William Fream Johnston

William Fream Johnston

William Freame Johnston, the third Governor of Pennsylvania under the
constitution of 1838, was born at Greensburg, Westmoreland county,
Pennsylvania, November 29, 1808. His paternal ancestors were originally from
Annandale, Scotland, where they at one time held valuable estates. The head of
the house, Alexander Johnston, however, being killed at the battle of Fontenoy,
April 30, 1745, the estate fell into dispute, and finally, through political
strife, was lost. The family then removed to Ireland and settled in County
Fermagh, where in July, 1772, the governor’s father, Alexander Johnston was
born. He emigrated to America in 1796, and after serving for a time as
surveyor in Western Pennsylvania, located in Westmoreland county, of which he
was sheriff when his son, William F., was born. The mother of the governor,
Elizabeth Freame, was born in Franklin county, Pennsylvania, in November,
1781, and was a daughter of William Freame, a private in the British army, who
bore arms against the French in America, and afterward accepted the
proposition of the English government to remain in this country. The issue of
the marriage of Alexander Johnston with Elizabeth Freame was eight sons and
two daughters. The subject of our sketch was not the only member of the family
who attained exalted position. Several of the sons bore themselves gallantly
as officers in the Mexican war and the war for the Union.

The subject of this sketch had a limited common school and academic
education, but acquired a great fund of general information by reading and
observation. He studied law under Major J. B. Alexander, and was admitted to
the bar in May, 1829, when in his twenty-first year. Shortly afterward he
removed to Armstrong county, and here he engaged in practice, and soon rose to
a commanding position. He was appointed by Attorney-Gen. Lewis, district
attorney for Armstrong county, which office he held until the expiration of
Gov. Wolf’s first term. For several years he represented the county in the
lower house of the legislature, and in 1847 was elected a member of the senate
from the district composed of the counties of Armstrong, Indiana, Cambria and
Clearfield. Ă¯Â¿Â½As a legislator, Mr. Johnston,Ă¯Â¿Â½ says a biographer, Ă¯Â¿Â½was
bold and original, not beholden to precedents, and was an acknowledged leader.Ă¯Â¿Â½
During the period in which he was in the legislature a great financial crisis
occurred, and the distress which ensued was extreme. Ă¯Â¿Â½At this crisis Mr.
Johnston came forward with a proposition to issue relief notes, for the
payment or funding of which the state pledged its faith. This he advocated
with his usual energy and logical acuteness, and though a majority of the
legislature was politically opposed to him, it was adopted, and gave instant
relief.Ă¯Â¿Â½ In 1847 Mr. Johnston was elected president of the senate. By a
provision of the constitution Ă¯Â¿Â½ if any vacancy occur by death or otherwise,
in the office of governor, the speaker of the senate become the acting
executive officer Ă¯Â¿Â½ Gov. Shunk resigning on the 9th of July because of ill
health, Speaker Johnston became governor. In 1848 he was the Whig nominee for
the office, and was elected over Morris Longstreth, after a very sharp and
remarkably close contest. Gov. Johnston managed the financial affairs of the
commonwealth during his administration in a very creditable manner. One of the
subjects which first and most fully occupied his attention was the material
interests of the commonwealth, and he argued with great ability in his first
message for a protective tariff. One work of lasting and high value which he
accomplished was the publication of twenty-eight large volumes, known as the
Colonial Records and Pennsylvania Archives, composed of important papers
relating to the most interesting period of state history. Upon retiring from
office, after failing to secure reelection, Mr. Johnston returned to
Kittanning, engaged in the practice of his profession, and also entered upon
active business life, at different periods being interested in the manufacture
of iron, boring for salt, the production of oil from bituminous shales, and
the refining of petroleum. He was prominent in organizing the Allegheny Valley
Railroad Company, and was its first president. Under his management the road
was built from Pittsburgh to Kittanning. During the war of the rebellion he
took an active part in organizing troops, and superintended the construction
of the defenses at Pittsburgh. He was appointed by President Andrew Johnson
collector of the port of Philadelphia, the duties of which office he
discharged for several months, but through the hostility of a majority of the
senate to the President, he was rejected by that body, though ample testimony
was given that the office was faithfully and impartially administered. He then
practiced law in Philadelphia, associating with himself Hon. George S. Selden,
of Meadville, and subsequently Ă¯Â¿Â½ some time in 1868 Ă¯Â¿Â½ returned to
Kittanning. In 1871 he removed to Pittsburgh, and he died there at the
residence of Mrs. Samuel Bailey, October 25, 1872. At the commemorative
meeting of the Armstrong bar Judge Logan made a brief address, a single
paragraph from which will convey some idea of the Governor’s character. Ă¯Â¿Â½I
gladly testify,Ă¯Â¿Â½ said he, Ă¯Â¿Â½to the fine ability of Gov. Johnston as a
lawyer, and his powers as an advocate; to his marked courtesy of address, and
his uniformly gentlemanly bearing; to his absolute integrity in professional
relation, always the characteristic of the great lawyer and man; and to his
scorn of the wrong. To say that Gov. Johnston was distinguished in these
things is but the tribute of truth to the recollection of a man whose presence
commanded affection, and whose memory compels respect.Ă¯Â¿Â½

Mr. Johnston was married April 12, 1832, to Miss Mary Monteith. The
offspring of their union were five sons and two daughters.

Source: Page(s)
354,
History of Armstrong County, Pennsylvania by Robert Walker Smith, Esq.
Chicago: Waterman, Watkins & Co., 1883.
Transcribed
December 2000
by Jeffrey Bish for the Armstrong County Smith Project.
Contributed by Jeffrey Bish for use by the Armstrong County Genealogy Project
(http://www.pa-roots.com/armstrong/)

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