Page:The Biographical Dictionary of America, vol. 01.djvu/253

 BAYARD.

BAYLES.

Bible society. He removed to Princeton, N. J. , in 1806, and was a member of the house of assembly. Among his published works are : ' " A Digest of American Cases on the Law of Evi- dence '■ (1810) ; '• An Abstract of the Laws of the United States, which Relate to the Duties and Authority of Judges of Inferior State Courts and Ju.stices of the Peace" (1834), and "Letters on the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper " (1835). He died in Princeton, N. J., May 12, 1840.

BAYARD, Thomas Francis, diplomatist, was born at Wilmington, Del., Oct. 29, 1828; son of James Asheton Bayard, senator. In 1841 he en- tered Dr. F. L. Hawks"s famous school, St. Thomas hall, at Flushing, L. I., where he remained until the school finally closed, in 1843. On his return from school he passed a year and a half in the counting-room of his brother-in-law, Augustus Van Cort- land Schermerhorn, in New York city, re- moving at the end of that time to Philadel- phia, where he en- tered the employ of S. Morris Wain, a mer- chant. He returned to Delaware in 1848, where, after studying law, he was admitted to the bar, in 1851. His first public oflSce was that of United States attorney for Dela- ware, to which he was appointed in 1858, and which he resigned in 1854, and removed to Phila- delphia, where, in co-partnership with William Shippen, Jr., he resinned the practice of the law. Upon the death of Mr. Shippen, in 1856, Mr. Bayard returned to Wihnington, Del. In 1861 he made a memorable peace speech at Dover, Del. , and succeeded his father as United States senator on the expiration of his term, March 3, 1869, his election being on the same day and by the same legislature that elected his father to fill out the short term made vacant by the death of Senator Riddle. He was re-elected in 1875 aftd in 1881. During his senatorial career, which lasted until 1884. he was prominent on the most unpor- tant committees of that body. In 1876-'77 he was one of the conmiission to decide the electoral vote of the disputed states. He was nominated as a can- didate before the Democratic convention for the presidency of the U. S. in 1880 and 1884. In 1885 President Cleveland appointed him secretary of state, and he served with great ability through- out Cleveland's first administration, at the close of which, in 1889, he retired to private life. In

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1893 he was appointed by President Cleveland ambassador to Great Britain. Lord Salisbury, in 1896, sent Mr. Bayard an advance copy of the oflicial reply of Great Britain to the inquiry of the U. S. government concerning the Venezuelan dispute, and this courtesj' was considered symp- tomatic of the high measure of esteem accorded him in British oflicial circles. In 1895 Lord Sack- ville, the British minister, who had been recalled at the demand of President Cleveland in 1889 for an official indiscretion in writing a political letter during the presidential campaign of 1888, issued a pamphlet attacking Mr. Bayard; the British press and people strongly condemned Lord Sackville's action, the result being an acces- sion of popularity on the part of Mr. Bayard. In December, 1895, Representative Barrett of Massa- chusetts asked for the impeaclmient of Mr. Bay- ard for ' ' high crimes and misdemeanors, ' " becau.se of utterances in certain speeches made at Edin- burgh, Scotland, and Boston, England, which were construed into an attack on the policy of protection. The words " by impeachment or otherwise " being struck out, the amended resolu- tion, after the preamble had been withdra\vn, was adopted and referred to the committee on foreign affairs. The freedom of the city of Dun- dee, Scotland, was presented to Mr. Bayard, Xov. 13, 1895, and at the opening of the H.iashalter water-color exhibition in London. Mr. Bayard made the inaugural speech. The degree of D.C.L. was conferred upon him by Oxford uni- versity, Jime 24, 1896, and he was further honored in the peaceful adjudication of the Venezuelan trouble. He died at Dedham, Mass., Sept. 28, 1898. BAYLES, James Copper, editor, was born in New York city, July 3, 1845. In 1862 he entered the army and served for two years with the rank of 2d lieutenant. He was compelled to resign at the end of that time on account of illness, and in 1865 he began his career as a journalist by assvmiing editorial charge of the New York Citizen. He remained in this position for two years, then edited the Commercial Bulletin for a year ; for the ensuing three years he was editor of the Iron Age, and in 1874 founded and edited Tlie Metal Worker. Besides his regular work in journalism he experimented in physics and chem- istry, becoming an active and interested member of the American institute of mining engineers, of which he was twice made president, and he contributed several papers to its "Transac- tions." Among them are: " Explosion from Un- known Causes," " Spirally- Welded Steel Tubes " and " Spirally -Welded Tubing. " His articles on sanitary reform attracted much attention, and resulted in improved sanitary conditions in New Jersey. The sewer system in New Jersey being so faulty as to need extensive alterations,