Burton Harrison

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Burton Norvell Harrison (July 14, 1838-March 29, 1904), was an American politician and public servant.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Harrison was born in New Orleans, Louisiana to Jesse Burton and Frances Braud Harrison. He attended the University of Mississippi from 1854 to 1855. In 1859 he was graduated from Yale University. Later that year he took a job at the University of Mississippi as an associate professor of mathematics and began to study law.

[edit] The Civil War and its Aftermath

In February, 1862 Harrison became the private secretary to Confederate President Jefferson Davis. At the end of the American Civil War he was captured by the Union Army and imprisoned at Fort Delaware, where he resumed his long-interrupted law studies. In 1866, Harrison was released, settled in New York City, and was admitted to the bar. Feeling himself established, in November, 1867 he married his sweetheart from his Richmond, Virginia days, Constance Cary Harrison.

[edit] Later Life

In 1875, Harrison became the secretary and counsel of New York City’s Rapid Transit Commission. The following year he actively campaigned for presidential candidate Samuel J. Tilden. In 1880, Harrison attended the Democratic convention in Cincinnati where he opposed William Jennings Bryan. Following 1880, Harrison began to lose interest in politics. In 1893 he declined President Grover Cleveland’s offers of appointments as Assistant Secretary of State and ambassador to Italy.

Burton and Constance Harrison were the parents of Francis Burton Harrison (1873-1957).

Burton Harrison died while visiting Washington, DC.

[edit] Sources/External Links

The Burton Norvell Harrison Family Papers at the Library of Congress http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?faid/faid:@field(DOCID+ms003060)