<&-'■ . u r . ^ %J» ^-..^^ /JK-: "W" ^^^S&\ X.^' ' :. -^^o^ °*<^^»- '^ov^ :i^^^ -^AO^ oV'^^^ii:\- ^_<-^ ^ ^V ^ o G^ <^ ^.TTT'' ^ 4 o .^ o.A' ,G^ "^ *'T;.' / . .o' rO' 'miim^' mBU d i\t yife MES GORE KING ;y HIS BROTEBR, CHaRLES KING, f*i»m mumV» Mvrckfttittt^ nittir«»tB«' KEWYORK: J']a?^1\KD BT OEOBvjE V/. -WOOD, »0, ^ DUTCH STREEt. 1864. a ik ^''bjJi.flSnxia-: maix ai t\t Jift JAMES GORE KING. , BY HTS BROTHER, CHARLES KINO. From Hnnt^K Merchants^ ma^av.ine. NEW YORK: PRINTED BY GEORGE W. WOOD, NO. 2 DUTCH STREET. 1854. JAMES GORE KIIG. The Chamber of Commerce of New York, at a special meeting, held oa Wednesday, 5th October, in order to express their sense of the great public loss sustained in the death of James Gore King, adopted the following among other resolutions : — Resolved, That the Chamber do declare their sense of the great intelli- gence and high moral worth of the deceased ; of his strictest integrity and honor ; of his great public spirit ; of his general usefulness ; of his liberal Christian charities, and of the high tone and elevation of his manly nature. Resolved, That the Chamber have no higher example than the character and career of their late associate, to point out to the admiration and imitation of the rising- members of the mercantile community. Of him thus commemorated by his associates — and in the spirit of the second resolution, which holds him up as an example to those who are com- ing forward on the scene which he so long adorned— it is proposed to pre- sent a faithful memoir, which cannot, it is believed, be without interest or encouragement, especially to the young. James Gore King was the third son of Rufus King and Mary Alsop his wife. He was born in the city of New York, on the 8th of May, 1791, at the residence of his grandfather, John Alsop, No. 38 Smith-street, afterward known as 62 "William-street. When just turned of five years of age he was taken, with the rest of the family, to England, to which country Mr. Rufus King was appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary by Washington, in 1796. Before he had reached his seventh year he was placed with Mr. Brown, who kept a select boarding-school of high reputation at Kensington Gravel Pits, near London, and there he remained, making satisfactory progress, until 1801, when, for the benefit of acquiring the French language, James was sent over to Paris to the care of the late Daniel Parker, an old friend of Mr. R. King, and long a resident in that city. Mr. Parker sent him to a school of high repute in Paris, where he soon acquired a thorough knowledge and mastery of the language, while prosecuting other studies. 4 James Gore King. In 1803, when Chancellor Livinofston, tl'jen American minister in Paris » 1 r was about returning home, he took with him our young studei t, in order that, in conformity with the well-considered views of his father as to the in>- portance of a youth receiving his education, in part at le st, in the cmntry and among the people where and with whom he was to live, he might titiisb his studies at h'O'me. After a short interval passed with his parents in this city, James was confided to the care of the Rev. Dr. Gardiner, Rector of Trinity Church, Boston, who received him with some few other private pupils into his house, and fitted them for Harvard University. Into the University accordingly, of which his father was a graduate, he entered in 1&06, and was graduated from it with honor ia 1810. He commenced almost immediately the study of law as his future profes- sion, with the venerable Peter Van Schaick, of Kinderhook, then old and nearly blind, but to whom, as to Milton — " The celestial light Shone inward, and tbe m.iDd thro' all her powers Irradiated." Mr. Van Schaick was an o^'d-fashioned, black-letter lawyer, loving his pro- fession, and adorning it by an upright life, and by sound and varied scholar- ship. Under his teaching and his example, our young student acquired that thoroughness which in all things characterrzed his after life. With the su- perficial he was never content to rest satisfied. This habit he owed not a little to Mr. Van Schaick, of whom he always spoke with great regard and reverence'. After some months spent under the roof of Mr. Van Schaick, James went to the law-school at Litchfield, then in its brightest estate, and under the instruction of Taopan Reeve and Judge Gould completed his ele- mentary education as a lawyer. Returning home to New York, and thrown by family association into the- society of the late Arch. Gracie and his household, in February, 1812, he married Sarah, the second daughter of Mr. Gracie, and from that time was led to turn his attention rather to commerce than the law as a profession. The war, however, which soon followed, left little opportunity for commerce^ and he was fain to wait for peace before entering into business. In the sum- mer of 1814, when a very large militia force was called out by the general' •government and stationed in this city, Mr. J. G. King was selected as his As- sistant Adjutant General by Major Gen^ Ebeuezer Stevens, who commanded in chief the whole militia contingent, in subordinatiorr to the general officer of the United States army, to whom was assigned the command of the mili- tary district, and especially the defence of the city of New York. Mr. King tutered with characteristic method, intelligence, and ardor upon this befor"* James Gore Kiny. d- untried field of duty, and he acquitted himself most abundantly to the satis- faction of his commander, and with general acceptance to all with whom he was brought into official relation. Th« troops were disbanded at the com- mencement of the winter of 1814-15, and with the peace which was con- cluded at Ghent in December, 1814, closed his military service. In the year 1815 he established, under the firm of James G. King & Co., a commission house in this city, in connection and partnership with his father in-law Arch. Gracie, and Mr. Walker, of Petersburg, Va., an old part- ner of Mr. Gracie, and was measureably successful in business. In the year 1818, however, upon the recommendation of his father-in-law, Mr. Gracie, he broke up h s business in this city and went to Liverpool, and there, with his brother-in-law, Archibald Gracie, Jr., established the house of King & Gracie. During a residence of nearly six years in this chief of English seaports, with a large business, and encountering heavy responsibilities, Mr. K. so skillfully steered his bark, that in despite of the wide-spread calamities which both in England and America