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Chauncey Depew

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Chauncey Depew
United States Senator
fromNew York
In office
March 4, 1899 – March 3, 1911
Preceded byEdward Murphy Jr.
Succeeded byJames Aloysius O'Gorman
Secretary of State of New York
In office
January 1, 1864 – December 31, 1865
GovernorHoratio Seymour
Reuben Fenton
Preceded byHoratio Ballard
Succeeded byFrancis C. Barlow
Member of theNew York State Assembly
from the 3rdWestchesterdistrict
In office
January 1, 1862 – December 31, 1863
Preceded byBenjamin F. Camp
Succeeded byGeorge A. Brandreth
Personal details
Born
Chauncey Mitchell Depew

(1834-04-23)April 23, 1834
Peekskill, New York,US
DiedApril 5, 1928(1928-04-05)(aged 93)
New York City,US
Political partyRepublican
Liberal Republican(1872)
Spouses
Elise A. Hegeman
(m.1871;w.1893)
May E. Palmer
(m.1901;d.1928)
Parent(s)Isaac Depew
Martha Minot Mitchell
EducationPeekskill Military Academy
Alma materYale College
ProfessionPolitician
Signature

Chauncey Mitchell Depew(April 23, 1834 – April 5, 1928) was an American attorney, businessman, andRepublicanpolitician. He is best remembered for his two terms as United States Senator from New York and for his work forCornelius Vanderbilt,as an attorney and as president of theNew York Central RailroadSystem.[1]

Early life[edit]

Depew was born inPeekskill, New York,on April 23, 1834, to Isaac Depew (1800–1869) and Martha Minot (Mitchell) Depew (1810–1885).[2]

Family[edit]

Depew's father was a merchant and farmer who pioneered river transportation between Peekskill and New York and was descended from François DuPuy, a French Huguenot who purchased land from natives at the present site of Peekskill.[citation needed]Through his mother, Depew was descended from Rev. Josiah Sherman, who served as a chaplain with rank of captain in the Revolutionary War and who was the brother of American founding fatherRoger Shermanand Rev.Charles Chauncy,the second president ofHarvard College.[citation needed]

Education[edit]

Chauncey Depew, Yale College Class of 1856 album.

Depew attendedPeekskill Military Academyfor 12 years before matriculating atYale Collegein 1852. At Yale, Depew joined many clubs and won several honors. He won second dispute appointments in his junior and senior years and was an honored speaker at Junior Exhibition and Commencement. He joined the Thulia Boat Club, Kappa Sigma Epsilon, Kappa Sigma Theta,Psi Upsilon,andSkull and Bones.He served as third president of theLinonian Society.[3]: 165 At Yale, he was a classmate of two future United States Supreme Court Justices,David Josiah BrewerandHenry Billings Brown.He graduated in 1856.

Legal and business career[edit]

After graduating from Yale, Depew apprenticed in the office of Edward Wells in Peekskill andread lawwith William Nelson. He was admitted to the New York state bar in March 1858 and opened an office in Peekskill, where he practiced until 1861. For a few months, Depew engaged in the brokerage business inNew York Cityas a member of the firm Depew & Potter, but then resumed his law practice in Peekskill. Depew later moved to New York City. During theAmerican Civil War,Depew served as Adjutant of the 18th Regiment of the New York National Guard,[4]and later Colonel and Judge Advocate of the 5th Division on the staff of Major GeneralJames W. Hustedof the New York Guard.[5]

In 1865, Depew was appointed and confirmed to the position ofUnited States Minister to Japan,but he declined the appointment to pursue his career as a railroad and business lawyer.[6]

Railroad attorney[edit]

In 1866, Depew became the attorney forNew York & Harlem Railroad,owned by Cornelius Vanderbilt. Three years later, he took the same position for Vanderbilt'sNew York Central and Hudson River Railroad.Having earned recognition for his work with subsidiary companies, Depew became general counsel and director of the entire "Vanderbilt System" in 1876. He joined the executive board of the New York Central & Hudson River Railroad in 1882 and became its second vice president. In 1885, Depew was elected the railroad's president and served in that capacity until 1898 when he was succeeded bySamuel R. Callaway.[7][8]Depew then became chairman of board of directors ofNew York Central RailroadCompany until his death in 1928.

