Louis T. Michener

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Louis T. Michener
14th Indiana Attorney General
In office
November 22, 1886 – November 22, 1890
GovernorIsaac P. Gray, Alvin P. Hovey
Preceded byFrancis T. Hord
Succeeded byAlonzo G. Smith

Louis Theodore Michener (December 21, 1848 - February 10, 1928) was an American lawyer and politician who served as the fourteenth Indiana Attorney General from November 22, 1886 to November 22, 1890. Michener also served on the staff of President Benjamin Harrison as both a campaign manager and political adviser.[1][2][3][4]

Biography[edit]

Early life and education[edit]

Michener was born in Connersville, Indiana to William and Mary A. (née Blake) Michener. William Michener, a native of Ohio who came to Indiana as a child, was descended from a Quaker family from Washington County, Pennsylvania. Mary Michener was a native of Virginia and also came to Indiana with her family at a young age.[1][3]

Michener attended common schools in Fayette County and was a student at Brookville College for a year. In 1870, he began to read law with James C. McIntosh in Connersville. He was admitted to the bar in 1871 and opened a practice in Brookville.[1]

Political career[edit]

In 1871, Michener, a Republican, was appointed deputy district attorney of Franklin County. He held this office for two years.[1]

In 1873, Michener moved to Winfield, Kansas before returning to Indiana one year later, settling in Shelbyville. In Shelbyville, he continued to practice law in partnership with his father-in-law, Thomas B. Adams. Michener left the firm in 1886.[1][3]

In 1886, Michener was elected Indiana Attorney General, succeeding Francis T. Hord. He served in the administrations of Governors Isaac P. Gray (a Democrat) and Alvin P. Hovey (a Republican). Michener served two full terms as Attorney General and was succeeded to the office by Alonzo G. Smith. From 1886 to 1887, the Deputy Attorney General under Michener was William B. Hord, son of Michener's predecessor, Francis T. Hord.[1][5]

In addition to his duties as Attorney General, Michener served as chairman of the Indiana Republican Party Committee from 1888-1890, as a delegate to the 1884 Republican National Convention in Chicago, and also as campaign manager to Benjamin Harrison (U.S. Senator from Indiana) during the 1888 presidential election. Michener would also serve as campaign manager for Harrison in the 1892 election. Michener convinced Stephen B. Elkins (the man Harrison would later appoint as Secretary of War) to back Harrison in the 1888 Republican primaries, part of a larger bid to convince supporters of James G. Blaine to support Harrison over other Republican candidates. Following Harrison's election to the presidency, Michener joined the president's staff as a political adviser.[1][3][6][7]

Michener was also an early supporter of Theodore Roosevelt. Michener, along with Henry Cabot Lodge and presidential secretary Elijah W. Halford, successfully convinced President Harrison to appoint Roosevelt to the United States Civil Service Commission in 1889. In 1904, Michener wrote a letter to James S. Clarkson promoting the Republican ticket of Theodore Roosevelt and Charles W. Fairbanks in the 1904 presidential election, stating that opposition to Roosevelt and Fairbanks came primarily from Southern Democrats who wished to preserve Jim Crow laws that disenfranchised African Americans.[6][8]

Personal life and death[edit]

Michener was a friend and political ally of Richard W. Thompson, a U.S. Representative from Indiana and Secretary of the Navy.[9]

In 1872, Michener married Mary E. Adams, daughter of his law partner, Thomas B. Adams. Mary Adams was a native of Franklin County and moved with her husband to Washington, D.C. where she died in 1935. They had one child, Nora, who married a D.C. lawyer.[3]

Michener died in 1928.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Monks, Leander John (1916). Courts and lawyers of Indiana. Indianapolis: Federal Publishing Company.
  2. ^ "Attorneys General of Indiana". Indiana State Library. 2 December 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Morrow, John (1958). The family and descendants of William Barnes Adams and Martha Lariomore Adams of Laurei, Indiana. Together with genealogieal data on the following families; Bowers, Bullitt, Larimore, Lehmer, Lindley, Linville, McElhiney, Melone, Morrow, Peery, Perin, and Pettit, and with early historical incidents of Franklin and Fayette Counties, Indiana.
  4. ^ "Michener on Indiana Vote (2): MICHENER ON INDIANA VOTE.(2); Expects McKinley to Carry State by a Reduced Plurality". The New York Times. 28 Aug 1900.
  5. ^ Hord, Arnold Harris (1898). Genealogy of the Hord family. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company.
  6. ^ a b Armbruster, Carl Joseph. "Problems and Personalities of the Civil Service Reform in the Administration of Benjamin Harrison". Loyola eCommons. Loyola University Chicago.
  7. ^ Williams, John Alexander (March 1972). "Stephen B. Elkins and the Benjamin Harrison Campaign and Cabinet, 1887-1891". Indiana Magazine of History. 68 (1): 1–23. JSTOR 27789790.
  8. ^ "Letter from Louis T. Michener to James Sullivan Clarkson". Theodore Roosevelt Center. Dickinson State University.
  9. ^ "Letter from Louis T. Michener to Richard W. Thompson". The Lincoln Financial Foundation Collection.
Political offices
Preceded by Indiana Attorney General
1886-1890
Succeeded by