Orville
Hitchcock Platt
Born: Washington;
July 19, 1827
Died: Meriden; April 21, 1905
Orville
Hitchcock Platt was without doubt the most important Connecticuter
in national political affairs in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. Platt represented Connecticut in the United
States Senate from 1879 until his death.
Platt
was a descendant of an old Connecticut family—the first Platt
came to New Haven in 1638—and was educated by his friend Frederick
W. Gunn (1816-1881), founder of the Gunnery School for boys in
Washington. Platt subsequently read law and was admitted to the
bar in 1850. For almost thirty years Platt practiced law in Meriden,
specializing in patent, real estate, and corporation law. Platt
was also active in Connecticut politics during his Meriden years,
serving as clerk of the Connecticut State Senate (1855-1856);
secretary of state (1857); member of the General Assembly (1864);
and speaker of the Connecticut House of Representatives (1869).
He was serving as state's attorney for New Haven County when
he
was elected to the United States Senate.
In
the Senate, Platt's untiring industry, honesty, and sound judgment
won him the respect of his colleagues. His unqualified support
of a high tariff and sound money gained him membership in the "Big Four," a group of conservative Republican senators—Rhode
Island's Nelson W. Aldrich (1841-1915), Iowa's William Boyd Allison
(1829-1908), and Wisconsin's John Coit Spooner (1843-19l9)—recognized
as "the masters of the Senate" during the McKinley
and Roosevelt administrations.
Platt's
major Senate efforts included service as chairman of the Committee
on Territories from 1887 to 1893, during which six Western states
were admitted to the Union; the engineering through the Senate
of the international copyright law of 1891, legislation that ended
most forms of literary piracy; and important work in the passage
of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890.
With
respect to foreign affairs, Platt generally stood with the president
in office. He supported President Cleveland, whom be did not particularly
like, during the Venezuela Boundary Dispute with Great Britain
in 1895-1896. During the growing American impatience with Spain
over Cuba in the late 1890s, Platt shared President McKinley's
hesitancy as to American military intervention. Once the Spanish-American
War began, however, Platt supported the American military effort
and became an ardent expansionist. He supported the American acquisition
of the Philippines and in 1901 introduced the so-called Platt
Amendment [to an army appropriation bill] which in effect made
Cuba a protectorate of the United States.
Platt
was several times mentioned as a Republican vice-presidential
possibility, but he apparently had no interest in office other
than the senatorship from Connecticut. Orville H. Platt's career
in the United States Senate reflected his own rigid sense of duty
and attention to detail as well as the conservatism of the rural
and business interests of the Connecticut Republican party of
his day.
Further
Reading
Coolidge,
Louis A. Orville H. Platt of Connecticut. New York, 1910.
Smith,
Edwina Carol. "Conservatism in the Gilded Age: The Senatorial
Career of Orville H. Platt." Unpublished Dissertation,
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 1976.
Entry
by David M. Roth.
*
Entry under revision.
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