James H. Davidson | |
|---|---|
Photo ca.1910 from theHarris & Ewing collection | |
| Chair of theHouse Committee on Railways and Canals | |
| In office March 4, 1901 – March 3, 1911 | |
| Preceded by | Charles A. Chickering |
| Succeeded by | Charles A. Korbly |
| Member of theU.S. House of RepresentativesfromWisconsin | |
| In office March 4, 1917 – August 6, 1918 (died) | |
| Preceded by | Michael K. Reilly |
| Succeeded by | Florian Lampert |
| Constituency | 6th district |
| In office March 4, 1903 – March 3, 1913 | |
| Preceded by | Edward S. Minor |
| Succeeded by | Edward E. Browne |
| Constituency | 8th district |
| In office March 4, 1897 – March 3, 1903 | |
| Preceded by | Samuel A. Cook |
| Succeeded by | Charles H. Weisse |
| Constituency | 6th district |
| District Attorney ofGreen Lake County, Wisconsin | |
| In office January 1, 1889 – January 1, 1891 | |
| Preceded by | Perry Niskern |
| Succeeded by | John L. Millard |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1858-06-18)June 18, 1858 Colchester, New York, U.S. |
| Died | August 6, 1918(1918-08-06) (aged 60) Washington, D.C., U.S. |
| Resting place | Riverside Cemetery,Oshkosh, Wisconsin |
| Political party | Republican |
| Spouse | |
| Children |
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| Alma mater | Albany Law School |
| Profession | Lawyer |
| Signature | |
James Henry Davidson (June 18, 1858 – August 6, 1918) was an American lawyer andRepublican politician fromOshkosh, Wisconsin. He represented eastern Wisconsin for nine terms in theU.S. House of Representatives, serving from 1897 to 1913, and from 1917 until his death in 1918. He was chairman of theHouse Committee on Railways and Canals from 1901 to 1911. Earlier in his career, he wasdistrict attorney ofGreen Lake County, Wisconsin, and city attorney of Oshkosh.
James H. Davidson was born in the town ofColchester, New York, and raised on his father's farm. As a child, he attended the district schools in the Winters and worked on his father's farm, or joined him lumbering in the nearby woods the rest of the year. At age 18, he began teaching school inDelaware andSullivan counties to raise funds to further his education. He attended the Walton Academy, in the nearby town ofWalton, New York, and worked as a janitor to help pay his tuition.[1][2]
During these years, he determined to become a lawyer and began studying law in the office ofSamuel H. Fancher andAlbert H. Sewell. In 1883, he was able to attendAlbany Law School with a loan from a family friend. He graduated in 1884 as president of his class and was admitted to the bar atBinghamton, New York. Within months, he decided to move out west for new opportunities.[2]
He arrived atPrinceton, Wisconsin, in August 1884. At the time, he found little opportunity as a lawyer, so instead went to work dealing grain and produce forChittenden & Morse. Through his employment withElmer D. Morse, then one of the most important businessmen in the city, he was quickly able to repay his debt for his school loan. By the fall of 1887, he was able to begin his law practice in earnest.[2]
Davidson grew in prominence in legal and political circles. In 1888, he was electeddistrict attorney ofGreen Lake County, Wisconsin, serving a two-year term. In 1890 he was elected chairman of the Republican congressional committee forWisconsin's 6th congressional district. A short time later, he moved to the larger neighboring city ofOshkosh, Wisconsin, where he expanded his legal practice.[2] He was appointed attorney there in 1895.

In 1896, the incumbent representative in Wisconsin's 6th congressional district,Samuel A. Cook, announced he would not run for re-election. Davidson, then wrapping up his sixth year as chairman of the Republican organization in that district, was easily nominated at the congressional district convention in August.[3] In the general election, Davidson prevailed with 57% of the vote over Democrat William F. Gruenewald.[4] At the time, the 6th congressional district comprised Davidson's home county, Winnebago, plus Calumet, Manitowoc,Fond du Lac, Marquette, Green Lake, and Waushara.
