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James Wilson
(1835-1920)
James Wilson was born August 16, 1835 in Ayrshire, Scotland, near
the farm rented by Robert Burns 50 years earlier. He was one of
14 children. His parents came to the U. S. in 1852, settling in
Connecticut before moving to Tama county, Iowa three years later.
He
attended Grinnell College, farmed, taught school, and was elected
to the Iowa state house (1867-71), serving as speaker (1870-71).
He was a state university regent and from 1891 to 1897 was a professor
of agriculture at what is now Iowa State University. In 1897 he
joined the McKinley administration as secretary of agriculture
and was retained by Presidents Roosevelt and Taft until 1913.
Wilson was know as Tama Jim to distinguish him from
Iowa Senator James Wilson, no relation. Tama Jim was an unusual
combination of accomplished educator, shrewd politician, and gifted
organizer. President Warren Harding once asserted that except
for his Scottish birth he would almost certainly have become president
of the United States.
He
revolutionized American agriculture by extending the U.S. Department
of Agriculture into many areas. He established the extension service,
began U.S. world leadership in agricultural science, inaugurated
programs in agricultural economics, farm credit, soil conservation,
and reforestation. He expanded facilities for research in plant
disease and insect control and began a complex of experimental
fields and laboratories at Beltsville, Md., that is known as one
of the worlds greatest research facilities.
Wilson
never forgot his Scottish heritage. He was well indoctrinated,
mostly by his father, in the Bible and the poetry of Burns and
Scott which he often quoted to make a point. He was a good friend
of Andrew Carnegie, the industrialist, a friendship made closer
by their common Scottish heritage. He was also very close to other
prominent Scottish Americans like Governor William Hoard of Wisconsin,
founder of Hoards Dairyman magazine and Henry Wallace. Wallace
was the father of Secretary of Agriculture Henry C. Wallace.
All
three men Wallace, Hoard, and Wilson were excellent speakers and
writers. They were all about the same age and tried to meet annually.
They would meet, sip a little scotch, quote Burns, and plan next
years meeting. As a staunch Republican, Tama Jim never wavered.
He would sometimes admit there was some good in a Democrat, but
would add that he had never found it. When President Woodrow Wilson,
a democrat, came to power in 1912 the 16-year tenure as Secretary
of Agriculture came to an end. He was 78.
During
his tenure, he expanded weather forecasting, mapped soil types,
and pushed for all weather rural roads and food inspection. Wilson
began building the huge complex that houses the U.S.D.A. The classic
colonnades stand as his memorial. James Tama Jim Wilson
died August 26, 1920 in Traer, Iowa.
President
William McKinely said of Wilson, He was a most valuable
public servant. General Wickersham said, He was typically
Scottish, poised, reserved, competent. President William
Howard Taft said, He was a canny Scot, a delightful associate,
thoughtful, genial, and thoroughly loyal.
Some
historians consider James Wilson the greatest of all U.S. secretaries
of agriculture. In tenure and accomplishment, he set records that
have never been equaled.
http://www.ans.iastate.edu/archives/wilson.html
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