George Williams | |
|---|---|
| 34thMayor of Portland | |
| In office June 2, 1902 – June 2, 1905 | |
| Preceded by | Henry Rowe |
| Succeeded by | Harry Lane |
| 32ndUnited States Attorney General | |
| In office December 14, 1871 – April 25, 1875 | |
| President | Ulysses Grant |
| Preceded by | Amos Akerman |
| Succeeded by | Edwards Pierrepont |
| United States Senator fromOregon | |
| In office March 4, 1865 – March 3, 1871 | |
| Preceded by | Benjamin Harding |
| Succeeded by | James Kelly |
| 3rdChief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court | |
| In office 1853–1858 | |
| Appointed by | Franklin Pierce |
| Preceded by | Thomas Nelson |
| Succeeded by | Aaron Waite |
| District Judge in Oregon | |
| In office 1847–1852 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1823-03-26)March 26, 1823 New Lebanon, New York, U.S. |
| Died | April 4, 1910(1910-04-04) (aged 87) Portland, Oregon, U.S. |
| Party | Democratic (Before 1864) Republican (1864–1910) |
| Spouse(s) | Kate Van Antwerp Kate Hughes George |
| Signature | |
George Henry Williams (March 26, 1823 – April 4, 1910) was anAmerican judge and politician. He served as chief justice of theOregon Supreme Court, was the 32nd Attorney General of the United States, and was elected Oregon's U.S. senator, and served one term. Williams, as U.S. senator, authored and supported legislation that allowed the U.S. military to be deployed inReconstruction of the southern states to allow for an orderly process of re-admittance into theUnited States. Williams was the first presidential Cabinet member to be appointed from thePacific Coast. As attorney general under PresidentUlysses S. Grant, Williams continued the prosecutions that shut down theKu Klux Klan. He had to contend with controversial election disputes in Reconstructed southern states. President Grant and Williams legally recognizedP. B. S. Pinchback as the firstAfrican American state governor. Williams ruled that theVirginius, a gun-running ship delivering men and munitions to Cuban revolutionaries, which was captured by Spain during theVirginius Affair, did not have the right to bear theU.S. flag. However, he also argued that Spain did not have the right to execute American crew members. Nominated for Supreme Court Chief Justice by President Grant, Williams failed to be confirmed by theU.S. Senate primarily due to Williams's opposition to U.S. AttorneyA. C. Gibbs, his former law partner, who refused to stop investigating Republican fraud in the special congressional election that resulted in a victory for DemocratJames Nesmith.[1]
In 1875, Williams resigned as U.S. Attorney General after his wife was accused of taking bribes from the custom house firmPratt & Boyd, which attempted to persuade the U.S. Justice Department to drop litigation against the company. After his resignation, Williams took part in the effort to countFlorida ballots forRutherford B. Hayes during the controversial presidential election of 1876. Williams returned to Oregon, resumed private law practice, and was electedPortland's mayor, serving two terms from 1902 to 1905. Williams, at the age of 83, was indicted for not enforcing restrictions on gambling; he was acquitted and served out the rest of his term as mayor.
George Henry Williams was born in upstate New York,New Lebanon,Columbia County, on March 26, 1823.[2] When he was very young his family moved toOnondaga County, where was educated in public and private schools, includingPompey Academy.[1][2] Williamsstudied law underDaniel Gott, and wasadmitted to the bar in 1844. Williams then moved toIowa Territory, where he practiced law inFort Madison.[2]
AfterIowa was admitted to statehood, Williams was elected district judge in 1847 in Oregon, serving until 1852.[2] In 1853, Williams was appointed Chief Justice ofOregon Territory by PresidentFranklin Pierce. At the 1857Oregon Constitutional Convention, Williams urged thatslavery be made illegal in Oregon as a requirement for statehood. Williams advocated unsuccessfully that a woman's property not be subject to her husband's debts.[2]
In the early years of the Oregon Supreme Court, the three justices alsorode circuit and acted as trial level judges. As a presiding judge while riding circuit, Williams presided over theHolmes v. Ford case that freed a slave family since slavery was illegal in the territory.[3] In 1857, he was a member of theOregon Constitutional Convention held before the establishment ofOregon as aU.S. state.[4] Williams remained on the court until 1858 when he resigned from the bench.[5] He then moved toPortland, Oregon, where he resumed the practice of law.[6]
Williams, a Democrat, supportedStephen Douglas during thepresidential election of 1860. Williams attended the Oregon Union convention of 1862, having opposed slavery, and was the chairman of the Election Committee.
