HON. GEORGE ROSS
HON. GEORGE ROSS, an eminent jurist and
statesman, was born in Doylestown, August 24, 1841. He came of a distinguished and honored
ancestry. His earlier ancestors were of the clan Ross. of the Highlands
of Scotland. His great-great-grandfather Thomas Ross was born in the year
1708, in county Tyrone, Ireland, where his parents had sought a refuge from the horrors of
civil and internecine war in their native Scotia.Emigrating to America at the age of
twenty-one he settled in Solebury, Bucks county. He joined the Society of Friends and
became a distinguished preacher. He was a man of superior education and intellectual
ability, and traveled extensively in later life both in the American colonies and in
England and Ireland. He died at the home of Lindley Murray, the great
grammarian, in York, England, while on one of his religious visits in 1786. He married
Keziah Wilkinson in 1731, and had by her three children: John, Thomas,
and Mary, who married Thomas Smith. John Ross married
Mary Duer in 1754, and had seven children; Sarah, who died in childhood;
Thomas; Keziah, who married Benjamin Eastburn; John; Joseph; Isaiah; and
Mary, who died in infancy.
Thomas, the great-grandfather of the
subject of this sketch, as one of the executors of his fathers will, joined in the
conveyance of the Solebury homestead, patented to his father in 1737, to Jacob Van
Horn in 1787, and the latter conveyed it back to Thomas by deed dated two days
later. In 1796 he conveyed it to his son Thomas, who by will in 1814 devised it to his
brother, Judge John Ross of Easton, who devised it to his son Thomas, the
father of the subject of this sketch, who conveyed it to Edward Vansant in
1853. Thus the original homestead of the Ross family in Bucks county
remained in the family for one hundred and sixteen years, notwithstanding the fact that
for three generations the owners had been much more eminent as jurists than as farmers.
John Ross, eldest son of Thomas and Keziah, removed to Philadelphia. His
son Joseph removed to the West. John became an eminent physician. Thomas married Rachel Longstreth
and settled in West Chester. He was a lawyer, and had a large and lucrative
practice.
THOMAS ROSS, younger son
of Thomas and Keziah (Wilkinson) Ross, born on the old homestead in
Solebury, was the great-grandfather of the subject of this sketch. He married (first) a
Miss Clark, and (second) Jane Chapman, who was the
mother of his six children: Thomas, John, William, Cephas, Hugh and Samuel. He lived on
the Solebury plantation until 1796, when he removed with his family to Newtown, where he
died about 1814. His eldest son Thomas was appointed prothonotary and clerk of the courts
of Bucks county in 1801, and held those offices for eight years. He was born in 1767 and
was admitted to the bar of Northampton county in 1793, but practiced but a year of two,
when he removed to New York city. He returned to Newtown in 1800 and practiced law until
appointed prothonotary and clerk. His wife was Mary Lyons, of Long
Island. He died in 1815, while visiting his brother John at Easton and left no children.
Hugh Ross studied law with his brother John at Easton and on being
admitted to the bar returned to Newtown, later went to Trenton, New Jersey and finally
settled in Milford, Pike county, Pennsylvania. Samuel, the youngest child of Thomas Ross
(2), born 1779, married in 1815 Mary Helena Wirtz, and settled
in Philadelphia. He had six children. Cephas Ross, another son of Thomas
(2) remained in Bucks county, where he still has numerous descendants. He died in
Plumstrad in 1840.
