Henry Clay Ide Explained

Henry Clay Ide
Appointer1:William Howard Taft
Term Start1:1909
Term End1:1913
Predecessor1:William Miller Collier
Successor1:Joseph Edward Willard
Office2:United States Governor-General of the Philippines
President2:Theodore Roosevelt
Term Start2:November 3, 1905
Term End2:September 19, 1906
Predecessor2:Luke Edward Wright
Successor2:James Francis Smith
Office3:United States Vice Governor-General of the Philippines
Term Start3:1904
Term End3:1905
Predecessor3:Luke Edward Wright
Successor3:James Francis Smith
Office4:Philippine Secretary of Finance and Justice
Term Start4:September 1, 1901
Term End4:June 30, 1908
Predecessor4:None (position created)
Successor4:Gregorio S. Araneta
Office5:Member of the U.S. Second Philippine Commission
Appointer5:William McKinley
Alongside5:William Howard Taft, Luke Edward Wright, Dean Conant Worcester, Bernard Moses
Term Start5:March 16, 1900
Term End5:September 19, 1906
Predecessor5:None (position created)
Successor5:William Morgan Shuster
Birth Date:18 September 1844
Birth Place:Barnet, Vermont
Death Place:St. Johnsbury, Vermont
Restingplace:Mount Pleasant Cemetery, St. Johnsbury, Vermont
Party:Republican
Spouse:Mary M. Melcher (1844-1892) (m. 1871)
Children:4
Profession:Attorney
Signature:Signature of Henry Clay Ide.png

Henry Clay Ide (September 18, 1844 – June 13, 1921) was a U.S. judge, colonial commissioner, ambassador, and Governor-General of the Philippines.

Biography

Early life, States Attorney, Senator, and Presidential Commissioner to Samoa

Ide was born in Barnet, Vermont, on September 18, 1844, a son of Jacob and Lodoiska (Knights) Ide. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1866, where he was named valedictorian. He studied law, first with Benjamin H. Steele, and later with Jonathan Ross, and was admitted to the bar in 1870.[1] He practiced law in St. Johnsbury, Vermont from until 1891, and was the partner of Wendell Phillips Stafford.[2] [3] [4] Among the prospective attorneys who studied law in their office was William H. Taylor, who later served as an Associate Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court.[5]

A Republican, from 1876 to 1878, Ide was State's Attorney for Caledonia County. From 1882 to 1885 he was a member of the Vermont State Senate.

President Benjamin Harrison appointed Ide Presidential Commissioner to Samoa in 1891. The formal title of the post was American Land Commissioner in Samoa, one of three representatives (of the United States, Germany, and Great Britain) responsible for adjudicating land claims by foreigners in the islands, as provided for in the Treaty of Berlin (1889). Ide reached Apia on May 16, 1891, but only held the office for six months, until he resigned because of a serious illness in his family and left the islands on November 12, 1891. Robert Louis Stevenson wrote to him two days beforehand, saying "I hear with great regret of your departure. They say there are as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it, but I doubt if they will come to our hook. It is not only that you have shown so much capacity, moderation, tact, and temper; but you have had the talent to make these gifts recognized and appreciated among our very captious population. For my part, I always thought your presence the best thing that the treaty had brought us."[6] [7]

Ide returned to the islands in 1893 as Chief Justice, another position provided for by the Treaty of Berlin. He accepted the appointment in August, and sailed for the islands two months later. As Chief Justice, Ide presided over trials of both native Samoans and foreign nationals of the three Treaty of Berlin signatories. He also had the power to recommend criminal and taxation legislation to the government of Samoa. He resigned in 1896, but there was a delay in the arrival of his successor, requiring him to continue in office until 1897. At his departure, the Samoa Weekly Herald editorialized that Ide had been a just and able judge. Similarly, King Malietoa told Ide that "You will not be forgotten in Samoa, you will be remembered as the good Chief Justice who knew our ways and laws and customs and who was kind to us".

Ide was succeeded as Land Commissioner and Chief Justice by William Lea Chambers.[8]

Presidential Commissioner to the Philippines

Ide was one of the Commissioners of the Taft Commission, appointed in 1900.[9] Like the other Commissioners, he arrived in the Philippines in June of that year,[10] and assumed official legislative power on 1900-09-01.[11]

In 1901, Ide and the other commissioners gained executive power when they were appointed to the cabinet of territorial Governor William Howard Taft. Ide was appointed Secretary of Finance and Justice, and served until 1904.[12] [13]

Ide was appointed Vice-Governor of the Philippines in 1904.[14] In November 1905 he became Acting Governor General after Luke Wright, then Governor General, took leave. Wright formally resigned in April 1906, and Ide formally succeeded him Governor-General.

Ide was Governor-General until September, when he resigned and was recalled to Washington D.C. In part, Ide's few months as Governor-General were a political face-saving exercise (as was Wright's resignation). Taft had visited the Philippines in August 1905, and after that visit that Taft intended major changes to the Philippine Commission. Wright and Ide were two of the Commissioners he intended to replace, and allowing Wright to resign and Ide to serve briefly as Governor-General were seen by contemporary observers as face-saving moves.[15] The issue Taft sought to solve was a conflict between the Commission members and the Federalistas. The Federalistas disagreed with and disliked both Wright and Ide. However, while they found Wright's Governor-Generalship outright offensive, they were happier with Ide's ten months in office. Hailing his resignation from office, La Democracia (as quoted in the September 5, 1906 Manila Times) praised Ide and his work, and stated that "in his social relations, Mr. Ide has reestablished the good times of Taft, which the latter's successor tried to make us forget".

Ambassador

Ide served as minister to Spain 1909 - 1913.

