
Historical records matching George B. Cortelyou, 1st U.S. Secretary of Commerce and Labor, Secretary of the Treasury, Postmaster General
Immediate Family
-
wife
-
daughter
-
father
-
mother
About George B. Cortelyou, 1st U.S. Secretary of Commerce and Labor, Secretary of the Treasury, Postmaster General
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_B._Cortelyou
George Bruce Cortelyou (July 26, 1862 – October 23, 1940) was an American Presidential Cabinet secretary of the early 20th century.
Early life
Born to Rose Seery and Peter Crolius Cortelyou, and part of an old New Netherlands family whose immigrant ancestor arrived in 1652, he was educated at public schools in Brooklyn, the Nazareth Military Academy in Pennsylvania, and the Hempstead Institute on Long Island. At the age of 20, he received a BA degree from Massachusetts State Normal School, a teacher's college in Westfield, Massachusetts. He then studied at and graduated from law schools of Georgetown University and Columbian University (the latter now being George Washington University). Courtelyou then began teaching, later taking a stenography course and mastering shorthand.
In 1891, he obtained a position as secretary to the chief postal inspector of New York. The following year a promotion led to a job as the secretary to the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General in Washington, D.C. In 1895 President Grover Cleveland hired Cortelyou as his chief clerk on the recommendation of Postmaster General Wilson S. Bissell. President Cleveland recommended him as a personal secretary to his successor, William McKinley. Cortelyou was working on improvements in office efficiency in 1901 when President McKinley was assassinated.
McKinley was greeting visitors in the Temple of Music at the Pan-American Exposition on September 6, 1901, in Buffalo, New York, when he was shot twice at close range by lone assassin Leon Czolgosz. As McKinley collapsed, he was caught and supported by his aides, among them George Cortelyou. As he was held in their arms he whispered, "My wife... be careful, Cortelyou, how you tell her. Oh, be careful."
After succeeding president Theodore Roosevelt took office, he tasked Cortelyou with transforming the White House into a more professional organization. Cortelyou developed procedures and rules that guided White House protocol and established processes where there had been only personal prerogative. Cortelyou is also credited with establishing an improved line of communication between the President's office and the press; he provided reporters with their own workspace, briefed journalists on notable news, handed out press releases. Cortelyou is credited with instituting the first systematic gathering of press commentary for a sitting president's perusal. These "current clippings" were the first attempt by a President to gauge public opinion through the media. Cortelyou selected items objectively, a practice that would not be consistently followed by his successors.
Secretary of Commerce and Labor
Cortelyou served as the first United States Secretary of Commerce and Labor from February 18, 1903 to June 30, 1904. He also served as United States Postmaster General from 1905 to 1907; and United States Secretary of the Treasury; all under President Theodore Roosevelt.
From 1904 through 1907, Cortelyou also served as chairman of the Republican National Committee, working for the successful re-election of Roosevelt.
He was made an honorary member of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Fraternity on April 9, 1903. He had attended the New England Conservatory of Music, where the fraternity was founded.
Secretary of the Treasury
Cortelyou was United States Secretary of the Treasury from March 4, 1907, to March 7, 1909. This was during the devastating Panic of 1907. Like his predecessor, Treasury Secretary Leslie M. Shaw, Cortelyou believed it was Treasury's duty to protect the banking system, but he realized that the Treasury was not equipped to maintain economic stability.
He eased the crisis by depositing large amounts of government funds in national banks and buying government bonds. To prevent further crises, Cortelyou advocated a more elastic currency and recommended the creation of a central banking system. In 1908, the Aldrich-Vreeland Act was passed, providing special currency to be issued in times of panic, and creating a commission, which led to the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913.
He returned to private enterprise as the president of the Consolidated Gas Company, later New York Gas Company. He was also cited in the Con Edison Energy Museum, now closed, as one of their former chairmen.
Death
He Lived at his home "Harbor Lights" in Halesite Long Island, NY until he passed in 1940. Edith Roosevelt attended the wake at his home, as she was best friends with his wife, Lily Morris Hinds Cortelyou.
He is buried in the Memorial Cemetery of St. John's Church in Cold Spring Harbor, New York. Brooklyn's Cortelyou Road and the Cortelyou Road Station, in the Flatbush section, are named for him.
George B. Cortelyou, 1st U.S. Secretary of Commerce and Labor, Secretary of the Treasury, Postmaster General's Timeline
1862 |
July 26, 1862
|
||
1897 |
October 22, 1897
|
||
1940 |
October 23, 1940
Age 78
|