John Sergeant Cram | |
---|---|
President of the New York Public Service Commission | |
In office 1911–1916 | |
Governor | John Alden Dix Charles Seymour Whitman |
Preceded by | Edward Bassett |
Succeeded by | Travis Harvard Whitney |
President of the Dock Board | |
Personal details | |
Born | May 18,1851 New York City,New York,U.S. |
Died | January 18,1936 84) New York City,New York,U.S. | (aged
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse(s) | Beatrice Budd Cleland 1898 (m. 1903,died) |
Relations | John Sergeant (grandfather) John Sergeant Wise (cousin) Richard Alsop Wise (cousin) Alexander S. Webb (cousin) H. Walter Webb (cousin) William Seward Webb (cousin) |
Parent(s) | Harry Augustus Cram Katherine Sergeant |
Education | St. Paul's School |
Alma mater | Harvard College Harvard Law School |
Signature | |
John Sergeant Cram Sr. (May 18, 1851 - January 18, 1936) was president of the Dock Board and the head of the New York Public Service Commission. [1] [2]
Cram was born on May 18, 1851, in New York City. He was the eldest son born to Harry Augustus Cram (1818–1894), [3] a lawyer, [4] and Katherine Sergeant (1825–1910). [5] His maternal grandparents were John Sergeant (1779–1852), a U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania, and Margaretta (née Watmough) Sergeant (1787–1869). [6]
His aunt, Margaretta Sergeant was married to Major General George Meade. Through his aunt, Sarah Sergeant, who married Governor of Virginia Henry A. Wise, he was a first cousin of politicians John Sergeant Wise and Richard Alsop Wise. His uncle was James Watson Webb, the United States Ambassador to Brazil, who married his father's sister, Laura Virginia Cram. Through Webb, he was a first cousin of Gen. Alexander S. Webb, railroad executive H. Walter Webb, G. Creighton Webb, and Dr. William Seward Webb, who married Eliza Osgood Vanderbilt, daughter of William H. Vanderbilt. [1]
He was educated at St. Paul's School and graduated from Harvard College in 1872 and, later, Harvard Law School in 1875. [1] After graduation from Law School, he practiced law with his father at his father's firm. [7]
Cram was first appointed to the Dock Board by Mayor Thomas Francis Gilroy. [8] He was reappointed by Mayor Hugh J. Grant and during the Robert Anderson Van Wyck administration, he was appointed president of the Dock Board. [1] [5]
In 1911, he was nominated by to the New York Public Service Commission by Governor John Alden Dix, with Dix stating: [9]
I know Mr. Cram to be a man of unusual of force and ability and of demonstrated courage and independence. He is a man who accomplishes results, the kind of man the New York City rapid transit situation needs at the present time." [9]
He was confirmed by the New York State Senate over the denunciation of State Senator Josiah T. Newcomb, a Republican who was opposed to the stronghold of Tammany Hall. [10] He was reappointed by Governor Charles Seymour Whitman, serving until 1916 when he was replaced by Travis Harvard Whitney. [2]
He was perhaps best known at the time of his death as the close friend and social advisor to Charles Francis Murphy, the late leader of Tammany Hall. [1]
In 1898, he was first married at the age of 47 to the widow Georgiana Beatrice Budd (1875–1903), a daughter of Samuel Budd. She had previously married Clarence Benedict Cleland (1867–1895) in 1894. [11] The marriage to Mrs. Cleland was done without the knowledge his family, with whom he was residing at the time of his marriage. [11] Her father was a haberdasher who supplied Cram, and his fellow members of the exclusive Knickerbocker Club, with his clothing, was a mild scandal at the time for someone of his social prominence. [12]
On January 17, 1906, he married Edith Claire Bryce (1880–1960), the daughter of General Lloyd Stephens Bryce, the United States Ambassador to the Netherlands and Edith (née Cooper) Bryce. [13] Her mother was the only child of New York City Mayor Edward Cooper, himself the son of prominent industrialist Peter Cooper. [14] [15] Her sister, Cornelia Elizabeth Bryce (1881–1960), [16] was married to conservationist Gifford Pinchot (1865–1946), the first Chief of the United States Forest Service under Theodore Roosevelt, in 1914. [17] [18] Her brother, Peter Cooper Bryce (1889–1964), [19] was married Angelica Schuyler Brown (1890–1980), of the Brown banking family, in 1917. [20] Together, they were the parents of:
He died at his residence, 9 East 64th Street in Manhattan, [24] on January 18, 1936, and was buried in Green-Wood Cemetery. [1] His widow died in 1960. [25]
His grandson, John Sergeant Cram III, was married to Lady Jeanne Campbell (1928–2007), the only daughter from the Duke of Argyll's first marriage. [26] She had previously been married to American writer Norman Mailer. Lady Jeanne and John had several children, including Cusi Cram (b. 1967), an actress, a Herrick-prize-winning playwright, and an Emmy-nominated writer for the children's animated television program, Arthur . [27] [28]
Gifford Pinchot was an American forester and politician. He served as the fourth chief of the U.S. Division of Forestry, as the first head of the United States Forest Service, and as the 28th governor of Pennsylvania. He was a member of the Republican Party for most of his life, though he joined the Progressive Party for a brief period.
