James H. Webb (Pennsylvania politician) explained

James H. Webb
Order:50th
Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Term Start:January 1, 1871
Term End:January 1, 1872
Predecessor:Butler B. Strang
Successor:William Elliott
Office1:Member of the
Constituency1:Bradford County district
Term Start1:January 1, 1874
Term End1:January 1, 1875
Alongside1:Elijah Reed Myer
Predecessor1:Elijah Reed Myer
Successor1:George Moscrip,,
Constituency2:Bradford - Sullivan district
Term Start2:January 1, 1867
Term End2:January 1, 1872
Alongside2:,,
Predecessor2:Lorenzo Grinnell
Successor2:Perley Hanford Buck
Office3: and of Bradford County, Pennsylvania
Term Start3:December 1, 1881
Term End3:December 1, 1884
Predecessor3:Addison C. Frisbie
Successor3:Adelbert D. Munn
Term Start4:December 1, 1854
Term End4:December 1, 1860
Predecessor4:H. Lawrence Scott
Successor4:Nathan C. Elsbree
Birth Date:4 December 1820
Birth Place:Tioga County, New York, U.S.
Death Place:Smithfield Township, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Restingplace:Union Cemetery, Smithfield Township
Occupation:Farmer

James Hammond Webb (December 4, 1820February 21, 1896) was an American farmer and Republican politician from Bradford County, Pennsylvania. He represented Bradford County for six terms in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, and served as the 50th speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1871).

His father, John Leland Webb, was also a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. His younger brothers, William C. Webb, Henry G. Webb, and Charles M. Webb, all became prominent politicians in their own adopted states.

Biography

James H. Webb was born December 4, 1820, in Tioga County, New York, in the portion of the county which is now Chemung County, New York.[1] As a child, he moved with his family to Ridgebury Township, Pennsylvania, where he was raised and educated. He worked on his father's farm in Smithfield Township, and took over the management of the farm after his father's death in 1846. He moved his primary residence to the Smithfield farm in 1850.

Webb first became active in local politics with the Democratic Party. He was elected Register and Recorder of Bradford County in 1854, running on the Democratic Party ticket.[2] But within a year he had switched his affiliation to the newly established Republican Party.[3] He was re-elected in 1857, running on the Republican Party ticket.[1]

He was active for most of the next 20 years campaigning and organizing on behalf of the Republican Party and its wartime identity, the National Union Party. He next stood for office in 1866, when he won his first term in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.[4] He went on to win four more terms, serving continuously through the end of 1871. At the organization of the 1871 Pennsylvania Legislature, Webb was elected speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.[5] He did not run again in 1871, but returned and won a final term in the House in the 1873 election.[1]

He ran for his final office in 1881, when he was elected to his third and final term as register and recorder of Bradford County.[1]

During this final term in elected office, Webb began reading law and, in 1885, was admitted to practice law, but was only able to practice for a few years. His health began to decline and he suffered from a creeping paralysis.

He died at his home in Smithfield township on February 21, 1896.[6]

Personal life and family

James H. Webb was the eldest of seven children born to John Leland Webb and his wife Annis ( Hammond). John Leland Webb was a prominent business contractor and politician in Pennsylvania; he was a contractor for the construction of the North Branch Canal and later served as a sheriff and member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.[7] [8] The Webb family descended from the colonist Richard Webb, who came to Connecticut Colony from England in 1626.[9]

James Webb's three younger brothers also went on to prominent careers:

James H. Webb married twice. He married Sally M. Chamberlain on September 20, 1845. They had five children together, though one died young. After his first wife's death in 1879, he remarried with Mary Munson, the widow of Joseph Munson. They adopted another daughter, Margaret.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bradsby, Henry C. . History of Bradford county, Pennsylvania . 1891 . S. B. Nelson & Co. . 274, 1269 - 1270 . June 9, 2023 .
  2. News: Political Intelligence . Franklin Repository and Chambersburg Whig . September 20, 1854 . 1 . June 9, 2023 . .
  3. News: Republican Mass Convention . Bradford Reporter . September 15, 1855 . 2 . June 9, 2023 . .
  4. News: Union State Ticket . Bradford Reporter . September 13, 1866 . 2 . June 9, 2023 . .
  5. News: Organization of the House . Harrisburg Telegraph . January 3, 1871 . 2 . June 9, 2023 . .
  6. News: The Hon. James H. Webb . The Canton Independent-Sentinel . February 25, 1896 . 3 . June 9, 2023 . .
  7. Book: Case, Nelson . History of Labette County, Kansas, and Representative Citizens . Biographical Publishing Co. . 1901 . 405 - 406 . June 9, 2023 .
  8. Book: Admire's Political and Legislative Hand-Book for Kansas . 1891 . George W. Crane & Co. . 456 . June 6, 2015.
  9. Book: Encyclopedia of Connecticut Biography . 1923 . 10 . American Historical Society . 55 . June 9, 2023 .
  10. Book: Berryman, John R. . History of the bench and bar of Wisconsin . 1898 . 2 . H.C. Cooper, Jr., & Co. . 286-287 . November 19, 2019.