marked the years 1822, '23, '24, and which overwhelmed his own nearest and dearest connections in this country, he maintained his own high character, fulfilled all the responsibilities of his house, and on leaving England in J 824, in compliance with advantageous arrangements made for his future residence in New York, left behind him an enviable name and reputation for urbanity, intelligence, promptness and in- tegrity. He made many fast and valuable friends while abroad, and retained their good will and confidence unabated to the day of his death. While in Liverpool he was brought into relations of business and much personal intimacy with the late John Jacob Astor, who was on a brief visit to Europe; and such was the impression made upon that sagacious observer and almost unerring judge of character, by the business tact and prompt- ness of Mr. King and his general character, that, upon his return to the • United States, Mr. Astur invited him to come to New York, and take the chief direction of the American Fur Company, with a very liberal salary. The otter was a tempting one, and made at a time when, owing to the mercantile disasters already alluded to, the prospects of Mr. King's house in Liverpool were not very promising. But the business to which he was in- vited was wholly new to him, and moreover it was in his character to prefer an independent position — though it might be less lucrative — to any how- ever advantageous of which the tenure was at the pleasure of others. Mr. King therefore declined, but with >uch expression of his sense of the liberal kindness of Mr. Astor as was both natural and fitting; and Mr. Astor con- tinued his fast friend always, and had another occasion of proving his friendship about the close of 1823. Consulted by Mr. Prime, then at the head of the house of Prime, Ward, Sands e into New York in the course of the spring of 1837. The banks almost everywhere had imprudently increased their loans, the federal gov- ernment, with its specie circular, aggravated the evil, and universal bank- ruptcy seemed impending. The State of New York, for a loan not exceed- ing half a million of dollars, at 6 per cent interest, publicly advertised, re- ceived not a bid. Mr. King was too sagacious not to perceive alike the magnitude and the extent of the danger ; but he also saw and knew that mutual aid and co- operation would mitigate, if they could not control, the impending storm* He sought earnestly and anxiously to avert especially the loss and the dis grace of a suspension of specie payments in a time of universal peace, and when no scourge of pestilence or famine was at hand to paralyze industry or to extenuate voluntary insolvency. But the concurrence of causes pecuniary and pohtical — which, however, it is no part of this memoir to discuss, or further to notice — overbore all individual efforts and opinions. The banks of the city of New York, after a long and honest struggle, came to the con- clusion that a suspension of specie payments was unavoidable, and indeed indispensible, in order to avert the necessity of further sacrifice of property by the struggling merchants in the efibrt to meet their engagements. Accordingly, after deliberate consultation among the oftieers and direc- 2 10 James Oore King. tors of the banks, on Wednesday, 10th of May, the following notice was issued : — "notice to the public in relation to the banks. " At a meeting last evening of all the banks in this city, except three, it was Resolved, That, under existing circumstances, it is expedient and necessary to suspend payments in specie. In the mean time the notes of all the banks will be received at the different banks as usual in payment of debts and in deposits ; and as the indebtedness of the community to the banks exceeds three times the amount of their liabilities to the public, it is hoped and expected that the notes of the different banks will pass current as usual, and that the state of the times will soon be such as to render the resumption of specie payments practicable." The Manhattan and Merchants' Bank and the Bank of America, the three dissenting at the meeting on the previous evening, and hoping, perhaps, still to sustain their specie payments, were borne away the next day, and fell in with the rest. The merchants and traders of the city met the same day at the Exchange, in pursuance of a call numerously signed by leading men of all pursuits and parties ; and to an overflowing meeting Mr. James G. King presented him- self, and after reading the call, enforced its objects with great power and eflfect. He inculcated " the necessity of mutual aid and forbearance," as we find him reported in the journals of the day, " and that all should put their shoulder to the wheel, without looking back now to the causes of our calam- ities, though a time to examine into and proclaim these causes would surely come. He said it was with deep humiliation as a merchant that he wit- nessed this hour ; and it was only in the belief that the suspension of specie payments by the banks would be temporary, and in the conviction that in order to hasten the period of resumption the co-operation of all was required, to sustain the credit of the bills of the banks, that he had consented to pre- sent himself to the meeting." He concluded by moving the following reso- lutions, which were seconded by Mr. N. Prime, and adopted : — " Resolved,^' (after reciting the resolution of the banks just given,) " That, re- lying upon tiie above statement, we have full confidence in the ultimate ability of the banks of this city to redeem all their bills and notes, and that we will our- selves continue to receive, and we recommend all our fellow-citizens to receive them as heretofore. That in an emergency like the present, it is alike the dictate of patriotism and self-interest to abstain from all measures tending to aggravate existing evils, and by mutual forbearance and mutual aid to mitigate as far as practicable the exist- ing difficulties, and thus most essentially to assist in the restoration of specie payments." These resolutions were put separately, and each was unanimously adopted. The sanction thus given by all the leadiog men of business to an accom- plished/act produced an instantaneous effect ; a sense of relief was felt, as if James Gore King. 11 a heavy pressure were removed. Stocks and other securities rose in price, and business became more active. It is a coincidence which at the time was gratifying to Mr. King, and in the retrospect is now not less gratifying to his fiimily, that on occasion