John E. Kenna
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox officeholder John Edward Kenna (April 10, 1848Template:Spaced ndashJanuary 11, 1893) was an American politician who was a senator from West Virginia from 1883 until his death.
Biography
Kenna was born in Kanawha County, Virginia (now West Virginia, near the city of St. Albans) and lived his early life at Upper Falls, where his father was lockmaster and owned a sawmill.<ref>Courtesy of Dr. William H. Dean, Ph.D. From Coal, Steamboats, Timber and Trains: The Early Industrial History of St. Albans, West Virginia & The Coal River, 1850-1925. Template:Cite web UpperFallsWV.blog.com</ref> He had little education, and at the age of 16 he served in the "Iron Brigade" with General Joseph O. Shelby in the Confederate States Army and was wounded. After returning home, he read law and was admitted to the bar in 1870. He became very active in the emerging Democratic Party of West Virginia.
He rose from prosecuting attorney of Kanawha County in 1872 to Justice pro tempore of the county circuit in 1875, and to the United States House of Representatives in 1876. While in the House he championed railroad legislation and crusaded for aid for slack-water navigation to help the coal, timber, and salt industries in his state. These activities earned him a seat in the United States Senate in 1883, where he continued fighting for his two causes.
Kenna became Democratic minority leader and emerged as a powerful and controversial speaker on the issue of the independence of the executive branch of the government. He forcefully defended President Grover Cleveland on several issues and indicted the Senate Republican majority for failure to pass tariff reforms. Kenna was a practicing Catholic and member of the congregation at St. Joseph's on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.<ref>Google Books Donahoe's Magazine, Volume 27, 1892</ref> In late April 1891, he successfully argued the Ball v. United States case before the U.S. Supreme Court, which spared the lives of two West Virginians accused of murder in Texas.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Kenna died on January 11, 1893, at the age of 44, having suffered from heart disease for several years.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He was still in office at the time of his death, and was succeeded by Johnson N. Camden. He had 6 children, including Ed Kenna.
Longtime Washington journalist Benjamin Perley Poore described Kenna as "a tall, thick-set man" who was "negligent in his dress and rather slow in the utterance of his sentences."<ref name=Poore>Poore, Ben. Perley, Perley's Reminiscences of Sixty Years in the National Metropolis, Vol.2, p.509 (1886).</ref>
Kenna is the namesake of the town of Kenna, West Virginia.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 1901, the state of West Virginia donated a marble statue of Kenna to the U.S. Capitol's National Statuary Hall Collection.
See also
References
External links
Template:Commons category Template:Wikisource
- Architect of the Capitol/Capitol Complex/Art/John E. Kenna
- US Congress Biographical Directory
- Finding Aid for John Edward Kenna Collection, WV State Archives and History
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- 1848 births
- 1893 deaths
- 19th-century West Virginia state court judges
- 19th-century American lawyers
- 19th-century Roman Catholics
- American lawyers admitted to the practice of law by reading law
- Catholics from West Virginia
- Confederate States Army personnel
- County prosecuting attorneys in West Virginia
- Democratic Party members of the United States House of Representatives from West Virginia
- Democratic Party United States senators from West Virginia
- Lawyers from Charleston, West Virginia
- Military personnel from West Virginia
- People from St. Albans, West Virginia
- People of West Virginia in the American Civil War
- Politicians from Charleston, West Virginia
- West Virginia circuit court judges
- West Virginia lawyers
- 19th-century West Virginia politicians
- 19th-century United States representatives
- 19th-century United States senators
- Chairs of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee