Ebenezer J. Ormsbee Explained

Ebenezer J. Ormsbee
Order1:41st
Office1:Governor of Vermont
Term Start1:October 7, 1886
Term End1:October 4, 1888
Governor1:Levi K. Fuller
Predecessor1:Samuel E. Pingree
Successor1:William P. Dillingham
Order2:35th
Office2:Lieutenant Governor of Vermont
Term Start2:October 2, 1884
Term End2:October 7, 1886
Governor2:Samuel E. Pingree
Predecessor2:Samuel E. Pingree
Successor2:Levi K. Fuller
Office3:Member of the Vermont Senate
Term Start3:1878
Term End3:1880
Constituency3:Rutland County
Alongside3:Horace H. Dwyer, Levi Rice, Charles A. Rann
Predecessor3:Ner P. Simons, Samuel Williams, Henry F. Lothrop, Charles W. Brigham
Successor3:Walter C. Dunton, Royal D. King, Orel Cook, Emmett R. Pember
Office4:Member of the Vermont House of Representatives
Term Start4:1872
Term End4:1874
Constituency4:Brandon
Predecessor4:Zachariah Clark
Successor4:Stephen L. Goodell
Office5:State's Attorney of Rutland County, Vermont
Term Start5:1871
Term End5:1873
Predecessor5:Horace G. Wood
Successor5:Martin G. Everts
Birth Date:June 8, 1834
Birth Place:Shoreham, Vermont, U.S.
Death Place:Brandon, Vermont, U.S.
Restingplace:Pine Hill Cemetery, Brandon, Vermont, U.S.
Spouse:
    Profession:Attorney
    Party:Republican
    Signature:Signature of Ebenezer Jolls Ormsbee (1834–1924).png
    Allegiance:United States (Union)
    Branch:Union Army
    Branch Label:Service
    Serviceyears:1861–1863
    Rank:Captain
    Unit:Company G, 1st Vermont Infantry
    Commands:Company G, 12th Vermont Infantry
    Battles:American Civil War
    Battles Label:Wars

    Ebenezer J. Ormsbee (June 8, 1834 – April 3, 1924) was an American attorney and politician from Vermont. A Republican, he served as lieutenant governor from 1884 to 1886, and governor from 1886 to 1888.

    A native of Shoreham, Vermont, Ormsbee attended academies in Brandon and South Woodstock, then studied law at a Brandon legal firm. After attaining admission to the bar, he enlisted in the Union Army for the American Civil War. Ormsbee served with the 1st Vermont Infantry in 1861, then joined the 12th Vermont Infantry as commander of its Company G. After leaving the army in 1863, he practiced law in Brandon.

    A Republican, Ormsbee served as Rutland County State's Attorney from 1871 to 1873. He represented Brandon in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1872 to 1874 and Rutland County in the Vermont Senate from 1878 to 1880. In 1884, he was elected lieutenant governor, and he served until 1886. He was the successful Republican nominee for governor in 1886 and served until 1888. During his governorship, he oversaw the initial efforts of the newly organized state railroad commission and board of health.

    After leaving office, Ormsbee practiced law in Brandon and served on two federal commissions, one to negotiate a compromise with the Paiutes in Nevada to relinquish part of their Pyramid Lake Indian Reservation, and one to negotiate competing land claims in Samoa with commissioners from Germany and Great Britain. He remained active in politics, including supporting the presidential campaigns of William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt. He practiced law until a stroke at age 80 caused him to retire, and he was the longtime president of the Brandon National Bank. Ormsbee died in Brandon on April 3, 1924. He was buried at Pine Hill Cemetery in Brandon.

    Early life

    Ebenezer Jolls Ormsbee was born in Shoreham, Vermont on June 8, 1834, the son of John Mason and Polly (Willson) Ormsbee.[1] He worked on the family farm and attended the local schools of Shoreham, then attended academies in Brandon and South Woodstock.[1] Ormsbee taught school while studying law at the Brandon firm of Anson A. Nicholson and Ebenezer N. Briggs.[1] He was admitted to the bar of Rutland County in 1861.[1]

    Military career

    In April 1861, Ormsbee enlisted for the American Civil War, joining a company called "Allen Grays" in April 1861.[1] This unit was subsequently accepted for Union Army service as Company G, 1st Vermont Infantry.[1] On April 25, 1861, Ormsbee was elected his company's second lieutenant, and he served with the unit in Virginia during its entire three-month term.[1] In September 1862, he joined Company G, 12th Vermont Infantry as commander with the rank of captain.[1] This regiment enlisted for nine months, and Ormsbee remained with it for its entire service, including the Battle of Gettysburg. The 12th Vermont returned home and was mustered out in July 1863.[1]

    Start of career

    After Ormsbee was mustered out, he practiced law in Brandon as Nicholson's partner, and later as Ebenezer Briggs's partner, then the partner of Briggs's son George.[1] A Republican, he was a member of the party's state committee and served as a U.S. internal revenue assessor from 1868 to 1872.[1] From 1871 to 1873, he served as State's Attorney for Rutland County.[1] Ormsbee represented Brandon in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1872 to 1874, and Rutland County in the Vermont Senate from 1878 to 1880.[1] During his House term, Ormsbee served on the judiciary committee.[2] During his senate term, Ormsbee was chairman of the committee on the state asylum and a member of the committee on state and federal relations.[3] He served a trustee of the Vermont Reform School from 1880 to 1884.[1]

