Josiah Quincy (1859–1919) Explained

Josiah Quincy VI
Office:Mayor of Boston
Term Start:January 6, 1896[1]
Term End:January 1, 1900[2]
Predecessor:Edwin Upton Curtis
Successor:Thomas N. Hart
Office1:United States Assistant Secretary of State
Term Start1:March 20, 1893
Term End1:September 22, 1893
President1:Grover Cleveland
Secretary1:Walter Q. Gresham-->
Predecessor1:William F. Wharton
Successor1:Edwin F. Uhl
Office2:Chairperson of the Massachusetts Democratic Party
Term Start2:1905
Term End2:1906
Predecessor2:John Flaherty
Successor2:John P. Feeney
Term Start3:1891
Term End3:1894
Predecessor3:John W. Corcoran
Successor3:John W. Corcoran
Birth Date:15 October 1859
Birth Place:Quincy, Massachusetts
Death Place:Boston, Massachusetts
Nationality:American
Party:Democratic
Relations:Quincy family
Children:1
Alma Mater:Harvard College[3]

Josiah Quincy VI (; October 15, 1859 – September 8, 1919) was an American politician from Massachusetts who served as mayor of Boston from 1896 to 1900. A member of the Quincy political family, his grandfather Josiah Quincy IV (also known as Josiah Quincy Jr.) and great-grandfather Josiah Quincy III also had served as mayors of Boston.

Early life and career

Quincy was born in Quincy, Massachusetts, on October 15, 1859, the son of Josiah Phillips Quincy (1829-1910), and Helen Frances "Fanny" (Huntington) Quincy (1831-1903).[4] [5] Josiah Phillips Quincy was a Harvard graduate and was a lawyer and poet who also wrote several books related to politics.[6] Josiah Quincy VI's grandfather and great-grandfather had both been mayors of Boston.[4]

Quincy pursued a career in law and graduated from Harvard College in 1880, enrolled in Harvard Law School, and in 1884 was admitted to the Massachusetts Bar.

A life-long supporter of historical preservation and organizations, Quincy addressed the first meeting of the Bostonian Society inside the Old State House in 1882, wherein he advocated for the retelling and commemoration of American history as a relevant subject.[7]

Notes and References

  1. News: MAYOR QUINCY'S INAUGURAL . . 6 . January 7, 1896 . March 22, 2018 . limited . pqarchiver.com .
  2. News: Mayor Hart's Inaugural . . . 8 . January 4, 1900 . March 21, 2018 . newspapers.com.
  3. Web site: Josiah Huntington Quincy (1859–1919) — Dumbarton Oaks. Sara. Taylor. www.doaks.org.
  4. Quincy, Josiah . 22 . see last sentence "Josiah Quincy (b. 1859), a son of...... 1.
  5. Web site: 2022-04-26 . Helen Frances (Fanny) Quincy . 2024-07-20 . geni_family_tree . en-US.
  6. Web site: Quincy, Josiah Phillips . 2024-07-20 . lawlit.net.
  7. News: 1919-09-09 . Josiah Quincy Dies; Boston Man was Good to Home Folks . 2024-03-23 . Chicago Tribune . 5.
  8. Jacobs . Warren . 1928 . Dates of Some of the Principal Events in the History of 100 Years of the Railroad in New England. 1826-1926 . The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin . 17 . 15–28 . 0033-8842.
  9. News: September 9, 1919 . Josiah Quincy Dies; Boston Man was Good to Home Folks . March 22, 2018 . . 5 . newspapers.com.
  10. Web site: Quincy, Josiah, 1859-1919 ArchivesSpace Public Interface . 2024-03-23 . archives.boston.gov.
  11. Web site: Taylor . Sara . Josiah Huntington Quincy (1859–1919) . 2024-07-20 . Dumbarton Oaks . en.
  12. Web site: Taylor . Sara . Edmund Quincy (1903–1997) . 2024-07-20 . Dumbarton Oaks . en.
  13. Web site: Taylor . Sara . Ellen Frances Krebs Tyler (1858 or 1862–1904) . 2024-07-20 . Dumbarton Oaks . en.
  14. Web site: Mayors of Newport . 2024-07-20 . stacyhouse.com.
  15. {{Cite news |date=1919-09-09 |title=THE BOSTONIAN SOCIETY.: OPENING MEETING OF THE SOCIETY IN ITS NEW ROOMS IN THE OLD STATE HOUSE--MANY INTERSTING SPEECHES." Boston Daily Globe (1872-1922), 1882 Oct 11 1882/10/11/, p. 4. ProQuest. Web. 8 July 2024.

    A Democrat, Quincy was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1887 to 1888 and from 1890 to 1891.

    Quincy was an unsuccessful candidate in the 2nd District of Massachusetts' congressional election in 1888 and served as the chairman of the Massachusetts Democratic Party from 1891 to 1894 and in 1905 to 1906. He was appointed as the United States Assistant Secretary of State by President Grover Cleveland in 1893 but resigned after six months. As Assistant Secretary of State, he filled all jobs under him with Bay Staters.[7]

    Mayoralty

    Quincy served two terms as mayor of Boston, being elected in December 1895, re-elected in December 1897, and holding office from January 1896 to January 1900.

    Quincy appointed a board of advisors, made up of Boston's leading businessmen, to guide him in the matters of taxes, business, and finance. In 1899, he united the city's various railroad terminals by building the South Station union station, which cost the city $3.6 million.[8] It soon became the busiest station in New England.[9] He saw to it that many playgrounds, public baths, and gymnasia were created during his mayoralty.[10]

    He was contemporaneously both applauded and criticized for his "socialist" reforms.[11]

    Later life and death

    Quincy was an unsuccessful candidate for governor of Massachusetts in 1901.

    In 1906 Quincy served on the Boston Transit Commission.

    Quincy was a delegate to the Massachusetts constitutional convention in 1917 and an unsuccessful candidate for Massachusetts attorney general in 1917. He was a member of the Massachusetts Society of Colonial Wars.

    Quincy died in his home in Boston on September 8, 1919, at the age of 59.

    Personal life

    Soon after leaving the mayoral office, on February 17, 1900, Quincy married Ellen Frances Krebs Tyler, a Christian Scientist, in London. She was the widow of William Royall Tyler (1852-1897) and mother of Royall Tyler, as well as the inheritor to a sizable shipbuilding fortune, which saw her receive $10,000 annually. They lived in Biarritz, France together and had one child, a son, named Edmund Quincy (1903-1997), who became a painter, author, and poet.[12] Ellen died from cancer on February 16, 1904, one day short of their fourth anniversary.[13]

    Quincy remarried a year later, marrying Mary D. Honey (1873-1941), who later adopted Edmund as her son. She was the daughter of Samuel Robinson Honey (1842-1927), who was mayor of Newport, Rhode Island in 1892.[14]

    See also

    Further reading

    External links