John Adams Lee (bornFlemingsburg,Kentucky, June 28, 1851; diedChicago,Illinois, October 10, 1928) was an American grocer and politician. He served as the DemocraticLieutenant Governor of Missouri from 1901 to April 25, 1903, when he resigned over his part in the Baking Powder Scandal.
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John Adams Lee's father, James A. Lee, could trace his ancestry back to colonial Virginia. Born in Kentucky, John Adams Lee's family moved to St. Louis when he was six, returning to Kentucky in 1861 at the onset of the Civil War. After being educated in the public schools in Kentucky, Lee went to work inLouisville, Kentucky and ended up in the grocery business as a traveling merchant.
By 1881 Lee had returned to St. Louis. In 1891 he was involved with a trade journal calledThe Inter-State Grocer. In 1893 he was appointed Police Commissioner of St. Louis by Democratic GovernorWilliam J. Stone, serving until 1897.[1]
In 1896, Lee ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor. In 1900, Lee was electedLieutenant governor of Missouri on the Democratic ticket withAlexander Monroe Dockery. He resigned his office on April 25, 1903 as a result of the Baking Powder Scandal.[citation needed]
The introduction of an alum-based baking powder by theCalumet Baking Powder Company in 1888 lead theRoyal Baking Powder Company, the chief seller ofcream of tartar-based baking powder, to conduct a campaign of marketing, disinformation, and legal actions against alum baking powder - the "baking powder wars". In 1899 Royal persuaded Missouri to pass a law banning the sale of alum baking powder on safety grounds. However, the law became a political issue, with grocers and others pressuring the legislature to repeal the law.
Adams, who served as president of the Senate as part of his position as lieutenant governor, solicited and received bribes from Royal to keep the alum ban in place, some of which he passed on toFrank H. Farris and other senators. Adams used his vote as presiding officer to break a tie and defeat the repeal effort. After the scheme became public, Adams briefly fled the state before returning and testifying to a grand jury, which lead to unsuccessful efforts to prosecute Farris and the officers of the Royal Baking Powder Company.[2]
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Lee married Virginia Gathwright in 1880 in Louisville, Kentucky. They had four children - Virginia Dorcas (born 1881), Minnie Deming (b. 1884), James Owen (b. 1886), and Eva Gathwright (b. 1889).
Virginia Dorcas Lee married millionaire newspaper publisher andBoy Scouts of America founderWilliam D. Boyce in 1910; after they had a daughter named Virginia in 1911, they were divorced in 1912 and Virginia Dorcas, her daughter and her parents all moved toSanta Barbara,California.[3]
Lee later moved to Chicago and self-published a bookHow to Buy and Sell Canned Foods (1926). He died in 1928 and is buried in theAcacia Park Cemetery inNorwood Park Township to the northwest of Chicago.
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Preceded by August Bolte | Democratic nominee forLieutenant Governor of Missouri 1900 | Succeeded by |