James E. Martine | |
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![]() Martine c. 1915 | |
United States Senator fromNew Jersey | |
In office March 4, 1911 – March 3, 1917 | |
Preceded by | John Kean |
Succeeded by | Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, Sr. |
Personal details | |
Born | (1850-08-25)August 25, 1850 New York City, New York |
Died | February 26, 1925(1925-02-26) (aged 74) Miami, Florida |
Political party | Democratic |
Signature | ![]() |
James Edgar Martine (August 25, 1850 – February 26, 1925) was an AmericanDemocratic Party politician who representedNew Jersey in theUnited States Senate from 1911 to 1917.[1]
James Edgar Martine was born inNew York City on August 25, 1850.[2][1] His parents were Daniel W. Martine and Anna Neher Martine, who were of German and English descent. In 1863, Daniel Martine died, leaving James in charge of their large ancestral family farm inPlainfield, New Jersey.[1] In addition to managing the farm, James began a successful real estate practice, selling off portions of the farm to be developed as the city of Plainfield expanded and urbanized.[1]
Martine was elected to the Plainfield common council but was otherwise a frequent and unsuccessful candidate for higher office. He ran unsuccessfully for United States Representative, Governor (three times), State Senator (four times), and State Assembly (twice), as well as for local and county offices including mayor.[1]
In 1910, Martine ran in the first-ever popular primary for United States Senator.[1] The primary was non-binding, and the presumptive Democratic candidate, former SenatorJames Smith Jr., did not register as a candidate.[1] When Martine won the most votes and the Democratic Party later won control of the state legislature, the nomination was contested between Martine and Smith as a proxy for whether the primary represented the choice of the people and should be obeyed by the legislators.[1] Ultimately, Martine prevailed with the support of Governor-electedWoodrow Wilson.
In the Senate, Martine served as chairman of theCommittee on Coast Defenses (Sixty-third United States Congress),Committee on Industrial Expositions (Sixty-third andSixty-fourth United States Congresses).
During the 1913 Senate Committee investigation into the West Virginia miners strike, Senator Martine aggressively confronted Kanawha County coal company executive Quinn Morton for arming and directing the use of the armored "Bull Moose" train against a Holly Grove tent village of miners and their families in the middle of the night on February 2, 1913, during which Charles Estep, young miner with a young child and a pregnant wife, was killed. The train contained dozens of private mercenaries armed with a Gatling gun. Martine confronted Morton over his refusal to acknowledge giving the command to fire and then reportedly asking the sheriff to back the train up and do it again. The two other senators on the committee attempted to censor Martine by requiring that his questions be submitted for prior review. According to historian David Alan Corbin's 1990 bookThe West Virginia Mine Wars, the Congressional Record of this hearing "breaks off suddenly, the topic switches, and Senator Martine disappears from the panel of inquisitors."[3]
Despite the fact that his election was the result of Wilson's support as Governor, Martine became a critic and opponent of Wilson following his election as President of the United States. Martine was critical of American participation in World War I and of Wilson's proposal for a League of Nations.[1] In the 1916 primary, Martine was challenged byJohn W. Wescott, a Wilson ally and Attorney General of New Jersey. Martine survived the challenge but was defeated by a wide margin in the general election byJoseph S. Frelinghuysen.[1]
Martine died on February 26, 1925, inMiami, Florida, ofapoplexy. He was interred atHillside Cemetery in Scotch Plains, New Jersey.[1]
James Edgar Martine, former United States Senator of New Jersey, died Thursday night in the home of Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Cowan, where he had stayed for the last three Winter seasons. Apoplexy was the cause of death. ...
Party political offices | ||
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First | Democratic nominee forSenator fromNew Jersey (Class 1) 1916 | Succeeded by |
U.S. Senate | ||
Preceded by | U.S. Senator (Class 1) from New Jersey 1911–1917 | Succeeded by |