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Salmon Portland Chase

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Salmon Portland Chase Famous memorial

Birth
Cornish City, Sullivan County, New Hampshire, USA
Death
7 May 1873 (aged 65)
New York, New York County, New York, USA
Burial
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA GPS-Latitude: 39.1682139, Longitude: -84.5270944
Plot
Section 30, Lot 10
Memorial ID
View Source
U.S. Senator, Ohio Governor, Presidential Cabinet Secretary. United States Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Born in Cornish, New Hampshire. At the age of 9, his father died and he went to live with his uncle, Philander Chase, who was the Bishop of Ohio. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1826, then went to Washington D.C., where he studied law under William Wirt, who also at this time was United States Attorney General. Wirt was also known to have participated in many of the most important Supreme Court cases of his day. After his studies, he was admitted to the Bar Association in 1829, then moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, where he set up his law practice. He became involved first with the Liberty Party, then the Free Soil Party, which both advocated for the abolition of slavery. Radical abolitionist to some, moderate to others, he was elected as a Senator from Ohio to the United States Senate in 1848, backed by an independent Democrat/Free Soil coalition to oppose the Compromise of 1850 and the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Writing an article for the "New York Times", he laid out the bedrock gospel of the fledgling Republican Party, assuring his political rise. Elected Governor of Ohio in 1855, he competed with several candidates, including Abraham Lincoln, for the 1860 Republican presidential nomination. Lincoln won the Republican nomination and the general election that fall. Lincoln asked Chase to be Secretary of the Treasury. Although Chase did not have a professional background in finance, he accepted the offer. His tenure, which was during the American Civil War, ironically threw him in most often with Lincoln, who irritated him, and with Secretary of State William H. Seward, whom he distrusted. However, Lincoln valued his competence and the political savvy that enabled him to get financial measures passed through Congress. He held Lincoln's trust (the President often preferred Chase's military opinions to those of his War and Navy secretaries and shared in the social prominence of Chase's daughter, famous hostess Kate Chase Sprague), but nevertheless, Chase was lured into another attempt at the presidency. As a member of a faction increasingly resistant to Lincoln's Reconstruction aims, Chase secretly consented to make a bid for the 1864 Republican nomination. In an anti-Lincoln letter circulated by Kansas Senator Samuel Pomeroy, dubbed the "Pomeroy Circular," he was touted as the man for President. Embarrassed when the letter was made public, the secretary offered his resignation. Lincoln refused the offer, but the damage was done. Though he campaigned for Lincoln, their relationship was ruined. When he offered his resignation again late in 1864, it was accepted. But Lincoln still valued him and in December appointed him Chief Justice of the United States. He was the first Chief Justice to preside over an impeachment trial of a President of the United States (that being Andrew Johnson in 1868 who was acquitted). He later would become a Democrat and while he was mentioned from time to time for the presidency, in the early 1870s his health began to fail, which put a halt to the idea, meaning he never achieved his ultimate goal. He later would die of a paralytic stroke. He was reinterred at Spring Grove Cemetery Oct 14 1886 from Oak Hill Cemetery Washington D.C.
U.S. Senator, Ohio Governor, Presidential Cabinet Secretary. United States Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Born in Cornish, New Hampshire. At the age of 9, his father died and he went to live with his uncle, Philander Chase, who was the Bishop of Ohio. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1826, then went to Washington D.C., where he studied law under William Wirt, who also at this time was United States Attorney General. Wirt was also known to have participated in many of the most important Supreme Court cases of his day. After his studies, he was admitted to the Bar Association in 1829, then moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, where he set up his law practice. He became involved first with the Liberty Party, then the Free Soil Party, which both advocated for the abolition of slavery. Radical abolitionist to some, moderate to others, he was elected as a Senator from Ohio to the United States Senate in 1848, backed by an independent Democrat/Free Soil coalition to oppose the Compromise of 1850 and the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Writing an article for the "New York Times", he laid out the bedrock gospel of the fledgling Republican Party, assuring his political rise. Elected Governor of Ohio in 1855, he competed with several candidates, including Abraham Lincoln, for the 1860 Republican presidential nomination. Lincoln won the Republican nomination and the general election that fall. Lincoln asked Chase to be Secretary of the Treasury. Although Chase did not have a professional background in finance, he accepted the offer. His tenure, which was during the American Civil War, ironically threw him in most often with Lincoln, who irritated him, and with Secretary of State William H. Seward, whom he distrusted. However, Lincoln valued his competence and the political savvy that enabled him to get financial measures passed through Congress. He held Lincoln's trust (the President often preferred Chase's military opinions to those of his War and Navy secretaries and shared in the social prominence of Chase's daughter, famous hostess Kate Chase Sprague), but nevertheless, Chase was lured into another attempt at the presidency. As a member of a faction increasingly resistant to Lincoln's Reconstruction aims, Chase secretly consented to make a bid for the 1864 Republican nomination. In an anti-Lincoln letter circulated by Kansas Senator Samuel Pomeroy, dubbed the "Pomeroy Circular," he was touted as the man for President. Embarrassed when the letter was made public, the secretary offered his resignation. Lincoln refused the offer, but the damage was done. Though he campaigned for Lincoln, their relationship was ruined. When he offered his resignation again late in 1864, it was accepted. But Lincoln still valued him and in December appointed him Chief Justice of the United States. He was the first Chief Justice to preside over an impeachment trial of a President of the United States (that being Andrew Johnson in 1868 who was acquitted). He later would become a Democrat and while he was mentioned from time to time for the presidency, in the early 1870s his health began to fail, which put a halt to the idea, meaning he never achieved his ultimate goal. He later would die of a paralytic stroke. He was reinterred at Spring Grove Cemetery Oct 14 1886 from Oak Hill Cemetery Washington D.C.

Bio by: Ugaalltheway

Gravesite Details

43300=interment id springgrove.org



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Apr 25, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/192/salmon_portland-chase: accessed ), memorial page for Salmon Portland Chase (13 Jan 1808–7 May 1873), Find a Grave Memorial ID 192, citing Spring Grove Cemetery, Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.