USA > Illinois > Cook County > Album of genealogy and biograghy, Cook County, Illinois, 10th ed. > Part 11
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He was called out of the city in criminal cases from Hartford, Connecticut, to defend the officers of the Charter Oak Life Insurance Company for conspiracy; to Denver, where, with Hon. Thomas Patterson, he defended Stickney, who shot a man in a fit of jealousy, killing also a young and at- tractive woman; and to Yankton, where he de- fended Wintermute for the killing of McCook.
His style in a trial was simply the abnegation of every consideration except winning that case. To this he sacrificed everything. His style of speaking was earnest and convincing. He was the Chicago counsel for the Union Mutual Life
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77
LEONARD SWETT.
Insurance Company, of Maine, and distinguished himself by gaining a suit for that company against the Chicago University, which had become fa- mous in the legal reports for its knotty problems of law and equity.
On the 21st of June, 1888, he made the nom- inating speech for Walter Q. Gresham for Presi- dent of the United States. Mr. Swett's address was an independent utterance, touching in an extremely effective manner the salient qualities of the individual eulogized, and also those points in his public career which had brought him so prominently before the people as a possible presi- dential candidate.
In private life Mr. Swett was a man of social disposition and strong attachments. He was a pleasant companion and a warm and steadfast friend, and was generous almost to a fault. His nature was kind, genial and sympathetic, and his social intercourse was enlivened by so many gen- erous and endearing qualities, that it won for him the affectionate regard of those who knew him intimately to an extraordinary degree. In person he was imposing; six feet two inches in height, and weighing, when in health, two hundred and twenty-five pounds or more. He possessed a strong face, with heavy, bushy, black eyebrows, over-hanging deep-set brown eyes, sparkling and brilliant, but kindly withal. An expansive, in- tellectual forehead betokened his strength of character. His voice was extremely rich and musical, and always pleasant to listen to.
The Chicago Bar, by Frank B. Wilkie, said of him the following:
" As a speaker he had few or no superiors at the bar. He required scarcely any preparation to make a speech on any subject. He saw a case clearly, and had the faculty of presenting it with equal clearness. He had that tendency toward amplification found in all true orators, and by whose aid he presented a single point in so many salient aspects, that it became as apparent as sun- light to his auditory. This ability to not only clearly present a point, but to restate it and reit- erate it under a slightly changed form up to a
boundary where it becomes thoroughly under- stood, and yet, which is not carried beyond into the region of verbosity and tiresome and useless reiteration, is one of a high order, and it is one which Mr. Swett seemed to possess to perfection. Its due and judicious exercise requires an accur- ate knowledge of the men whom it is employed upon, and the precise ideas and illustrations which are demanded by their comprehension. Mr. Swett had all these qualities, and the additional one of being an excellent logician and an admirable manager, who thus not only knew what should be presented, but the very best form in which the presentation should be made.
" Possibly the not least remarkable feature of his oratorical power was his ability to employ pathos. Herein, when occasion required, he rose to a most effective level. He was both rhetorical and natural in this direction, the former being to some extent a sequence to the latter, in that he felt what he said, and therein, as usually happens, was eloquent. He was exceedingly happy in the use of this powerful element. When in this mood he smote the rock of men's hidden emotions, and obediently, as in the case of Moses, the waters gushed forth in response to the summons. From the possession of this subtle power to touch ef- fectively men's emotional natures, Mr. Swett had what the world would suspect from seeing him, and that was a powerful element of poetry in his character. This was true; and its existence was not only the source of his power to touch the hearts of others, but it refined his nature and gave him a chivalry that exhibited itself in a lofty regard for women, an integrity in business mat- ters that could not be disturbed, and a kindly con- sideration that leavened all his intercourse with others. In fine, the poetical quality, while it in- troduced no element of effeminacy in his char- acter, while it did not detract from his masculine vigor or interfere with his comprehensive ability, softened his naturally rugged make-up, and gave him an efficient refinement." Leonard Swett was one of nature's noblemen, and worthy to be re- membered as Abraham Lincoln's most trusted friend.