of suspending specie payments by the banks in 1812-13, during the war with England, Mr. Rufus King was called from his retirement on Long Island to urge the same views as those presented by his son in 1837, and that in each case the speaker carried his hearers and the country with him. In 1812-13, however, New York only followed ; in ISS? it was her hard and humiliating fortune to lead the way in suspension ; and her example swept away, as the news of it sped, the banking institutions East, North, South, and West. The Pennsylvania Bank of the United States, which had succeeded the National Bank destroyed by President Jackson, was obliged to yield with the other banks of Pennsylvania, and closed its vaults on the day after the suspension in New York. Throughout the summer of 183Y, Mr. King, with others of like views, was earnest in preparing measures for the speediest possible return to specie payments. Disasters, however, thickened around — the failure in London of three of the largest houses interested in the American trade — followed as this unavoidably was by failures in the United States — and the return of a large amount of sterling bills drawn on those houses, added to the general consternation, and of course to the obstacles to a speedy redemption. Mr. King, however, never lost his self-possession, nor confidence in the opinion, and in the expression of it, that the banks and the general mercantile com- munity had ample means and an honest purpose to meet, ultimately, all their engagements. Under such impressions, both with a view to inspire on the other side confidence in such a result, and to judge for himself of the actual condition of money aflfairs there, he embarked in the month of Octo- ber for England. He was warmly received and eagerly consulted by bank- ers and merchants in London ; and did not fail, by his calm and assured tone and judgment about the means and responsibilities of his own country- men, to allay much of the apprehension which panic and ignorance of the extent of resources possessed by our commercial community and banks, had produced. When he had accomplished thus much, he went further, and undertook to show to the leading capitalists and to the Bank of England, that in their own interest, if from no other view, they should aid the Americans strug- ghng to extricate themselves from embarrassments, and to return to specie payments. He startled the bank parlor in Threadneedle-street by a sug- gestion, that instead of embarrassing American merchants by discrediting, as they had been doing, paper connected with the American trade, it nearly concerned the solvency of many of their own customers, and consequently 15 James Gore King, thdif own interests, that liberal aid should rather be extended to that trade. Again and again invited to consult with the bank authorities as to measures fit to be taken in the crisis, he finally brought them over to his views, and gave practical scope to those views, by proposing that the bank should at once send over to New York several million dollars in coin, in order to strengthen the banks in America, and to make their redemption more easy and early. Regularly advised from home of the systematic measures in progress there for bank resumption, and made aware that timidity rather than want of actual means withheld the banks of the city of New York from an immediate return to specie payments, he himself saw clearly, and proved to the Governors of the Bank of England, that at such a juncture a supply of coin from that institution would at once determine the New York banks in their right course, and render it both easy and permanent. In conformity with these opinions of Mr. King, the Bank of England re- solved to confide to his house the consignment of one million pounds ster- ling in gold, upon the sole responsibility of that house and the guaranty of Baring, Brothers & Co. The object and the terms of that important movement are stated in the letter, of which a copy is subjoined, addressed by the Governor of the Bank of England, Mr. Curtis, to Mr. King : — Bank of England, March 20, 1838. giP, ; — I have to acknowledge your favor of yesterday's date, and to express my concurrence in its contents in res-pect to the consignment of gold coin or bullion and the returns for the same. Messrs. Baring, Brotliers & Co. have also addressed me guarantying the transaction and the payment of the bills of ex- change which may be remitted. In reply to your observation as to the latitude it may be expedient to give in the time for making these returns, 1 beg to say that it is not at all the intention of the bank that any undue haste should be exhibited in taking bills of exchange for remittance. I am quite aware that any such action on the exchange at New York would tend unnecessarily to raise premiums on bills. The object of the bank in the operation is not one of profit — the whole transaction is one out of the ordinary course of its operations. Profit, therefore, is not what the bank seeks ; but by a judicious course of proceeding, the bank may be saved from loss ; and it is fairly entitled to a moderate rate of interest, if the progress of the transaction will admit of it. I deem it inexpedient to fix any precise period within which the returns should be made. Having shown your house so much confidence in intrusting the man- agement of this great concern in their hands, it would but ill agree with that confidence if I were to prescribe limits which might, in many ways, act most in- conveniently, and deprive the bank of the advantage of your judgment and ex- perience, in both of which I hope to find a satisfactory result to this important undertaking. Wishing you a safe voyage, I have the honor to be, sir, your very obedieni^' servant, T. A. CURTIS, GoTernor. Jakes Gork Kino, Esq., Partner of the house of Messrs. Prime, Ward 4c King^ of New York, now in Loudon. **> James Gore King, 13 The first shipment of 80,000 sovereigns was made by the bank the next day, per packet ship Gladiator^ and Mr. King himself soon followed, with a much larger sum. The solicitude of Mr. King to hasten resumption by the banks of New York and throughout the United States, which has been already dwelt upon, lay at the botton of this great operation, and he was naturally and reasonably elated at his success. Ho thus announced the transaction to his friend, S. B. Ruggles, Esq., then at Albany as one of the members of Assembly from this city : — London, March 15, 1838. " 1 hasten to apprise you that 1 have concluded an arrangement on the part of