HON. JOHN ROSS, the
grandfather of the subject of this sketch, son of Thomas and Jane (Chapman) Ross,
was born on the Solebury homestead, February 24, 1770. He received a liberal education,
but it appears that his family were averse to his following a professional career. From a
number of letters written by him in 1790 to his benefactor, Richard Backhouse,
it would seem that by reason of the difference with his parents as to his future career he
was cast upon his own resources. These letters are now in the possession of the
Pennsylvania Historical Society. He commenced life as a school teacher at Durham, where he
attracted the attention of Richard Backhouse , then proprietor of the
furnace. To Mr. Backhouse the youth confided his intention of going South
to seek his fortune. Mr. Backhouse urged him to take up the study of law,
and generously offered to give him sufficient financial aid to complete his studies and
start him in the practice of law. Taking up with this generous offer, the embryo judge
began the study of law with his cousin, Thomas Ross, of West Chester,
then in the same judicial district as Bucks county, and he was admitted to the bar of the
district in 1792. He settled at Easton, Northampton county and began the practice of law,
and at once sprang into prominence. Hon Henry P. Ross, his grandson, once
said: No member of the family approached him in ability, and his brilliant
professional career warrants the assertion, superlative though it be. A born politician,
he early launched into the arena of politics. He was elected to the state legislature in
1800. In 1804 he was a candidate for congress, but the jealousies aroused by the rival
claims of the three counties of Northampton, Bucks and Montgomery, then composing the
district, caused his defeat. He renewed the fight in 1808 and was then elected. At the
expiration of his term he was appointed prothonotary of Northampton county. Was elected to
congress again in 1814 and re-elected in 1816 and resigned to accept the appointment of
judge of the seventh judicial district, comprising the counties of Bucks, Montgomery,
Chester and Delaware, January 25, 1818. He had married November 19, 1795, Mary Jenkins,
whose family resided at Jenkintown, and on taking up the duties of his office he located
there. The act of March, 1821, placed Montgomery and Bucks in one judicial district and
Judge Ross removed to Doylestown, then the county seat of Bucks. He
purchased the old tavern stand where the National Bank now stands, and converted it into a
residence, and it remained the home of his descendants until 1896. Judge Ross
was appointed justice of the supreme court April 16, 1830, after which much of his time
was spent in Jenkintown. He died of apoplexy in Philadelphia January 31, 1834, in his
sixty-fourth year. While in Northampton county he had purchased a tract of 348 acres near
the Wind Gap in what is now Monroe county, and named it Ross Common. He set apart upon
this tract a family burying ground. Here his favorite brother Thomas was buried, and here
the famous jurist and statesman himself lies buried.
The children of Judge John Ross
were: George, a graduate of Princeton, who studied law with his father and was admitted to
the bar in 1818; (he became involved in a quarrel which resulted in a duel on the Delaware
river, and he was never afterwards heard from) Charles J.; Lord; Camilla, who married
General Peter Ihrie, of Easton; Serena; John, an invalid, though he lived
until 1886; Thomas; Jesse Jenkins, who was at one time consul to Sicily; Adelaide, who
married Dr. Samuel R. Dubbs, and Mary. Of these, George, Thomas, William
and Jenkins all were college graduates and all lawyers, though Thomas was the only one who
continued to practice. William became a teacher. Mary Jenkins Ross died
in December, 1845.
THOMAS ROSS, the father
of the subject of this sketch, was born in Easton, December 1,1806. He graduated at
Princeton in 1825, studied law, and was admitted to the bar February 9, 1829. Inheriting
the abilities of his distinguished ancestors, he was a fine pleader and a logical thinker
and became one of the eminent lawyers of his day. He was elected to congress from the
tenth district comprising Bucks and Lehigh in 1848, and re-elected in 1851, and the
district was never more ably represented. As an orator he obtained a national reputation.
He died July 7, 1865. His wife was Elizabeth, daughter of Levi Pawling of Montgomery
county, a member of the fiftieth congress, and grandaughter of Governor Heister. The
children of this marriage were Henry P., George and Mary.
Henry P. Ross, born
December 16, 1836, who became president judge of the seventh judicial district, graduated
at Princeton in 1857, studied law with his father and was admitted to the bar in December,
1859. He practiced law with his father until the death of the latter in 1865, when he took
his brother George into the firm. He was elected district attorney in 1862. He was a
brilliant lawyer and an accomplished speaker. He was a leader of his party and twice its
candidate for congress. He was elected additional law judge in 1869, and succeeded Judge Chapman
as president judge two years later. When the district was divided in 1874, he chose
Montgomery county and, finishing his term there, was re-elected in 1881, but died at
Norristown, April 13, 1882.
George Ross, son of
Thomas and Elizabeth (Pawling) Ross, was born August 24, 1841. He
obtained his preparatory education at the Tenent school at Hartsville, conducted by the
Rev. Mahlon and Charles Long, and at the Lawrenceville,
New Jersey Academy, under the tutorship of Dr. Hamill. He entered
Princeton in January, 1858, and graduated in the class of 1861. He at once began the study
of law with his father and brother at Doylestown and was admitted to the bar of the county
June 13, 1864. At the death of his father the following year he formed a partnership with
his elder brother, Hon. Henry P. Ross, which lasted until the elevation
of the latter to the bench in 1869, when he became associated with Levi L. James,
under the firm name of George Ross & L. L. James. At
the death of Mr. James in 1889, J. Ferdinand Long became
the junior partner.