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I,ESLIE LEWIS.
LESLIE LEWIS.
ESLIE LEWIS, who is assistant superin- tendent of schools of the city of Chicago, has been one of the prime factors in the de- velopment of the comprehensive school system of the city. Coming from a direct line of educated and refined ancestors, Mr. Lewis has devoted his entire life to educational work. He was born at Otsego, New York, December 10, 1838. When Leslie was ten years of age, his father, Corydon Lewis, removed his family, consisting of his wife and three children, to Freeport, Illinois.
Leslie Lewis was graduated from the Freeport High School, and subsequently attended for two years Phillips Academy, at Andover, Massachu- setts. After completing the course at the last- named institution in 1862, he was graduated from a four years' course at Yale College, finishing in 1866. He soon after accepted a position as principal of the Washington Academy. In Sep- tember, 1867, he was elected principal of the old Dearborn School, Chicago, which was on Madison Street, opposite McVicker's Theater. Mr. Lewis was next made principal of the Haven School, which position he held until 1876, when he resigned to enable him to take up the duties of superintendent of schools of Hyde Park, to which office he had previously been elected.
He had taken up his residence in this town a short time before the fire of 1871, having pre- viously resided in a house which was located near where the Leland Hotel now stands. He has been re-elected to the office mentioned every year since that time, but the office became subordinate to the city of Chicago when Hyde Park was annexed, in 1889. He has now held the office twenty-two years, and under his super- vision the growth in number of pupils, as well
as number and quality of teachers, has been phenomenal. The examinations were not so rigid then as now, and as teachers were not so numer- ous, the requirements were less. Over five thou- sand teachers, who have passed through the pres- ent rigid system of examinations, are at present employed. The school buildings have been greatly improved, and in the place of wooden and poorly ventilated buildings, stand fine brick structures of the most modern pattern. The schools are now conducted with the view to fur- thering the physical as well as mental welfare of the pupils.
Leslie Lewis was married to Miss Mary E., daughter of John Waterman, of Chicago. She was born in Grafton, Worcester County, Mas- sachusetts, her father being a native of Vermont. Mrs. Lewis is the mother of two children, Mary Catherine and Susan Whipple, who are now young ladies.
The Lewis family is of very old American stock, and the grandfather of Leslie Lewis served with distinction in the War of the Revolution. His name was Justus Lewis, and his son, Corydon Lewis, was the father of Leslie, whose name heads this article.
Mr. Lewis is a thorough-bred American, and believes in upholding, at any price, the good name of his country. He is a man of sturdy character, and believes that what is worth doing at all is worth doing well. He affiliates with the Republican party in national politics, but in municipal matters is always thoroughly inde- pendent. He owns his pleasant residence at No. 5605 Madison Avenue. Being a man of pleasant personality, he is alike beloved by friends and relatives.
ELISHA GRAY
ELISHA GRAY.
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ELISHA GRAY.
C ROF. ELISHA GRAY, whose inventive genius and persevering industry have played no inconspicuous part in revolutionizing the business methods of the modern world, bears in his veins the sturdy and vigorous blood of some of America's founders. His grandfather, John Gray, was of Scotch-Irish descent, and was a farmer in Chester County, Pennsylvania, where he died. Mary Moore, wife of John Gray, was a native of Delaware, presumably of English blood. She survived her husband and moved, with her younger children, to the vicinity of Georgetown, Ohio, and afterward to Monroe County, in the same State, where she died. She was the mother of Thomas, Elijah, Elisha, David, John and Samuel Gray.
David Gray was an Orthodox Quaker; a quiet man, of noble character, and beloved by all who came within his benign influence. He was a farmer, and lived near Barnesville, Ohio, whence *he moved to Monroe County, in that State, where he died, in 1849, in the prime of life, at the age of about forty years. His wife, Christiana Edg- erton, was a native of Belmont County, Ohio, where her parents, Richard and Mary (Hall) Edgerton, were early settlers. Richard Edgerton was born in North Carolina, of English descent, and was a prominent member of the Society of Friends. The family was noted for the large size of its members, all being six feet or more in height. They were also brainy people. John Edgerton was a noted leader of the "Hicksite" Quakers, and a powerful anti-slavery agitator in Ohio and Indiana. His brother, Joseph Edger- to11, was the leading Orthodox Quaker of his day, and a great preacher. He was vigorous to the
end of his life, which came after he had attained the age of eighty years. The Halls were also a vigorous and intelligent people, and prominent among the Quakers.
