Richard Almgill Harrison (April 8, 1824 – July 30, 1904) was an American politician and jurist from Ohio. He was elected to succeed Thomas Corwin in the United States House of Representatives, serving from 1861 to 1863. He was several times considered for a seat on the Supreme Court of Ohio, but declined the honor.
Harrison was born in Thirsk, England on April 8, 1824 to Robert and Mary (Almgill) Harrison. His father was a Methodist minister and mechanic. In 1832, the family immigrated to the United States, settling first in Waynesville, Ohio and later in Springfield. Harrison attended Ohio public schools and graduated from Springfield High School. While a student, he worked as a printer's devil in the office of the Springfield Republic, an influential Whig paper. Following graduation, he studied law successively under William A. Rodgers and William White before entering the Cincinnati Law School. Upon completion of the six-month course of study, he was admitted to the Ohio Bar on April 8, 1846. In 1847, he married Maria Louisa Warner, daughter of Henry Warner, with whom he had seven children.[1]
Following the appointment of Thomas Corwin as U.S. minister to Mexico, Harrison was nominated for Corwin's vacant seat in the U.S. House of Representatives by the Union Party, a coalition of War Democrats and conservative Republicans. He narrowly defeated Aaron Harlan, the candidate of the Radical Republicans, and served the remainder of Corwin's term.[3][4] He attended the special session of Congress that convened July 4, 1861. He was not a candidate for re-election in 1862, and was succeeded by DemocratSamuel S. Cox.[5] In October 1864, he denied rumors that he would vote for the Democratic nominee for president, General George B. McClellan, and declared his support for Lincoln's re-election.[6]
After the war, Harrison was several times considered for a seat on the Ohio Supreme Court. He was a Democratic candidate for that office in 1870, but was defeated along with the rest of the Democratic state ticket.[7] He was offered an appointment to the bench by GovernorJoseph B. Foraker in 1887, but declined. In 1893, Harrison was again considered for a judicial appointment, this time to the United States Supreme Court; on this occasion, he was passed over due to his advanced age.[8]
In his later career, Harrison won great acclaim for his work as a corporate attorney specializing in railways.[9] His work in the Boesel Railroad Cases (1872) established his national reputation as an authority on constitutional issues.[10] He praised President Theodore Roosevelt and Attorney GeneralPhilander C. Knox in connection with the Northern Securities case, and predicted the court would find in favor of the administration.[11]