Baring, Brothers &. Co., and Prime, Ward & King, with the Bank of England, for the sliipment of one million of sovereigns, (in gold of course,) by the four or five ships for New York from London and Liverpool, and I hope and trust that upon their arrival, our banks and those of the Atlantic cities will resume and maintain specie payments, towards which result my thoughts and efforts have been unceasingly devoted. The service which I have thus had the oppor- tunity to render my own city and Stale by aiding it, in taking the initiative in this great and wholesome measure, affords me a satisfaction in which I know that you and my other friends will fully participate. The arrangement was only concluded definitely this morning, but I communicate it with all dispatch." The anticipation of Mr. King that with the aid thus opportunely and fortunately brought to them, the banks of New York would resume and maintain specie payment was abundantly realized. Already, in despite of a convention of delegates from the banks of New England, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Maryland, who formally declared the resumption could not yet safely be attempted, in despite of the absolute refusal of the banks of Pennsylvania to come into the measure, the banks of New York had re- solved that on or before the 10th of May they would resume, and the whole business community of the city resolved to stand by the banks in this honest determination. The work was accomplished by the vote that it should be done. The legislature authorized the emission of small notes. They also created sorae four millions of stocks for canal purposes, for which the banks, by special act, were permitted to subscribe, so as to obtain an available re- source for the purchase of coin in England, if needed ; and almost without an effort, and absolutely without any shock, the reign of irredeemable paper was terminated : first, by the issue of small notes and their redemption in coin whenever asked, and then by a full resumption which was complete weeks before the specified day of May. As the coin from the Bank of England arrived, it was disposed of on easy terms to the banks here and in Boston — a large sum offered to the Bank of the United States of Pennsylvania at first declined, was afterwards availed of — and thus the city of New York, which had seen itself compelled to lead the way in suspension, had the great honor and satisfaction to lead the way itself in resumption, and to smooth the way for others. 14 James Gore King. The signal confidence reposed by the Bank of England in the house of Prime, Ward & King in this important transaction, was fully justified by the event, as were the sagacious previsions of Mr. King, as to the good re- sults to be eflected by such a use of the Bank's treasure. It is satisfactory to be able to add that a concern of so large import — en- tered into not without high motives on the part of the Bank of England, and conducted with equal skill and fidelity by the New York house — was wound up without loss and with great promptness. In the autumn of the year 1839 Samuel Ward died, but the partnership, according to its tenor, was continued ; the eldest son of Mr. Ward and the son-in-law of Mr. King, Mr. Deming Duer, having been admitted as part- ners in the previous month of May. The business of the house went on in its steady, regular, and as to profits progressive course. In 1844, A. Gracie King, son of Jas. G. King, became a partner, and the house then consisted of J. G. King, Edward Prime, Sam. Ward, Deming Duer, and A. Gracie King. A diversity of views as to the proper scope and business of the house led, in 1847, to its dissolution. J. G. King, with his son-in-law and son, under the firm of James G. King & Sons, continued the old business in the same line exactly. Mr. King, shortly after the formation of the new firm, made a second visit to Europe, with a view both to business and pleasure, taking part of his family with him. While abroad, though only gone for some five or six months, one of those financial disturbances, which, if not regularly period- ical in commercial aftairs, are of frequent occurrence, came to try the skill, the prudence, and the nerve of the younger partners left in charge of the house in New York ; it found them well prepared, and passed them by un- disturbed and uninjured. In London, a like money pressure and derange- ment existed, produced on both sides by the same cause, deficient harvests in Europe, and excessive speculations in breadstufFs. Mr. King had thus again the opportunity, by his steadiness of nerve and character, and his full comprehension of all the difficulty as regards his own countrymen, to encourage and relieve the public mind in England. He had too, at the same time, the opportunity to manifest, in a very special manner, the in- terest he continued to feel in the welfare of his late partners. Mr. King came back at the close of 1847, bringing with him an increased measure of confidence and regard from some of the leading capitalists of Europe, and experiencing most satisfactorily in the constantly enlarging busi- ness of the house, the evidence of such con6dence. He did not, however, feel himself called upon to devote his time and labor, as in former years, in so great a degree to business. His young associates had proved their pru- dence, capacity, and industry, under difficult circumstances, and he was con- James Gore King. 15 tent to leave to them the burden of work, always exercising, however, a thorough and intelligent supervision over the business. Mention has been made of the friendly and confidential relations which subsisted between Mr. King and the late J. J. Astor. It was a cherished wish of Mr. Astor, many years ago urged upon Mr. King, that he would consent to be one of the executors of his estate. Mr. King was very averse to un- dertaking any such trust, of which the responsibilities might, as in this case, extend beyond the probable period of his own life ; but after repeated re- quests he consented, and by the last will of Mr. Astor, Mr. King was named an executor and also a trustee of the public library, for the establishment of which the will made so liberal provision. It so happened that owing to his change of residence and consequently ceasing to be a citizen of New York, Mr. King could not, according to the laws of the State, enter upon the duty of an executor without giving bond in twice the amount of the personal property of the deceased, for the faithful performance of that duty. Mr. W. B. Astor, who well knew, and himself