|
LONG, John Davis, a Representative from Massachusetts; born in Buckfield, Oxford County, Maine,
October 27, 1838; attended the common schools at Buckfield and Hebron Academy, Maine; was
graduated from the academic department of Harvard University in 1857; taught school in Westford
Academy, Massachusetts; studied law at Harvard Law School and in private offices; was admitted to
the bar in 1861 and commenced practice in Buckfield, Maine; moved to Boston, Mass., in 1863 and
continued the practice of law, and in 1869 moved to Hingham, Mass.; member of the State house of
representatives 1875-1878 and served the last three years as speaker of the house; Lieutenant
Governor of Massachusetts in 1879; Governor of Massachusetts 1880-1882; elected as a Republican
to the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses (March 4, 1883-March 3, 1889); declined to
be a candidate for renomination in 1888; continued the practice of his profession in Boston; appointed
Secretary of the Navy in the Cabinet of President McKinley and served from March 5, 1897, until
May 1, 1902, when he resigned; resumed the practice of law in Boston, with residence in Hingham,
Mass.; president of overseers of Harvard University and of the Authors Club of Boston; died in
Hingham, Mass., August 28, 1915; interment in Hingham Cemetery.
BibliographyHess, James W. John D. Long and Reform Issues in
Massachusetts Politics, 1870-1889. New England Quarterly 33 (March 1960):
57-73; Long, John Davis. Journal. Edited by Margaret Long. Rindge, N.H.: R.R.
Smith, 1956.
|