John Coit Spooner (January 6, 1843 – June 11, 1919) was a politician and lawyer from Wisconsin. He served in the United States Senate from 1885 to 1891 and from 1897 to 1907. A Republican, by the 1890s, he was one of the "Big Four" key Republicans who largely controlled the major decisions of the Senate, along with Orville H. Platt of Connecticut, William B. Allison of Iowa, and Nelson W. Aldrich of Rhode Island.
Early life
Portrait of Spooner in 1899
Spooner was born in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, on January 6, 1843, the son of Philip Loring Spooner and Lydia (Coit) Spooner.[1] Philip Spooner was an attorney and judge and served on the bench in both Indiana and Wisconsin.[2] Spooner moved with his parents to Madison, Wisconsin, in 1859.[3] He attended the common schools and graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a Bachelor of Philosophy (Philosophiae Baccalaureus, or P.B.) degree in 1864.[4][a] While in college, Spooner joined the Psi Upsilon fraternity[5] and was admitted to membership in Phi Beta Kappa.[6]
Military service
During the Civil War, he enlisted in the Union Army as a private assigned to Company D, 40th Wisconsin Infantry, a three-month unit.[2] After Spooner's 100 days of service were complete, he returned home and recruited a company from his college classmates, Company A, 50th Wisconsin Infantry, which he commanded as a captain.[3] At the close of the war, Spooner received a brevet promotion to major.[7]
After becoming a lawyer, Spooner was appointed assistant attorney general of Wisconsin and he served from 1869 to 1870.[9] In 1869, Spooner received the honorary degree of Master of Arts from the University of Wisconsin.[11][12] Spooner moved to Hudson in 1870, and practiced law there from 1870 to 1884.[7] He established himself in the field of railroad and corporation law, and served as counsel for the West Wisconsin Railway and Chicago, St. Paul and Minneapolis Railway.[9]
Spooner was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1872.[3] He was a member of the University of Wisconsin Board of Regents from 1882 to 1886.[3]
In 1888 and again in 1892, Spooner was a delegate to the Republican National Convention and was the chairman of Wisconsin's delegation.[14] Spooner was the unsuccessful Republican nominee for governor of Wisconsin in 1892.[9] After his election defeat, he moved to Madison and resumed practicing law in 1893.[9]
In 1897, Spooner was elected to the U.S. Senate, succeeding Vilas.[9] He was reelected in 1903,[9] and served from 1897 until his resignation in 1907.[13] He served as chairman of the Committee on Canadian Relations from 1897 to 1899 and of the Committee on Rules from 1899 to 1907.[13]
Spooner and fellow Wisconsin Senator, Robert M. La Follette, were known to be bitter rivals.[16] Spooner disagreed with La Follette's progressive policies, which were opposed to his own conservative policies.[16] Spooner was also one of the early opponents of direct primary elections.[17] At the time, party nominees were selected by the party officials, sometimes by party bosses.[17] Spooner's view of political campaigns if direct primaries became standard was:
Direct primaries would destroy the party machinery ... and would build up a lot of personal machines, and would make every man a self-seeker, and would degrade politics by turning candidacies into bitter personal wrangles.[18]
Spooner shocked the state of Wisconsin and much of the American political world with his sudden resignation in March 1907. In his letter to the Governor, he explained that he felt the need to return to the legal profession in order to build a financial cushion to provide for his retirement and his heirs. He also noted that he had only two years left in his term and did not plan to seek re-election anyway.[19] Members of the political media also speculated that Spooner had timed his resignation to catch the La Follette faction off guard and unprepared for a Senate campaign.[20]
On hearing of his resignation, President Roosevelt remarked, "I can not sufficiently express my regret at Senator Spooner's resignation. We lose one of the ablest, most efficient, most fearless, and most upright public servants that the nation has had."[21]
Later life
After his retirement from the Senate, he practiced law in New York City.[22][23] In 1910, Spooner and Joseph P. Cotton formed the firm of Spooner & Cotton, where Spooner practiced until his death.[22][23]
In 1868, Spooner married Annie Main of Madison.[14] They were the parents of four children, three of whom lived to adulthood[14]—Charles Philip Spooner (1869–1947), Willet Main Spooner (1871–1928), John C. Spooner (1877–1881), and Philip Loring Spooner (1879–1945).[24]
Notes
^Many sources incorrectly state that Spooner received a Ph.D. This appears to be a misreading of the abbreviation for his bachelor's degree, which was occasionally abbreviated as B.Ph. or Ph.B.
Fowler, Dorothy Ganfield. John Coit Spooner: Defender of Presidents (1961) scholarly biography
Parker, James Richard. "Senator John C. Spooner, 1897-1907" (PhD dissertation, University of Maryland; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1972. 7229414).
Parker, James R. "Paternalism and Racism: Senator John C. Spooner and American Minorities, 1897-1907." Wisconsin Magazine of History (1974): 195–200. online