William Henry Stanton | |
|---|---|
| Member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromPennsylvania's 12th congressional district | |
| In office 1876–1877 | |
| Preceded by | Winthrop W. Ketcham |
| Succeeded by | Hendrick B. Wright |
| Member of thePennsylvania State Senate for the20th district | |
| In office 1875–1876 | |
| Preceded by | Edward Scull |
| Succeeded by | George B. Seamons |
| Personal details | |
| Born | July 28, 1843 New York City, U.S. |
| Died | March 28, 1900 (aged 56) Scranton, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
| Party | Democratic |

William Henry Stanton (July 28, 1843 – March 28, 1900) was an attorney, editor, politician and judge. He served as aDemocratic member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromPennsylvania's 12th congressional district, elected to fill the vacancy whenWinthrop Welles Ketcham resigned and serving for three months from December 1876 to early March 1877. He was previouslyeditor of theScranton Daily Times (nowtheTimes-Tribune) until 1872.[1]
In 1877 Stanton was elected as a statejudge for the County Court of Common Pleas inWilkes-Barre,Luzerne County (which then included much of present-day Lackawanna County). After Lackawanna County was organized by the state legislature in 1878, and designated as a separate judicial district, Stanton chose to be reassigned to its County Court inScranton.
He resigned from the judgeship in February 1879. He was prosecuted and acquitted of libel in September 1879 following charges byWilliam Walker Scranton, general manager of the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company, who objected to newspaper articles published in August 1878. Stanton had been indicted in the scandal because of witness testimony.
William H. Stanton was born inNew York City on July 28, 1843. He was raised inCarbondale andArchbald, Pennsylvania.[2]
Stanton attended school in Archbald and at Saint John's College, nearMontrose, Pennsylvania.[3] Following graduation, he taught school[4] whilestudying law with an established firm. He wasadmitted to the bar in Scranton, Pennsylvania in 1868.[5]
He married Anna Marie Allen of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. They had a total of five children together: William H. Jr.; Mary A., Victoria A., Lenore, and Leroy Emmanuel Stanton.
Stanton commenced practice inScranton, an industrial city in the anthracite region of northeastern Pennsylvania.[6] He waseditor of theScranton Daily Times (nowtheTimes-Tribune) until 1872.[1]
He served as District Attorney andProsecuting Attorney of theScranton Mayor's Court from 1872 to 1874.[7] He served in thePennsylvania State Senate for the20th district in 1875 and 1876.[8]
Stanton was elected as a Democrat to the44th United States Congress, filling the vacancy caused by the resignation of RepublicanWinthrop W. Ketcham, appointed as a federal judge.[9] He served from December 4, 1876, to March 3, 1877. He did not stand as a candidate in 1876 for election to a full two-year term.[10]
In August 1877, Scranton erupted into a general strike, as mine workers and others joined railroad workers. Thousands of workers protested wage cuts. After three men were killed by a mayor-appointed group known as the Citizens' Corps, Patrick Mahon, alderman of the Sixth Ward, acted as county coroner to investigate the deaths, assisted by Stanton. Based on his coroner's jury, Mahon issued warrants for more than a dozen arrests.[11]
Stanton was later elected in late 1877 in a "wave of labor reform politics"[12] as the candidate of theGreenback-Labor Party for Judge of theLuzerne County Court of Common Pleas, defeating incumbent Judge Dana,[13] who was supported by Republicans and Democrats.[14]
In April 1878 the legislature passed an act authorizing the creation of new counties if population reached 150,000 in an existing county. This applied only to Luzerne County, andLackawanna County was approved for organization in August 1878 as the last county in the state.[13] TheNew York Times at the time described "excitement" in the lobbying around the formation of the new county, with a revisiting of issues related to the general strike in Scranton the previous year.[15]
As the new county had more than 40,000 inhabitants, it qualified to be designated as a new judicial district. After maneuvering by the governor, Stanton and other judges were ordered by the state supreme court to assist in the organization of county courts in the new Lackawanna County in October 1878.[13][16] Stanton was reassigned as one of the judges for Lackawanna's County Court of Common Pleas, to be held at the county seat of Scranton.[13]
Stanton resigned his judgeship in February 1879.[13][17] TheNew York Times reported later that fellow Democrats in the Assembly had begun impeachment proceedings against Stanton in retaliation for his snubbing Daniel Dougherty and other important Philadelphia counsel in an unfavorable ruling, and he resigned rather than being forced out.[12][18]
William Walker Scranton, general manager of Lackawanna Iron and Coal, contended that articles published in August 1878 in theScranton Times andLabor Advocate, during the lobbying for the new county, were libelous and encouraged violence against him.[15] He filed a libel suit against Aaron Augustus Chase, editor of theScranton Daily Times and a colleague of Stanton. Implicated by witnesses in the scandal (and thought by some to have written the article inLabor Advocate, Stanton was arrested and prosecuted for libel.[15]
Stanton was tried in September 1879 and acquitted. A separate libel trial of Chase resulted in his conviction and being sentenced to a fine and jail time.[19] At the conclusion of the libel trial, theNew York Times reported Scranton as saying that Stanton had offered to resign his judgeship if W.W. Scranton dropped his prosecution against him.[19]
After leaving the bench, Stanton became an organizer of the reformGreenback andLabor movements,[20][21] which had a peak of influence in this area in the late 1870s and early 1880s, extending into the Southern Tier of New York.[22][23] He left Scranton in 1883, living first inArkansas, and in 1884 moving toKansas City, Missouri. He made national headlines when travelling back to Scranton to run for judge, his wife back in Kansas took all his money and deserted the children. The family was reunited[12] and Stanton returned to Scranton, where he practiced law until his death in 1900.[24]
Stanton died in Scranton on March 28, 1900.[20] He was buried in Scranton's West Side Catholic Cemetery. He was survived by his widow and five children: two sons and three daughters.[14]
| Pennsylvania State Senate | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Member of thePennsylvania Senate,20th district 1875-1876 | Succeeded by George B. Seamons |
| U.S. House of Representatives | ||
| Preceded by | Member of the U.S. House of Representatives fromPennsylvania's 12th congressional district 1876–1877 | Succeeded by |