I —) r?-i 006 638 764 10 F 869 .L8 P4 Copy 1 PERSONAL SKETCH ! Otis, Harrison Gray: Union soldier and officer throughout the War of the Rebellion; brigadier-general and brevet major-general of U. S. Volunteers in the war against Spam; editor ol the VnCTeles Timea (1882-1912). Born in Washington County, Oh.o, February in. 1837. so °n of Stephen Otis an,! Sarah (Dyar) Otis; he was the youngest of sixteen children in his father's two families His parents were pioneer citizens o Southern Ohio his father having emigrated from Fast Poultney, Vt., in 1800, at the age of ..;, to the Far West, settling in the Ohio Company's Purchase a, Marietta; his mother »1 -a native of N Scotia, emigrated with her parents from Boston earlj in the century, settling in .he Muskingum Vallej in Southern Oh.o. His grandfather was a patriot soldier in the Revolutionary War, honorably dis- charged and pensioned. The Otis stock has produced James Ot.s, famous as a Revo- lufio g nan patrio) and ,„,,„„, and the first Harrison Gray Otis, once United States Senator from Massachusetts The subject of this sketch was reared on a farm, attending the common schools of Southern Ohio for three months in each winter, until the age of fourteen, when he eft horn o ,,arn the printing trade. He spent rm of less than six months in Wetherbys Academy, Lowell, Ohio, in 1856-57, and afterwards graduated from Granger's Commercial College. Columbus, Ohio. He enlisted as a private in the Twelfth Ohio Volunteers June 25, 1861, w-as pro- moted to Mrs, sergeant March 1, 1862; second lieutenant, November 12, 1862 first Heutenant May 30, 1863, and to captain, July 1, 1864 on winch date he was transferred, ! ," the consolidation of the two regiments, to the Twenty-third Ohio Veteran Volunteers, of wind, Rutherford B. Hayes was colonel and William McK.nley a cap t;m , and subsequently breve, major of U. S Vols (Both of them subsequen I re-, dents of the United States., He took par. in many actions with the Army of Wes f the Shenandoah; was wounded at \„,ie,an, September 17, 1862, and again .severely, a. Kernstown, July 24, 1864. In the winter of 1864-'65 he was assigned, as th. -en, or capta.n present for duty, to Army of the Potomac, and Vrmy of the Shenandoah; was wounded at . September 17, 1862, and again (sev nter of 1864-'65 he was assigned, as the nmand of l„s regimen, at ( umberland, Maryland, and led it up the Shenandoah Valley to Harrisonburg, where he was provost marshal up to the close of the war, when he was honorably discharged, and later was brevetted major and lieutenant- colonel "for gallant and meritorious services during the war," and honorably dis- charged -Wgust 1. 1865. He had served forty-nine months in the army, in field and camp, participated in fifteen engagements, was tw.ee wounded in battle, and received seven promotions, including two brevets. In the course of his military serve- in the War Of the Rebellion he made a ha, tie record embracing the following actions, in which he was a participant; Searcy Creek. W. Va . July 17. 1861; Carnifex Ferry, Va., Sep.. 10 1861; Bull Run Bridge. Va . Aug 27. 1852; Frederick, Md„ Sept. 1-'. 1862, (skirmish), South Mountain, Sep, 14, 1862; Antietam, Sept. 17. 1862, (wounded,; Blue Sulphur Springs W Va Sep,. 1863, (skirmish); Boyer's Ferry, W. Va., Nov. 1863, (skirmish); Meadow Bluff, W Va., Dee. 14. 1863, (picket fight); Princeton Va May. 1864 (skirmish); Clovd Mountain, Va., May 9, 1864; Nev, River Bridge, Va., May 10. 1864; Quaker Church, (Lynchburg), Va., June 17-18, 1864; Cabelltown, Va.. July 20, 1864; Kernstown, Va., July 24, 1864, (severely wounded,. He became owner of a small newspaper and printing plant at Marietta. Ohio, in 1865- was foreman of the Government I'm, ling Office at Washing,,.,,. 