Mr. Ross, like his father and
grandfather, was a trained and erudite lawyer, by years of study and patient industry he
had mastered the great principles of common and statute law, and soon earned the proud
distinction of being the recognized leader of the bar in his native county. He was a
forceful speaker, quiet and undemonstrative in his manner, not given to self-assertion in
oratory. One of his contemporaries has said of him, if the absence of art is the
highest quality of oratory, he was an orator indeed. His remarkable knowledge of the law,
his subtle power of logic, and his indomitable perseverance in the advocacy of the cause
of a client, have made his memory dear to the people he served, and made his name
remembered and honored in the community in which he lived. In 1872 he was a member
of the constitutional convention that framed our present state constitution, representing
the counties of Bucks and Northampton in that body. He was elected to the state senate in
1886, and succeeded himself four years later, a distinction exceedingly rare in the
history of his county. He was a life-long Democrat, and therefore represented the minority
in the law-making body of the state. Notwithstanding this fact he soon became known as the
recognized leader in all that pertained to the best interests of his state. At the
organization of the senate on January 2, 1895, Senator Brewer, of Indiana
county, who was not of his political faith, in calling the attention of the body to the
death of Senator Ross, said in part: Seldom has any legislative
body been called upon to mourn the loss of a more distinguished member. This is not the
proper time to pay a tribute to the distinguished services he rendered his state. There is
such a thing as leadership, known and recognized among men, and the members of this body,
irrespective of party, accorded to George Ross leadership. Although we
have scarcely passed the threshold of this session, his absence is noticed and his counsel
is missed. Mr. Ross stood deservedly high in the counsels of his
party. He was a delegate to the national conventions of 1876, 1884, and 1892. He was the
Democratic nominee for the congress in the seventh district in 1884, but was defeated at
the polls by Hon. Robert M. Yardley. He was also the caucus nominee of
his party for the United States senate in 1893. He was deeply interested in the local
insitutions of his county and district was one of the original directors of the Bucks
County Trust Company, and its president at the time of his death. He was also a trustee of
the Norristown Insane Asylum until his death. He died at his home in Doylestown, November
19, 1894. The disease which caused his death had given his family and friends much concern
for probably a year. The state senate, of which he was a member at the time of his death,
appointed a committee of five to draft resolutions expressive of the sense of that body
upon his death, and fixed a special session on January 23, 1895, to receive and consider
the report of such committee. At this special session the resolutions adopted and the
speeches of his colleagues show the merited appreciation of his public services and
private virtues. We quote from one of these speeches the following: Our friends
(sic) was not of humble origin, nor could he boast of being wholly a self-made man. He had
great advantages, coming from a long line of distinguished ancestors, a race of lawyers,
some of whom had worn the judicial ermine; he had the benefits of a most liberal
education, and claimed the famous college of Princeton for his alma mater. This scion of
one of the most illustrious families of Pennsylvania, in whose veins flowed some of the
best blood in this grand old Keystone state, worthy of his origin, was a prince among
men.
George Ross married,
December 4, 1870, Ellen Lyman Phipps, a daughter of George W.
Phipps, of Boston, Massachusetts. The children of this marriage are: Thomas, born
September 16, 1873; Elizabeth P., George; Ellen P., Mary; Gertrude.
Thomas, the eldest son, was educated at
Lawrenceville and Princeton, and graduated at Princeton in the class of 1895.He studied
law under the preceptorship of Hon. Harman Yerkes, and was admitted to
the bar December, 1897. He formed a partnership with his fathers old partner,
J. Ferdinand Long, which terminated with the death of the latter in
January, 1902.
George Ross was born May
28, 1879. He graduated at Lawrenceville in 1896 and at Princeton in 1900. He studied law
with his brother Thomas at Doylestown and at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and
was admitted to the bar December 22, 1902, and entered into partnership with his brother.
In 1902 Hon. Harman Yerkes became a member of the firm.
Text taken from pages 81-83 of: Davis,
William W. H., A.M., History of BucksCounty, Pennsylvania [New York-Chicago: the Lewis
Publishing Company, 1905] volume III Transcribed July 2000 by Earl Goodman of PA
as part of the Bucks Co., Pa., Early Family Project,
www.rootsweb.com/~pabucks/bucksindex.html
Published April 2000 on the Bucks County,
Pa., USGenWeb pages at www.rootsweb.com/~pabucks/ |