shared in, his father's strong desire that Mr. King should serve in that capacity, at once offered to give the re- quired bonds himself, but Mr. King absolutely declined, not willing that any one should be bound in the penalty of millions for him. He, however, at the request of the executors, habitually met with them as a friend and ad- viser, but without any oflBcial character. As trustee of the library, he was always a punctual and interested attendant at every meeting of the board, and derived much satisfaction from being instrumental in shaping and direc- ting a benefaction so fraught with good to the present and all future time. His connection too with the Chamber of Commerce was one in which he took much pleasure. It began with his earliest mercantile career, having been elected a member of that corporation in April, 1817. When, after several years of absence in Europe, he returned to his native city, he renewed his connection with the Chamber. In 1841 he was chosen first vice pres- ident, and annually rechosen for four years, when, in 1845, he became pres- ident, and served in that station four years. Over and above the ordinary business of this body, its president, by the will of Capt. Randal, the gener- ous founder of the Sailors' Smig Harbor^ was to be ex officio a trustee of that noble foundation. Mr. King entered very thoroughly upon this duty, and was instant on all proper occasions and in all proper ways, both to ren- der it as beneficent as possible to those for whom it was instituted, and to confine it to them. Hence he always sought, so far as depended upon his vote and influence, to place all the subordinate trusts and ofl&ces in the hands of sea-faring men, to abolish all expenditure not needed for the accommo- dation and benefit of the sailors, and all sinecures. On retiring from the chair of the Chamber in 1848, in the course of an address of thanks to the assembled members for the partiality shown by his 16 James Oore King, frequent re-election, he dwelt with particular emphasis upon this important ex officio connection of the president of the Chamber with the foundation of the Sailors' Snug Harbor, and expressed fervently the hope, both in the in- terest of the sailor who had so good a right to look up to the merchant as his natural guardian, and in behalf of the dignity and eflSciency of the Chamber, that this part of the president's duty would always be faithfully and diligently executed. The state of public affairs and political questions in 1848, was such as to call forth the anxieties of thoughtful men, and Mr. King, after much solicita- tion on the part of neighbors and political friends in New Jersey, and the urgnt entreaties of many of his associates — the chief commercial men of this city — reluctantly consented to accept a nomination for Congress, from the Vth. Congressional district, where he resided, and where the Whig party, to which he belonged, had the ascendancy. Having once accepted, he went heartily into the canvass, and to the end that his person, and his opinions, as well as his manner of stating these might be widely known to those whose votes he asked, he visited all the chief places of the district, addressing large meetings, making no disguise of any opinion, and assuming none for the occasion ; and dealing thus squarely with the constituency, he received from them one of the largest majorities ever cast in the district. He took his seat in the House of Representatives, at Washington, as a member of the 31st Congress, on Monday, December 3d, 1849, and was present without flinching, at every ballot — amounting to sixty-three in all, and protracted through nearly three weeks, from Monday the 3d to Satur- day the 22d of December both inclusive — for Speaker, when Howell Cobb, of Georgia, was finally chosen, by a plurality and not by a majority vote. This organization of the House threw Mr. King into the minority, and gave to the anti-administration party, General Taylor being President, the con- trol of all the committees. Mr. King was put by the Speaker upon the standing committee on roads and canals, where little scope presented itself for his labors. He applied himself with exemplary punctuality and diligence to the business of the house, never being absent from his seat, however long and wearying the sittings, unless actually detained by illness. On all ques- tions touching the revenue and its collection, the tinances, and commerce, he spoke with marked effect, never wearying the house with prosy essays, nor disturbing its harmony by partisan appeals. As a consequence he was eagerly listened to. On a bill for the collection of the revenue, his efficiency and his practical ability were specially manifested. The House had talked over, and cavilled at, and delayed a joint resolution from the Senate, authorizing the requisite expenditure for defraying the cost of collecting duties at the Custom-House. The matter was urgent, for there was no appropriation and no money there- James Gore King. 1*7 fore available for such uses. In consequence the business of the Custom- House was seriously embarrassed; every other desk almost was vacant, for lack of means to pay for services, and ships arriving with full cargoes were unable to discharge, because there were not officers to attend to it. Not- ■withstandiug these embarrassments to Commerce and danger to the rev- enue, the House of Representatives hesitated and objected, insisting that the Secretary of the Treasury should have asked a specific appropriation for each head of expenditure, and seemed disposed to vote against the gross sum asked, although it was, for the half year requiring immediate provision, less than half of the sum voted to Mr. Walker when Secretary of the Treasury, for a year's expense. Mr. King, feeling the great wrong and the great suflfering arising from delay, applied himself strenuously to the subject, di- gested the various amounts needed under specific heads, so as to meet ob- jections on that score, and then moved an amendment to the resolution from the Senate, in which, after appropriating the respective sums needed for the half year, he employed this phraseology — " and in that proportion for any shorter or longer time, until Congress shall act upon the subject.''