Online Encyclopedia

THOMAS BRACKETT REED (1839—1902)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 973 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

THOMAS BRACKETT REED (1839—1902)  ,
See also:
American states-man, was born in Portland, Maine, on the 18th of
See also:
October 1839 . He graduated at Bowdoin College in 186o; was acting assistant-paymaster in the U.S.
See also:
navy from
See also:
April 1864 to November 1865; and in 1865 was admitted to the bar . He was a member of the Maine House of Representatives in 1868—69 and of the state Senate in 187o, was attorney-general of the state in 1870—72, and was city
See also:
solicitor of Portland in 1874—77 . He was a Republican member of the
See also:
National House of Representatives from 1877 until 1899; was a member of the Potter Committee to investigate the disputed presidential election of 1876, and conducted the examination of
See also:
Samuel J . Tilden; and he was
See also:
Speaker of the House in 1889—91, and in 1895—99 . He was a " strong " speaker in his control of the proceedings, and he
See also:
developed an organized committee
See also:
system, making the majority of the Committee on Rules consist of the speaker and chairman of the committees on ways and means and on appropriations . The " Reed Rules,"
See also:
drawn up by him, William McKinley and J . G . Cannon, were adopted on the 14th of
See also:
February 1890; they provided that every member must
See also:
vote, unless pecuniarily interested in a measure, that members
See also:
present and not voting may be counted for a quorum, and that no dilatory motion be entertained by the speaker . His
See also:
parliamentary methods were bitterly attacked by his
See also:
political enemies, who called him "
See also:
Tsar Reed." He greatly hastened the passage of the McKinley
See also:
Bill in 189o, and of the Dingley Bill in 1897 . His rules and methods of control of legislation were adopted by his successors in the speakership, and the power of the Rules Committee was greatly increased under Charles F . Crisp (1845—1896), Democratic speaker in 1891—1895 .

After the

war with Spain Reed broke with the administration on the issue of imperialism . He resigned his seat in 1899 and practised law in New York City . He died in Washington on the 7th of December 1902 . Reed was a remarkable personality, of whom many good stories were told, and opinions varied as to his conduct in the chair; but he was essentially a man of rugged honesty and power, whose
See also:
death was a loss to American public
See also:
life . Reed's Rules were published as a parliamentary
See also:
manual . He edited with others a Library of
See also:
Modern Eloquence (10 vols., 1901): See the chapter on Reed in H . B . Fuller's Speakers of the House (Boston, 1909) .

End of Article: THOMAS BRACKETT REED (1839—1902)
[back]
JOSEPH REED (1741—1785)
[next]
REEDBUCK (Dutch rietbok)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.