American journalist
Colonel
William Franklin Switzler
Born (1819-03-16 ) March 16, 1819Died May 24, 1906(1906-05-24) (aged 87) Resting place Columbia Cemetery Nationality American Occupation(s) journalist, publisher, politician / legislator, historian Notable work Swizler's Illustrated History of Missouri, History of Boone County, Missouri
William Franklin Switzler (March 16, 1819 – May 24, 1906) was an American notable lawyer, journalist, publisher, and historian from Columbia, Missouri .
Biography
William F. Switzler handwritten letter to 16th President Abraham Lincoln at the White House in Washington, D.C. , dated Wednesday, September 23, 1863
Mrs. William F. Switzler, (nee - Mary Jane Royall, 1820-1879), wife of William Franklin Switzler (1819-1906)
William F. Switzler was born in Fayette County, Kentucky . In 1826, his family moved west to Fayette, Missouri .
He studied law under local Boone County, Missouri attorneys Abiel Leonard (1848-1903), (who was also a state supreme court judge), and James Sidney Rollins (1812-1888), and practiced it for several years. In 1841, he started editing the newspaper Columbia Patriot in Columbia, Missouri , eventually liking it and going into the business and practice of journalism . He also printed another paper of the Columbia Statesman (a.k.a. Missouri Statesman ); later in his life he also edited the Chillicothe Constitution / Constitution-Tribune (in Chillicothe, Ohio ) and the Missouri Democrat (of Boonville, Missouri in Boone County ).[ 1]
During the American Civil War (1861-1865), in 1863, he was appointed a provost marshal for the 9th District of Missouri, supporting the Union cause of the North.[ 2]
Following the war, he served as a state Representative in the Missouri House of Representatives , the lower chamber of the General Assembly of Missouri (state legislature ), for Boone County, Missouri , at the old Missouri State Capitol in the state capital of Jefferson City .
Twice, (in 1866 and two decades later in 1888), Switzler ran for a seat in the United States House of Representatives , the lower chamber of the Congress of the United States , unsuccessfully.
In 1885, during the administration of Democrat and 22nd President Grover Cleveland , (1837-1908, served 1885-1889 & 1893-1897), he was appointed Chief of the Bureau of Statistics (then in the United States Department of the Treasury , currently now the reorganized Bureau of Economic Analysis in the U.S. Treasury Department), and worked / resided in the national federal capital city of Washington, D.C. during that time.[ 3]
In 1879, he researched, wrote and edited / published Switzler's illustrated history of Missouri, from 1541 to 1877 about the long then three centuries / 336 years of Missouri's colonial, territorial and state history . Three years later in 1882, followed — a History of Boone County, Missouri (about the heritage of Boone County, Missouri ).
He died May 24, 1906 in Columbia, Missouri , aged 87 years old. Switzler was buried in the Columbia Cemetery at Columbia , (the county seat of Boone County ), Missouri .
His papers and historical / biographical documents for the period of 1836-1905, are preserved by the State Historical Society of Missouri , in their collections also in Columbia, Missouri .[ 4]
Family
He married Mary Jane Royall (1820-1879) of Columbia, Missouri in 1843, and they had three children.
Legacy
Switzler Hall on the David R. Francis Quadrangle on the campus of the University of Missouri at Columbia , is named after him.[ 5]
Works
References
^ Obituary for William F. Switzler , Christian County Republican , Ozark, Missouri, 31 May 1906, Page 6
^ Abraham Lincoln papers: Series 1. General Correspondence. 1833-1916: William F. Switzler to James Rollins, Tuesday, February 24, 1863
^ Christensen, Lawrence O. Dictionary of Missouri Biography . Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1999
^ Switzler, William Franklin (1819-1906), Papers, 1836-1905 , State Historical Society of Missouri
^ Spirits of Mizzou: William F Switzler , University of Missouri
External links
Media related to William Franklin Switzler at Wikimedia Commons