Bedford County PA Archives Biographies.....Reynolds, Hon. John M. ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Judy Banja jbanja@msn.com May 2003 HON. JOHN M. REYNOLDS, attorney-at-law and a member of the firm of John G. Hartley & Co., bankers, of Bedford, Pa., was born in Lancaster County, near the borough of Quarryville, twelve miles south of Lancaster city, on March 5, 1848, being a son of Patrick Hewitt and Ann (Barnett) Reynolds. Patrick H. Reynolds was one of the well-to-do farmers of this locality and an influential citizen. He dealt quite extensively in live stock, and he also operated a grist-mill. A native of Ireland, he was eight years old when he came with his parents to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where in due time he established his home. He married Ann, daughter of Andrew Barnett, of Baltimore County, Maryland, and was the father of eight children, namely: James Hewitt; Barnett; Edward; Emmett D.; Martha; Mary; John Merriman, the subject of this sketch; and De Warren H. Barnett is now a resident of Delaware County, Pennsylvania. De Warren H. is a practicing lawyer in Cumberland, Md. Ann, the mother, now at the age of ninety-two, Emmett D., Martha, and Mary, reside in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. James and Edward are deceased. John M. Reynolds, after attending the public schools for the usual period, entered the First Pennsylvania State Normal School at Millersville, from which he was graduated in 1867. Shortly afterward he came to Bedford, and became an instructor of teachers in the County Normal School. For two school terms, 1867 and 1868, he was principal of the public schools of Bedford. In 1868 he began the study of law under the preceptorship of John W. Dickerson, who was then one of the leading members of the bar. Admitted to the bar of Bedford County on February 15, 1870, he immediately began practice in Bedford. In 1872 he became a half-owner of the Bedford Gazette, which he edited until August 1, 1880, when he disposed of his interest in order to give his time exclusively to his law practice, which had greatly increased. In January, 1872, Mr. Reynolds was suggested by members of his party (the Democratic) as the nominee for the legislature in the district comprising Fulton and Bedford, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of J. W. Dickerson. Mr. Reynolds declined this nomination, but was nominated in the fall of 1872, elected at the October election, and took his seat in the legislature in January, 1873, as the youngest member of that body. Re-elected in the fall of 1873, he served in the session of 1874, and was actively concerned in framing much of the legislation necessary to put in force the new constitution of the State adopted in 1873. At the close of his term Mr. Reynolds declined a renomination, and began to devote himself more actively to his law practice. In the fall of 1875 he was elected district attorney of Bedford County, which office he held for a period of three years, declining renomination. His law business had by this time assumed large proportions, extending into the surrounding region and embracing every leading case, civil or criminal, tried at the bar of Bedford County or in the Supreme Court, in which latter tribunal for the last twenty-five years he has not missed a term. In 1881 Mr. Reynolds was presented by the Bedford County Democracy as their choice for nomination in the district as candidate for President Judge, but voluntarily declined in favor of the Hon. W. J. Baer, of Somerset County, who was elected that year. In 1882 he consented to become the candidate of his party for State Senator for the district composed of the counties of Bedford, Fulton, and Somerset, but was defeated at the election by one hundred and forty-four votes, having reduced the usual Republican majority of the district about one thousand five hundred. In 1891 he was the nominee of his party in the judicial district composed of Somerset and Bedford Counties for the office of President Judge; and, although defeated in a strong Republican district, he ran two thousand ahead of the party ticket. In 1892 he was appointed by Governor Pattison one of the five commissioners to select a site and build an asylum for the chronic insane of the State; and the result of over four years' labor may be seen in the magnificent buildings at Wernersville, Berks County, where half a million dollars were spent, all within the original appropriation and without the wrongful expenditure of one dollar through contracts or otherwise. Mr. Reynolds was secretary for the commission during the whole period, and performed that and his other duties as a member without compensation other than his actual expenses. In 1893 Mr. Reynolds was tendered by President Cleveland the office of Assistant Secretary of the Interior, and this without any solicitation on his part. He accepted, was appointed, was duly confirmed by the Senate, and entered upon the duties of the office April 15, 1893, serving until June 1, 1897. His