David Gray and wife were well-read and intell- igent, and engaged in teaching in early life. Mrs. Gray was liberally educated for that day in Ohio, and her influence went far in preparing her son for the prominent part he was destined to take in the development of modern practical science. She survived her husband many years, reaching the venerable age of seventy-eight, and died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Sarah Cope, in New Sharon, Iowa.
Elisha Gray was born near Barnesville, Bel- mont County, Ohio, August 2, 1835. From a recent work, entitled "Prominent Men of the Great West," the following elegant and carefully prepared account of Professor Gray's life is taken :
"When young Gray was but twelve years of age, he had received three or four months of dis- trict schooling and the usual industrial training given to farmers' lads of his age and condition of life. Over forty years ago his father died, leav- ing Elisha in a large measure dependent upon his own resources for a living. When fourteen years of age he apprenticed himself to a blacksmith, and partly mastered that trade, but, his strength being greatly overtaxed, he was forced to give it up and joined his mother, who had removed to Brownsville, Pennsylvania. Here he entered the employ of a boat-builder, serving three and a- lıalf years' apprenticeship, learning the trade of ship-joiner.
"At the end of this time he was a first-class mechanic and began to give evidence of his
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ELISHA GRAY.
inventive genius. He was handicapped, how- ever, by the meagreness of his education, and was little more than able to experiment with the simplest contrivances. The testimony of one who knew him intimately at this time indicates that he had a consciousness of his own resources and was of the belief that Nature had destined him to accomplish some important work in life. He had a great desire to acquire that funda- mental knowledge which would open for him the way to intelligent research, investigation and ultimate achievements.
"While working as an apprentice, he formed the acquaintance of Prof. H. S. Bennett, now of Fisk University, then a student at Oberlin College, Ohio, from whom he learned that at that institution exceptional opportunities were afforded to students for self-education; and immediately after he had completed his term of service he set out for the college, with barely enough money in his possession to carry him to his destination. He arrived in Oberlin in the summer of 1857, at once going to work as a carpenter, and supported himself by this means during a five-years course of study in the college. As a student he gave especial attention to the physical sciences, in which he was exceptionally proficient, his ingenuity being strikingly mani- fested from time to time in the construction of the apparatus used in the classroom experiments. His cleverness in constructing these various appliances made him a conspicuous character among the students. While pursuing his college course he was not fully decided as to what pro- fession he would take up, and, at one time, he is said to have contemplated entering the ministry, finally deciding, however, not to do so. Perhaps the course of his life was decided by a remark of the mother of the young lady who afterwards became his wife. This was in a joking spirit, to the effect that 'it would be a pity to spoil a good mechanic to make a poor minister.' In fact, to this casual remark the now famous in- ventor has declared himself to be, in great meas- ure, indebted for what he has since accomplished. Truly, the worthy lady must have been of a sound and discriminating judgment, to discover
the hidden worth of the young man, and she, doubtless, more than any one else, in his earlier days, fanned the latent sparks of genius into the flame which, in later days, revealed to his brain the contrivances which have made his name famous, and which have proved of inestimable value to civilization.