Ogden Codman Jr. was an American architect and interior decorator in the Beaux-Arts styles, and co-author with Edith Wharton of The Decoration of Houses (1897), which became a standard in American interior design.
Henry Walter Webb, Sr. was an American railway executive with the New York Central Railroad under Cornelius Vanderbilt and Chauncey Depew. He was also Vice President of the Wagner Palace Car Co.
General James Watson Webb was a United States diplomat, newspaper publisher and a New York politician in the Whig and Republican parties.
Alexander Stewart Webb was a career United States Army officer and a Union general in the American Civil War who received the Medal of Honor for gallantry at the Battle of Gettysburg. After the war, he was a prominent member of New York Society and served as president of the City College of New York for thirty-three years.
Nicholas Fish II was a United States diplomat who served as the ambassador to Switzerland from 1877 to 1881 and the ambassador to Belgium from 1882 to 1885. In a widely reported crime of the time known as the "sensation of the day," Fish was murdered while leaving a New York City bar.
Edward Cooper was the 83rd Mayor of New York City from 1879 to 1880 and the second president of the Cooper Union. He was the only surviving son of industrialist Peter Cooper.
Doris Margaret Kenyon was an American actress of motion pictures and television.
Edith Roberts was an American silent film actress from New York City.
Lloyd Stephens Bryce was an American diplomat and politician who served one term as a U.S. Representative from New York from 1887 to 1889. He was also an author and magazine editor.
Robert Bowne Minturn Jr. was an American shipping magnate of the mid to late 19th century.
Phelan Beale was an American attorney and sportsman in New York City who was married to Edith Ewing Bouvier, an aunt of Jacqueline Bouvier Onassis. Beale is probably best remembered as the absent father chronicled in the Grey Gardens saga portrayed in a 1975 movie documentary, 2006 Broadway musical, and 2009 HBO film, all of which were named for his home in East Hampton, New York.
Edith Claire Cram was an American peace activist and heiress. She founded Peace House, which produced anti-war and peace movement lectures, newspaper advertisements, and other propaganda to promote peace. She was a benefactor for the War Resisters League.
Alexander Stewart Webb Jr. was an American banker and philanthropist who was prominent in New York society during the Gilded Age.
Edward Neufville Tailer who was a New York merchant and banker, and a prominent member of New York Society during the Gilded Age.
Major John Vernou Bouvier Jr. was an American Wall Street lawyer and stockbroker. He was the father of John Vernou Bouvier III as well as a grandfather of First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and socialites Lee Radziwill and Edith Bouvier Beale.
Anthony Joseph Drexel III was an American banker and aviator.
Cornelia Elizabeth Bryce Pinchot, also known as “Leila Pinchot,” was a 20th-century American conservationist, Progressive politician, and women’s rights activist who played a key role in the improvement of Grey Towers, the Pinchot family estate in Milford, Pennsylvania, which was donated to the U.S. Forest Service in 1963 and then designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1966. A maternal great-granddaughter of Peter Cooper, founder of Cooper Union, and daughter of U.S. Congressman and Envoy Lloyd Stephens Bryce (1851–1917), she was the wife of Gifford Pinchot (1865-1946), the renowned conservationist and two-time Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and was also a close friend of U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt.
Marjorie Gwynne Drexel (née Gould was an American heiress and socialite.
Lillian GonzalesKohlhamer, also known as Lillian Gottlieb Kohlhamer, was an American suffragist and peace activist, based in Chicago. She was one of the American delegates to the International Congress of Women held in The Hague in 1915, and at the International Woman Suffrage Alliance conference in Geneva in 1920.