part of the State of Minnesota were reduced to a condition of poverty and semi-starvation pitiful to contemplate, Mr. Walker's efforts in behalf of suffering humanity were untiring. As soon as the grasshopper scourge had disappeared, he organizetl a scheme for the raising of late crops, that was of inestimable value to settlers. -He bought up all the turnip-seed and likewise that of buckwheat to be had in the twin cities, and, at the same time, telegraphed to Chicago for all that was for s:ile there. In this labor of love, Mr. Walker himself visited the afflicted sections ; making up the seed into paper packages, and with hired teams conducted a systematic distribution over many townships. The season was so far advanced that only these late crops could be attempted. This timely aid saved hundreds of families and numberless cattle from starvation. When the free distri- bution of these seeds became known in the afflicted districts, many farmers walked fifteen or twenty miles to meet the teams, and thus avail themselves of Mr. Walker's beneficence. For many years he was one of the managers of the State Reform School. For fifteen years or more Mr. Walker worked systematically and persistently to build up the old Athenaeum (a joint stock company) into a fine public library, and through the agency, assist- ance, and goodwill of various other citizens, he succeeded in this great task. Recognizing his achievement, the board insisted on his acting as its president, since its organization several years ago. For many years he worked amidst the most persistent and determined opposition from various parties, and was seriously misunderstood and misapprehended. The records of those years show numerous communications, personal letters and criticisms, and his answers, regarding the part taken by him in the old Athenasum in his endeavors to change it from a rigid, close corporation into this public institution which is now the source of so much pride and satisfaction to the people. No man in the State has taken greater interest or a more active part in any public institution than he has in this, expending a large amount of time and considerable money in working the desired transformation. The noble and spacious building just completed contains not only a magnificent library, but also the Minnesota Academy of Natural Science, an institution with which Mr. Walker has been identified for years and which he has helped more materially than any one else ; and the Minneapolis Society of Fine Arts, with which he has been connected as president for several years. Taken altogether, the library-science-art building makes what is regarded as the finest public institution of the kind in the city or State. Mr. Walker's private library, consisting of a judicious selection of choice books, manifests a mind well stored with useful knowledge as well as a spirit of high culture and refined taste. Of late years Mr. Walker has given much attention to matters of art, and has made a collection of paintings which exhibit not only a cultivated taste, but likewise an artistic eye for the beautiful in nature. His gallery walls are graced with rare productions of the first masters, both ancient and modern, includ- ing Jules Kreton's "L'Appelle du Soir," — one of the most famous pictures at the Interna- tional Exhibition, — and Madame Demont Breton's " Her Man is on the Sea," purchased at the Salon. This exquisite collection of paintings — one of the finest private galleries in America or Europe — has recently been described in the Art Review, "The Collector." In 1S74, Mr. Walker erected at the corner of Eighth Street and Hennepin Avenue, for THOMAS BARLOW WALKER. 37 his permanent residence, a palatial mansion in which the family one year later took up its abode. He is the father of eight children, seven of whom live to cheer and bless the paren- tal home. The second son, Leon, a noble youth of nineteen years, just as he had joined his brother Gilbert in business, was suddenly stricken with fever ; and death, in one brief week, bereft the family of one tenderly loved, and whose cherished memory will live forever in each heart of the home circle. We close this sketch, not because the subject is exhausted, but because enough has been said to command attention to a man who, by his acts, is entitled to high consideration for what he has done and what he is doing. He has opened wide paths to industry and enterprise, and extends a helping hand to all honest and well-disposed men who seek labor. In conclusion the following extract from a paper by T. 1}. Walker, read at the recent Sanitary Conference in Minneapolis, is subjoined, as suggestive and highly instructive : — "The rearing and training of children is justly regarded by the wiser portion of mankind as the highest and most important duty devolving upon the human race. It underlies all other interests, and upon its measure and direction depend the welfare and happiness of the succeeding generation. ' "The subject is as old as the race; but its antiquity takes not the least from its supreme unportance. On the contrary, its great age adds immeasurably to tlie difficulty of rightly determining its bounds. "As each generation comes and goes, and leaves behind it the records of its life-work, and adds to the long list of previous discoveries, inventions, and compositions, it has produced a vast accumu- lation of wisdom and of folly, of useful and beautiful things so mixed with worthless or injurious ones that tlie difficulty in rightly directing children's thoughts and studies is increased with the vast- ness of the accumulated records. If men investigated the training of children as carefully and consistently as they do medicine, astronomy, geology, or almost any subject other than this, there would be a step taken which would profit the world far more than in any other research to' which they might direct their attention. The science of philosophy of education is comparatively an uncultivated field. The art of teaching is quite extensively discussed. Eloquent appeals are made for men to educate; the supreme necessity of widespread, general education is universally recognized; but the astonishing indifference and criminal carelessness concerning the quality, quantity, and method of our so-called education quite neutralizes the great merit of recognizintr the value of true and appropriate training. Or, in other words, we feel justified in saying that'the people generally have retrograded more by their general forgetfulness or misapprehension of the true object of education, than they have gained by their allegiance to the principle of the general