During his first term, in the55th Congress, Davidson gave a lengthy speech supporting theannexation of Hawaii; his speech was then printed and distributed as a pamphlet.[5] Davidson was appointed to theHouse Committee on Rivers and Harbors, which allowed him to play an important role in appropriating funds for projects relevant to his part of the state.[6] When running for re-election, Wisconsin newspapers remarked that Davidson had a notable first term, and was diligent and attentive to constituent services and issues of local concern. He was easily renominated, but had a more competitive general election, receiving just 53% of the vote against Democrat Frank C. Stewart.[7] In 1900, he faced former state representativeJames W. Watson, but won by a comfortable margin.[8]

Following the1900 United States census, Wisconsin was apportioned an additional seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, necessitating a significantredistricting of the state's congressional map. Under the new map, the 6th congressional district shifted south, and Davidson was drawn into the8th congressional district. His new district comprised the counties of Winnebago, Calumet, Manitowoc, and Waushara from his previous district, and added Portage and Waupaca. He faced some opposition for renomination at the 8th congressional district convention, but was renominated on the first ballot, receiving 65% of delegate votes.[9] He won by a comfortable margin in the general election, receiving nearly 58% of the vote.[10]
In the57th Congress, Davidson was appointed chair of theHouse Committee on Railways and Canals. He would hold the chair for five terms. During the 1904 election season, Davidson was seriously ill withTyphoid fever, but was renominated and re-elected without serious difficulty.[11][12] In 1906, Davidson was appointed to the executive committee of theNational Republican Congressional Committee.[13] 1906 was Wisconsin's first election in which party nominations were determined by primary election. Davidson faced no opponent in the primary, but the Democrats of the district failed to properly nominate any candidate for the primary.[14] An emergency ruling of the Wisconsin Supreme Court ultimately determined that write-in primary candidate John E. McMullen would be considered the official nominee of the Democrats in the district and ordered his name to appear on the ballot,[15] but McMullen did not actively campaign for the seat, and Davidson easily won his sixth term.[16] He won again in 1908 and 1910 by similar margins.[17][18]
Until 1912, Davidson largely avoided the bitter intra-party Republican feud of this era between progressive and stalwart factions. In 1912, however, he firmly endorsed the campaign of Wisconsin's progressive U.S. senatorRobert M. La Follette seeking the Republican nomination for the presidency.[19] Ultimately, La Follette did not win the nomination in 1912 andTheodore Roosevelt split the party with his progressive allies, starting the short-livedBull Moose Party. Davidson did not leave the Republican Party, but ran a series of large newspaper advertisements that sought to make clear he considered himself a "progressive".[20]

Davidson's new ideological declaration was likely influenced by his changed political circumstances at home. The 1911 redistricting significantly rearranged his district again, drawing Davidson back into the 6th district, and nearly restoring the district to its pre-1902 boundaries. Davidson faced a seriousprimary challenge from James N. Tittemore of Omro, an avowed progressive who spent much of 1912 questioning Davidson's progressive record.[21] Davidson narrowly survived the primary, defeating Tittemore by just 362 votes.[22] After the primary, Davidson largely abandoned his attempts to appease the progressive faction and aggressively distanced himself from the progressive campaign of Theodore Roosevelt. TheOshkosh Northwestern, which had been supportive of all of his previous campaigns, declared themselves disillusioned with his 1912 campaign, and suggested the Democrat,Michael Reilly, was perhaps a more progressive choice.[23] Reilly narrowly defeated Davidson in the general election, receiving 48% of the vote to Davidson's 45%.[24]
Davidson took a short break after losing his seat, but quickly returned to politics, running for another term in the House in 1914. He faced a primary rematch with James Tittemore, but this time a third candidate, Philip Lehner, also sought the nomination. Davidson easily won the three-way contest,[25] but lost the general election rematch to Reilly by a narrow margin.[26] He ran again in 1916, and faced another three-way primary, prevailing again by a comfortable margin.[27] In their third matchup, Davidson finally defeated Michael K. Reilly in the 1916 general election and reclaimed his seat in the House of Representatives.[28]
During the 1916 campaign, Davidson ran on a platform of strict neutrality inWorld War I, and stuck to that position after his election. He was one of only fifty members of the House to vote against thedeclaration of war on Germany in April 1917. After war was declared, however, Davidson quickly agreed to support any necessary war measures, unlike some other opponents to the war.[29]
Davidson announced in July 1917 that he would not run for another term in Congress after being hospitalized inWashington, D.C.[30] After a month in the hospital, Davidson died ofpericarditis.[1][31] He was interred atRiverside Cemetery in Oshkosh.