1869 and 1870; chief of a division in the United States Patent Office, 1871 to 1876; editor and pub lisher of the Santa Barbara Press, 1876 to 1880; principal United States ["reasury A,,,.,,, i n charge ol th< Seal Islands of Alaska from 1879 to 1881. "Adapted from a sketch originally prepared for James 'I'. White & Co., publishers, New York, at their request F«i I ;•• 2 In 1882 he was offered by the State Department the appointment of U. S. Consul for the Samoan [slands, and in 1884 a similar appointment at Tien Tsin, China, both of which he declined. He became a fourth owner in the Los Angeles 'limes August 1, 1882, and in October, 1884, joined in the organiaztion of The Times Mirror Company for its con- tinued publication, and lias been its president and general manager since 1886. He is also a director of the Times-Mirror Printing and Binding House. President of the Board of Control "f the Los Angeles Suburban Homes Company, director in the Cal- ifornia-Mexico Land and Cattle Company, and president of the Colorado River Land Company, (a Mexican corporation) associated with the former — which corporations together own and operate a large tract of delta lands (once desert) lying along the Rio Colorado of the West, mainly on the Peninsula of Lower California,, Mexico. In 1898 he served in the Spanish-American War. and in 1899 in the war to sup- press the Filipino insurrection, as brigadier-general of Volunteers, having been appointed by President McKinley, May. 1898, and assigned, first, to the Independent Division, Philippine Islands Expeditionary Forces, at Camp Merrit, California; later to the command of the second section of the fourth sea expedition to the Philippines, and subsequently to the Eighth Army Corps at Manila, where he commanded lie First Brigade of the First Division, and later the First Brigade of the Second Division, hold ing the left of the American line on the northerly front id' Manila. He was present, in command of his brigade, at the Filipino outbreak on the night of February 4, 1899, and participated with his command, constantly on the advance line, in all the siihse quent actions up to and including the capture of Mololos, March 31, 1890. His brigade constituted the principal force engaged in the assault upon and capture oi Caloocan on February ID, 1899. On March 25. 1899, he was ordered, with his brigade, to "pierce the enemy's center" in the first advance from La Loma Church northward to Malolos, the temporary Filipino capital. This order he successfully executed at the head of his brigade. On April _'. 1899. Brigadier-General Otis was relieved of his command, at Malolos, by his own request, and returned to the United States, where he was honorably dis- charged from the military service, July 2. 1899. He was subsequently brevetted major- general "for meritorious conduct in action at Caloocan, March 25, 1899." General Otis is a stalwart independent Republican in politics, a steady opponent of political insurgency, and trains with the Old Republican Guard. He was Official Reporter of the Ohio House of Representatives at the session of 1866-'67; was a dele- gate from Kentucky to the National Republican Convention at Chicago which nomi- nated Abraham Lincoln for President in 1860; and also a delegate from the District of Columbia to the Soldiers and Sailors' National Convention at Chicago, in 1868, which first nominated General U. S. Grant for the Presidency. He is a member of the American Academy of Sciences, Associated Press and American Newspaper Publishers' Association; also a member of the Grand Army of the Republic, Military Order of the Loyal Legion, Society of the Army of the Potomac. Military Order of Foreign Wars. United Spanish War Veterans. National Society of the Army of the Philippines, Veteran Army of the Philippines. Order of Sons of the American Revolution, and of several local Clubs and Societies He was appointed by the President a commissioner on the part of the United States to attend the Centennial of Mexican Independence in September. 