ORR, James Lawrence, statesman, b. in Cray- tonville, Anderson co., S. C., 12 May, 1822 ; d. in St. Petersburg, Russia, 5 May, 1873. He was graduated at the University of Virgjinia in 1842, studied law, was ad- mitted to the bar, and practised at Anderson, S. C, where he also es- tablished and edit- ed the •' Gazette." He sat in the state legislature in 1844- '57, where he de- nounced nullifica- tion, and was elect- ed and re-elected to congress as a Demo- crat, serving from 3 Dec, 1849, till 3 March, 1859. With the exception of his
original contest,
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there was no opposition to his efection. In con- gress, while he deprecated the agitation of the sla- very question, he was a devoted friend of the Union. He opposed the compromise measures that were introduced by Henry Clay. While he was a mem- ber of the 33d congress he was appointed chairman of the committee on Indian affairs, and made an elaborate report on the best method of civilizing the various tribes, which, in the case of several of tliem, was adopted with considerable success. On the as- sembling of the 35th congress in December, 1857, he was chosen speaker. As a member of the South- ern Rights convention in Charleston, S. C, in May, 1851, he opposed the policy, while maintaining the right, of secession in the several states, and to his efforts is attributed the failure of the secession ordinance that was framed on that occasion. On 4 July, 1854, Mr. Orr, with Stephen A. Douglas and others, addressed a Democratic meeting in Phila- delphia, taking a strong stand against the Know- Nothing party, and is said by his arguments to have prevented many public men from joining its ranks. At the Secession convention he earnestly opposed the withdrawal of South Carolina, but when he found that the state was determined to secede he acquiesced and declared that he would yield his judgment and cast his lot with his state. He was subsequently appointed one of the three Confederate commissioners that visited Washing- ton in December, I860, to treat with the govern- ment for the surrender of the U. S. forts in Charles- ton harbor and to transact other business. On his return to South Carolina, he organized a rifle regi- ment which he led in the field until 1862, when he was elected a member of the Confederate senate, and served until the dispersion of that body at the end of the war. He was chosen governor of the state of South Carolina under President Johnson's plan of reconstruction, and served until 1868. In 1866 he represented his state in the Philadelphia constitutional union convention, and in 1872 he was sent to the jSTational Republican convention. In 1870 he was elected circuit judge for South Carolina, which office he held until his appoint- ment as U. S. minister to Russia in 1872. His death took place in St. Petersburg within two months after the presentation of his credentials to the Russian government.
ORR, John, soldier, b. in 1747; d. in Bedford,
Hillsborough co., N. H., 23 Dec, 1822. He served
in the war of the Revolution and was so severely
wounded at the battle of Bennington, Vt., that he
was crippled for life. He was for many years a
representative and senator in the New Hampshire
legislature, also state counsellor, and served for
twenty years as justice of the peace. — His son,
Benjaniin, lawyer, b. in Bedford, N. H., 1 Dec,
1772; d. in Brunswick, Me., 5 Sept., 1828, was
graduated at Dartmouth in 1798, studied law with
Samuel S. Wilde, and began to practise in Tops-
ham, Sagadahoc co.. Me., but subsequently removed
to Brunswick, where he attained eminence at the
chancery bar. He was elected to congress as a
representative from Massachusetts, and served
from 1 Dec, 1817, till 3 March, 1819. He was the
author of "An Oration on the Death of Washing-
ton " (1800). — Another son, Isaac, clergyman, b.
in Bedford. N. H., in 1793; d. in Amherst, Mass.,
28 April, 1844, was graduated at Yale in 1814.
He studied theology, was ordained and became a
teacher at the asylum for the deaf and dumb in
Hartford, Conn., and afterward labored as a mis-
sionary among the colored people in Washington,
D. C, and other southern cities, being employed
by the American colonization society. He was pro-
ficient in mathematics and the natural sciences,
and had a talent for mechanics, one of his inven-
tions being an air-tight stove. He was a volumin-
ous writer for the newspaper and periodical press,
contributing forty-five letters signed " Hampden "
to the New York " Commercial Advertiser," and
eighty letters over the signature of "Timoleon"
to the Boston " Courier." Among his unpublished
manuscripts is a commentary on the books of
" Daniel " and " Revelation."
ORR, John William, wood-engraver, b. in Ire-
land, 31 March. 1815 ; d. in Jersey City, N. J., 4
March, 1887. , He was brought to this country in
infancy, his father settling in Buffalo, N. Y. In
1836 John went to New York city, where he stud-
ied drawing under William Redfield. one of the
most skilful of the early engravers on wood. The
following year he was awarded a silver medal by
the Mechanics' institute for the best specimen of
engraving. The same year he began business on
his own account in Buffalo, but he removed to
Albany in 1842, where he was employed in making
illustrations for the state reports on geology. In
the latter year he received a gold medal from the
State agricultural society " for the best specimen
of domestic animals engraved on wood." In 1844
he went to New York city, where the remainder
of his business life was spent. His first important
work was for the frontispieces for Harper's " Illus-
trated Shakespeare." When Mr. Orr removed to
New York, wood-engraving was but little used, but
by advertising extensively, engaging the best assist-
ants he could procure, and by introducing new in-
ventions, he placed his establishment in the front
rank in his profession, which position it retained for
more than a quarter of a century. He employed
skilled English, French, and German engravers,
and adopted an original device for economizing their
time. He engaged a young man to read to them
daily, and it was found that the men became too
much interested to waste their time in discussions
and arguments that previously had caused them
to neglect their work. Mr. Orr was an active mem-
ber of the society of Odd Fellows, and from 1862
till 1871 edited and published " The American Odd
Fellow," the official organ of that order.
ORRY, Lonis Victor, French missionaiy, b. in Longumean in 1642 ; d. in Three Rivers, Canada, in May, 1691. He united with the RecoUets, came to Canada in 1657, and was attached to the missions of Lake Superior. He tried to form an establishment in the deserted island of Michipi-