"From 1857 to 1861 the Professor devoted himself to unremitting toil and study, and the result was that his naturally delicate constitution was impaired by the great strain upon his mental powers. In 1861, just when the future was brightening with the promise of success, and when he thought his days of struggling were past, he was stricken with an illness from which he did not recover for five years. After his ınar- riage, in 1862, to Miss Delia M. Sheppard, of Oberlin, and, with a view to the betterment of his health, Mr. Gray devoted himself for a time to farming as an occupation. This experience was disappointing, both in its financial results and in its effects upon his health, and he returned to his trade, working in Trumbull County, Ohio, until he was again prostrated by a serious illness. Following this, came two or three years of strug- gle and privation; of alternate hope and disap- pointment, during which he experimented with various mechanical and electrical devices, but was prevented by his straitened circumstances from making any headway in profitable invention. Pressed by his necessities, he was once or twice on the point of giving up his researches and investigations entirely and devoting himself to some ordinary bread-winning industry; but he was stimulated by his faithful and devoted wife and her mother, both of whom had an abiding faith in his genius, and who aided him in his work with all the means at their command, and to whose influence was largely due the fact that he continued his efforts in the field of invention.
"In 1867 a more prosperous era dawned upon him, with the invention of a self-adjusting tele- graph relay, which, although it proved of no practical value, furnished the opportunity of in- troducing him to the late Gen. Anson Stager, of Cleveland, then General Superintendent of the Western Union Telegraph Company, who at once
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ELISHA GRAY.
became interested in 'him and furnished him facil- ities for experimenting on the company's lines. Professor Gray then formed a co-partnership with E. M. Barton, of Cleveland, for the manufacture of electrical appliances, during which time he invented the dial telegraph.
"In 1869 he removed to Chicago, where he continued the manufacture of electrical supplies, General Stager becoming associated with him. Here he perfected the type-printing telegraph, the telegraphic repeater, the telegraphic switch, the anuunciator and many other inventions which have become famous within the short space of a few years. About 1872 he organized the West- ern Electrical Manufacturing Company, which is still in existence and is said to be the largest establishment of its kind in the world. In 1874 he retired from the superintendency of the elec- tric company and began his researches in teleph- ony, and within two years thereafter gave to the world that marvelous production of human genius, the speaking telephone. Noting one day, when a secondary coil was connected with the zinc lining of the bath tub, dry at the time, that when he held the other end of the coil in his left hand and rubbed the lining of the tub with his right, it gave rise to a sound that had the same pitch and quality as that of the vibrating contact- breaker, he began a series of experiments, which led first to the discovery that musical tones could be transmitted over an electrical wire. Fitting up the necessary devices, he exhibited this inven- tion to some of his friends, and the same year went abroad, where he made a special study of acoustics and gave further exhibitions of the inveution, which he developed into the harmonic, or multiplex, telegraph. While perfecting this device, in 1875, the idea of the speaking tele- phone suggested itself, and in 1876 he perfected this invention and filed his caveat in the Patent Office at Washington. That another inventor succeeded in incorporating into his own applica- tion for a telegraph patent au important feature of Professor Gray's invention, and that the latter was thereby deprived of the benefits which he should have derived therefrom, is the practically unanimous decision of many well informed as to
the merits of the controversy to whichi conflict- ing claims gave rise; and the leading scientists and scientific organizations of the world, accord- ing to a certain periodical, have accredited to him the honor of inventing the telephone. In recog- nition of his distinguished achievements, he was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor at the close of the Paris Exposition of 1878, and Amer- ican colleges have conferred upon him the degrees of Doctor of Laws and Doctor of Science.
"For several years after his invention of the telephone he was connected with the Postal Tel- egraph Company, and brought the lines of this system into Chicago, laying them underground. He also devised a general underground telegraph system for the city, and then turned his attention to the invention of the 'telautograph,' a device with which the general public is just now becom- ing familiar through the public accounts of its operation. On March 21, 1893, the first exhibi- tions of the practical and successful operation of this wonderful iustrument were given simultane- ously in New York and Chicago, and on the same day the first telautograph messages were passed over the wires from Highland Park to Waukegan, Illinois. The exhibitions were wit- nessed by a large number of electrical experts, scientists and representatives of the press, who were unanimous in their opinion that Professor Gray's invention is destined to bring about a revolution in telegraphy.