Family, personal life, and business affairs

On October 26, 1871 Ide married Mary M. Melcher, daughter of Joseph and Sophia Melcher of Stoughton, Massachusetts. They had four children before her death in 1892: Adelaide (Addie) M., Annie L., Harry J. and Mary M.[16] [17] [18]

During his time on Samoa, Ide became friends with Robert Louis Stevenson, who was heavily engaged in the politics of the region and a frequent commentator on Samoan affairs to the world at large.[19] [20] [21] One day, Ide mentioned to Stevenson the feelings of his daughter Annie about having been born on Christmas Day and so having no birthday celebration separate from the family's Christmas celebrations. Stevenson drew up a formal deed of gift, properly sealed and witnessed as a legal document, and then published in the press, donating his birthday to Ide's daughter.[22] The daughter and Stevenson corresponded further on the matter in November 1891, with Stevenson assuring her that "I am sure [your father] will tell you this is sound law." The affair was the root of a strong bond between the Ide and Stevenson families.

Anne H. Ide, who was known as "Levei-malo" to the Samoans, married William Bourke Cockran in 1906, becoming his third wife.[23] [24] In 1912, his daughter Marjorie married Shane Leslie, a first cousin of Winston Churchill.

Death

Ide died in St. Johnsbury, Vermont on 13 June 1921.[25] His body was buried at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in St. Johnsbury.[26]

Further reading

Ide's published works

Notes and References

  1. Book: Crockett, Walter Hill . 1921 . Vermont: The Green Mountain State . 4 . New York, NY . Century History Company . 215.
  2. Ide, Henry Clay. Dictionary of American diplomatic history. John E. Findling. 2nd. Greenwood Press. 1989. 9780313260247. 254.
  3. Ide, Hendy Clay. Encyclopedia of American foreign policy: studies of the principal movements and ideas. 3. Alexander DeConde. Scribner. 1978. 9780684160412. 1047.
  4. Ide, Henry Clay. Encyclopedia, Vermont biography: a series of authentic biographical sketches of the representative men of Vermont and sons of Vermont in other states. Prentiss Cutler Dodge. Burlington. Ullery publishing company. 1912. 233.
  5. Cummings . Charles R. . November 1906 . The New Judiciary System: The Board of Superior Judges; William H. Taylor . The Vermonter . White River Junction, VT . Chas. R. Cummings . 296 . .
  6. Ide, Henry C.. Dictionary of American Biography. 5 (Hibben - Larkin). American Council of Learned Societies. Scribner. 1959. 458.
  7. Book: The foreign policy of the United States in relation to Samoa. 24. Yale historical publications. George Herbert Ryden. Yale University Press. 1933. 533 - 534,540 - 541.
  8. Book: The diplomacy of involvement: American economic expansion across the Pacific, 1784 - 1900. David M. Pletcher. University of Missouri Press. 2001. 9780826213150. 254.
  9. Book: The Philippine Story. David Bernstein. READ BOOKS. 2007. 9781406744644. 85.
  10. Book: Colonial pathologies: American tropical medicine, race, and hygiene in the Philippines. Warwick Anderson. Duke University Press. 2006. 9780822338437. 253.
  11. Book: The Pacific Ocean in History. Henry Morse Stephens. BiblioBazaar, LLC. 2008. 9780559703027. 255 - 257.
  12. Book: The Philippines: Past and Present. 1. Dean C. Worcester. Reprinted 2008 by BiblioBazaar LLC. 1914. 9781426458507. 16.
  13. Book: An introduction to Philippine history. José S. Arcilla. 4th. Ateneo de Manila University Press. 1994. 9789715502610. 97.
  14. Ide, Henry C.. The United States in Asia: a historical dictionary. David Shavit. Greenwood Publishing Group. 1990. 9780313267888. 259.
  15. Book: Ilustrado Politics: Filipino elite responses to American rule, 1898 - 1908. Michael Cullinane. Ateneo de Manila University Press. 1989. 9789715504393. 111, 246.
  16. Web site: Biography of Henry Clay IDE . Illustrated Biographical History of Vermonters & Sons of Vermont . 1894 . Ullery. Brattleboro: Transcript Publishing Company, p 218 .
  17. Selected Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, ed. by Ernest Mehew (New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 2001)
  18. News: Bound for Samoa: New Chief Justice and Land Commissioner, Both from America. . The Daily bulletin . 3 . October 27, 1893 . Honolulu, Hawaii .
  19. October 1923. 23. 4. 0035-838X. Rotary International. Taylor Erwin Gauthier. The Rotarian. For Stevenson Lovers. 38.
  20. Book: Robert Louis Stevenson and the colonial imagination. Ann C. Colley. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. 2004. 9780754635062. 141.
  21. Book: 179 - 180. Tusitala of the South Seas: the story of Robert Louis Stevenson's life in the South Pacific. registration. Joseph Waldo Ellison. Hastings House. 1953.
  22. News: MISS IDE'S BIRTHDAY.; Robert Louis Stevenson Gave Her His - Mr. Roosevelt Has the Reversion.. The Philadelphia North America. 1906-07-24. 6. The New York Times.
  23. A Samoan Girl's Letter . The Outlook . 61 . Outlook Co. . 1899 . 226.
  24. Book: The Collected Letters of W.B. Yeats: 1905 - 1907 . Yeats Collected Letters Series . 4 . John S. Kelly . Ronald Schuchard . William Butler Yeats . Oxford University Press . 2005 . 9780198126843 . 823. William Butler Yeats .
  25. Ide, Henry Clay. Encyclopedia Americana. 14. Americana Corp.. 1966. 660.
  26. Web site: Mount Pleasant Cemetery, St. Johnsbury . VOCA . 2015 . www.voca58.org/ . Vermont Old Cemetery Association . Burlington, VT.