Julius Sterling Morton

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Julius Sterling Morton
Julius Sterling Morton

Julius Sterling Morton (April 22, 1832April 27, 1902) was President Grover Cleveland's Secretary of Agriculture.

Julius Sterling Morton in 1858.
Julius Sterling Morton in 1858.

Morton was born in Adams, Jefferson County, New York. He was raised in Detroit and attended the University of Michigan. After receiving his diploma in 1854, he moved with his bride to Nebraska, which was not yet organized as a territory, and staked a claim in Nebraska City. He was appointed Secretary of Nebraska Territory b President James Buchanan on July 12, 1858 which he served as until 1861.

Respected as an agriculturalist, he sought to instruct people in the modern techniques of farming and forestry. Among his most significant achievements was the founding of Arbor Day. He became well known in Nebraska for his political, agricultural, and literary activities and from there was appointed as Secretary of Agriculture by President Cleveland. He is credited with helping change that department into a coordinated service to farmers, and he supported Cleveland in setting up national forest reservations.

In 1897 Morton planned and began to edit the multivolume Illustrated History of Nebraska. He also published a weekly periodical, The Conservationist. He died on April 27, 1902, in Lake Forest, Illinois, where he was seeking health treatment. His home in Nebraska City is now a state park, the Arbor Lodge State Historical Park and Arboretum.

In 1937, the state of Nebraska donated a bronze statue of Morton to the U.S. Capitol's National Statuary Hall Collection. Morton is a member of the Nebraska Hall of Famehe is very famous in today's world.

His son, Paul Morton, served as Secretary of the Navy under President Theodore Roosevelt from 1904 to 1905.

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Preceded by
Jeremiah McLain Rusk
United States Secretary of Agriculture
1893 – 1897
Succeeded by
James Wilson
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