Williams, George H. 1823-1910

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Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
ויליאמס, ג'ורג' הנרי, 1823-1910
Name (Latin)
Williams, George H. 1823-1910
Other forms of name
Williams, Geo. H. (George Henry), 1823-1910
Williams, Mr. (George Henry), 1823-1910
Date of birth
1823-03-26
Date of death
1910-04-04
Occupation
Judges
Lawyers
Legislators
Mayors
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 40815558
Wikidata: Q725008
Library of congress: n 85181073
Sources of Information
  • His Occasional addresses, 1895:
  • MoSU-L/NLT files
  • In the Senate of the United States. May 2, 1866, 1866:
  • Biog. dir. of the U.S. Cong. online, viewed Apr. 28, 2009
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Wikipedia description:

George Henry Williams (March 26, 1823 – April 4, 1910) was an American judge and politician. He served as chief justice of the Oregon Supreme Court, was the 32nd Attorney General of the United States, and was elected Oregon's U.S. senator, and served one term. Williams, as U.S. senator, authored and supported legislation that allowed the U.S. military to be deployed in Reconstruction of the southern states to allow for an orderly process of re-admittance into the United States. Williams was the first presidential Cabinet member to be appointed from the Pacific Coast. As attorney general under President Ulysses S. Grant, Williams continued the prosecutions that shut down the Ku Klux Klan. He had to contend with controversial election disputes in Reconstructed southern states. President Grant and Williams legally recognized P. B. S. Pinchback as the first African American state governor. Williams ruled that the Virginius, a gun-running ship delivering men and munitions to Cuban revolutionaries, which was captured by Spain during the Virginius Affair, did not have the right to bear the U.S. flag. However, he also argued that Spain did not have the right to execute American crew members. Nominated for Supreme Court Chief Justice by President Grant, Williams failed to be confirmed by the U.S. Senate primarily due to Williams's opposition to U.S. Attorney A. C. Gibbs, his former law partner, who refused to stop investigating Republican fraud in the special congressional election that resulted in a victory for Democrat James Nesmith. In 1875, Williams resigned as U.S. Attorney General after his wife was accused of taking bribes from the custom house firm Pratt & Boyd, which attempted to persuade the U.S. Justice Department to drop litigation against the company. After his resignation, Williams took part in the effort to count Florida ballots for Rutherford B. Hayes during the controversial presidential election of 1876. Williams returned to Oregon, resumed private law practice, and was elected Portland's mayor, serving two terms from 1902 to 1905. Williams, at the age of 83, was indicted for not enforcing restrictions on gambling; he was acquitted and served out the rest of his term as mayor.

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