necessity for a diffusion of knowledge among all classes. Education implies, according to all authorities, the development and cultivation of all the physical, intellectual, and moral faculties; and it should'add, and many do add, that of religion. "The primary necessity of the useful citizen and successful man is strong, vigorous, robust health. There is no difference of opinion on this point among thoughtful men. The sickly man is not an efficient producer, agent, or actor of any kind. He is a cripple and a burden upon' society in proportion to iiis lack of vigor and energy. It is not important to state whether the person can answer a hundred or ten thousand questions in geography, grammar, botany, natural histor}-, or the Latin language ; but in time of either peace or war his value to the State is dependent upon the e.vtent of his physical and mental force, directed by a knowledge of facts and principles which our schools almost wholly ignore. To obtain an elementary education in our city schools requires twelve 38 KORTHWHST BIOGRAPHY. years of close, laborious study. Th.e whole force and machinery of the schools is directed toward the most effective devices and methods for cramming and crowding a multitude of things into the memory of the children. Each scholar is compelled to pursue from seven to ten studies. From two and one- half to three and three-fourths hours are consumed each day in recitations. They are confined in the schoolroom four and one-half hours per day. 'faking our of this the tiine consumed in the recitations, it leaves for the time to devote to stud\- in the schoolroom from one to two hours; or, running a general average, it takes o\er three hours per day to get through the recitations, and they have, say, one and one-half hours to devote to study. These recitations are from fifteen to tiiiriy minutes in length, so that they are tinning rapidly from one subject to anotlier during the whole day. "Such long-continuetl attention under most severe and rigid rules, wliich compel close attention, becomes irksome, overtaxes their nerve power, and injures them. Now when we further consider that so mucli time is consumed in the recitations, and there are so many of them that it leaves but a little over ten minutes per day to devote to studying each lesson, we readily see that this is insufficient time for learning them; for we must bear in mind that this is the high-pressure sxsteni, and each scholar is impelled by all the force of expedients as merciless as cold steel to keep his place. This requires more time to study out of school hours than are allowed within ; so that it is probably safe to say that each scholar is ta.xed with giving seven hours' close attention to books each day. Those who have the best memories and readiest tongues are accounted the ablest scholars. .Vnd they can commit a greater variety of facts, names, and dates to memory in a given time than those who have a slower memory, but very likely a better mind. Now when the high pressure is applied to all of them, and the quick memories are more than buried, the others are taxed beyond the limit of safety; add to this the fact of very defective healing and ventilation, as well as bad lighting to hurt the eyesight, and it makes a very discouraging view to people having children to educate, or who have any care for the welfare of society. " The effect of this educational machinery upon the children, we claim, is. That it reduces to a considerable extent the physical system, not necessarily to produce disease or great apparent weakness, though it very often does this or more. It reduces their a\ailable force and energy, and lessens their chance of success and usefulness. It also reduces their natural independence and originality, and wears away any marked aptitude or genius which they might possess. " These results are caused by the length of time required each day for so many years of study ; by the great number of subjects taught ; by the universal selection of subjects ; by the application of one great rigid system to all sorts, kinds, and qualities of dispositions; by enclosing them in a machine that allows no independent action, and regards each scholar as a portion of the wheel- work that must turn in its groove regularly and without variation ; by the bad heating, ventilating, and lighting of schoolhouses. "Children are but young, unmatured men and women. The limit of their capacity to bear strain of this kind without injury is easily reached. Business men, whose minds are certainly able to bear more than those of children, are constantly admonished of the danger of mental destruction, and can bear safely but little, if any, more hours' close thinking than is required by our public-school management of the children. One of tiie most unpromising features of the case is that those who are intrusted with the management of the schools deny the existence of any hardships or methods which are injurious. But the injury will result just the same as though they did not deny it, and their inability to appreliend it only insures its more certain effects and greater permanence. " Professor Huxley in the Pi^puhxr Science Monthly says : 'The educational abomination of desola- tion of the present day is the stimulation of young people to work at high pressure by incessant com- petitive examinations. Some wise man (who probably was not an early riser) has said of early risers in 6£>-^. WILLIAM DREW WASHBURN. 39 general that they are conceited all the forenoon and stupid all the afternoon. Now, whether this is true of early risers, in the common acceptance of the term, or not, I will not pretend to say; but it is too often true of the unhappy children who are forced to rise too early in their classes. They are conceited all the forenoon of life and stupid all the afternoon. The' vigor and freshness, which should have been stored up for the purposes of the hard struggle for existence in practical life, have been washed out of them by precocious mental debauchery, by book-gluttonv and lesson-bibbing. Tiieir faculties are worn out by the strain upon their callow brains, and thuv are demoralized b^y worthless, childish triumphs before the real work of life begins. I have no compassion for sloth, but youth has more need for intellectual rest than age; and the cheerfulness, the tenacity of purpose' and tiie power of work which make many a successful man what he is, must often be placed to the credit, not to his hours of industry, but to that of his hours of idleness in boyhood.' Those who are not satisfied that our school system is seriously and criminally defective in the points condemne