* The passage here marked in italics fixes permanently and without any fresh appropriation, the expenditure for the collection of revenues until Congres^ shall otherwise order — a very important point since it obviates the recur rence of any like embarrassment to that the resolution was designed to cure. Although opposed by the chairman of the committee of ways and means, Mr. King maintained with so much precision and force the merits of the resolution, that it was finally adopted by a considerable majority, and be- came, and it is now, the law of the land. In the course of the next session the Speaker, influenced probably by the impression made upon the House by Mr. King's practical business informa- tion and clear and ready elocution, without any suggestion or advance from Mr. King or his friends, placed him on the committee on Commerce, where- in he was able to make himself very useful. When, at the request of the Secretary of War, Mr. Crawford, a commit- tee was appointed by the House of Representatives to investigate his con- nection with what was commonly known as the Galphin Claim, and the nature of that claim, the Speaker named Mr. King as a member of it. A calculating politician would probably have declined such a questionable distinction ; but Mr. King, strong in the consciousness of right purpose, and always ready to follow out his convictions and stand by them, did not seek to escape the responsibility of this position. He examined the whole case cautiously and acutely, and finding evidence that seemed to him incontesti- ble of the justice of the claim, he recommended its payment; and discover- ing no rightful nor equitable difference between a debt unlawfully withheld from its cr^ "-tor by a government and a debt withheld in like circumstances IB Sarms Gore Kinrf. by an individual, he was unable to perceive why the rule which would com- pel the individual to pay both principal and interest should not equally apply to the government, and accordingly he concurred in, and ably defend- ed on the floor of the House, the report of the committee which recom- mended the payment of principal and interest on the Galphin Claim. He knew the outcry that awaited such a course ; but his own self-respect, and the utterance of and adherence to his honest opinions, pointed it out to him a? right, and he took it. With General Taylor, during his too brief career as President, Mr. King lived on a footing of great confidence and intimacy, and none mourned more truly than he the decease of that honest and good chief magistrate. He foresaw then, what soon became manifest to all, that with the disappear- ance from the scene of a man of such positive character, such pre-eminent merits, and such deserved popularity as General Taylor, a great power to restrain men of extreme opinions from rushing into extravagant measures, was lost. Already the menacing questions connected with the admission of Texas, New Mexico, and California into the Union, were disturbing the harmony of the country ; but while General Taylor lived and was invested 'with the power of chief magistrate, it was felt alike by all, that he would permit no violation of law or constitution, but possessing himself in calmness? and standing aloof from the hot strife of sections, that he would guard the rights of all, and subject all rights to the test of the supreme law. Mr. King concurred entirely with General Taylor and his cabinet in their rec- ommendations as to the proper mode of disposing of the knotty questions of Texas, New Mexico, and California, and was therefore not prepared for, and did not approve the sudden change of policy adopted by the successor of General Taylor, and finally passed through Congress in the shape of the Compromise. Against the Fugitive Slave Law in particular, Mr. King, faithful to his name and blood, voted ever, as against every proposition that looked to the spread of slavery. Yet amid the hottest agitation on these subjects in Con- gress, Mr. King neither lost his calmness nor faltered in his opposition. He felt indeed no solicitude about the Union, the safety of which he well knew depends not upon hot-heads in Congress or out of it, and his course was in- fluenced as little by the clamors of those so noisy to save, as by those other so fierce to dissolve the blessed bond that makes us a nation. Among the incidental claims upon Congress, as administrators of the property of the nation, no one more interested Mr. King than that preferred by Miss Dix for a grant of public land towards defraying the expenses of establishing, where needed, asylums for the protection and the cure of the insane. He felt the force of this appeal all the more strongly from the beautiful example of self-sacrifice and generous devotion to the cause of the James Gore King. ID' most desolate of God's creatures, which that lady's life, and exertions, and sufferings, and dangers exhibited — and he labored zealously, though without success, to obtain the grant she asked. He had the happiness, however, of presenting through her and upon her suggestion, a library of select books to the Insane Asylum of New Jersey at Trenton, and subsequently sent, for the embellishment of the grounds of that institution and for the supply of its conservatories, a large collection of plants. The first session of the 31st Congress lasted almost ten months, and during that whole time Mr. King never left Washington. But the life was unsuited to his habits and tastes : and although purposing to serve out his term, he made up his mind not to be a candidate for re-election. After attending with like fidelity through the second session, in the course of which he had occasion again and again to press upou the House the necessity and advantage of establishing a branch mint in New York, Mr. King re- turned home in March, 1851, with the settled purpose to avoid any further engagement in public life. Yet his career in Congress had been altogether successful. As a speaker, he was always attentively heard, for it was known that he only spoke when he had something to say, and left off when he had said it ; while his accurate information and large experience in all matters connected with commerce and finance, gave great weight to his opinions. When, upon the accession of Mr. Fillmore to the Presidency, a new cabi- net was formed, Mr. King was spoken of as the Secretary of the Treasury, and his name was urged upon Mr. Fillmore. Mr. King, as soon as he heard of it, went himself to Mr. Fillmore, and at once begged him not to trouble himself a moment with considering his (Mr. King's) name, in reference to that or any office, for he could not accept one under any circumstances. Putting off his official robes with far more alacrity than he had put them on, Mr. King returned with increased delight to his trees, his garden, and his beautiful rural home. Withdrawing