- James Mitchell Ashley
James Mitchell Ashley (
November 14 ,1824 ndashSeptember 16 ,1896 ) was a U.S. congressman, territorial governor and railroad president.Early life
Ashley was born in
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania , to John and Mary A. (Kilpatrick) Ashley. He married Emma Smith in 1851 and together they had four children. He is the great-grandfather ofThomas W. L. Ashley and a number of other descendants, including James Ashley IV, a portraitist living in Chicago. James IV recently completed a portrait of his great-grandfather, which will soon be permanently installed at theUniversity of Toledo Law School. The school held a symposium in the first James Ashley's honor, at which an original hiphop composition about his life was presented.Ashley was mostly self-taught in elementary subjects. His early employment included clerking on Ohio and Mississippi River boats. In 1848, he settled in
Portsmouth, Ohio , where he became editor of the Portsmouth Democrat. In 1849, he was admitted to the Ohio Bar but did not practice. About this time he moved toToledo, Ohio , and got involved in the wholesale drug business.Political career
James Ashley was an active
abolitionist who traveled with John Brown's widow on the date of Brown's execution and reported the event in the still-extant local newspaper, theToledo Blade . In 1858, he was elected to U.S. House of Representatives of the36th Congress as a Republican. While in Congress (the 37th through 40th), he served as the chairman to the Committee on Territories. He took an active role in supporting the recruitment of troops for theUnion Army during theAmerican Civil War .During his term, he wrote a bill to abolish slavery in the
District of Columbia , introduced the first bill for a constitutional amendent abolishing slavery, and initiated impeachment proceedings againstPresident Andrew Johnson (1867). He was defeated for re-election in 1868. During the Civil War, he authored theArizona Organic Act .Following his defeat, Ashley was appointed the Territorial Governor of Montana and served until 1870. He then returned to Toledo.
Ashley was the builder and president of the
Ann Arbor Railroad .References
* Who's Who on the Web, s.v. "James Mitchell Ashley" (n.p.:
Marquis Who's Who , 2005).
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6865268 James Mitchell Ashley] at Find-A-GraveFurther reading
* Horowitz, Robert F. "Great Impeacher: A Political Biography of James M. Ashley". New York: Brooklyn College Press, 1979.
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