Burton, Joseph Ralph
Joseph Ralph Burton was born on his father's farm, near Mitchell, in Lawrence county, Indiana, Nov. 16, 1852.
His father was Allen C., and his mother was Elizabeth (Holmes) Burton. The Burton family, which is of English origin,
came to America about the year 1750. John P. Burton, the great-grandfather of Joseph R., was a colonel in the Continental
line in the war for American independence. Hutchinson Burton, a brother of the Revolutionary colonel, was a member
of the Continental Congress from Virginia. William Burton, son of Col. John P. Burton and grandfather of Joseph
Ralph Burton, was born near Asheville, N. C. He was a pioneer settler of Lawrence county, Indiana, locating near
Mitchell in the year 1830. He was a farmer by occupation and a Democrat in politics. He was active in the civic
life of the community and served several terms in the Indiana legislature. Allen C. Burton, the son of William
Burton, was born near Lexington, Ky., and went with his parents to Indiana. Like his father, he was a farmer and
a Douglas Democrat, but became a Lincoln Republican.
Joseph Ralph Burton received his elementary education in the district schools of his native county. He pursued
an academic course of study in the Mitchell Seminary, of which his father was one of the founders, and which at
that time was conducted by a relative, the Rev. Simpson Burton. He matriculated in Franklin College, at Franklin,
Ind., under the special tutelage of Lincoln Wayland, the late editor of the "National Baptist," of Philadelphia.
After completing a three-years course in Franklin College young Burton entered DePauw University, at Greencastle,
Ind. While in the university he paid his own way by teaching elocution. He became dangerously ill in the middle
of his senior year and was forced to leave college without receiving an academic degree. After leaving DePauw,
Mr. Burton read law in the offices of the celebrated firm of Gordon, Brown & Lamb, of Indianapolis, and was
admitted to the bar in that city, in July, 1875. He located for the practice of his profession at Princeton, Ind.
During the campaign of 1876, before he had cast his first vote for President, he made a three months' speaking
campaign for the National ticket, under the auspices of the Republican National Committee, and was on the electoral
ticket.
Attracted by the greater opportunities for young men in the West, Senator Burton located in Abilene, Dickinson
county, Kansas, in 1878. There he formed, with John H. Mahan, the law firm of Mahan & Burton, which soon acquired
a large practice. Like most young lawyers Mr. Burton took an active interest in politics and was elected a member
of the legislature of Kansas, in the year 1882. With his colleague, the Hon. C. B. Hoffman, Mr. Burton at once
became interested in railway legislation. The members-elect were called together in a sort of rump session at Abilene
previous to the regular session. The call for this caucus of legislators was signed by C. B. Hoffman, A. P. Collins,
G. W. Martin, and J. R. Burton. The efforts of Mr. Burton and his associates resulted in the organization of the
first railway commission in Kansas. He was a member of the house judiciary committee during his first session in
the legislature, and was reelected in the year 1884. During the session of 1885, as chairman of the committee on
county seats and county lines, Mr. Burton had charge of the making of many new counties in southwestern Kansas.
He was recognized as the leader of the house of representatives. In the year 1886 he was a candidate for the Republican
nomination for Congress in the Fifth district. After a heated campaign, in which Hon. John A. Anderson, the incumbent,
took part, he came within two votes of a nomination, a dark horse, the Hon. A. S. Wilson, finally winning. While
campaigning for the Republican National ticket in the State of Maine, in the year 1888, Mr. Burton was nominated
and elected for a third term in the legislature. He was the house leader of his party during the session of 1889
and declined all committee appointments. He introduced and secured the passage of an anti-trust bill, which became
a law in 1889. What was substantially a copy of this law was passed by Congress, in June, 1890, and has since become
well known as the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. The Kansas measure was the first bill of this kind to become a law in
the United States. In a speech before the Republican state convention, held in Topeka in the year 1890, Mr. Burton
foretold the disastrous overthrow that befell the Republican party in the elections of that year. This speech,
for a time, made him unpopular, but after the election his words of warning were remembered. In 1891 he spoke in
a series of joint debates with Senator William A. Peffer, who had been elected by a combination of Populists and
Democrats. These debates attracted attention throughout the country and resulted in his nomination for Congress
in the Fifth district the following year. Senator Burton made his campaign for Congress in a district with a majority
of more than 9,000 against him. He spent five months on the stump and was defeated by less than 1,300 votes. Although
defeated, his campaign was the means of restoring his district to the Republican party. In the year 1894 he was
a candidate for the United States senate. There were some seven other aspirants against him. He was also opposed
by the Republican National committeeman from Kansas and by the entire regular organization of the party. He was
defeated in the party caucus by one vote, the nomination going to Lucien Baker, a dark horse in the contest. He
was again a candidate for the senate in 1896. He and the late Senator John J. Ingalls were the recognized candidates.
He defeated Ingalls by a vote of more than seven to one in the caucus of his party, but the legislature was carried
by the Democrats and the Hon. W. A. Harris was chosen senator.
In the campaign of the year 1898, although a private citizen, Mr. Burton was recognized as the leader of his
party, and largely through his efforts the Republicans were restored to power in Kansas. In the year 1900 Senator
Lucien Baker was a candidate for reelection, but was easily defeated by Mr. Burton, who was the unanimous choice
of the Republican caucus. Mr. Burton's service in the United States senate is chiefly noted for his uncompromising
opposition to the Cuban bill, which sailed under the name of Cuban reciprocity. In his fight on this measure, which
he believed to be unwise, unjust to the people, and dangerous to the interests of his state, Senator Burton incurred
the displeasure of President Theodore Roosevelt, the organized commercial interests, and especially of the notorious
sugar trust. The enemies he made in the senate, in the defense of the industries and resources of Kansas, never
ceased to pursue him until he was driven out of the senate and financially ruined. After his retirement from public
life Mr. Burton returned to Abilene, engaged in business, and soon acquired a comfortable fortune. In the year
1907 he bought the Central Kansas Publishing Company, of which he and his wife are the sole owners, and purchased
the "Salina Daily Union," which he has since conducted. In this paper he seeks to teach the members of
both the Republican and Democratic parties the true principles of democracy as opposed to autocracy, which he believes
has gained a dangerous foothold in the Republic.
Senator Burton was married, Oct. 10, 1875, to Mrs. Carrie Webster, daughter of Dr. E. V. Mitchell, of New Harmony,
Ind. Mrs. Burton is related to the leading families of that famous colony immortalized by Lord Byron in "Childe
Harold." The Senator and Mrs. Burton have no children, but they have generously assisted in the education
of several nephews and nieces. Mrs. Burton is one of the most brilliant and versatile women in Kansas, as well
as one of the most beloved. She has been a co-worker with her husband in all his enterprises, as well as in his
public life. She enjoys the distinction of being the only United States senator's wife who has never had her picture
taken. The family became residents of Salina in April, 1910.
Kansas Biography, Part 2 Vol. III, 1912
Page 819-821
Transcribed by Millie Mowry |