James H. Davidson was the youngest of five children born to James Davidson and his wife Ann (née Johnson). His father was a farmer and lumberman, he was born in Scotland and emigrated as a child with his parents; his maternal grandfather was an Irish immigrant, and his maternal grandmother was a descendant of Jacobus Turck, a pioneer Dutch settler of theNew Amsterdam colony.[2]
James H. Davidson married Niva Therese Wilde, of Ripon, Wisconsin, on October 8, 1889.[2] They had at least three children together and were married for nearly 29 years before Davidson's death in 1918. Mrs. Davidson lived to age 95.[32]
| Year | Election | Date | Elected | Defeated | Total | Plurality | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1896[4] | General | Nov. 3 | James H. Davidson | Republican | 26,649 | 57.66% | William F. Gruenewald | Dem. | 18,944 | 40.99% | 46,220 | 7,705 |
| James E. Thompson | Proh. | 626 | 1.35% | |||||||||
| 1898[7] | General | Nov. 8 | James H. Davidson (inc) | Republican | 20,107 | 53.58% | Frank C. Stewart | Dem. | 16,680 | 44.45% | 37,526 | 3,427 |
| William H. Clark | Proh. | 738 | 1.97% | |||||||||
| 1900[8] | General | Nov. 6 | James H. Davidson (inc) | Republican | 26,326 | 55.81% | James W. Watson | Dem. | 19,758 | 41.89% | 47,168 | 6,568 |
| Wesley Mott | Proh. | 869 | 1.84% | |||||||||
| John Voss | Soc.D. | 215 | 0.46% | |||||||||
| Year | Election | Date | Elected | Defeated | Total | Plurality | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1902[10] | General | Nov. 4 | James H. Davidson | Republican | 19,553 | 57.82% | Thomas H. Patterson | Dem. | 12,651 | 37.41% | 33,817 | 6,902 |
| Joseph Matthews | Proh. | 811 | 2.40% | |||||||||
| Charles C. Fraim | Soc.D. | 802 | 2.37% | |||||||||
| 1904[12] | General | Nov. 8 | James H. Davidson (inc) | Republican | 25,233 | 63.10% | C. F. Crane | Dem. | 12,889 | 32.23% | 39,991 | 12,344 |
| John J. Pitz | Soc.D. | 1,092 | 2.73% | |||||||||
| C. A. Smart | Proh. | 777 | 1.94% | |||||||||
| 1906[16] | General | Nov. 6 | James H. Davidson (inc) | Republican | 16,966 | 59.70% | John E. McMullen | Dem. | 9,594 | 33.76% | 28,417 | 7,372 |
| John J. Pitz | Soc.D. | 1,103 | 3.88% | |||||||||
| Charles H. Forward | Proh. | 700 | 2.46% | |||||||||
| William B. Minnahan | Ind.R. | 54 | 0.19% | |||||||||
| 1908[17] | General | Nov. 3 | James H. Davidson (inc) | Republican | 23,097 | 57.28% | Lyman J. Nash | Dem. | 14,984 | 37.16% | 40,321 | 8,113 |
| Martin Georgenson | Soc.D. | 1,389 | 3.44% | |||||||||
| Byron E. Van Keuren | Proh. | 851 | 2.11% | |||||||||
| 1910[18] | General | Nov. 8 | James H. Davidson (inc) | Republican | 15,934 | 55.22% | Fred B. Rawson | Dem. | 10,654 | 36.92% | 28,857 | 5,280 |
| Richard W. Burke | Soc.D. | 2,005 | 6.95% | |||||||||
| Charles H. Velte | Proh. | 261 | 0.90% | |||||||||
| Year | Election | Date | Elected | Defeated | Total | Plurality | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1912 | Primary[22] | Sep. 3 | James H. Davidson | Republican | 3,572 | 52.64% | James N. Tittemore | Rep. | 3,210 | 47.30% | 6,786 | 362 |
| General[24] | Nov. 5 | Michael K. Reilly | Democratic | 16,742 | 48.65% | James H. Davidson | Rep. | 15,505 | 45.06% | 34,411 | 1,237 | |
| Martin Georgenson | Soc.D. | 1,659 | 4.82% | |||||||||
| Frank L. Smith | Proh. | 505 | 1.47% | |||||||||
| 1914 | Primary[25] | Sep. 1 | James H. Davidson | Republican | 4,592 | 50.80% | Philip Lehner | Rep. | 2,396 | 26.51% | 9,039 | 2,196 |
| James N. Tittemore | Rep. | 2,051 | 22.69% | |||||||||
| General[26] | Nov. 3 | Michael K. Reilly (inc) | Democratic | 15,115 | 49.54% | James H. Davidson | Rep. | 13,998 | 45.88% | 30,512 | 1,117 | |
| Martin Georgenson | Soc.D. | 1,005 | 3.29% | |||||||||
| Verner N. Weeks | Proh. | 392 | 1.28% | |||||||||
| 1916 | Primary[27] | Sep. 5 | James H. Davidson | Republican | 5,020 | 46.99% | James N. Tittemore | Rep. | 3,029 | 28.36% | 10,682 | 1,991 |
| August C. Dallman | Rep. | 2,620 | 24.53% | |||||||||
| General[28] | Nov. 7 | James H. Davidson | Republican | 20,317 | 52.33% | Michael K. Reilly (inc) | Dem. | 17,080 | 43.99% | 38,825 | 3,237 | |
| Robert Zingler | Soc.D. | 929 | 2.39% | |||||||||
| Clarence O. Tinkham | Proh. | 498 | 1.28% | |||||||||
| U.S. House of Representatives | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Member of the U.S. House of Representatives fromWisconsin's 6th congressional district March 4, 1897 – March 3, 1903 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Member of the U.S. House of Representatives fromWisconsin's 8th congressional district March 4, 1903 – March 4, 1913 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Member of the U.S. House of Representatives fromWisconsin's 6th congressional district March 4, 1917 – August 6, 1918 (died) | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Chair of theHouse Committee on Railways and Canals March 4, 1901 – March 3, 1911 | Succeeded by |
| Legal offices | ||
| Preceded by Perry Niskern | District Attorney ofGreen Lake County, Wisconsin January 1, 1889 – January 1, 1891 | Succeeded by John L. Millard |