Born to Hannah (née Pitts) of North Carolina[1] and Beebe Booth[2] of Connecticut, Quakers,[1] in Salem, Indiana, he attended the common schools. In 1841, his parents Beebe and Hannah Booth moved from Salem to Terre Haute, Indiana. In 1846, he graduated from Asbury College (later renamed DePauw University), in nearby Greencastle, Indiana.[3] Booth worked in his father's Terre Haute store, then studied law in the office of attorney William Dickson Griswold (1815–1896). He was admitted to the bar in 1849 and became a partner in Griswold's law firm.[1]
Business career
In 1850, Booth traveled[4] to Panama, continuing by ship to San Francisco.[1]Central Pacific Railroad founder,[5] Lucius Anson Booth (1820–1906), a cousin, and New York native,[1][6] and Thomas Morton Lindley Sr. (1819–1896),[7] in 1849, began the firm of Lindley & Booth.[8] When Newton Booth arrived in Sacramento, the first cholera epidemic was spreading, and he went to Amador County, where he was sick for some time.[6] The epidemic, reportedly, ended in three weeks.[1] In May 1850, John Forshee, Lucius Anson Booth and John Dye established Forshee, Booth & Co.[9][6] In the Spring of 1851, Lucius Anson Booth and John Dye retired from Forshee, Booth & Co.[9] In February, 1851, Charles Smith and Newton Booth established a business of Smith & Booth., on J Street, between 4th and 5th streets.[1][9][6] Kleinhaus & Co., established in 1852, Theodore P. and David W. Kleinhaus as partners.[9]
The firms suffered from the Sacramento Fire of 2 November 1852.[10][6] Soon after Lucius Anson Booth, one of the organizers of Lindley & Booth, became a partner, and the firm assumed the name of Booth & Co. and continued until 1856, when Newton Booth retired and returned to Indiana, while the firm consolidated with Kleinhans & Co., but the name was not changed from Booth & Co.[6] In 1856, C. T. Wheeler and T. L. Barker were admitted as partners.[9] The Kleinhaus retired in 1860, and Newton Booth again entered the firm.[9] Lucius Anson Booth and T. L. Barker retired in 1862, and Joseph Terry Glover (1832–1886), of San Francisco, became a partner in the firm.[9][1] In 1869, Lucius Anson Booth was working in SF and living in Oakland.[11] In December 1871, business was established in San Francisco in connection with W. W. Dodge.[9] The firm in 1878 was composed of Newton Booth, C. T. Wheeler, Joseph Terry Glover and W. W. Dodge.[9]
Newton Booth made his fortune as a saloon keeper.[citation needed]
He returned to Terre Haute in 1856 and engaged in the practice of law with future U.S. Congressman Harvey D. Scott.[1] In the summer of 1857 Booth traveled through Europe.[1]
Political career
In 1860, Booth returned to Sacramento and the wholesale mercantile business.[9][6] He campaigned for Abraham Lincoln for president.[1] In 1862, he was elected to the California State Senate, serving from 1863 to 1865. In 1871, Booth was elected the eleventh governor of California, serving from December 8, 1871, to February 27, 1875. Booth openly sought black support.[12]
In 1873, Booth helped to organize the Dolly Vardens,[13] a new, independent, republican, anti-monopoly political party.[14] The party was named for a calico pattern composed of many different colors and figures, alluding to a political party made up of "sore heads from any party or by any name".[2] With their support, he was elected to the U.S. Senate as a member of the Anti-Monopoly Party in December 1873, serving from March 4, 1875, to March 3, 1881. He was not a candidate for reelection in 1880. During his time in the Senate, he served as chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Manufacturers and the U.S. Senate Committee on Patents, both during the 45th Congress. In 1876, the Greenback Party nominated him for Vice President of the United States on the ticket with Peter Cooper. However, Booth declined the nomination and Samuel F. Cary replaced him. As of 2021, Booth remains the only senator from California who served as a member of a third party.
After serving in Congress, he returned to his wholesale mercantile business in Sacramento.[9][6]
Personal life
He married the widow of Joseph Terry Glover,[9][17][18] his business partner, Octavine C. Glover[19] (1833–1907) on 9 February 1892, in Sacramento, where he died, in July 1892.[20] His wife, Octavine C. Booth (1833–1907), Glover's mother-in-law, Eliza Payne (1810–1873); his sister-in-law, Julia E. Dunn (1839–1923); and his brother-in-law, William Henry Payne (1848–1919); are interred in the Newton Booth plot[1] in Sacramento Historic City Cemetery.[15][16]
Sobel, Robert, and John Raimo, eds. Biographical Directory of the Governors of the United States, 1789–1978. Vol. 1. Westport, CT: Meckler Books, 1978. 4 vols.
Melendy, H. Brett; Gilbert, Benjamin F. The Governors of California: From Peter H. Burnett to Edmund G. Brown. Georgetown, CA: Talisman Press, 1965.
Fulton, Robert Lardin (1924). Epic of the Overland. A. M. Robertson. p. 14. D. W. Strong , Charles Marsh , and L. A. Booth as the other four directors . ... Sacramento , was a cousin of Newton Booth , afterwards Governor of ...
Fulton, Robert Lardin (1924). Epic of the Overland. A. M. Robertson. p. 14. D. W. Strong , Charles Marsh , and L. A. Booth as the other four directors . ... Sacramento , was a cousin of Newton Booth , afterwards Governor of ...
^Willis, William Ladd (1913). "Newton Booth". History of Sacramento County, California: With Biographical Sketches of the Leading Men and Women of the County who Have Been Identified with Its Growth and Development from the Early Days to the Present. Historic Record Company. pp. 239–243. ISBN9783849675011.
"ALTA CALIFORNIA PRINTING HOUSE". Daily Alta California. 529 California Street, San Francisco, California. 24 July 1869. p. 2. Retrieved 9 February 2022 – via California Digital Newspaper Collection. Volume 21, Number 7065. This establishment has been in operation since the year 1849 and has become celebrated throughout the Pacific Coast for the elegance and promptitude with which orders have been executed. The prices are satisfactory, as evidenced by the constantly recurring orders from the same parties who have been in the habit of procuring their work here. OUR JOB TYPES and PRINTING MATERIALS Are the most beautiful that could be selected, now used in executing FINE LETTER PRESS PRINTING, SUCH AS BOOKS, CIRCULARS, PAMPHLETS. CARDS, HAND-BILLS. INSURANCE POLICIES BILLS OF LADING, BILL-HEADS, BANK CHECKS. BLANKS, RAILROAD, STAGE AND STEAMBOAT BILLS or EVERY VARIETY, WITH APPROPRIATE ENGRAVINGS. FROM THE FINEST CARD, AND THE MOST DELICATE CIRCULAR, TO THE MOST SHOWY POSTER.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
Parkison, R. R. (1878). "Booth & Co., Wholesale Grocers. - Sacramento Large Business Houses, 1878". Pen Portraits. San Francisco. pp. 113–142 – via Golden Nugget Library. Submitted by: Nancy Pratt Melton{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^"This Day in History". Sacramento History Museum. 23 February 2015. Retrieved 7 February 2022. November 2, 1852 On this day in 1852, Sacramento's great fire, known as the Great Conflagration, burned more than 80 percent of the structures in the city.
^Langley, Henry G. (1869). The San Francisco directory for the year 1869. San Francisco: Commercial Steam Presses, S.D. Valentine & Sons. p. 106. Booth, Lucius A., real estate, office room 4, 402 Front, residence Oakland