While Depew was primarily active in the Vanderbilt railroads, he held concurrent positions with many other railroads and companies. He was president ofWest Shore Railroadand served on the boards of directors for theNew York and Harlem Railroad,theChicago and North Western Railway,theChicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Railway,theCleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad,theDelaware and Hudson Railroad,theNew Jersey Junction Railroad,theSt. Lawrence and Adirondack Railroad,theWallkill Valley Railroad,and theCanada Southern Railroad.

Aside from railroads, Depew also served on the boards of directors forWestern Union,theHudson River BridgeCompany, the Niagara River Bridge Company, the New York State Realty & Terminal Company, the Union Trust Company, Equitable Life Assurance Company, and Kensico Cemetery Association.

Political career[edit]

Chauncey M. Depew in 1901

As a young student and lawyer, Depewstumpedthe state of New York forJohn C. Frémontin1856and forAbraham Lincolnin1860.

New York politics[edit]

Depew represented Westchester County in theNew York State Assemblyin1862and1863.During the latter year, he sometimes acted asSpeaker of the New York State Assemblypro tempore while SpeakerTheophilus C. Callicotwas under investigation.[9]In 1863, he was electedSecretary of State of New Yorkon the Union ticket and served from 1864 to 1865.

In 1867, Depew became clerk ofWestchester Countybut resigned after a short service. In 1870, the New York Legislature named Depew Immigration Commissioner, but he declined to serve. Depew had also been commissioner of quarantine and president of Court of Claims of New York City as well as commissioner of taxes and assessments for the city and county of New York. Depew was one of the commissioners appointed to build the state capitol in 1874 and a member of the state's boundary commission in 1875.

In 1872,Depew ran forLieutenant Governor of New Yorkon theLiberal Republican-Democraticticket but was defeated.

In 1886, Depew gave an oration at the unveiling of theStatue of Liberty.[10]

On October 7, 1897, Depew inaugurated theNew York pneumatic tube mail,declaring: "This is the age of speed. Everything that makes for speed contributes to happiness and is a distinct gain to civilization. We are ahead of the old countries in almost every respect, but we have been behind in methods of communication within our cities. In New York this condition of communication has hitherto been barbarous. If the Greater New York is to be a success, quick communication is absolutely necessary. I hope this system we have seen tried here to-day will soon be extended over all the Greater New York."[11]

In 1898, Depew nominatedTheodore Rooseveltfor Governor of New York at the Republican state convention.

Presidential politics[edit]

"When Depew goes to the Senate" byHomer Davenport,1899

Depew served as a delegate-at-large to each Republican National Convention from 1888 to 1904 and was elected delegate to all following conventions, including 1928, being elected the day before he died. At theconvention in 1888,Depew received 99 votes for the presidential nomination. He made presidential nominating speeches forBenjamin Harrisonin 1892 and GovernorLevi Mortonin 1896. In 1904, he made the re-nominating speech for Vice PresidentCharles Fairbanks.

U.S. Senate[edit]

Depew was a candidate forUnited States Senatorin an1881 special election,but withdrew his name from consideration after the 41st ballot. He also declined nomination as a senator in 1885.

In 1899,Depew was elected to the Senate from New York and was re-elected in1905.He served from March 4, 1899, to March 3, 1911.

In 1906,David Graham Phillipsbegan amuckrakingseries entitled "The Treason of the Senate" for William Randolph Hearst's newCosmopolitanmagazine, and targeted Depew in the first article. The article's sensational charges included labeling Depew a "boodler" owned "mentally and morally" by railroad magnatesCorneliusandWilliam Vanderbilt.The piece provoked outrage from President Roosevelt, theNew York Sunand SenatorHenry Cabot Lodge.[12]

Death[edit]

In spring 1928, Depew became ill while returning from Florida to Manhattan. He died ofbronchial pneumoniainManhattanon April 5, 1928.[1]He was buried in the family mausoleum in Hillside Cemetery,Peekskill.In his honor, the huge concourse ofGrand Central Terminalwas draped in mourning.

Personal life[edit]

Depew's second wife, May Palmer

Depew married twice. On November 9, 1871, he married Elise Ann Hegeman (1848–93) in New York City. She was the daughter of William and Eliza Jane (Nevin) Hegeman. Before her death on May 7, 1893, they had one son, Chauncey Mitchell Depew Jr. (1879–1931),[13]who died unmarried.[14]

On December 27, 1901, he re-married to May Eugenie Palmer (1866–1940) inNice, France.She was the daughter of Henry and Alice (Hermann) Palmer. In 1904, he was one of several high-profile investors who backed theIntercontinental Correspondence University,[15]but the institution folded by 1915.