1910. and dis- charged that function acceptably to his government. On his return to Los Angeles, on the first day of October, 1910, he found that the building of his newspaper, the Los Angeles Times, had been criminally dynamited early on that morning, blown up and destroyed by lire, sacrificing the lives of twenty of his loyal workmen. By common admission. The Times has had a very large hand in the brave and persistent task of achieving that high measure of industrial liberty and prosperity which have made Los Angeles the leader, in these respects, among cities of like population in the United State- In May. 1911. he represented the Chamber of Commerce of Los Angeles at the Lake Mohonk Conference on International Arbitration. (17th annual session). In June. 1911, he was a member of an official conference called by tin- Secretary of the Interior, under the approval of the President, to consider the flood situation on the Rio Colorado of the West in its lower reaches. The conference, mainly composed of engineers, made a unanimous report to the President, which was approved by him. He married at Lowell, Ohio., September 11, 1859, Miss Eliza A. Wetherby, who died November 12, 1904, and who was actively associated with her husband in journal- ism for more than a quarter of a century. She is the author of a noted volume of poetry and prose entitled "California. Where Sets the Sun" (1905). Of that union came a son, Harrison Gray, born 1861, died in infancy; and four daughters: Lilian, born September 22, 1864, died March, 1905; Marian, born July 1, 1866 (wife of Harry (.handler); Mabel, born May 28, 1871 (wife of Franklin Booth), and Esther, born in 1876, died in infancy. Residence: "The Bivouac", Westlake, Los Angeles. Office address: Times Building, Los Angeles, California. [In this personal sketch no attempt has been made to give a history of the Los Angeles Times, or even the chief events of its notable career. The business history of the paper and of its publishing company are found in twenty-live different annual reports rendered to the stockholders by General ( >tis in Ins capacity as president and general manager. These reports, not being public property, are preserved in the archives of the office. The editorial course and conduct of the paper have been written in its editorial and news columns from day to day during the thirty years of its life, and is i ipen history. General Otis has long been a conspicuous, aggressive anil steadfast defender of the principle of freedom in the industries, and his journal, the Los Angeles Times, is freely acknowledged to be the foremost champion of the cause. A new and more imposing Times Building is in course of erection on the ruins of the destroyed structure. Despite the awful diNasicr to it. The Times has expanded from nothing in 1881 to one of the first newspaper properties extant in 1912 — from a circulation in 1881 of about one thousand copies daily to an average circulation in 1912 of approximately 53„000 copies daily and 84,1)01) copies on Sundays It- gross earnings have reached a million and a half dollars yearly; and during the period between August 4, 1890, and Septem- ber 30, 1910, the office paid to its loyal and well-satisfied non-union workmen., in salaries and wages, the telling aggregate cash sum of $4,025,122.68 — mainly to skilled labor.] "THE CRIME OF THE CENTURY" Destruction by dynamite and fire of the Times Building, October 1, 1910. (From a poem entitled "The Times Holocaust", published after the fateful event.) "High on the ruins of the battlement The Eagle stood, unscatched, above the wreck Of dynamite and death. The morning sun Threw o'er its grimy wings a sheen of gold To symbolize that Liberty shall live, While in the arms of God the martyred dead Shall rest eternally, and willing hands Shall take their places here and rear again A thousand temples unto Liberty For every one that falls." iHUirriy mtu Cam, izqualtta of (Oppurtmiitg. jhiiutatrial ifrrruam * u c H.G.O. 1837 / 1859 f 1833 ) 1904 \ 1861 / 1865 , 1398) 1399$ Holiday Greetings — 1910 FROM Gen. Harrison Gray Otis, with timely salutations, TO HIS FRIEND "(§ura" Sl]i? ICua Angelas amirs Dieu te garde! Health, long life and happiness! "Ours" Dec. 4 1881 Oct 1 1910 Aug. 1 1882 Dec 25 1910 " tCnrii (&ui> of Basts ! tic uiitli us urt. Irst me fornrt, lrst mr fururt!" AMERICAN CITIZEN, SOLDIER AND JOURNALIST - DEFENDER OF THE FAITH ' PRINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION II GEN HARRISON GRAY OTIS LIBRARY OF CONGRESS IIIIII '1 1 III II 1" \ 006 638 764 1