 |
| Hon. H. J. Humes,
Engraving from the Centennial edition of the Daily
Tribune-Republican, 1888 |
Homer James Humes,
ex-state senator, was born in Woodcock township, Crawford county,
Pennsylvania, September 29, 1844. His father was killed by lightning in his
own house July 26, 1848, leaving to survive him a widow, Eliza, and four
children,Edwin, Homer, Ella and an infant daughter who died in 1851. Edwin
and Ella died in 1865, and his mother is also deceased, thus leaving Homer
the only surviving member of the family.
After his fathers death, the mother took the family to
the home of her father-in-law, James M. Humes, where they lived until the
children were able to take care of themselves At the age of nine Homer went
to his uncle, George Doctor, in Cambridge township, and lived with him till
the spring of 1861. He acquired what may be called a good common-school
education, and attended school at the Waterford Academy in the spring term
of 1862. He taught a country school during the winter of 1863-64, and in
April, 1865, he entered the Edinboro State Normal School, and continued
there for four full terms. In the fall of 1866 he entered Allegheny College,
at Meadville, Pennsylvania, at which he graduated in June, 1869 He taught
school for three terms after his graduation, and entered the law office of
W. R. Bole, the first of March, 1871, as a student of law, and was admitted
to the bar November 11, 1871. In February, 1872, he went south and west,
but returned to the office of Mr. Bole, his preceptor, and continued his law
study until October 14, when he opened an office for himself, and has since
been an active and successful practitioner.
He began his political career by stumping Crawford
county for Greeley in 1872, and since then has been among his partys
leaders in the county and state. He was chairman of the Democratic county
committee in 1873 and 1874. In 1873, by his energetic work, the Republican
majority was greatly reduced, and in 1874 the Democratic candidates were
elected, save one. He was a member of the state committee in 1876. Although
actively engaged in every political campaign till 1882, he attended strictly
to the practice of his profession, and has made his way to the front. in
1882 he was unanimously nominated by his party for state senator, and
although his district had given one thousand three hundred and forty-five
plurality for Garfield in 1880, he was elected by four hundred and one over
the Hon. A. B. Richmond.
During his service in the senate, Mr. Humes was a determined opponent of bad
legislation and jobs of every kind, and more frequently voted No than any
other senator. At the opening of the session of 1883 his attention was
attracted by the governors message, which showed that there was more than
five million dollars in idle cash in the state treasury, owing to the fact
that there existed a set of favored banks that were making money out of
state funds. After much careful study of the law, the senator prepared a
bill to compel the commissioners of the sinking fund to invest all surplus
funds in either state or United States bonds as required by the state
constitution. After a hard and long contest, in which Senator Cooper, of
Delaware, led the opposition forces, the bill became a law by receiving the
signature of Governor Robert F. Pattison on the last night of the session.
To enforce this law Governor Pattison was obliged to go into the courts to
compel the commissioners to take the sinking-fund money from favored banks
and invest it as required by the law. More than two million five hundred
thousand dollars state and four million two hundred thousand dollars United
States bonds have been purchased under the Humes bill, a saving to this
time, for the state, of more than three million dollars in interest which
would otherwise have gone to the state treasurers favored banks. In talking
of the passage of this bill the senator never tires of giving praise to
Senators Wallace, Gordon, Wolverton, Hall, Hess, Lee. Emery and Stewart for
their active co-operation.
In i886 he was unanimously renominated for the senate.
G. W. Delamater was his opponent. Money flowed without stint from the
pockets of his competitors, yet the senator ran ahead of his party ticket
and his competitors fell behind Governor Beavers vote. Since then the
senator has devoted himself to the practice of his profession.
During his service in the senate he was one of Governor
Pattisons trusted friends, and was on the best of terms with the whole
administration. The only friction between the senator and Governor Pattison
was concerning the appointment of Dr. F. E. Higbee as superintendent of
public instruction. This was political and not personal. The senator led the
Democratic forces in the attempt to defeat confirmation, but failed. His
principal reason was too close relationship between Higbee and the Soldiers
Orphan Syndicate, and subsequent information has clearly shown the senator
to be right.
He was the author of the bill to prevent the
consolidation of parallel and competing pipe lines, and by his every vote
sustained every move to enforce article seventeen of the constitution
concerning railroads and canals. In 1885
he offered a bill to enforce this article of the constitution, drawn
strickly under the twelfth section of the article, which is: The general
assembly shall enforce by appropriate legislation the provision of this
article. The bill simply provided penalties for the violation of each
section of the article; but it never got out of the committee. He offered an
amendment to the constitution, article five, section five, changing the
population from forty thousand to sixty thousand to entitle a county to a
separate judicial district.
In 1890 the senator took an active part in the renomination of Governor
Pattison, and was a delegate to the Democratic state convention in
Pattisons interest. He was largely instrumental in securing Pattisons
re-election.
In 1892, 1894 and 1896 he was one of Hon. J. C.
Sibleys staunchest supporters. He wrote several letters over his own
signature, and many not signed, declaring that he was for Sibley and free
silver coinage, because only by so doing could he be a Democrat as
prescribed by the Chicago platform of 1892. and if he must follow Grover
Clevelands interpretation of that platform to be a Democrat, he was one no
longer. He supported William J. Bryan in 1896 with unparalleled enthusiasm.
When Bryan was in Erie, in August of that year, he opened the meeting at the
Opera House with a speech that was excelled by none, and only equalled by
that of Mr. Bryan himself.
Senator Humes declares he is now in politics only for
the principle. He believes sincerely in the new Democracy as set forth in
the Chicago platform of 1896, and he has but one question to ask legislative
and executive candidates, and if they stand on that platform he will support
them, for they represent his cause. The senator is a forcible speaker, and
never uses notes.
He was a delegate to the Altoona convention in 1898,
and was a warm supporter of George A. Jenks, who was there nominated for
governor.
He was married to Delia F. Lowry, a daughter of Judge
Thomas J. Lowry, of Conneautville, February 11, 1874. They have one child, a
son, E. Lowry Humes, who is now a student at Allegheny College, and is
studying law in his fathers office.
Our county and its people:
a historical and memorial record of Crawford County, Pennsylvania by Samuel
P. Bates, 1899, pages 691-693.
.