Page:Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography (1889, volume 6).djvu/498

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466
WHITCOMB
WHITE

but died before it was completed. In addition to her literary ability, Mrs. Whitcher was a clever caricaturist, and illustrated the " Table Talk " when it first appeared in the "Gazette." After her death her writings were collected in two vol- umes: "The Widow Bedott Papers, with an In- troduction by Alice B. Neal " (New York, 1855), and " Widow Spriggins, Mary Elmer, and Other Sketches, by Mrs. P. M. Whitcher ; Edited, with Memoir, by 'Mrs. M. L. Ward Whitcher" (1867).


WHITCOMB, James, senator, b. near Windsor, Vt, 1 Dec, 1795; d. in New York city, 4 Oct., 1852. His father removed to Ohio and settled near Cincinnati when James was quite young. The boy prepared himself to enter Transylvania university, where he maintained himself by teaching during his vacations. On leaving college he entered a law- office, and in 1822 was admitted to the bar of Fay- ette county, Ky., where he practised for two years. He then removed to Bloomington, Ind., where he soon made a reputation in his profession, and in 1826 was appointed prosecuting attorney of his circuit. In discharging the duties of this office he travelled over a large extent of country, and be- came acquainted with many men of note. In 1830 and 1833 he was elected to the state senate, where he did much to stay the progress of the " internal improvement " fever that was then at its highest point. In October, 1836, he was appointed a com- missioner of the general land-office. He was re- appointed by President Van Buren, and continued to serve until the end of the latter's term. Early in 1841 he returned to Indiana and opened a law- office in Terre Haute. Business came quickly, and he soon acquired a lucrative practice. He was nominated for governor in 1843 by the Democrats, and elected by 2,013 majority. In 1846 he was re- elected bv nearly 4,000 majority. When he entered office Indiana was loaded down with a debt upon which no interest had been paid for years ; when he left office the debt had been adjusted, and the public credit was restored. He also, by his efforts, created a public sentiment that demanded the establishment of benevolent and reformatory insti- tutions, and he awakened the people to the impor- tance of establishing common schools and provid- ing a fund for their maintenance. During his term of office he raised five regiments of infantry that represented the state in the Mexican war. The legislature of 1849 elected him to the U. S. senate for the full term, beginning in March of that year, but he was unable, owing to feeble health, to dis- charge his senatorial duties as he wished, and died of a painful disease when he had served little more than half his term. In 1843 he wrote a pamphlet entitled " Facts for the People," which is considered by many one of the most effective arguments against a protective tariff that has ever been written. As a lawyer Gov. Whitcomb ranked high. It was his custom in presenting a case to the jury first to give his opponent's side of the question, that he might the easier demolish it afterward. Thomas A. Hendricks said : " Gov. Whitcomb . . . declared what he believed to be the truth, and trusted to its influence upon men's minds to bring them into common action. He led legislators be- cause it was safest for them to follow. His manner was grave and serious, his voice was full and mu- sical, and his delivery almost without gesture."


WHITCOMB, John, soldier, b. in Lancaster, Worcester co., Mass., about 1720; d. in 1812. He was colonel of Massachusetts troops in the campaign against Crown Point in 1755, in which he served with credit. At the beginning of the Revolution he was not called into service on account of his advanced age, but the soldiers of his regiment were so greatly attached to him that they resolved not to enlist under any other officer, and the veteran, failing to move them from their purpose by appeals to their patriotism, proposed, as an inducement to them to remain in the army, to join them in the ranks. Col. Brewer, however, who had been appointed Whitcomb's successor, relinquished the command, and the latter continued with the regiment at Boston until he was chosen brigadier-general on the Continental establishment, 5 June, 1776, having previously been promoted to the same rank by the Provincial congress. On the 13th of the same month he was made major-general in the Massachusetts service, but he was soon after permitted to retire from the army.


WHITE, Albert Smith, senator, b. in Bloom- ing Grove, Orange co., N. Y., 24 Oct., 1803 ; d. in Stockwell, Tippecanoe co., Ind., 4 Sept., 1864. He was graduated at Union in 1822, in the class with William H. Seward. After studying law he was admitted to the bar in 1825, and soon after- ward removed to Indiana. In March, 1829, he opened an office in Lafayette, where, and in the neighboring town of Stockwell, he resided until his death. During the session of 1828-'9 he re- ported the proceedings of the Indiana legislature for an Indianapolis journal, the first work of the kind that .had been done in the state. In 1830-'l he was assistant clerk of the Indiana house of rep- resentatives, and from 1832 till 1835 he served as its clerk. In 1832 he was a candidate for congress in opposition to Edward A. Hannegan, but was de- feated. Four years later he was elected, serving from 4 Sept., 1837, till 3 March, 1839. The year before he had been an elector on the Whig ticket. In 1839 Mr. White was elected to the U. S. senate as the successor of Gen. John Tipton. There were three candidates, and he was not chosen until the 36th ballot. In the senate he opposed the. annexa- tion of Texas, as well as every other measure that tended to extend the area of slavery. He was also active in securing grants of land to aid in the ex- tension of the Wabash and Erie canal. On the expiration of his senatorial term in 1845 he re- sumed the practice of law, but soon abandoned it to become actively engaged in the construction of railroads. He was president of the Indianapolis and Lafayette road from its organization until 1856, and for three years was also at the head of the Wabash and Western railway. In 1860 Mr. White was elected to congress as a Republican, and served from 4 July, 1861, till 3 March, 1863. He was made chairman of a select committee whose duty it was to consider the question of compen- sated emancipation, and reported a bill appropri- ating $180,000,000 to pay loyal owners for their slaves, and $20,000,000 to aid in the colonization of the freedmen. This measure was recommended and supported by Mr. Lincoln with all the influ- ence of his office. In presenting the bill, Mr. White accompanied it with an elaborate report on slavery as a social and political problem. Ho contended that the white and black races should be separated, and the latter colonized in the equatorial regions of America. He also assured the south that if his proposition were not accepted, their slaves would ultimately be taken from them without compensa- tion. Mr. White, at the close of his term, failed to secure a renomination, mainly on account of his action on this question. He was named by the president one of three commissioners to adjust the claims of citizens of Minnesota and Dakota against the government for Indian depredations. On the death of Caleb B. Smith, 7 Jan., 1864, Presi-