HARKI.SON
HARRISON
States and Enjjland in referent-e to the killing of
seal ill the Bering sea; for the Pan -American
congress held in Washington in the winter of
1889-90, in which the South and Central Ameri-
can countries were represented and a system of
reciprocity in trade establisiied; signed the acts
for the admission of the territories of North
Dakota, South Dakota, Washington, Montana,
Idaho and Wyoming as states; secured the ex-
tinguishment of Indian titles to vast tracts of
land formerly claimed by the Indians, tiimugh
commissioners appointe 1 under the direction of
the secretary of tiie interior and which secured
the territory of Oklahoma; quelled the Indian
disturl»ances in the norllnvest. IS90-91; and de-
fined in a messiige to congress the rights of
aliens to the protection of the U.S. government,
in connection with the demand of the Italian
government
for redre.ss
and indem-
nity for loss
caused by
(he Ivnch-
u,.^
Ital-
resi-
of
Or-
La.
his
RESlPE/ycE of £.K-FP£ilt>iftr HARRI50M.
dent
New
lean:
^ Duri
IS administra-
tion the
battle -ships
Maine and Texas, the armed cruiser Xeio York, the protected cruisers Chicago, Baltimore, Charles- ton, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Xeimrk, and the gunboats Yorktown, Bennington, Concord and Machias were completed. These vessels had been planned and constructed largely under Mr. Cleveland's administration and during Mr. Harrison's the battle ships Indiana, Iowa, Massa- chusetts, Oregon and Texaf^, the armed cruiser Brooklyn and the protected cruisers Cincinnati, Columbia, Detroit, Marhlehead, Montgomery, Minne- apolis, Olympia and lialeigh were planned and their keels laid. He was renominated by the R^-pulilican national convention of 1892 at Minnea[«jlis, Minn., and in the general election in November, 189ii, he received .=5,176.108 of the fxjiniiar votes, ex-Presi<lent Cleveland receiving o,.~,.",(j,918 votes; and in the electoral college Mr. Cleveland received 277 votes to 145 for Mr. Harri.son. On retiring from the presidency, March 4, 1893, he resumed the practice of law in Indiana|>olis; and was non-resident professor of constitutional law at the Leland Stanford, Jr., university, Cal.. 1893-98. He was married, Oct. 20, 18r,3. to Caroline Lavinia. daughter of Prof. John "W. Scott of Oxford, Ohio. She died in Washing-
ton, D.C., Oct. 2."), 1892. Tiieir son, Russell Ben-
jamin, was graduated from Lafayette in 1877;
became a journalist; was married in 1884 to
Mary Angeline, daughter of the Hon. Alvin
Saunders, U.S. senator from Iowa; and in 1898
was ap[)ointed assistant inspector-general in
the U.S. volunteer army in the war with
Sixain with the rank of major and assigned
to the statf of Maj.-Gen. Fitzhugh Lee. Their
daughter Mary Scott was married to James
Robert McKee, a merchant of Indianapolis anil
subsequently of New York city. Mr. Harrison
was married a second time in April, 1896, to
Mrs. Mary Lord Dimmick, and on Feb. 21, 1897.
a daugliter was born, who was christened Eliza-
beth. In May, 1898, ilr. Harrison was retained
as principal counsel for Venezuela before the
court of arbitration on the British -Venezueliiii
boundary question. He received the honorary
degree of LL.D. from Miami university in 188S
and from the college of New Jersey in 1889. He
is the author of Indiana Supreme Court licports.
Vols. 1.1-17 and 23-29; This Country o/0?<r.s(1897);
and ailicli's in ina.:^azines and newspa|.ers. He
died in Indinn.qx.lis. Ind.. Marrli 13. 1901.
HARRISON, Caroline Scott, wife of B. nja- min ll:n^i^.)n. twenty-third President of the United States, was born in Oxford, Ohio, Oct. 1, l>i^ji: daugliter of the Rev. Dr. John Witlierspoon and Mary Potts (Neal) Scott; granddaughter of George McElroy and Anna (Rea) Scott; and great-granddaughter of John and Anna (Rea) Scott. Her great- ..^^—
grandfather, John Scott, came to Amer- ica from the North of Ireland and set- tled in Bucks county, Pa., twenty miles north of Philadel- phia. On land pur- chased by him from the proprietary gov- ernment, the first Presbyterian church in America was erected as was the ■ ^
celebrated "log col- ^^;i,ryt^ -cf ^^tzi4^yi^<Urh}. lege," the primi- tive foundation of the College of New Jersey anci Princeton university. Caroline Scott was gradu- ated at the Oxford, Ohio, female seminary, of which her father was president, in 18.'>2; taught mu-sic in Carrollton, Ky., LS-'iS, and on Oct. 20. 18.")3, was married to Benjamin Harrison, a grad- uate of Miami university. 18.12. Her experience in Washington society for six years as wife of a U.S. senator, 1881-87, gave her an acquaintance and experience that peculiarly fitted her to V>o