Peleg Chandler | |
Birth Name: | Peleg Whitman Chandler |
Birth Date: | 12 April 1816 |
Birth Place: | New Gloucester, Maine |
Death Place: | Boston, Massachusetts |
Occupation: | Lawyer, politician |
Signature: | Signature of Peleg Whitman Chandler (1816–1889).png |
Office: | Member of the Massachusetts Governor's Council |
Term: | 1850 |
Office1: | Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives |
Term Start1: | 1844 |
Term End1: | 1845 |
Term Start2: | 1862 |
Term End2: | 1863 |
Office3: | President of the Boston Common Council |
Term3: | 1841–1845 |
Predecessor3: | Edward Blake |
Successor3: | George Stillman Hillard |
Peleg Whitman Chandler (April 12, 1816 – May 28, 1889) was an American lawyer, legal news reporter and editor, Boston's city attorney (solicitor), and a two-term state legislator in the Massachusetts General Court.
As City Solicitor, Chandler defended Boston's exclusion of African American students from its public schools in the legal case of Roberts v. City of Boston.
Chandler's father and grandfather were also named Peleg Chandler;[1] his mother was Esther Parsons Chandler.
Born in New Gloucester, Maine, he studied at Bangor Theological Seminary and received his degree from Bowdoin College in 1834. He studied law with his father, in the law office of Theophilus Parsons, and at Harvard Law School. Chandler was admitted to the Massachusetts Bar Association in 1837, in which year he also married Martha Ann Bush, with whom he went on to have four children.[2]
Chandler practiced law in Boston, contributed law reports to the Boston Daily Advertiser and also founded the Law Reporter journal, which was the first magazine on law to be successful in the US. He served on the Boston City Council from 1843 to 1845 and in the Massachusetts Governor's Council in 1850. He was also a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives for 1844-1845 and 1862-1863.[2]
In 1850, as City Solicitor, Chandler defended Boston's exclusion of African American students from its public schools in the legal case of Roberts v. City of Boston.[3]
Chandler died at his Boston home from heart failure, after a long illness, on May 28, 1889.[4]
Among Chandler's published writings are:
In 1872, Chandler funded the refurbishment of Massachusetts Hall, Bowdoin College according to designs by A. C. Martin. The works included removal of a staircase, the creation of a first-floor recitation room and space to house the Cleaveland Cabinet of mineral and natural history specimens. Cleaveland was his father-in-law.[5]
Chandler's papers are kept several institutions including the Phillips Library,[6] Massachusetts Historical Society,[7] the Hayes Presidential Center,[2] and the Bowdoin College Library.[8]