Lawrence Dudley Bailey

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Lawrence Dudley Bailey

Lawrence Dudley Bailey (August 26, 1819 – October 15, 1891) was an American abolitionist who served as justice of the Kansas Supreme Court from February 9, 1861 to January 11, 1869.

Early life, education, and career[edit]

Born in Sutton, Merrimack County, New Hampshire to Dudley and Sarah (Woodman) Bailey, Bailey worked on his father's farm until the age of seventeen,[1] and attended Franklin, Unity, Pembroke, and Atkinson academies, but never attended college.[2] He became an abolitionist in 1837, writing frequently in various abolitionist newspapers.[2] He read law with Mason W. Tappan to gain admission to the bar on July 9, 1846.[1][2] He began practicing in East Washington, New Hampshire in 1847, moving in March of that year to Milford, New Hampshire, and partnering there with S.K Livermore until 1949.[1][2] He moved to California as part of the 1849 California Gold Rush, returning to New Hampshire in 1853 and forming a partnership with Mason W. Tappan at Bradford, New Hampshire.[1][2]

Move to Kansas[edit]

Bailey moved to Kansas on April 2, 1857, though he would have preferred to move to Minnesota, but felt that Kansas was in jeopardy of becoming a slave state.[2] He was "conspicuous in his efforts to rescue [Kansas] from the blight of slavery", at one point having to swim the Kansas River at night while in Lawrence, Kansas, during an attack by "border ruffians".[1] In Kansas, he opened a law office near Emporia, and wrote for the Emporia News, published by Preston B. Plumb, whom Bailey also supervised as Plumb read law.[1] Bailey was elected to the legislature in November 1858.[1][2]

Judicial service and later life[edit]

Under the new free-soil Constitution he was elected as a Judge of the Supreme Court in 1861, and reelected in 1862 for a six year term.[1][2][3] He was interested in the material development of Kansas, and was prominent in the organization of the first Board of Agriculture.[1] During this time, he was also active in persuading the state legislature to establish the State Normal School at Emporia.[2]

In 1869 he was again elected to the legislature,[2][3] and in 1870 founded the town of Lyndon, Kansas, which became the county seat of Osage County later that year.[2] For a time was editor and publisher of the Cultivator and Herdsman, and was long a contributor to the newspaper press.[1]

Personal life and death[edit]

In his later life, Bailey occupied a farm.[1] On December 15, 1870, he married the widowed Elizabeth A. Peabody of Lawrence, Kansas, who survived him.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Charles Henry Bell, The Bench and Bar of New Hampshire (1894), p. 160-161.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Passed Away", Garden City Sentinel (October 17, 1891), p. 1, 8.
  3. ^ a b Noble Lovely Prentis, A History of Kansas (1904), p. 374.
Political offices
Preceded by
Newly created seat
Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court
1861–1869
Succeeded by