Pulaski-Phillips-Franklin County ArArchives Biographies.....Clarke, James P. 1854 - 1916 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ar/arfiles.html ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Robert Sanchez lmu567@gmail.com May 24, 2009, 1:39 am Author: S. J. Clarke (Publisher, 1922) HON. JAMES P. CLARKE. Hon. James P. Clarke of Little Rock, who died October 1, 1916, was serving at the time of his death, for the third term as a member of the United States congress. He had previously been governor of Arkansas and he left the impress of his individuality and marked ability upon the history of state and nation, being connected with various important legislative measures while a member of congress. A native of Mississippi, James P. Clarke was born in Yazoo City, August 18, 1854, and was the eldest son of Walter and Ellen (White) Clarke, the latter the daughter of a prominent family of New Jersey. The father was a civil engineer and architect. After attending the public schools of Yazoo City, James P. Clarke became a student in Professor Tutwilder's Academy at Greenbrier, Alabama, and completed his preparation for the bar as a law student in the University of Virginia in 1878. Before becoming a university student he had edited a small newspaper in Yazoo City and this constituted his initial step in the business world. It was in 1879 that Senator Clarke became a resident of Arkansas, taking up his abode in Ozark, later moving to Helena, Phillips county, where he opened a law office and had soon gained a large and distinctively representative clientage. He possessed a keen, analytical and logical mind and his reasoning was always sound, while he was seldom, if ever, at fault in the application of a legal principle. Senator Clarke was well known through his political activity. In 1886 he was elected to represent Phillips county in the twenty-sixth general assembly of Arkansas and after two years' service in the lower house he was elected to the senate from the fourteenth district, continuing a member of that body until 1892 and serving as president of the senate in 1891. In the succeeding year he received the nomination of the democratic party for the office of attorney general and was elected by a large majority, continuing to serve in that position in 1893 and 1894, vigorously prosecuting the duties of the office. He declined a second term, to which he would without doubt have been elected, had he so desired. In September, 1894, he was made a candidate for governor on the democratic ticket and entered upon one of the most bitterly contested campaigns in the political history of the state. He was elected, however, and inaugurated in January, 1895. He declined reelection as governor and it was while serving as chief executive of the state that he established a precedent in the matter of preventing prize fighting. Some prize fight promoters undertook to arrange a bout between James J. Corbett and Robert Fitzsimmons at Hot Springs, whereupon Governor Clarke announced that no prize fights should take place in Arkansas while he was governor and that he would call out the militia it necessary to prevent the match. His unyielding determination to protect the good name of the state caused the abandonment of the project by its promoters. In 1896 Senator Clarke became a candidate of the United States senate against Senator James K. Jones of Garland county, but withdrew from that contest and devoted the next six years to the active practice of law. In 1902 he again became a senatorial candidate against Senator Jones, whom he defeated, taking his seat in Washington, March 9, 1903. So valuable was the service which he rendered to the state that he was reelected in 1909 without opposition, for another six years' term. In 1914 he was again chosen for the office and was filling the position for the third term at the time of his demise. He was regarded as one of the influential members of the senate and in 1913 after a bitter contest he was elected president pro tempore of that body, being the first Arkansas man to receive this honor. In 1915 he was again chosen for the same position. During his last term he served as a member of three of the most important committees in the senate, being chairman of the commerce committee and a member of the foreign relations and military affairs committee. He was closely associated with the passage of some of the most important legislation enacted during his connection with the United States senate. He introduced and was responsible for the passage of the Philippine bill, also of the cotton futures bill and he had opposed the ship purchase bill introduced by the administration in the sixty-third congress. He was also one of the two democratic senators who voted against the Adamson bill passed in September, 1916, to stop the threatened national railroad strike. It was largely through his efforts, at a most strenuous contest in both house and senate, that the rivers and harbors committee recommended a substantial appropriation for Arkansas rivers. Senator Clarke was a student of men and events. He watched the trend of the times and with notable prescience foresaw what might be accomplished in the future. He looked beyond the exigencies of the moment to the opportunities of oncoming times and labored to meet the needs which would arrive with the passing years. None ever doubted the integrity of his position. Those who opposed him politically had the keenest respect for the sterling worth of his character and his fidelity to a cause in which he believed. On the 15th of November, 1883, Senator Clarke was married to Mrs. Sallie (Moore) Wooten of Moon Lake, Mississippi, a daughter of Francis Marion and Nannie B. Moore, members of a prominent family in eastern Arkansas. They became the parents of two daughters and a son: Julia, now the wife of Joseph W. House, Jr., and they have a daughter, Ellen Clarke House; Marion, now the wife of Robert Monroe Williams, and they have one child, Francis Marion Williams; and James P., Jr., who was a captain in the late war and died while serving his country at Camp Bowie, Fort Worth, Texas, October 28, 1917. Senator Clarke was a prominent member of Albert Pike Consistory, in which he attained the thirty-second degree of the Scottish Rite in Masonry and he also belonged to Al-Amin Temple of the Mystic Shrine and was a past exalted ruler of Little Rock No. 29, B. P. O. E. He died on the 1st of October, 1916, leaving behind him a memory that is enshrined in the hearts of those who knew him because of the sterling traits of his character, his upright manhood, his fidelity to principle and the broad vision which he always displayed in connection with public affairs. The state honored Senator Clarke by placing his statue in Statuary Hall of the capitol at Washington, D. C. The statue stands between those of Jackson and Lee. Additional Comments: Citation: Centennial History of Arkansas Volume II Chicago-Little Rock: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company 1922 Photo: http://www.usgwarchives.net/ar/pulaski/photos/bios/clarke10nbs.jpg File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ar/pulaski/bios/clarke10nbs.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/arfiles/ File size: 7.4 Kb