He attendedSaint Thomas Episcopal Churchin New York.

Yale[edit]

Depew was a member of theYale Corporation(1888–1906). In 1887, Yale conferred him an honorary doctorate of letters. He was a founding member of the Yale Alumni Association of New York and served as its third president from 1883–92. He was also among those founding members of theYale Club of New York Cityin 1897. He was a vice chairman of the $20,000,000 Yale Endowment Campaign and was elected an honorary member of Yale Class of 1889 in 1923. In his will, he left $1,000,000 to Yale without restrictions as to its use.[citation needed]

Civic associations[edit]

He served as trustee of his alma mater, thePeekskill Military Academy.

In 1877, Depew became a regent of theUniversity of the State of New Yorkand served until 1904.

Depew became a member of theNew York Chamber of Commercein 1885 and served as its vice president from 1904–08.

In 1918, Depew was made life member of Lawyers' Club of New York.

Depew was active in a number of patriotic and hereditary societies. He served as president of Empire State Society of theSons of the American Revolutionfrom 1890–99, thePilgrims Societyfrom 1918 until his death, and theSaint Nicholas Society.He joined theUnion Leaguein 1868 and served as its president for seven years. He was elected an honorary life member at the close of his presidency. He was also a member of the ConnecticutSociety of the Cincinnati,the New YorkSociety of Colonial Wars,Holland Society,Huguenot Society and theNew England Society of New York.Other cultural memberships included theMetropolitan Museum of Art,American Association for the Advancement of Science, France-America Society,New York Historical Society,Historical Society of St. Augustine, Florida,American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society,National Horse Show, Lafayette Post of theGrand Army of the Republic,and the citizens' committee to complete theCathedral of St. John the Divine.

Health[edit]

Depew used to smoke 25 cigars a day but gave up smoking aged 65 upon the advice of his secretary.[16]He gave up drinking alcohol at aged 88. Depew stated that he had worked "practically every day" of his life. He avoided stress and slept 7 and half hours a day.[16]In 1908, it was widely reported in newspapers that Depew had become avegetarian.[17][18]In a 1925 interview aged 90, Depew clarified that he had never been a vegetarian but in his early 60s removedred meatfrom his diet but consumedpoultry.He commented that "Beefsteaks and roast butcher's meat figured too much in my diet, I concluded. Out they went, never to return. I'm not a vegetarian; wouldn't be one –that's going to extremes– but I don't eat need red meat and don't eat it. For thirty years the only meat I've eaten has been poultry."[16]

Honors[edit]

Depew received the FrenchLégion d'honneurin the rank of Officer.[citation needed][when?]

Depew was an honorary member of theNew York Genealogical and Biographical Society.

In 1887, Depew became an honorary member of Columbia chapter ofPhi Beta Kappa.

Legacy[edit]

Depew on the December 1, 1924 cover ofTimemagazine

Depew was a distinguished orator andafter-dinner speakerand published many of those speeches. Recordings of his speeches were commercially issued as gramophone discs byZonophone Recordsin the late 1890s.[19]Depew was remembered as a prodigious speaker years after his death; many years after his death, SenatorRobert S. Kerrof Oklahoma quoted Depew in an attack on a Senator from Indiana: "As I gaze on the ample figure of my friend from Indiana, and as I listen to him, I am reminded of Chauncey Depew who said to the equally obeseWilliam Howard Taftat a dinner before the latter became President, 'I hope, if it is a girl, Mr. Taft will name it for his charming wife.' "To which Taft responded, 'if it is a girl, I shall, of course, name it for my lovely helpmate of many years. And if it is a boy, I shall claim the father's prerogative and name it Junior. But if, as I suspect, it is only a bag of wind, I shall name it Chauncey Depew.'"[20]

In 1929, May Palmer-Depew donated her late husband's papers and $120,000 to establish a department of public speaking toGeorge Washington University.[21]The collection is currently cared for by the university's Special Collections Research Center, located in theEstelle and Melvin Gelman Library.[22]

Namesakes[edit]

In 1908, Depew gave land toPeekskill, New York,which became Depew Park. A decade later he expanded the donation by 10 acres (40,000 m2) and paid for a statue of himself for display in that park.

