Llewellyn Powers (1836-1908) — of Houlton, Aroostook County, Maine. Born in Maine, October 14, 1836. Republican. U.S. Representative from Maine 4th District, 1877-79, 1901-08; died in office 1908; Governor of Maine, 1897-1901. Died July 28, 1908 (age 71 years, 288 days). Interment at Tilton Corner (Powers) Cemetery.
From: "BIOGRAPHICAL REVIEW, Vol. XXIX
Containing the life sketches of leading citizens of Somerset, Piscataquis, Hancock,
Washington, and Aroostook Counties, Maine"
Biographical Review Publishing Company, Boston, 1898,
Biographical Review 239, April 1898.
HON. LLEWELLYN POWERS, a representative citizen,
not only of Aroostook County, but of the State of Maine,
of which he is the present Governor, was born at
Pittsfield, Me., in 1838, son of Arba and Naomi
(Mathews) Powers. His father was one of the pioneer
settlers of Pittsfield, where he was engaged in farming
and lumbering. Industrious and enterprising, the elder
Powers was fairly successful in worldly affairs, though
hampered to some extent by the burden of a large family,
eight boys and two girls. Their mother was a school
teacher before marriage. Six of the sons engaged in the
practice of law.
Llewellyn Powers was born in the log house that
constituted at one time his parents' primitive dwelling.
He acquired the rudiments of knowledge in the common
schools of his native town, fitted for college at St. Albans
and Waterville Academies (the latter now known as
Coburn Classical Institute), and entered Colby University
in the class of 1861. Leaving college in his Sophomore
year to enter the Albany University Law School at
Albany, N.Y., he was there graduated in December, 1860,
with the degree of Bachelor of Laws. Shortly after his
graduation he was admitted to the New York bar, and in
the following December to the bar of Somerset County,
Maine, at Norridgewock. In January, 1861, he began
practice in Houlton, where he had an extensive practice
for twenty-five years. He was then admitted to the bar of
Suffolk County, Massachusetts, and practised his
profession for some four years in that
county, making his home in Brookline, an attractive
suburb of Boston. He was also admitted to the United
States District and Circuit Courts.
Elected County Attorney for Aroostook County in 1864,
he held that office for six years, performing its duties
with pre-eminent ability. He was the first Collector of
Customs for the Aroostook District, being appointed by
President Grant in 1868, serving four years, and declining
a reappointment tendered him in 1873. He represented
his district in the legislature in 1873-74, 1874-75, 1875-76,
and 1883, much of the time serving on the Judiciary
Committee, of which in 1875-76 he was chairman. It was
while on this committee that he gave evidence of a
capacity for public affairs that attracted the attention of
his fellow-citizens throughout the State, and resulted in
his elevation to his present high position as the Chief
Magistrate of the State. He introduced and carried
through, in spite of strong opposition, the bill for
abolishing capital punishment, which has since been in
operation, notwithstanding efforts made to revoke it. In
1876 he was elected to the national House of
Representatives from the Fourth Maine District. In 1878
he was re-nominated by acclamation, but was defeated
with many other Republican candidates, owing to the
"Greenback" delusion that swept the State that year.
Retiring for a time from active politics, except as his
services were demanded on the stump, he gave his chief
attention to the practice of his profession and to his
various private interests, which included the ownership
and management of large tracts of timber land, some two
hundred thousand acres in all. Of this realty he began the
purchase in 1872. He was one of the original twenty
persons interested in the "Burleigh Scheme," which
culminated in the building of the Bangor & Aroostook
Railroad, Mr. Powers liberally subscribing to the stock,
besides conceding the right of way through his property.
In 1892, being persuaded by his friends to re-enter public
life, he was again elected to the legislature, and his
thorough knowledge of public affairs and brilliant
qualities of leadership soon made him one of the most
talked of men in the House. Re-elected in 1895, he was
chosen Speaker, receiving the votes of all the Republican
members; and in this capacity also he fulfilled the most
sanguine expectations of his friends, displaying rare
judgment, tact, and executive ability. His nomination to
the gubernatorial chair followed almost as a logical
conclusion; and he was elected in September, 1896, by the
largest majority ever given a candidate for that office in
the State of Maine. Of his record as Governor up to the
present time (April, 1898) no more need now be said than
that it has been worthy of himself, of his party, and of the
old Pine Tree State, whose public men have proved
themselves the equal in statesmanship of those of any
other section of the Union.
Governor Powers is an able and interesting public
speaker, and his services in this capacity have been of
great value to his party in
many political campaigns. His speech to the members of
the House of Representatives on assuming the office of
Speaker was a model of its kind, being brief, yet
comprehensive, and to the point. His great personal
popularity is another element of his strength that should
be taken into account by all those who would review his
past career or attempt to forecast his political future.
Besides the private interests already mentioned,
Governor Powers holds stock in several banks in
Aroostook County and elsewhere. A member of the
Masonic order, he is Past Master in the Blue Lodge, and
belongs also to the chapter.
He married December 25, 1886, Martha A. Averill, of
Lincoln, Me. He has five children—Walter A., Martha P.,
Doris V., Ralph A., and Margaret L.
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