James McMillan (Senator)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James McMillan (May 12, 1838 – August 10, 1902) was a U.S. Senator from the state of Michigan.
McMillan was born in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada to William and Grace McMillan, both Scottish natives. He was educated in the public schools of Hamilton before moving to Detroit, Michigan in 1855 to embark on a career in business.
McMillan's first position was as a clerk for Buhl, Ducharme & Co., a wholesale hardware firm. At the age of 20, he left to become the purchasing agent for the Detroit & Milwaukee Railway. In 1863, he helped, along with John Stoughton Newberry, to organize the Michigan Car Company. He later built and became president of the Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic Railway and was largely interested in shipbuilding and lake transportation companies. For three years he was president of the Detroit Board of Park Commissioners and for four years a member of the Detroit Board of Estimates.
McMillan was the only person to be elected Chairman of the Michigan Republican Party three non-consecutive times (1879, 1886 and 1890). He was a presidential elector on the Republican ticket in 1884. He was elected as a Republican to the United States Senate in 1889 and was reelected in 1895 and 1901, serving from March 3, 1889, until his death. He was chairman of the Committee on Manufactures in the Fifty-first and Fifty-second Congresses, and of the Committee on the District of Columbia in the Fifty-fourth through Fifty-seventh Congresses. He is also remembered for his chairmanship of the Senate Park Improvement Commission of the District of Columbia (better known as the McMillan Commission), which was responsible for the creation of the National Mall.
McMillan died in Manchester, Massachusetts and is interred in Elmwood Cemetery, in Detroit. He was survived by his wife Mary and their six children: William Charles, Grace Fisher, James Howard, Amy, Philip Hamilton and Francis Wetmore.
[edit] Bibliography
- American National Biography
- Dictionary of American Biography
- Drutchas, Geoffrey G. "Gray Eminence in a Gilded Age: The Forgotten Career of Senator James McMillan of Michigan." Michigan Historical Review 28 (Fall 2002): 78-113
- Drutchas, Geoffrey G. "The Man With a Capital Design." Michigan History 86 (March/April 2002): 36-38.
- Heyda, Marie. "Senator James McMillan and the Flowering of the Spoils System." Michigan History 54 (Fall 1970): 183-200
- Michigan. Legislature. In Memory of Hon. James McMillan, Senator in the Congress of the United States from Michigan. Lansing: R. Smith Printing Co., 1903.
- Moore, Charles. "James M’Millan, United States Senator from Michigan." Michigan Historical Collections 39 (1915): 173-87.
- U.S. Congress. James McMillan: (Late a Senator from Michigan). Memorial Addresses Delivered in the Senate and House of Representatives. 57th Cong., 2d sess., 1902–1903. Washington: Government Printing Office.
[edit] References
- James McMillan (Senator) at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- The Political Graveyard
Preceded by Zachariah Chandler |
Chairman of the Michigan Republican Party 1879– 1880 |
Succeeded by Henry P. Baldwin |
Preceded by Philip T. Van Zile |
Chairman of the Michigan Republican Party 1886– 1888 |
Succeeded by George H. Hopkins |
Preceded by George H. Hopkins |
Chairman of the Michigan Republican Party 1890– 1896 |
Succeeded by Dexter M. Ferry |
Preceded by Thomas W. Palmer |
United States Senator (Class 2) from Michigan 1889–1902 Served alongside: Francis B. Stockbridge, John Patton, Jr., Julius C. Burrows |
Succeeded by Russell A. Alger |
|