The Village ofDepew, New Yorkwas incorporated in 1894 along the New York Central Railroad main line.[23]The town ofDepew, Oklahoma,is also named for him.[24]

The shipChauncey M. DePewwas built for theMaine Central Railroad Companyin 1913 to carry passengers to Bar Harbor. She worked along the Maine coast until 1925 when she was sold to theDay Lineas an excursion boat between New York and Albany. In 1940 she was drafted to carry men and supplies between New York City andFort HancockonSandy Hook.In 1950, she was sold to the government of Bermuda and spent the next 20 years as aship's tender,harbor ferry, cruise ship andpilot boat.Back in the States, in 1971, a storm slammed her against a breakwater inChesapeake Bay,where she lay for three years. She was refurbished and moored in theHackensack RiverbetweenHarmon Coveand theHackensack River Route 3 Bridge, [25][26][27] [28]Another boat, a tugboat owned by the New York Central, was also named for him.[29]

Depictions[edit]

Many artists painted Depew, includingGeorge Burroughs Torrey.The Swiss-born American artistAdolfo Müller-Urypainted Depew numerous times. A three-quarter length portrait of Depew seated on a bale of furs was exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1890 and is now in the Yale Club of New York City.[citation needed]Several other portraits followed including a portrait painted for the New York State Capitol atAlbanyshowing Depew as he was in 1863 (now New York State Museum). The artist gave a bust-length portrait to the Museum atPeekskillin 1918. Copies of an etching Müller-Ury made of Depew, signed by the artist and the sitter, are in the American National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC, the collection of the Newport Preservation Society of Rhode Island, and the University of Cincinnati College of Design. Müller-Ury also painted Depew's first wife in 1893, and his second wife in 1902 in 18th-century costume. In 1896, sculptorVictor D. Brennercreated a small plaque in honor of his 60th birthday (which was two years earlier).

Publications[edit]

Speeches[edit]

  • Orations and After Dinner Speeches(1890)
  • Life and Later Speeches(1894)
  • Orations, Addresses and Speeches(eight volumes) (1910)
  • Speeches and Addresses on the threshold of Eighty(1912)
  • Addresses and Literary Contributions on the Threshold of Eighty-two(1916)
  • Speeches and Literary Contributions on the Threshold of Eighty-four(1918)
  • My Memories of Eighty Years and Marching Ona/k/aMy Autobiography(1922)
  • Miscellaneous Speeches on the Threshold of Ninety-two(1925)
  • "An Optimistic Survey", 50th Anniversary Supplement of theYale Daily News(1928)

