Description: Vintage French Postal Cover March 1875 addressed to Austen G. Fox, Esq., New York City from L. Reynaud the Proprietor of the Hotel De France in Chambery with two 25 Blue Ceres Stamps, Chambery postmarks front and back, other postmarks and what appears to be Hotel Stamp or Logo on back flap. Austen G. Fox was an amazing man please read more about him below. Condition very good. Zoom in on pics as part of description. A unique piece on multiple levels. This ships fast and FREE! Contact us any questions and thanks for supporting our tiny biz. Austen George Fox (1849-1937) was a prominent American lawyer and philanthropist. He was the son of George Henry Fox (1824–1865) and Hannah Clarissa Fox (1830–1860). His younger sister, Rebecca Fox, was the wife of Dr. Benjamin Clapp Riggs, parents of Dr. Austen Fox Riggs. A descendant of an old Quaker family, his paternal grandparents were George Shotwell Fox and Rebecca Leggett Fox, herself the daughter of Thomas Leggett and Mary Haight Leggett. His paternal aunt, Anna Mott Fox, was the wife of Augustus Schell, the Collector of the Port of New York. He was educated at Rev. John O'Choule's School in Newport, Rhode Island followed by Churchill's Military Academy in Sing Sing, New York. Fox graduated from Harvard University with an A.B. degree in 1869 and from Harvard Law School with an LL.B. degree in 1871. While at Harvard, he was a member of the Zeta Psi Fraternity. Eventually becoming the Fraternity's Phi Alpha for the 1890/1891 term. After graduating from Harvard, he was admitted to the bar in New York in 1872 and began practicing, with an office at 45 Wall Street in Lower Manhattan. He later served as vice-president of the New York City Bar Association. Fox was considered a leader of the New York bar for sixty years, and was a close friend and contemporary of Elihu Root (a U.S. Senator, Secretary of War and Secretary of State) and Joseph Choate (the lawyer and U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom under Presidents William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt). In October 1894, upon the retirement of Chief Justice Robert Earl, he was offered the Democratic nomination for Judge of the New York Court of Appeals, but declined. From 1895 to 1896, he was asked by John R. Fellows to be the special assistant District Attorney in the prosecution of police officials following the Lexow Committee investigation. In 1897, he was the Citizens Union nominee for New York County District Attorney, in the so called "Low campaign", however, Democrat Asa Bird Gardiner was elected but later removed from office by then Governor Theodore Roosevelt. In January 1899, Governor Roosevelt appointed Fox special counsel to assist Attorney General John C. Davies in the investigation of charges against George W. Aldridge, the former Commissioner of Public Works and Campbell W. Adams, the former State Engineer, in connection with the deepening of the Erie Canal under what became known as the "Nine Million Dollar Act." In 1901, he was a founding member of the Committee of Fifteen, which was a New York City citizens' group that lobbied for the elimination of prostitution and gambling, The Committee, which was largely unsuccessful, disbanded in 1901 (and was succeeded by the Committee of Fourteen) after evaluating the investigations and reporting to Governor Benjamin Barker Odell, Jr. Fox himself participated in the raids: "Late one February evening in 1901, Austen G. Fox, prominent Wall Street lawyer and founding member of the Committee of Fifteen, arrived at the West Thirtieth Street police station in the heart of the infamous Tenderloin district with eight of his Committee colleagues. Dressed in his finest evening clothes and a silk top hat, Fox presented the desk sergeant with arrest warrants for the proprietors of eight different gambling parlors and brothels. The nine committeemen, bedecked in formal wear, each set out with a police officer to oversee the arrest of the offending parties. The arrival of Fox and his colleagues in the Tenderloin, traipsing around in the opera clothes accompanied by policeman, drew the attention of the neighborhood's denizens, who followed these strange pairs on their rounds." He later served as chairman of the Committee of Nine on police problems in 1905. He also served as chairman of the Anti-Imperialistic League. In 1913, he was the defense counsel during the impeachment trial of Democratic Governor William Sulzer, who was eventually found guilty and replaced by his Lieutenant Governor, Martin H. Glynn.
Price: 25.5 USD
Location: Lanoka Harbor, New Jersey
End Time: 2025-01-20T01:22:16.000Z
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Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Certification: Uncertified
Quality: Used
Region: France
Grade: Ungraded
Place of Origin: France & Colonies