"One of the beauties of electrical science is the expressiveness of its nomenclature, and among the many siguificant names given to electrical inventions none expresses more clearly the use and purpose of the instrument to which it is applied than the term, 'telautograph.' As its name signifies, it enables a person sitting at one end of the wire to write a message or a letter which is reproduced simultaneously in fac simile at the other end of the wire. It is an agent which takes the place of the skilled operator and the telegraphic alphabet. Any one who can write can transmit a message by this means, and the receiving instrument does its work perfectly, without the aid of an operator. The sender of the message may be identified by the fac simile of
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ELISHA GRAY.
his handwriting which reaches the recipient, and pen-and-ink portraits of persons may be as readily transmitted from one point to another as the written messages. In many respects the telautograph promises to be more satisfactory in its practical operations than the telephone. Com- munications can be carried on between persons at a distance from each other with absolute secrecy, and a message sent to a person in his absence from his place of business will be found awaiting him upon his return. These and many other advantages which the telautograph seems to possess warrant the prediction that in the not very distant future telautography will supplant in a measure botli telephony and telegraphy. The transmitter and the receiver of the telauto- graph system are delicately constructed pieces of mechanism, each contained in a box somewhat smaller than an ordinary typewriter machine. The two machines are necessary at each end of a wire, and stand side by side. In transmitting a message an ordinary feed lead pencil is used. At the point of this is a small collar, with two eyes in its rim. To each of these eyes a fine silk cord is attached, running off at right angles in two directions. Each of the two ends of this cord is carried round a small drum supported on a ver- tical shaft. Under the drum, and attached to the same shaft, is a toothed wheel of steel, the teeth of which are so arranged that when either section of the cord winds upon or off its drum, a number of teeth will pass a given point, corres- ponding to the length of cord so wound or un- wound. For instance, if the point of the pencil moves in the direction of one of the cords a dis- tance of one inch, forty of the teeth will pass any certain point. Each one of these teeth and each space represents one impulse sent upon the line, so that when the pencil describes a motion one inch in length, eighty electrical impulses are sent upon the line. The receiving instrument is prac- tically a duplicate of the transmitter, the motions of which, however, are controlled by electrical mechanism. The perfected device exhibited by Professor Gray, and now in operation, is the result of six years of arduous labor, an evolution to which the crude contrivance used in liis earliest
experiments bears little resemblance. The man- ufacture of the instruments will be carried on by the Gray Electric Company, a corporation having offices in New York and Chicago and a large manufacturing establishment just outside the limits of the suburban village of Highland Park, Illinois, of which place Professor Gray has been for many years a resident. Here, in addition to his workshop and laboratory, the renowned inventor has a beautiful home, and his domestic relations are of the ideal kind.
"The title by which Professor Gray has been known for so many years came to hini through liis connection with Oberlin and Ripon (Wis- consin) Colleges as non-resident lecturer in physics, and his general appearance is that of the college professor or the profound student. He has none of the eccentricities which are the con- spicuous characteristics of some of the great inventors of the age, and, when not absorbed in his professional work, he is delightfully genial and companionable.
"When the World's Congress of Electricians assembled in the new Art Institute in Chicago, on the 21st of August, 1893, there were gathered the most noted electricians of all the world. The congress was divided into two sections, one of which-termed the official section-was com- posed of representatives designated by the vari- ous Governments of Europe and the Americas, and was authorized to consider and pass upon questions relating to electrical measurement, nomenclature and various other matters of import to the electrical world. To the other section of the congress were admitted all professional elec- tricians who came properly accredited, and they were permitted to attend the sessions and partici- pate in the deliberations of the congress, although they were not allowed to vote on the technical questions coming before it.
"When it was determined that the convening of international congresses of various kinds should be made one of the leading features of the Columbian Exposition, a body, which became known as the World's Congress Auxiliary of the World's Columbian Exposition, was organized for the purpose of promoting and making all
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B. C. MILLER.
necessary preparations for these gatherings. To Prof. Elisha Gray, of Chicago, this body as- signed the task of organizing the congress of electricians, and placed upon him the responsi- bility of formulating the plans and making all initiatory preparations for what was, unquestion- ably, the most important and interesting conven1- tion of electricians ever held in this or any other country. While the Professor called to his assist- ance many distinguished members of his profes- sion, by virtue of his official position, he was the central and most attractive figure 11 this great movement.
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