Ohio History Journal

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John A

John A. Bingham.                 331

 

JOHN A. BINGHAM.

ADDRESS OF HON. J. B. FORAKER ON THE OCCASION OF THE

UNVEILING OF MONUMENT IN HONOR OF HON. JOHN A.

BINGHAM, AT CADIZ, OHIO, OCTOBER 5, 1901.

Mr. Chairman and Fellow Citizens:

The private life and character of John A. Bingham were

the special possessions of this community.

You were his neighbors and friends.

He came and went in your midst.

You were in daily contact with him.

You knew him under all the varying circumstances of his

long and eventful career.

You saw him tested by the trying vicissitudes of the tem-

pestuous times with which his most conspicuous public service

was identified.

You knew better than anybody else can his private life and

character, and time and again you honored him with your con-

fidence and attested your high estimate of his personal worth,

his integrity, and his splendid qualities of nature and heart.

It would be almost out of place for me to speak of him on

these points in this presence.

As to his public life, it is different. It is the common prop-

erty of the whole country -mine as well as yours. This monu-

ment is in its honor and this occasion calls for its review.

The first twenty-five years of his life were spent in prepara-

tion; the last fifteen in retirement.

The other forty-five years that he lived were devoted almost

exclusively to the public service.

He entered upon his career with a mind all aflame with zeal

for the great work in which he was to engage.

He dealt with all the economic questions of his day-

finance, taxation, national banks, the tariff, and public improve-

ments; but the subjects with which his fame is linked were

slavery, secession, rebellion, and reconstruction.

To intelligently appreciate his work, we must approach it

as he did.