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Joseph Choate
'Joseph Hodges Choate' (
January 24,
1832 -
1917), was an
American lawyer and diplomat.
He was born at
Salem, Massachusetts, the son of physician
George Choate, the brother of
George C. S. Choate, and cousin to
Rufus Choate. After graduating from
Harvard College in 1852 and
Harvard University Law School in 1854, he was admitted first to the Massachusetts (1855) and then (1856) to the New York bar, and entered the law office of Scudder & Carter in
New York City.
His success in his profession was immediate, and in 1860 he became junior partner in the firm of Evarts, Southmayd & Choate, the senior partner in which was
William M. Evarts. This firm and its successor, that of Evarts, Choate & Beaman, remained for many years among the leading law firms of New York and of the country, the activities of both being national rather than local.
During these busy years, Choate was associated with many of the most famous
litigations in American legal history, including the
Tilden, AT Stewart, and Stanford will cases, the
Kansas prohibition cases, the
Chinese exclusion cases, the Maynard election returns case, and the
Income Tax Suit. In 1871 be became a member of the
Committee of Seventy in
New York City, which was instrumental in breaking up the
Tweed Ring, and later assisted in the prosecution of the indicted officials. In the retrial of the
General Fitz-John Porter case he obtained a reversal of the decision of the original court-martial.
His greatest reputation was won perhaps in cross-examination. In politics he allied himself with the
Republican Party on its organization, being a frequent speaker in presidential campaigns, beginning with that of 1856. He never held political office, although he was a candidate for the Republican senatorial nomination against Senator
Thomas C. Platt in 1897. In 1894 he was president of the New York state constitutional convention.
He was appointed, by
President McKinley,
U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom to succeed
John Hay in 1899, and remained in this position until the spring of 1905. In England he won great personal popularity, and accomplished much in fostering the good relations of the two great English-speaking powers. He was one of the representatives of the United States at the
second Peace Congress at the Hague in 1907.
Several of his notable public addresses have been published. ''The Choate Story Book'' (1903) contains a few of his addresses and after-dinner speeches, and is prefaced by a brief biographical sketch. His country house,
Naumkeag, was designed by
Stanford White and now open as a nonprofit museum in
Stockbridge, Massachusetts.
References
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