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William P. Frye

American politician from Maine (1830–1911)

William P. Frye

Summary

American politician from Maine (1830–1911)

FieldValue
nameWilliam Pierce Frye
imageWilliam P. Frye - Brady-Handy.jpg
captionFrye
order1President pro tempore of the United States Senate
term_start1February 7, 1896
term_end1April 27, 1911
preceded1Isham G. Harris
succeeded1Rotating pro terms
order2United States Senator
from Maine
term_start2March 18, 1881
term_end2August 8, 1911
preceded2James G. Blaine
succeeded2Obadiah Gardner
order3Chairman of the House Republican Conference
1blankname3Speaker
1namedata3Samuel J. Randall
term_start3March 4, 1879
term_end3March 3, 1881
predecessor3Eugene Hale
successor3George M. Robeson
state4Maine
district42nd
term_start4March 4, 1871
term_end4March 17, 1881
preceded4Samuel P. Morrill
succeeded4Nelson Dingley, Jr.
office518th Attorney General of Maine
term_start51867
term_end51871
governor5Joshua Chamberlain
preceded5John A. Peters
succeeded5Thomas Brackett Reed
office6Member of the Maine House of Representatives
term61867
term71861–1862
birth_dateSeptember 2, 1830
birth_placeLewiston, Maine, U.S.
death_date
death_placeLewiston, Maine, U.S.
resting_placeRiverside Cemetery
partyRepublican
relationsWallace H. White Jr. (grandson)
alma_materBowdoin College
Bates College (LL.D.)
occupation
signatureSignature of William Pierce Frye (1830–1911) from Genealogical and Family History of the State of Maine.png

from Maine Bates College (LL.D.) William Pierce Frye (September 2, 1830 – August 8, 1911) was an American politician from Maine. A member of the Republican Party, Frye spent most of his political career as a legislator, serving in the Maine House of Representatives and then U.S. House of Representatives, before being elected to the U.S. Senate, where he served for 30 years before dying in office. Frye was a member of the Frye political family, and was the grandfather of Wallace H. White Jr., and the son of John March Frye. He was also a prominent member of the Peucinian Society tradition.

Fry was a leader of the "Old Guard" faction of conservative Republicans, exerting his weight on such important committees as Rules, Foreign Relations, Appropriations, and Commerce. He was best known for supporting the shipping industry, but repeatedly failed to obtain government subsidies. He also supported high tariffs, expansion that sought additional territory and the canal connecting the Atlantic and Pacific. He favored the annexation of Hawaii and the acquisition of the Philippine Islands in 1898. President William McKinley appointed him to the peace commission that negotiated the end of the Spanish-American war.

Biography

Mrs. William P. Frye

Frye was born in Lewiston, Maine, in Androscoggin County. He attended public schools there and graduated from Bowdoin College in Brunswick in 1850. Frye studied law and was later admitted to the bar. He began practicing in Rockland, Maine in 1853 but later returned to Lewiston, and practiced law there. While living in Rockland, he married Caroline Spear (1832 - 1900) in February 1853. Frye played a role in founding Bates College in Lewiston and served as a longtime trustee of the college. Frye received a LL.D. from Bates in 1881.

Frye was a presidential elector in 1864.

Frye served in the Maine House of Representatives from 1861 to 1862 and again in 1867. He was later elected as the mayor of Lewiston, holding that position from 1866 to 1867, when he became the state attorney general. Frye left the attorney general post in 1869. He was elected as a Republican in 1870 to the U.S. House of Representatives. Frye served in the 42nd Congress and the five succeeding Congresses from March 4, 1871, to March 17, 1881, when he resigned after being elected Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of James G. Blaine, who was appointed by President Garfield to be Secretary of State. He served over 30 years in the Senate (March 18, 1881 – August 8, 1911), and was reelected in 1883, 1889, 1895, 1901, and 1907.

During his tenure in the Senate, Frye served as its President pro tempore from the 54th–62nd Congress. The Vice Presidency was vacant twice during that time: November 21, 1899 – March 4, 1901, following the death of Garret Hobart, and September 14, 1901 – March 4, 1905, after Theodore Roosevelt succeeded to the presidency. Frye resigned as president pro tempore due to ill health a couple of months before his death. Electing his successor proved difficult for the Senate, as the Republicans, then in the majority, were split between progressive and conservative factions, each promoting its own candidate. It took several months for a consensus way forward to emerge. At the time of his resignation he had served longer in that position then anyone else, 15 years, 2 months, 21 days.

Frye was also the chairman of the Rules Committee (47th–49th Congress). Frye also was a member of the Commerce Committee (50th–62nd Congress) and a member of the commission which met in Paris in September 1898 to adjust the Treaty of Paris between the United States and Spain, ending the Spanish–American War.

Senator Frye was a charter member of the District of Columbia Society of the Sons of the American Revolution when it was founded in 1890.

Frye died in Lewiston in 1911. He is interred in the Riverside Cemetery. The Sen. William P. Frye House near Bates College in Lewiston is on the National Historic Register.

Notes

References

  1. Lewis L. Gould, "Frye, William Pierce" ''American National Biography'' (1999)
  2. (9 November 1903). "S. Doc. 58-1 - Fifty-eighth Congress. (Extraordinary session -- beginning November 9, 1903.) Official Congressional Directory for the use of the United States Congress. Compiled under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing by A.J. Halford. Special edition. Corrections made to November 5, 1903". U.S. Government Printing Office.
  3. (1898). "The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography". James T. White & Company.
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