In 1864 Williams, having changed over to theRepublican Party, was elected to theUnited States Senate; he served one term, from 1865 to 1871.[2] In 1865, Sen. Williams, aRadical Republican, was appointed to theCommittee on Finance and Public Lands and theJoint Committee on Reconstruction.[2] In 1866 Williams authored theTenure of Office Act, passed by Congress in 1867 over PresidentAndrew Johnson's veto, that limited the President in removing Cabinet officers.[2] This act was vital to the Republican Party, having saved the offices of appointed Republicans throughout the United States.[2] In 1867, he authored and supported theMilitary Reconstruction Act, passed by Congress over President Johnson's veto, that authorized U.S. military control of the South.[2] This act permanently restored and Reconstructed the formerly Confederate states in rebellion back into the United States in an orderly and peaceful manner using the strength of the U.S. military.[2] In 1868, Williams and his senatorial colleagueHenry W. Corbett voted guilty in President Andrew Johnson's impeachment trial; Johnson was acquitted by one vote. Williams was defeated in the election of 1870.

In 1871, President Grant appointed Williams one of six U.S. Joint High Commissioners to negotiate a settlement treaty between Britain and the U.S. in Washington, D.C., over theAlabama Claims and America's Northwest boundary between the U.S. and Canada.[2] Six representatives had been chosen to representBritish andCanadian interests making a total of twelve High Commissioners. Williams was chosen to be on the U.S. treaty commission due to his experience and career in thePacific Northwest. Williams proved to be a valuable member of the U.S. Commission and served in this position with dignity. In addition to settling the Alabama claims against Britain for allowing Confederate ships to be armed in British ports, at stake was the U.S. Northwest border running through theRosario Strait. The U.S. desired that the boundary run through theHaro Strait, however, this became a highly contentious issue between the U.S., Britain, and Canada.[2] The Washington, D.C., treaty Commissioners finally decided that theEmperor of Germany,William I, would settle the boundary matter. Williams was able to convince the Committee that the German Emperor needed to strictly interpret theTreaty of 1846 and that the boundary be determined by the most used channel, the Haro Strait. Through Williams's efforts, the German Emperor finally chose the Haro Strait as the Northwest boundary between the U.S. and Canada; the U.S. received theSan Juan Islands.[2]
In December 1871, during laterReconstruction, President Grant appointed Williams as Attorney General of the United States; he served three years until 1875.[2] His appointment was made to satisfy demands by Pacific Coast politicians that the region be represented in the cabinet. Williams was also the legal counsel for the Alaska Improvement Company in which Grant was a shareholder.[7] President Grant's southern Reconstruction policy worked primarily through Williams's Justice Department supported by Grant's Secretary of War,William W. Belknap.[2]
Attorney General Williams continued to prosecute theKu Klux Klan until December 1872 when he issued a clemency policy toward the South.[8] The Justice Department had been inundated by multiple caseloads against the Klan and did not have the manpower to effectively prosecute all of them. Williams finished his prosecution of the remaining Klan cases in the Spring of 1873.[8] Williams believed continued prosecutions of the Klan was unnecessary and was concerned over negative public reaction to the Klan prosecutions.[8] The suppression of the Klan led toAfrican American turnout at the polls throughout the South, and Grant was re-elected in part due to blacks voting for Grant.
During the presidential election of 1872, Attorney General Williams toured the Southern states advocating President Grant's Southern Reconstruction policy through public speeches. Prominent Southern cities that Williams visited and spoke at includedRichmond,Virginia;Savannah, Georgia; andCharleston,South Carolina. Through Williams’ efforts, Southern states went over to the Republican ticket, including Virginia, South Carolina, andArkansas. This was the last time that Republicans had a majority victory in the South after the Democratic Party took control of all of the Southern Reconstructed states in 1877, known as the “Solid South”.[2] No Republican presidential candidate would win any former Confederate state untilWarren G. Harding carriedTennessee in 1920, and the Democratic Party would carry a majority of former Confederate states in every presidential election until the party's support forblack civil rights caused the defection of almost all the region's white voters inthe 1968 election.
