Edward McPherson

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Edward McPherson (July 31, 1830December 14, 1895) was a prominent Pennsylvania newspaperman, attorney, and United States Congressman. A significant part of the Battle of Gettysburg's first day fighting occurred on property owned by McPherson, known thereafter as McPherson's Ridge.

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[edit] Early life and career

McPherson was born in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, and attended the common schools. He graduated from Pennsylvania College as valedictorian in 1848 and studied law. After passing the bar exam, he joined the practice of Thaddeus Stevens in Lancaster and came to share Stevens' political views as a Whig. Falling ill, McPherson left the law practice and moved to Harrisburg, where he briefly edited the Harrisburg American in 1851. He returned to Lancaster to edit the Independent Whig from 1851–54, and the Pittsburgh Daily Times in 1855. He moved back to Gettysburg in 1856 and resumed his legal career. His father died in 1858 and willed him a large farm two miles west of town along the Chambersburg Turnpike.

That same year, McPherson was nominated to represent Pennsylvania's 17th District in the United States House of Representatives. He was elected as a Republican to the Thirty-sixth and Thirty-seventh Congresses, serving from 1859 through March 1863. He was a member of the Republican National Committee in 1860. He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1862 to the Thirty-eighth Congress when his district was expanded to include Somerset County, a moderate region opposed to McPherson's Radical Republican views. President Abraham Lincoln appointed McPherson as Deputy Commissioner of Internal Revenue in 1863.

[edit] Battle of Gettysburg

On June 30, 1863, Union cavalry under John Buford camped on the large farm inherited by McPherson west of Gettysburg in Cumberland Township. The following day, Buford's men stubbornly held the ridgeline against Confederate infantry until reinforcements arrived, including the famed Iron Brigade. Fighting raged on McPherson's farm for much of the day, with thousands of men wounded or injured in the vicinity. The battle ruined the crops and pastures of McPherson's tenant farmer, John Slentz, and caused considerable damage to fences, buildings, property and supplies, for which McPherson was never compensated. McPherson sold the farm in 1868. The National Park Service bought the property in 1904 and now maintains the McPherson barn, which still stands on the Gettysburg National Military Park.

[edit] Postbellum career

Rep. Thaddeus Stevens used his considerable influence to have his protegé McPherson appointed as Clerk of the House of Representatives, a position he held from December 8, 1863, to December 5, 1875. He authored a pair of books, Political History of the United States of America During the Great Rebellion (1864) and The Political History of the United States of America During the Period of Reconstruction (1871).

McPherson presided over the Republican National Convention in 1876. President Rutherford B. Hayes appointed him as Director of the United States Bureau of Engraving and Printing in 1877 and 1878. Returning to the newspaper business, he was editor of the Philadelphia Press from 1877 until 1880. He also served as editor of the New York Tribune Almanac from 1877–1895 and was editor and proprietor of a newspaper in Gettysburg from 1880 until 1895. He was the American editor of the Almanach de Gotha.

He again served as Clerk of the House of Representatives from December 1881 to December 1883 and for a third time from December 1889 to December 1891. He died four years later in Gettysburg, and was buried in Evergreen Cemetery.

He and his wife Annie Crawford McPherson were married in 1862 and had four sons and a daughter.

[edit] References

Preceded by
Wilson Reilly
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania's 17th congressional district

1859 - 1863
Succeeded by
Archibald McAllister
Preceded by
Emerson Etheridge
Clerk of the United States House of Representatives
18631875
Succeeded by
George M. Adams
Preceded by
George M. Adams
Clerk of the United States House of Representatives
18811883
Succeeded by
John B. Clark, Jr.
Preceded by
John B. Clark, Jr.
Clerk of the United States House of Representatives
18891891
Succeeded by
James Kerr