resignation on March 5, 1897, was not accepted until the following June, when he was obliged to relinquish the office to recruit his health, which had been impaired by overwork. The four years thus spent had been devoted mainly to the supervision of pension affairs, through which there was annually incurred an expenditure of nearly one hundred and fifty million dollars. Mr. Reynolds's leading rulings are contained in volumes seven and eight, Pension Decisions, selected from a mass of about twenty-five thousand cases passed upon under his direction, a number almost double that considered in any like period under any of his predecessors. The pension laws were construed in the spirit of liberality that prompted their enactment, and the correspondence of Mr. Reynolds's office shows that his labors were endorsed by soldiers and veteran organizations, together with their friends, throughout the nation. The soldier, his widow, and his helpless ones received at Mr. Reynolds's hands the justice that was theirs under the law, though in many cases it was necessary to reverse previous rulings of the pension office. In no case throughout his four years' work was Mr. Reynolds conscious of having either aided in the wrongful expenditure of the public money, or, on the other hand, of having wronged to the extent of a farthing one of the nation's defenders or its helpless ones. Mr. Reynolds marked the close of his term by directing and supervising the publication and editing of a digest, in one volume, of all the decisions of the various departments of the government and of the courts relating to pensions and bounty lands, a work which consumed many months of labor and which has been pronounced a model of its kind. The most important of Mr. Reynolds's decisions are on issues relating to "Honorable and Dishonorable Discharge and Desertion," "Effect of Enlistment and Service in the Confederate Army," "Army Nurses," "Rules governing Ratings in Amputation Cases," "Widows' Pensions," "Commencement of Pensions," "Accrued Pensions and Reimbursement," "Line of Duty," "Pensions to Minors, Insane, Idiotic, and Helpless Children," "Dependence," etc. Important pension legislation was also enacted by Congress on his recommendation. A Democrat by conviction from his youth, Mr. Reynolds up to 1896, with the exception of a single campaign (1889) was active in the management of his party's politics. He was chairman and secretary of the Democratic County Committee for many years, and during that period directed and controlled the party machinery, also speaking in many campaigns. He was a delegate to many State conventions, to the National Convention at St. Louis in 1888, and to that at Chicago in 1892, on both occasions supporting Mr. Cleveland. On the adoption of the Chicago platform in 1896, finding himself unable to conscientiously support the principles represented by Mr. Bryan, the Presidential nominee, which he regarded as dangerous political heresies, he spoke on the stump in favor of "sound money," and for the first time in his life voted the full Republican ticket. He is now prominently identified with the Republican party. In 1897 Mr. Reynolds was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of the United States, and is at present the local solicitor of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, the Saxton Iron Company, and the Everett Furnaces, also a director and large stockholder in and solicitor for the Colonial Iron Company at Riddlesburg, Pa. Besides the time devoted to his profession and to politics, Mr. Reynolds has been able to give attention to business matters as represented by his banking interests in the firm of John G. Hartley & Co. and in the management of his farm and flouring mill. In local affairs Mr. Reynolds has always been prominent, especially in the cause of popular education, having served six years as president of the School Board and he has been the directing spirit in the erection of the present beautiful school buildings at Bedford. He was also one of the leading workers in raising funds for the erection of the monument in Bedford to the soldiers of the late war. He is a member of the Episcopal church, with which he has been identified for more than twenty years, serving during a greater part of this period as vestryman and warden, and for some time as superintendent of the Sunday-school. He is a Royal Arch Mason and a Knight Templar, belonging to Altoona Commandery. He is also a member of the Cosmos Club, of Washington, D.C., a society including among its members some of the most prominent literary and scientific men in the country. In 1895 Columbia University at Washington, D.C., bestowed on Mr. Reynolds the degree of Master of Arts. Mr. Reynolds was married in 1877 to Miss Ella Harley, daughter of William Hartley, of Bedford, Pa. He has three children: William, a student at St. Paul's School, Concord, N.H.; Margaret, at Bryn Mawr, Pa.; and Judith, at Friends' Select School, Washington, D.C. Source: Bedford Biographical Review, 1899, Bedford Co., Pa