John Green Brady
John Green Brady | |
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5th Governor of District of Alaska | |
In office July 15, 1897 – March 2, 1906 | |
Nominated by | William McKinley |
Preceded by | James Sheakley |
Succeeded by | Wilford Bacon Hoggatt |
Personal details | |
Born | New York City | May 25, 1847
Died | December 17, 1918 Sitka, Territory of Alaska | (aged 71)
Political party | Republican |
Spouse | Elizabeth Jane Patton |
John (James) Green Brady (June 15, 1848 – December 17, 1918)
Childhood
John Green Brady was born in
"Governor Roosevelt, the other governors have greeted you with interest, simply as a fellow governor and a great American. but I greet you with infinitely more interest, as the son of your father, the first
Theodore Roosevelt." When greeted warmly by Governor Roosevelt and asked why and in what special way he had been interested in his father, Governor Brady replied, "Your father picked me up on the streets of New York, a waif and an orphan, and sent me to a Western family, paying for my transportation and early care. Years passed and I was able to repay the money which had given me my start in life, but I can never repay what he did for me, for it was through that early care and by giving me such a foster mother and father that I gradually rose in the world until I greet his son as a fellow governor of a part of our great country."
Brady was living at the
Brady's experience as an orphan train rider is discussed in the book Orphan Trains: Taking the Rails to a New Life, by Rebecca Langston-George.
Brady went to live with the family of
Brady married Elizabeth Jane Patton in 1887 in Sitka, Alaska. They had five children: John Green Brady Jr., Hugh P. Brady, Sheldon Jackson Brady, Mary Beattie Brady and Elizabeth P. Brady.
District of Alaska
Brady moved to the Alaska Territory first as a Presbyterian minister, then a missionary and then a lawyer. In 1878 he co-founded what is now Sheldon Jackson College as a school to train Alaska Natives.
Later he would be appointed Governor for three terms. He was introduced to the infamous Alaskan gangster Soapy Smith during the 1898 Fourth of July festivities in Skagway. Brady was made aware of Smith's criminal activities and offered him a position as a Deputy U.S. Marshal in Sitka, if he would quit Skagway. Smith turned down the position, which Brady noted in a personal letter. Four days after meeting him, Smith was killed in the famed Shootout on Juneau Wharf.
Governor Brady had an interest in preserving the culture of the Alaska natives. He orchestrated the placement of 15
In 1897, Brady was appointed to be Governor of the Territory of Alaska by Republican President William McKinley. He served for three terms and became involved in the Reynolds-Alaska Development Company which was under investigation for corruption. U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ethan A. Hitchcock (Interior) (R) under Republican President Theodore Roosevelt, charged that Brady had acted improperly in his association with Reynolds-Alaska and public clamor soon led Brady to resign though he vigorously denied that he was guilty of any wrongdoing. Without charges, Brady was asked to resign in 1906 and went to work for Reynolds-Alaska. He was never convicted.[6][7]
Brady died on December 17, 1918, and was buried in Sitka National Cemetery in Sitka, Alaska. He was interred in Section R, Plot 4 in December 1918. The monument at his grave bears the inscription: "A life ruled by faith in God and Man."
References
- ^ Jimerson, Randall C. (November 1978). "Guide to the John G. Brady Papers" (PDF). Retrieved July 4, 2024.
- ISBN 0-88240-045-2..
- ^ a b c Ksander, Yaél. "Poster Boy of the Orphan Train", Indiana Public Media, October 12, 2009
- ^ "Totem Poles - Sitka National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service)".
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 24, 2017. Retrieved July 10, 2017.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Yale Finding Aid Database : Guide to the John G. Brady Papers". Archived from the original on September 18, 2018.
- ISBN 9780826336378.
External links
- The Presbyterian Leadership in Pioneer Alaska:
- "We Are More Truly Heathen Than the Natives"
- John Green Brady at Find a Grave
- Google Books: Alaskan John G. Brady, missionary, businessman, judge, and governor, 1878-1918
- John G. Brady Papers. Yale Collection of Western Americana, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.