State Senate: | New York State |
District: | 1st |
Term Start: | January 1, 1884 |
Term End: | December 31, 1885 |
Predecessor: | James W. Covert |
Successor: | Edward F. Fagan |
Birth Date: | 12 October 1836 |
Birth Place: | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | Bellport, New York, U.S. |
Party: | Republican |
Parents: | James William Otis Martha Church Otis |
Children: | 4 |
Relations: | See Otis family |
James Otis (October 12, 1836 – July 22, 1898) was a Republican member of the New York State Senate and a society leader during the Gilded Age.
Otis was born in New York City on October 12, 1836, as a member of the prominent Boston Brahmin Otis family. He was the son of James William Otis (1800–1869) and Martha (née Church) Otis.[1] His elder brother was William Church Otis, who married Margaret Sigourney (their daughter Violet was married to William Greenough Thayer).[2]
He was the grandson of Harrison Gray Otis, a U.S. Senator and U.S. Representative from Massachusetts who was one of the wealthiest men of Boston during his time, and a great-grandson of Samuel Allyne Otis, a delegate from Massachusetts to the Second Continental Congress who served as the Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives and the 1st Secretary of the United States Senate. He was also the granduncle of Sigourney Thayer, the theatrical producer, and Robert Helyer Thayer, the U.S. Minister to Romania under Dwight D. Eisenhower.[3]
During the U.S. Civil War, Otis was a member of the Union Army, achieving the rank of colonel with the 22nd New York Regiment. He began his career working as an East Indian commission broker.
In 1878, he was an unsuccessful candidate to represent New York's 1st District in the U.S. House of Representatives. In 1883, he was elected as a Republican to represent New York's 1st Senate District (comprising Queens and Suffolk counties) in the New York State Senate during the 107th and 108th New York State Legislatures,[4] which was during the second and third year of Grover Cleveland's governorship. During his time in the Legislature, he served alongside cousin Norton P. Otis, who represented Westchester County in the Assembly. Norton later represented New York's 19th congressional district in the House of Representatives.[5]
In 1892, the widower Otis and several of his relatives, including his unmarried daughter Sarah and grand-nephew J. Wadsworth Ritchie, were included in Ward McAllister's "Four Hundred", purported to be an index of New York's best families, published in The New York Times.[6] [7] Conveniently, 400 was the number of people that could fit into Mrs. Astor's ballroom.[8] [9] Otis, who spent his summers in Newport, Rhode Island, was a member of the Union League and Seawanhaka Yacht Club, and was known for many years a famous cotillion leader, bon vivant and raconteur.
Otis was married to Mary Adelia Ludlum (d. 1890),[10] daughter of Nicholas Ludlum.[11] They had a large country home and estate in Bellport on Long Island known as "Near-the-Bay" and a home in New York City at 22 East 10th Street near Tompkins Square Park.[11] Together, they were the parents of:[12]
Otis died from congestion of the lungs on July 22, 1898, at his home in Bellport on Long Island.[17] His funeral was held at Christ Chapel in Bellport and he was interred in the family vault in the Bellport Cemetery.[18]
Through his daughter Mary, he was the grandfather of James Otis Clarkson (1888–1951), Mary Adelia Clarkson (1889–1976), Pauline Livingston Clarkson (1892–1983), and Elizabeth Clarkson (1896–1956).[12]