When election disputes occurred during theAlabama state elections in 1872; both stateDemocrats andRepublicans appealed to U.S. Attorney General Williams for settlement.[9] Both President Grant and Williams thoroughly consulted each other in considering a settlement for the contentious Alabama political crisis. On December 12, 1872, President Grant and George Henry Williams peacefully settled the disputed Alabama state elections between the Democrats and Republicans by issuing five resolutions to GovernorDavid P. Lewis.[2][9] Gov. Lewis and the Republican legislature agreed to the five resolutions that included a Democratic and Republican representative to make a coordinated count of a disputed election result inMarengo County. Williams had required that the current House resign and the House building be vacated before settling the disputed election returns. Williams also vacated the Alabama Senate while disputed senatorial elections were resolved.[9] In addition to elections, Williams settledper diem compensation disputes for office holders.[9]
During the election of 1872, Louisiana was in political turmoil, having two rival factions contending for control of the state legislature.[10] Democrat John D. McEnery and RepublicanWilliam P. Kellogg both claimed to have won the governorship; both parties mired in charges of voting fraud.[10] Federal troops led byWilliam H. Emory, in charge of the Department of the Gulf, kept the peace during and immediately after the election.[10] On December 3, Attorney General Williams, at the request of Kellogg, ruled that President Grant would enforce any decision by the United States District Courts.[11] After multiple state Returning Boards failed to resolve the election, U.S. District Court Judge Edmund H. Darrell ordered that Kellogg was the winner of the Louisiana election.[11]
In the meantime, on December 9, U.S. MarshalStephen B. Packard, who was affiliated with the New Orleans Custom House Gang led by President Grant's brother-in-law (James F. Casey), chose a legislature that impeached sitting GovernorHenry Clay Warmoth and put in chargeP. B. S. Pinchback, a Kellogg supporter, as the United States' firstAfrican American state governor.[12][13] On December 14, Attorney General Williams informed Warmoth that President Grant recognized Kellogg as the rightful, elected governor of Louisiana.[13] This action upset the McEnery faction, who believed that President Grant and Attorney General Williams had taken sides in a state election.[13] On December 16, Attorney General Williams reaffirmed Kellogg's election, Pinchback as the lawful governor of Louisiana, and recognized other elected Republican candidates and presidential electors.[14]
In October 1873, a privateer gun-running ship flying the American flag, theVirginius, secretly owned by Cuban insurgents during the CubanTen Years' War was captured by a Spanish warship. In November, a total of 53 crewmembers, including American and British seamen, were tried and executed by Spanish mercenary,Juan N. Burriel, in Santiago, Cuba. On December 17, theVirginius was turned over to the United States Navy according to an agreement between the U.S. and Spain. On the same day, after an investigation by the U.S. Justice Department, Attorney General Williams ruled that theVirginius had been purchased by fraud and did not have the legal right to carry the American flag, however, he argued that the Spanish did not have the right to capture it on open waters and execute American crewmen, since the United States only had the right to investigate if theVirginius had been legally registered inNew York. Williams’ ruling on the ownership of theVirginius ship was a mixture of "pretense, legality, and bluff".[15] Through negotiations, 91 crewmembers were returned to New York and families of those Americans who were executed by Burriel were eventually awarded $80,000 reparations from Spain in 1875.[16][17]
In December 1873, President Grantnominated Williams to becomeChief Justice of theUnited States Supreme Court. Initially, Grant had SenatorRoscoe Conkling's support for the nomination. However, rumor spread through Washington that Williams had used Justice Department funds to pay for his wife's expensive carriage. Williams had drawn on Justice Department funds, replaced by himself, when banks suspended payment on checks during the Panic of 1873. Sen. Conkling believed under the circumstances the nomination should be revoked. In December 1873, after previously reporting the nomination to the Senate with a favorable recommendation, theSenate Judiciary Committee held two days of closed-door hearings concerning the controversy. This was the first recorded instance in which formal hearings are known to have been held on a Supreme Court nominee by a Senate committee. On January 9, 1874, an angered President Grant sent the Senate a letter that withdrew Williams's name from nomination.[18][19]
On January 31, 1874, prominent members of the New York Bar and Bench attend a reception given by Col. Eliott F. Shepard in honor of U.S. Attorney General Williams.[20] The extravagantly lighted party took place on No. 10 East 44 Street inNew York from 8 pm to 10 pm. Williams had initially visited New York on vacation for a reunion with old friends.[20] The Bernstein Band performed a series of popular musical opera arrangements. Prominent New York judges attended, including Justice Louis B. Woodruff and JusticeNoah Davis. Almost 800 persons showed up in attendance including a future President, Collector of New York,Chester A. Arthur.[20]
President Grant forced Williams to resign in April 1875 upon a rumor in Washington, D.C., that Williams's wife had accepted $30,000 in payment in order for Williams to drop litigation against alleged fraudulent activities of a New York mercantile housePratt & Boyd.[21] Also under scrutiny was Williams’ wife's purchase using government money of an expensive carriage in Washington, which she had equipped with liveried coachman and footman.[22] Williams had also commingled his personal accounts with those of the Justice Department, paying personal checks using government money, although he made repayment.[23] One of Grant's reforming cabinet members PostmasterMarshall Jewell, informed Grant Congress was planning a formal investigation into William's Justice Department. SenatorRoscoe Conkling, Grant's ally in the U.S. Senate, had asked Grant that Att. Gen. Williams step down from office.[21] William's resigned office, and Grant appointed reformer and famous New York lawyerEdwards Pierrepont for his replacement.[24] Pierrepont made extensive investigations into the conduct of the U.S. Attorneys and U.S. Marshals in the Southern states, exposing fraud and corruption, and gave specific reform orders to that were vigorously enforced, cleaning up the Justice Department.[25]
In February 1876, Williams was part of a three-man defense team who defendedOrville E. Babcock, President Grant's military secretary, at the Whiskey Ring trial held in St. Louis. Babcock had been charged with secretive collusion with the ring, and throwing off investigators. The investigation into the Whiskey Ring was started by Grant's Secretary of TreasuryBenjamin H. Bristow to clean up Republican corruption. Babcock was acquitted.