    In 1884, Ormsbee was the Republican nominee for lieutenant governor.[1] With the Republican Party dominant in the years following the Civil War, he easily won the general election.[1] In 1886, he was elected governor.[1] Ormsbee served the single two-year term permitted by the Republican Party's "Mountain Rule", and his administration included appointment of a commission to propose revisions to the state's education laws and overseeing the initial work of Vermont's new railroad commission and board of health.[4]

    In 1887, President Grover Cleveland proposed to return to the former Confederate states battle flags that had been captured by Union troops during the Civil War.[5] The Grand Army of the Republic led the opposition to Cleveland's plan, and the G.A.R's Vermont Department passed resolutions condemning Cleveland's proposal.[5] [6] Ormsbee forwarded the resolutions to Cleveland, declaring they had "my unqualified and warmest approval" and "you may rest assured that they contain the sentiments of Vermont on this subject."[6] Cleveland rescinded his executive order, but in 1905 shifting sentiment led to unopposed passage of a federal law requiring the return of the flags.[5]

    Later career

    At the end of 1891 Ormsbee was appointed by President Benjamin Harrison to serve on a commission to treat with the Paiute Indians at the Pyramid Lake Indian Reservation, in Nevada, to get the tribe to relinquish a claim to part of their reservation.[1] Later that year, he was appointed as U.S. Land commissioner in Samoa, where he negotiated with British and German commissioners to adjust claims to millions of acres of Samoan land.[1] Ormsbee completed his work in May 1893, returned to the United States, and resumed his law practice in Brandon.[1]

    In September 1896, Ormsbee joined a number of Vermont luminaries in a train trip to William McKinley's hometown of Canton, Ohio to demonstrate their support for his presidential campaign.[7] In September 1901, he was president of the Reunion Society of Vermont Officers and presided over the organization's annual banquet, at which Vice President Theodore Roosevelt was the featured speaker.[8] Roosevelt became president a week later, and in late August and early September 1902 returned to Vermont to spend several days campaigning for Republican candidates in that year's elections; Ormsbee presided over welcoming ceremonies during Roosevelt's September 1 stop in Brandon.[9] Ormsbee also presided over the July 1913 dedication of a monument to Stephen A. Douglas, a native of Brandon.[10]

    Retirement and death

    He was a Freemason, and a longtime comrade of Grand Army of the Republic Post No. 18, which was named for his brother Charles James Ormsbee; C. J. Ormsbee was killed in action while serving with the 5th Vermont Infantry during the May 1864 Battle of the Wilderness.[11] Several universities presented Ormsbee with honorary degrees, including a Master of Arts from Middlebury College in 1874, a Master of Arts from Dartmouth College in 1884, and an LL.D. from Norwich University in 1893.[11]

    Ormsbee was president of the Brandon Free Public Library, president of the Brandon Cemetery Association, and member of the prudential committee of the Brandon graded and high school for over 27 years. He was long affiliated with the Brandon National Bank, and served for many years as its president.[11] Ormsbee practiced law until age 80, when a stroke caused him to retire though he continued to serve as the bank's president.[12] He died in Brandon on April 3, 1924.[13] Ormsbee was buried at Pine Hill Cemetery in Brandon.[14]

    Family

    In 1862, Orsmbee married Jennie L. Briggs, the daughter of his law partner Ebenezer N. Briggs.[1] She died in 1866, and in 1867 he married Frances Davenport of Wadhams Mills, New York.[1]

    See also

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Book: Carleton, Hiram . 1903 . Genealogical and Family History of the State of Vermont . New York, NY . Lewis Publishing Company . 82 . Google Books.
    2. News: October 19, 1872 . Standing Committees . Vermont Journal . Montpelier, VT . 3 . Newspapers.com.
    3. News: October 4, 1878 . Legislature of Vermont: Senate . . Burlington, VT . 3 . Newspapers.com.
    4. Book: Capace, Nancy . 2000 . Encyclopedia of Vermont . Santa Barbara, CA . Somerset Publishers . 82 . 978-0-4030-9602-2 . Google Books.
    5. Taylor . John M. . 1987 . Grover Cleveland and the Confederate Flags . . Dublin, NH . Yankee Publishing, Inc. . April 3, 2024 . WesClark.com.
    6. News: June 23, 1887 . Vermont's Protest . . Bennington, VT . 1 . Newspapers.com.
    7. News: September 9, 1896 . Vermont to Ohio . . St. Albans, VT . 2 . Newspapers.com.
    8. News: September 7, 1901 . Vermont Men As Hosts . . St. Albans, VT . Newspapers.com.
    9. News: September 1, 1902 . Third Day In Vermont . . St. Albans, VT . 1 . Newspapers.com.
    10. News: July 4, 1913 . Douglas Day! . The Brandon Union . Brandon, VT . 1 . Newspapers.com.
    11. Book: Ellis, William Arba . 1911 . Norwich University, 1819-1911; Her History, Her Graduates, Her Roll of Honor . 3 . Montpelier, VT . Capital City Press . 538–539 . Google Books.
    12. Book: Crockett, Walter Hill . 1923 . Vermont: The Green Mountain State . Five . New York, NY . Century History Company . 371–372 . Google Books.
    13. News: April 3, 1924 . Gov. Ormsbee Dead In 90th Yr. . Barre Daily Times . Barre, VT . 1 . Newspapers.com.
    14. News: April 7, 1924 . Bury Gov. Ormsbee With Military Rites . . Rutland, VT . 3 . Newspapers.com.