- John James McCook (lawyer)
John James McCook (
May 25 ,1845 –September 17 ,1911 ) was a American corporateattorney , business director, and soldier, serving as aUnion Army officer during theAmerican Civil War . He was the youngest member of the famed "Fighting McCooks", a prominentOhio military family which contributed fifteen members to the war effort.Early years
John J. McCook was born in
Carrollton, Ohio , to family patriarchDaniel McCook . He was named for his uncle,John James McCook . He enrolled inKenyon College , but left school after completing his freshman year to enlist as a private in the 52nd Ohio Infantry onAugust 12 ,1862 , but was not mustered into the service initially because of his age. He accompanied theregiment as a volunteeraide-de-camp . OnSeptember 12 of that year, he was commissioned as afirst lieutenant in the6th Ohio Cavalry and assigned to the staff of Major GeneralThomas L. Crittenden in what later became the XXI Corps in theArmy of the Cumberland . McCook was involved in several campaigns and battles in the Western Theater, including Perryville, Stones River, theTullahoma Campaign , Chattanooga, and Chickamauga.In September 1863, McCook was commissioned as a captain and an
aide-de-camp , serving in theArmy of the Potomac . He was part of the army ofUlysses S. Grant in theOverland Campaign inNorthern Virginia in the spring of 1864. He was severely wounded near Shady Grove, Virginia, during theBattle of Spotsylvania Court House , but recovered, although he never fought again. He received a brevet promotion to major for his "gallant and meritorious" service in that battle. In the omnibus promotions at the end of the war, McCook was breveted as a lieutenant colonel and then a colonel in the volunteer army.Post-war years
After the war, McCook resumed his studies at Kenyon College and graduated in 1866. He entered the
Harvard Law School and graduated in 1869, and later received honorary law degrees fromPrinceton University and theUniversity of Kansas . He passed his bar exam and established a prosperous legal practice inNew York City in the celebrated firm of Alexander & Green, eventually becoming a senior partner. He joined the New York State Bar Association and served on the boards of directors for several prominent insurance companies, railroads, and financial institutions. He was also a trustee of Kenyon College, as well as being a director of thePrinceton Theological Seminary . He was instrumental in establishing a formal statute for an intercollegiate system of academic costume, and provided the money in 1892 for the University of Kansas's first athletic stadium, McCook Field, which was in service for thirty years.The
Santa Fe Railroad went into receivership in December 1893 due to rapidly declining stock prices and the failing health of its president, and McCook was one of three men appointed as directors to oversee the struggling railroad as it returned to financial stability.McCook declined an offer to serve in the first Cabinet of President
William McKinley . During theSpanish-American War , he chaired the Army and Navy Christian Commission. He became a close friend ofTheodore Roosevelt .Death and legacy
John McCook died at his summer house in
Sea Bright, New Jersey , at the age of 66.The village of
McCook, Illinois , is named after him, as is McCook Street on the campus of the University of Kansas.References
* Howe, Henry, "Historical Collection of Ohio", 1898.
* Whalen, Charles and Barbara, "The Fighting McCooks: America's Famous Fighting Family", Westmoreland Press, 2006.
* [http://www.ohiohistory.org/etcetera/cover_archives/1999apr_cover.html Ohio Historical Society]
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