After resigning Williams declined an offer from Grant to become the U.S. minister to Spain. George Williams campaigned for the election ofRutherford B. Hayes as president in 1876. During the controversial presidential election of 1876, Williams, now a private citizen, went to Florida to manage theHayes ballot returns.[2]
After the 1876 U.S. presidential election, Williams returned to hisPortland private law practice. Williams supported women'ssuffrage and the Oregon "popular government" movement.[2]
In 1895, Williams published a compilation ofOccasional Addresses gathered "from newspapers and stray places"[26] that he had delivered as early as 1869, with the majority dating from 1885 to 1893. Intended primarily as a souvenir for friends, professional and political speeches were excluded. Among the 21 addresses presented are tributes delivered on the deaths of Generals U.S. Grant andW.T. Sherman and several prominent judges, and speeches bearing upon the history and growth of Portland, the study and practice of medicine, the militia, and the United States Supreme Court. Williams' address on the value of good thoughts was intended as advice to the 1891 graduating class of the high school at Portland.
On October 11, 1901, theEpiscopal Church of America met inSan Francisco to decide whether Episcopal clergymen could remarry divorced persons and discipline any Episcopal members who remarried.[27] Former Attorney General Williams attended the meeting and opposed all restrictions by the Episcopal church on married and divorced persons and stated that such matters belonged in civil law as opposed to church law.[27]
Williams was electedPortland's mayor serving from 1902 to 1905.[2] On January 4, 1905, Mayor Williams, at the age of 83 years, was indicted by a grand jury inMultnomah County for allegedly refusing to enforce laws that regulated gambling .[28] Williams was charged for not closing down gambling facilities on July 13, 1904, that operated within four miles ofPortland.[28] Portland's Chief of Police Charles H. Hunt's indictment was similar to Mayor Williams's indictment.[28] Williams, however, was acquitted and served out the rest of his term in office.
On May 28, 1905, Mayor Williams gave a speech in honor of the opening of theLewis and Clark Centennial Exposition.[29] Vice PresidentCharles W. Fairbanks was the keynote speaker who attended the opening ceremony.[29] PresidentTheodore Roosevelt officially mechanically opened the ceremony by pressing a button inWashington, D.C.[29]
Williams died April 4, 1910, in Portland and is buried atRiver View Cemetery in that city.[30]
Williams was the first presidential cabinet member appointed from Oregon.
Although Williams had some successes as U.S. Attorney general, he was not a reformer and was involved in corruption during his tenure in federal office. Historian Jean Edward Smith, critical of Williams, said whenever "tested as attorney general he failed dismally."[22]
Williams married Kate Van Antwerp in Iowa in 1850, and they had one daughter.[6] He married a second time in 1867 to Kate Hughes George, and the couple adopted two children.[6][30]
| Legal offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court 1853–1858 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Chief Justice of the Oregon Supreme Court 1853–1858 | |
| Preceded by | United States Attorney General 1871–1875 | Succeeded by |
| U.S. Senate | ||
| Preceded by | U.S. Senator (Class 2) from Oregon 1865–1871 Served alongside:James Nesmith,Henry Corbett | Succeeded by |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by | Mayor of Portland 1902–1906 | Succeeded by |