Walker Blaine Explained

Walker Blaine
Order1:3rd
Title1:Third Assistant Secretary of State
Predecessor3:Charles Payson
Successor3:Alvey A. Adee
President3:James A. Garfield
Chester A. Arthur
Birth Date:8 May 1855
Birth Place:Augusta, Maine, U.S.
Death Place:Washington, D.C., U.S.
Education:Yale University
Columbia University
Occupation:Lawyer
Assistant Counsel of the United States for the Court of Commissioners of Alabama Claims (1882-1886)
Solicitor of the Department of State (1889-1890)
Party:Republican
Parents:James G. Blaine
Harriet (Stanwood) Blaine
Nationality:American

Walker Blaine (May 8, 1855 – January 15, 1890) was an official in the United States Department of State.

Biography

Walker Blaine was born in Augusta, Maine, on May 8, 1855, the son of James G. Blaine and Harriet (Stanwood) Blaine. In 1876, he graduated from Yale College, where he served on the third editorial board of The Yale Record[1] and was a member of Skull and Bones.[2] He then earned his law degree from Columbia Law School.

After law school, Blaine joined the law office of Senator Cushman Kellogg Davis (R–Minn.) in Saint Paul, Minnesota. In 1881, Blaine's father became the United States Secretary of State in the administration of President of the United States James A. Garfield. Blaine's father named him Third Assistant Secretary of State, with Blaine holding this office from July 1, 1881, until June 30, 1882. During his time as Third Assistant Secretary, Blaine and William Henry Trescot were sent on a special diplomatic mission to South America. Following the death of Garfield and the resignation of the older Blaine, President Chester A. Arthur appointed Walker Blaine assistant counsel of the United States for the Court of Commissioners of Alabama Claims. Blaine held this office until the court's abolition on January 1, 1886. He then moved to Chicago to practice law. In 1889, Blaine's father became Secretary of State for the second time (this time in the Benjamin Harrison administration) and James G. Blaine again secured a position for Walker Blaine in the United States Department of State, this time as Solicitor of the Department of State.

Walker Blaine died in Washington, D.C., unexpectedly on January 15, 1890, of pneumonia that followed a bout of influenza.[3] He is buried at Oak Hill Cemetery in Washington.

References

  1. "Editors Yale Record". The Yale Banner. New Haven: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor, Printers. 1874. p. 78.
  2. Book: Catalogue of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity . March 25, 2011 . 1910 . The Delta Kappa Epsilon council.
  3. News: 1922-02-27 . Blaine Walker 2 . 18 . The Evening News . 2023-04-25.

External links