The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 3

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The Bay State Monthly, Volume
3, No. 3

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Title: The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 3
Author: Various
Release Date: February 9, 2006 [EBook #17723]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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[Illustration: John Albion Andrew]

THE BAY STATE MONTHLY.
A Massachusetts Magazine.
VOL. III. AUGUST, 1885. NO. III.
* * * * *

JOHN ALBION ANDREW.
THE "WAR-GOVERNOR" OF MASSACHUSETTS.
John Albion Andrew, the twenty-first Governor of Massachusetts, was
born, May 31, 1818, at Windham, a small town near Portland, Maine.
His father was Jonathan Andrew, who had established himself in
Windham as a small trader; his mother was Nancy Green Pierce, of
New Hampshire, who was a teacher in the celebrated academy at
Fryeburg, where Daniel Webster was once employed in the same
capacity.
Jonathan is described as having been "a quiet, reticent man, of much
intelligence and a keen perception of the ludicrous," while his wife was
"well educated, with great sweetness of temper, and altogether highly
prepossessing in appearance." There never was a more united and
happy family. The father possessed ample means for their education,
and left his household to the good management of his wife, who was
admirable in her domestic arrangements, judicious, sensible, energetic,
and a rigid disciplinarian of her children. There was a rare union of
gentleness and force in this woman, which made her generally
attractive, and especially endeared her to all who came under the
influence of her character.
Mrs. Andrew died on the 7th of March, 1832. Shortly afterwards the
husband sold out his property in Windham and removed to a farm in
Boxford, in the county where he was born. He died in September, 1849.

John Albion, the oldest son, entered Bowdoin College in 1833, where
he pursued a course in no way remarkable. He was a studious youth,
applied himself closely to his books, and appeared to take no lively
interest in athletic sports. Notwithstanding his studiousness, he was
ranked among the lowest of his class, and was allotted no part at
Commencement. Among his fellows he was, however, exceedingly
popular, and his happy temperament, his genial nature, won him
friendship which after years only made stronger and more enduring.
After his graduation the young man came to Boston and entered the
office of the late Henry H. Fuller, as a student of law. The attraction
between him and young Andrew was mutual, and they became almost
like brothers. It was while serving his novitiate under Mr. Fuller that
Andrew became interested in many of the reform movements of the day,
and was as firm and peculiar in one direction as his friend was in
another.
Andrew rose slowly at the bar. To his clients he simply did his duty,
and that was all. He was not a learned lawyer, nor was he in any sense a
great lawyer, and yet he expended great care and industry in looking up
his cases, and probably never lost a client who had once employed him.
We are told by one of his biographers that, "during all these years he
was not what was called a student, but was never idle." He entered
largely into the moral questions of that day; was greatly interested in
the preaching of James Freeman Clarke; a constant attendant at meeting
and the Bible-classes. Occasional lay-preaching being the custom of
that church, young Andrew sometimes occupied the pulpit and
conducted the services to the general acceptance of the people.
Andrew did not become actively interested in politics until his
admission to the bar, and then he joined the Whig party, and became
thoroughly in earnest in advocating the Anti-Slavery movement. In
1859 he was chosen to the lower branch of the Legislature and at once
took a prominent position. In 1860 he was nominated for Governor of
the Commonwealth, by a general popular impulse which overwhelmed
the old political managers, who regarded him as an intruder upon the
arena, and had laid other plans. He was called to the position of chief

magistrate of Massachusetts at a most momentous time, but he was
found equal to the emergency, and early acquired, by general consent,
the title of "The Great War-Governor."
It was just on the eve of the
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