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 Snow-Hawkins-Corcoran-McKenzie
 by Bob Snow
Global TreeClubsMy GenCirclesSmartMatching
WILLIAM JENNINGS Bryan19 SmartMatches
Birth:19 MAR 1860 in Salem, IL
Death:1925
Sex:M
Father:Silas Lillard Bryan
Mother:Mariah Elizabeth Jennings
  

Spouses & Children 
(Unknown)
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Notes 
Title: Notes
Text:
Bryan, William Jennings (1860-1925), American political leader, editor, and lecturer, known for his spellbinding oratory.

Bryan was born on March 19, 1860, in Salem, Illinois, and educated at Illinois College, Jacksonville, and at Union College of Law, Chicago. He began to practice law in Illinois in 1883 and served as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Nebraska from 1891 to 1895. During this period he became a leader of the movement for the unlimited coinage of silver. At the Democratic National Convention of 1896, Bryan, who had become celebrated as an orator, delivered his most famous talk, generally known as the “cross of gold” speech, in behalf of the bimetallic theory, and received the presidential nomination; he was defeated in the election of that year by the Republican governor of Ohio, William McKinley. During his subsequent career he twice again (1900 and 1908) received the Democratic nomination for president, but on both occasions he was defeated at the polls. In 1901 Bryan founded the Commoner, an influential weekly paper, in Lincoln, Nebraska. The nomination of the Democratic governor of New Jersey, Woodrow Wilson, for the presidency in 1912 was due in part to Bryan's efforts in his behalf. As secretary of state (1913-1915) in the Wilson administration, Bryan negotiated 30 treaties of arbitration with foreign countries. He resigned his office in 1915 in protest against the administration's hostile attitude toward Germany. Although his political career had come to an end, he retained recognition as an eminent national figure. Many of the reforms for which he worked were eventually adopted. Among the most notable of these were woman suffrage, the national income tax, popular election of U.S. senators, and prohibition.

Bryan's last years were devoted largely to activities in behalf of the American religious movement known as fundamentalism. In 1925, at Dayton, Tennessee, he acted as an associate prosecutor in the trial of a schoolteacher, John Thomas Scopes, who had taught the biological theory of evolution to his pupils in defiance of a state law prohibiting the teaching of doctrines contrary to the Bible. The chief defense attorney was the famous American lawyer Clarence Darrow, who also had strong personal convictions about the principles involved. The case attracted considerable attention throughout the U.S. Bryan won the case, and Scopes was found guilty and fined $100, but the humiliating cross-examination to which Bryan was subjected by Darrow, revealing his ignorance of scientific discoveries, probably hurt the fundamentalist cause and may have been a contributing factor in Bryan's sudden death on July 26, only five days after the conclusion of the trial. Bryan's writings include Heart to Heart Appeals (1917) and The Bible and Its Enemies (1921).

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SmartMatches 
Individuals from other files that are believed to be the same person:
William Jennings Bryan of Crenshaw
William Jennings Bryan of Don's Ancestors
William Jennings Bryan of Ballard-Willis Family Tree
William Jennings Bryan of J Cummins
William Jennings Bryan of J Cummins
William Jennings Bryan of CLEDAS RESEARCH UPDATE
William Jennings BRYAN of EJM Family 15 Jan 2007
William Jennings Bryan of prater/mcguire/burchett/lewis
William Jennings Bryan of Jason's Research 2006
William Jennings Bryan of Jason's Research January 2007
William Jennings Bryan of Jason's Research July 2007
William Jennings Bryan of Hughey, Fralick, Taborsky and More 5-08
William Jennings Bryan Sr. of Family of Legends & The Unknown
William Jennings BRYAN of Braley-Slice Family
William Jennings Bryan of The Branch Ranch-A Roundup of Ancestors
William Jennings (2964) Bryan , lawyer, pol. of BRYAN Family Annex
William Jennings Bryan of My Family Jungle
William Jennings Bryan of Dugan and Others
William Jennings Bryan of moyer_master

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