himself more and more from the cares and the require- ments of business, he gave himself serenely and cheerfully to that prepara- tion for another life, the need of which advancing years bring to every sensi- tive and thoughtful mind, and which to his mind was brought all the more impressively by reason of occasional disturbance of the regular action of the heart and lungs. These symptoms he accepted without murmur, as a kindly and merciful warning. "There is something wrong here," he would say, laying his hand upon his broad chest, " I will fight it while I can, but it is to prevail," and beautifully did he carry out this manly senti- ment. Thus far we have looked at Mr. King in his relations with the world, and with society, as a man of business and a public man. Turn we now to the 20" James Gore King, family circle and his inner life. There he was the radiant center of as much true happiness, and close and united affection, as the world has witnessed. His manner, his voice, his eye, his smile, revealed the deep springs within his heart, of love and joy, and inventive, considerate, and unselfish kind- ness. With an exterior somewhat set and grave, even at times to reserve ; with a steadiness of look that seemed to scrutinize the inmost nature, and that sometimes left the impression of coldness, he united the warmest and tenderest feelings, the quickest and truest sensibilities, and the most unself- ish and unchangeable attachments. Of a well set and vigorous frame, untouched by excesses of any sort, with health uninterrupted till towards the close of his life — a sound mind in a sound body — ^he took his part in the world cheerfully, hopefully, and with head and heart elate. He was a thorough man. Diligent and punctual in business, he yet did not permit it to shut out reasonable recreation and the society of his household. He loved his horse, his dog, his gun, and was a proficient in the use of all of them ; and these tastes lasted with him through life. The country had great charms for him, and much of his attention, of late years, was given, as has already been intimated, to the cultivation of fruits and flowers, and to that most rational, seductive, and withal, even in a mercantile sense, remunerating employment, the planting of irees. The groves of Highwood, (his residence on the Weehawken Hights opposite to the city,) will recall for generations the tasteful and skillful hand which planted, arranged, and grouped them. These cannot follow him, but they will bear witness to him long after all who now enjoy their grateful shade shall have followed him to that resting-place where the funereal cypress- weeps alone. Of simple and child-like faith, of unaffected and unpretending piety, with the consciousness of a life well spent, and of every duty fulfilled, so far as- may be predicated of any mere mortal, with no rancor in his heart against any human being, surrounded by all temporal blessings, in the midst of a devoted family, all centering their afltections on him, and each emulating his good example, with everything to gild the close of life, he seemed, as the shadows were lengthening, to have withdrawn himself measurably from the busy haunts of men, chiefly that in his lovely and beloved home he might busy himself in devising how to do good to others, and thus add still brighter and more beautiful tints to the calm yet glowing sunset which his prophetic heart seemed to feel was near at hand. It would be to lift too much the sacred vail of Home to attempt to specify how and how frequently, and how thoughtfully, and how wisely, and how liberally, he exercised his benevolence, but it is not presumptuous to say, that Heaven seemed to smile upon his wishes, and to hallow them. One James Gore King. 21 incident in illustration of this renaark, may be mentioned without violating the sanctities of the domestic hearth. A misunderstanding had for some years existed and comparative estrangement, betv?een him and one who had been nearly connected with him by family ties. This state of things grieved him, for having no resentments or unkindness in his own heart, he was un- easy even under the appearance of cherishing any. A casual and most im- probable meeting in a city omnibus, only four days before his death, with the person thus estranged, the inhabitant of another State, afforded him the opportunity of reconciliation. After exchanging friendly salutations in the omnibus, when the person alighted, he too got out, and when alone together, said, extending his hand, " If without asking or giving any explanation you are willing that we should be friends, let it be so ;" adding, with that solemn prescience which sometimes goes before the event, " I want, before I die, to be at peace with all." The extended hand was taken — peace was his ; and the last words heard from his lips, the last smile on his glowing face, seen by him who in sorrow and in sadness writes these lines, was on the very next day, when he burst in upon him to tell, with the earnestness of com- plete happiness, the particulars of the interview just related. In less than sixty hours ! that warm, gentle, generous, manly heart had ceased to beat, that tongue was still in death. That death was very sudden, and in this particular not unanticipated by him. Previous severe spasmodic paroxysms of the heart and lungs, without warning, and, so far as could be understood, without any predisposing cause* had made him aware of the peculiar uncertainty of his life. He had looked at the case with' the calm and sound judgment which was his characteristic, and having come to the conclusion that at any moment one of these parox " ysms a little more prolonged than usual would terminate his existence, he prepared himself for such an issue ; he set his house in order, and, though manifesting no anxiety, omitting no duty ; failing not in the cheerfulness of his social intercourse, and to the common eye evincing by no sign that he felt himself to be at every instant on the brink of the grave, it is believed that he had not for a long, long while ever laid his head on the pillow at night without the thought that he might never see another morning, nor without tranquilly saying, as with his last breath almost he repeated — " Thy will be done." And this prevision as to the manner of his death was realized. On Mon- day the 3d of October he had been well as usual, and retired at his accus- tomed hour to bed. He was soon and suddenly seized by one of those paroxysms. The remedies always at hand, before applied with success, were now resorted to in vain ; and before the physician could reach the house, or the family even be assembled, with perfect consciousness and per- fect resignation, without a struggle and almost without a sigh, he breathed out his life, in less than half an hour from the first attack of the paroxysm. 