- Lloyd Wheaton Bowers
Lloyd Wheaton Bowers was born
March 9 1859 , inSpringfield, Massachusetts , the son of Samuel Dwight and Martha Wheaton (Dowd) Bowers. On both sides his ancestors were Puritans who had settled inNew England more than two centuries before his birth.His family moved to
Brooklyn, New York , and later toElizabeth, New Jersey , where he was tutored privately in preparation for college. Entering Yale in 1875, he graduated valedictorian of his class in 1879, where he was a member ofSkull & Bones . For one year he remained a graduate student, then traveled inEurope , and despite an offer to teach atYale , he turned to the law profession. He graduated from theColumbia Law School , was admitted to the New York bar, and received a clerkship from a leading firm inNew York City in 1882.His efforts earned him the position of managing clerk in one year, and in 1884 he became a member of the firm. Ill health compelled him to rest, and as a result of travel to the Northwest he moved to
Winona, Minnesota in October 1884. There he formed a partnership with Thomas Wilson, former chief justice of theMinnesota Supreme Court , where he practiced law until 1893. He then became thegeneral counsel of theChicago & North Western Railway Company, one of the great railway systems of the country, and in this office he served until 1909, when he was appointed by President Taft, an intimate friend since college,Solicitor General of the United States .The years of his work with the North Western were a period of extraordinary industrial development. Incidentally to this development litigation arose involving federal control of the railroads under the
Interstate Commerce Act of 1887, the powers of the states to control intrastate commerce and to tax corporations, and theSherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890. Bowers success in winning cases for the government during his brief service as solicitor general was phenomenal. He found great joy, as solicitor general, in the fact that he could act solely as lawyer, rather than counsel, and for the whole country rather than for a special interest. Only his death prevented his nomination by President Taft for appointment to theU.S. Supreme Court .He retained throughout his life a catholicity of intellectual interests, particularly in literature. Art and music, in his later years, also became avid interests. Notwithstanding some reserve, his charm of manner, marked by kindly sympathy, easily won him friends. He married twice; first on
September 7 1887 to Louisa Bennett Wilson ofWinona, Minnesota , who died onDecember 20 1897 ; and second in 1906 to Charlotte Josephine Lewis of Detroit, who survived him after his death onSeptember 9 1910 , aged 51.He left no published works.
References
*OSGguide
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