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ab"Chauncey M. Depew Dies Of Pneumonia In His 94th Year. Family at Bedside of the Ex Senator When End Comes in Early Morning. Was Ill Only A Week. Stricken With a Chill on His Way North on the Train From Florida. Continued Duties as Chairman of New York Central Board to the Last".The New York Times.April 5, 1928.RetrievedJanuary 13,2015.Chauncey M. Depew died at his home, 27 West Fifty-fourth Street, at 4:20 o'clock this morning. He would have been 94 years old on April 23.
  2. ^The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography.Vol. I. James T. White & Company. 1893. pp. 528–529.RetrievedApril 30,2021– via Google Books.
  3. ^Robbins, Alexandra (2002).Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, the Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power.Boston: Little, Brown.ISBN0-316-72091-7.
  4. ^Leonard, John William (1911).Who's Who in Finance, Banking, and Insurance, Volume 1.Joseph & Sefton. p. 557.
  5. ^New York Adjutant General (1909).Annual Report, Volume II.J. B. Lyon Company. p. 98.
  6. ^Murlin, Edgar L. (1909).The New York Red Book.J. B. Lyon Company. p. 34.
  7. ^"The New York Central's New President".The Railway Agent and Station Agent.XIX(2). National Association of Railway Agents: 15–17. April 1898.
  8. ^"Samuel R. Callaway".Railroad Men.XVII(10): 365 and 387. July 1904.
  9. ^Depew:My Memoirs of 80 Years(Depew reminisces not quite correctly; seeJournal of the Assembly(86th Session))
  10. ^Depew, Chauncey M.Orations, addresses and speeches of Chauncey M. Depew,pp. 96-108.Private printing, 1910.Online facsimileof volume held by Columbia University Libraries. Full digital text atInternet Archive.Largely celebrating American democracy and the friendship between France and the USA, Depew, likely referring to the recentHaymarket affair,also remarked, "The rays from this beacon, lighting this gateway to the continent, will welcome the poor and the persecuted with the hope and promise of homes and citizenship. It will teach them that there is room and brotherhood for all who will support our institutions and aid in our development; but that those who come to disturb our peace and dethrone our laws are aliens and enemies forever."
  11. ^"Mail Tube is a Success".The New York Times.October 8, 1897.
  12. ^D. K. Goodwin, The Bully Pulpit (Simon & Schuster, 2013) pp. 480–482
  13. ^"C.M. Depew Jr.'s Funeral: Services Held In Chantry of St. Thomas—Burial at Peekskill".The New York Times.January 29, 1931.RetrievedOctober 6,2016.
  14. ^"Chauncey M. Depew Ill: Son of the Late Senator Is Stricken With Pneumonia".The New York Times.January 26, 1931.RetrievedOctober 6,2016.
  15. ^"To Furnish Knowledge For The Whole World",Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette(August 11, 1904), p. 2.
  16. ^abcDepew, Chauncey (1925)."Give Human Nature a Chance".Collier's.75:15–48.
  17. ^"Queer Fads of Distinguished Men to Prolong Their Lives".Evening Star(June 20, 1908). p. 3
  18. ^"Fads of the Great to Prolong Life".The Salt Lake Tribune(June 21, 190). p. 15
  19. ^Patrick Feaster.Pictures of Sound: One Thousand Years of Educed Audio: 980-1980.Dust-to-Digital, 2012. Page 53-54. Track 6 on the accompanying CD reproduces his "Speech on Forefather's Day."
  20. ^Broderick, John (April 9, 1974)."Scribe Suggests Insult Proposal".The Daily Herald.Washington. p. 13.RetrievedApril 30,2021– via Newspapers.
  21. ^King, Jennifer."Guide to the Chauncey M. Depew Papers, 1856–1934".gwu.edu.George Washington University.RetrievedOctober 6,2016.
  22. ^Guide to the Chauncey M. Depew Papers, 1856–1934,Special Collections Research Center, Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library, The George Washington University
  23. ^Gannett, Henry (1905).The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States.Govt. Print. Off. p. 104.
  24. ^Wilson, Linda D. Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. "Depew." Retrieved March 23, 2012.[1]ArchivedDecember 30, 2008, at theWayback Machine
  25. ^"Chauncey M. Depew - ShipSpotting - Ship Photos and Ship Tracker".shipspotting.RetrievedFebruary 25,2019.
  26. ^Prial, Frank J. (August 28, 1977)."Dining Out".The New York Times.RetrievedFebruary 25,2019.
  27. ^"The Chauncey M Depew in Bermuda - Ships Nostalgia Gallery".shipsnostalgia.RetrievedFebruary 25,2019.
  28. ^"The New Yorker Digital Edition: Aug 31, 1935".archives.newyorker.RetrievedFebruary 25,2019.
  29. ^Adams, Arthur G. (February 25, 1996).The Hudson Through the Years.Fordham Univ Press.ISBN9780823216765.RetrievedFebruary 25,2019– via Internet Archive.west shore railroad ridgefield park.

General sources[edit]

Further reading[edit]

  • Depew, Chauncey Mitchell.My memories of eighty years(Scribner, 1922), autobiographyonline
  • Murphy, Arthur F.  "The Political Personality of Chauncey Mitchell Depew" (PhD dissertation, Fordham University; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1959. 10587205).
  • Yeager, Willard Hayes.Chauncey Mitchell Depew the orator: His education in oratory; His views on the theory of public speaking; and a collection of his hitherto unpublished addresses(George Washington University Press, 1934)online

External links[edit]

  • Chauncey Mitchell Depew papers (MS 180). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.[2]
New York State Assembly
Preceded by New York State Assembly
Westchester County, 3rd District

1862–1863
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by New York Secretary of State
1864–1865
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 1) from New York
1899–1911
Served alongside:Thomas C. PlattandElihu Root
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Oldest living U.S. senator
November 3, 1924 – April 5, 1928
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover ofTimemagazine
1 December 1924
Succeeded by