22 James Gore King. Such was the peaceful close of a beautiful life — a life which may be summed up in a few brief lines. Happily born, carefully educated, with a high order of mind ; early and happily married, blessed with dutiful and affectionate children ; crowned with prosperity, surrounded with all men's respect, and with all means, ap- pliances, and temptations to selfish indulgences — James G. Eng was simple in his tastes and habits, unostentatious, self-denying, considerate of others, actively benevolent, exact yet liberal in business, cheerful and instinctive as a companion, sought after and prized in society, but loving home with a fondness which years rather added to than weakened, and especially loving children and loved by them — he has passed away ; the scenes that knew him shall know him no more forever, but his memory will endure, and his example shall not perish from among men. " Quis (lesiderio sit pudor aut modus Tam cari capitis. * * ***** * * Pudor et Justitiae soror ' Inconnipfa Fides nudaqua Veritas, Quando uUum invenient parem ? 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CO CO CQ 00~ CO" x" of '* QO" lO O oT i-T rf of iC" OOOOOOOlOOOCOOOQiOOlOOOlOOOOO _ - . 1.0 lO c; -^ J^ c lO o c 03 o CO o ~ o oi '-" o vo -^r lO* c; o rH o 00i-l'*(7iO M 00C:0000tS:=00000 ClOCOOCOlOCOOOCO ousc^Xuo-^OiTrcooooMCQO oC'Cociooc50ooiraoc;oooooooo*c:oooo c; cr lO lO c; i^ 10 -; lO no o t^ C5 c:; o lO C5 1.0 o X lO 00 lO cr o lo o r-icoxi^O) — corHco»-^c:T3.oioccoXkO'-'L.^r;cN!cocO"*ot> coTri^(>(S<)C3Coxor-oicoco-^ OJO-. (jjroTT— .r-i M fi te o tor oj ci o o 2 S ^. g r2 "^ ^^ ^ r§ 3 >! s^ 2 _ s ci i ."5 "g I i fl, P^ p:; W M jC 02 OQ o so a a 3 O c ■B •a o 3 3 ►1 o o a M •-3 3 3 p 2. L 3 ? •5 3 3 3 3 5 p 5' 3" ■8 3 2. T c 3: 3 ^ 3 d ■5 c c c 2 C s a p <1 o 2 g o- C X o o < o c B >»>■ to — c B CI ■a o > w o ca o o O f K O H OD o ^~ <1 o c" 3 o c 3 2! I O 2 <5 o <»>. w c 3 cr o 2! 00 o o 3 M S3 w o H S3 H Ph C Ph Ph w o P5 P w £-2 F. 5 OOOOOlOQOO Cv» CO l.-^ i-l O (Ti O S O lO o o c o CO ire tc :o 00 -3- o rf fo" r^' eo Tj^ S O O O O O Ifl ire- c; o o o ire M ' C3 o o o 1-1 1> ire Ci ci~ CD" CO (D o o o o o t o o o ire i>. o o Oi x> i> CO 00 co" i-T r-T w O P S -a fcr, ^ -2 c: c 3 3a 5? '-' o o o o o ire o ci ire o lo ire C' oj o ci r-T o cf of CO ere l>0(M^'g o o o o o c o ire o c o ire c ire 03 to re) re) ire i^ 00 t" ■"* r-T Tf reT rej 00 re) i-> i>. o i>. c o o o o ire o ire o o o ire c o: oc;3oc;re)ct^oc~?Nt^o; MCi>ofOire-^re)SJre<-^cx03i ri ire ire 00 ire w 1— ire re^ re* oooreJOTrooooiftoicO'-Hooi^oo) ° 7' "fe p. sS OS ^ a V aj -o s O bii — a -P OS =: ^ aj Sp Q O o a o o o H 9r a o o ■0 5i p p a c 5' 3 B P_ 3 5l. B B a 3 TatTiiill Telfair Thomas 3 fa 3 I H B 2S h-i h^ 1— t t-i ^S h>^ i»i w 00 *- a< OT ^ CA CO c; *- C5 00 rf^ CI CO w r. 2! 2. °" CO > W as W _W jU _W CT> CD C5 01 vr C' *- ^i w C2 oi ac' ocnOLCiitoocj'oooo oooioooocnoo 05 CO *>■ 00 oi to 01 CI -^ ■ to i'il ■ c S 03 CO 5" J^ J-' w i'i „*' -^ 3; 00 ai *^ oc c: <» QD c; Oi Oi CO M Oi h-1 CO 00 ^^ 01 000 JO 01 tD >-3 >T3 Erto 01 a? s 3 rig- K S > 2! 111 H- 2; ETC E 3 2. "" a "< to •a B s > g 3 '-^ ■' 5 == ill trco H W I— t < 1 o o W w j» o a t:d O o w H o o O o =3 H O 05 w o Q Q Eh QD C9 Q Z g Em H W re = C 1 r 1 1 If O w II ' Total value of church property. O ' ' « 2 :o o o OS ; r -= a E 3 Z ^ a : 1 o o m 3 o >, 1 o • C3 ■ lO ! o o . o «D i o • r-l ...... .-.^ III < y I o 1 o . CO 1 o o I o CO ! O . o • of a 3 1 1^ i 1-1 I rH !M • 1-1 ; OB a; i n 311 3 t 5? c I • i J « 5 •- 3 5 1 d i: '3 3 ; 5 " 5 1- 3 e 3 C 1 1- n 3h _£ 3 ; 5? ' 1 ' 'i i ? 3? J 2 : C • £ > c 1 ri : t • c > s ) c c i 5 3 s a • a ; s 5 LI D 5 - o a o W O H O Q W to o a ^^c0lUlt•>fi•cD05h-<^cr^©;0l— tool tOQD'<('<»C30COCCODO:QD^IQDOiW OCnOOOOTOOCHOIOOOOO oc30oio*>.tD05Ciwooi-'a)Cii-'oo o C'1 o o o c;< Oi o 115 CT K. CI (t" c; o o OOOOOOCiOOjOCnOCOCO iC O CO C 01 ■ *» CO Oi c; ^i CD M <( O C' C O O OT c c o o c o c; <» M M CD O O «C' c< o o c c o o o COOO-^l C1i o H »o CO f^ fH O P5 Ah ^ H O o « t^ ^ D m ^ ;?; 1-4 o w Q !> I — I w M o CO < > o .2 . o o o. » 10 IIS hi ^ fH 3 o H i'— - o O D. CO 0»l0 000 ■ lO ilOOOOCCOO (7i 'X O O S\( (M . 1 lO • uO G5 t^ l^ CO t^ O ' eo r-rr^"(?fio I ! '*" I (?r com" (jTc^ I I I 00 CO O !0 5 2 QOCOOOQOCO . .Ci'MCOCOi-llOTfl^.O OS CD III o o c o ■^ CO s-5 IP LO 00 o « •2 id i 3 00 11 H Talbot Taliaferro Troup Uniou Walker Ware Warren Wayne Wilkinson 1 o W Ph O P5 Ah a O W o o I > I— I M PQ 2, 2 c c o o -t "■ 5C-' ■"• -"? " C P CTQ ^ lo w I— ^^ i-i 00 QD O OD Ol O Cn C O O O O C C' O J^ ^ i^ i^ ^ to o c o o O M o o o o o< o o o lO h-i 1-1 in to 00 *>. tc ^^ CI O O O CS Ol O O O O 3 lU *>. i-j w oi C O C: O O o c o o o &» s-^ o m o o C5 I-" o o hH Hh tn t-i tn M 03 O IT != P 'I c s tt 'JO n 5? -5 » c"5 pr =• ot ji. 00 C: w O o o o CI ^s i-" CI C3 O o o o O^ l-> !»>■ CI o o o o o o to CO o o o o o o o o o ^ c o o o 53 ■ O oq T3 O g - 2L r. c H f> td t-i W < 1 o W d o W O o td O Q o :^ o > I §■" •a o a 11^ 6 "*-p S = o Q • o fe >o p^ w 00 Ah 1-H O Pm E^ w O P5 p r/? W t3 o CO m w ;z: o w « Q 5 1 1 t— 1 X w hJ w <1 H CO Q Total valu9 of church proporty. o o o =j L-? 00 a o o lO o lO lO •«• CO =: to (>r lo" ic r-T i>r Tt 00 CO i-i TJ" r-i 7,300 205, 400 5, 550 7,010 28, 800 O O O O O O 10 irt o o o lO 1.-3 1.0 cft o 05 00 rr t^ as of rr" 'T » CO -h" O O O S 1(0 O LO O l^ C5 O no GO -^ 05 ic CO o'oTof (?< 1-1 1 Aggregate accbiiitiidda- tious. oooc;oooj>.©o=>oioooo irt C; O 05 lO uO L-; S5 t- — 1 to o o» O uO o oooooooiooooirtioi: OOlOOCOC^C: l^Ol.OO(N-*5 lOOCOCr-«rJ.<3li o d~of CO rM (jii-T CO ic oTof rf c: i c O m E 3 3 .a (M C «:>• O L.0 O -^ CO CO '- lO «>. IT) •'■, i-lOiCMC^>-1rHC0 33 Eh o g « 3 S ■3-!^ 2 o 10 1 ' ii-a « o . III < o cs o o rH S 3 3.S T-H m a > t3 Total value of church properly. « 2 M £ 3 3 I o - o a 3 J3 -H W o <3 5? 5S 5i : -a 5;^ 3 a 3 E 5p: 3 I 3fL • E • a 3 ? 5i 3 a J j: 3 f 3 I: 3 r I c . c 5 3 C 3 % i J 3 i 3i N 1 a 3i 3 3 ^ ) w , i. t. e i c ■>_> li fi. 1 a J 1 . o o -f >x> ' c; ro ■n" 1 T* 05 j^ o 1 CO Tf ^ t UO H I— I W M H o M t-H P5 <^ < Eh C o E 3 o > - \r. S lO o o rf la ■<:i< — r^ 2 H u w o o > o o of T— I 3 2; CO CO c o < a D m i o > o liO o o 3 2; lO r-i o o o m o > o 2 1— ( c 3 3 o o CO o o ^ g T-H 1—1 »3 J << a! X s ;5 if .^ r- r^ a 5 ^1: z Js! 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