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James
O'Neill
Posted by Susie on
Sat, 17 Feb 2001
Source: 1918
History of Clark Co., WI, by Franklyn, Curtiss-Wedge, pg. 162

James O'Neill, judge of the
Seventeenth Judicial Circuit of Wisconsin, was born in Lisbon, St. Lawrence Co.,
N.Y., Sept. 3, 1847, son of Andrew and Mary (Holiston) O'Neill, and grandson of
Andrew and Janet (Armstrong) O'Neill. His preliminary education was received in
the district schools and his career as educator started when at the age of 15,
he started teaching district school, at $15 a month. In 1863 he entered St.
Lawrence University, at Canton, N.Y., and there remained for three years. Then
he taught school again for awhile until 1868, when, upon being awarded the
district scholarship in a competitive examination, he entered Cornell University
as a sophomore at its original opening. During his entire career there he was
master of the chimes. Both as a debater and a scholar he distinguished himself,
and indeed such excellent work did he do, that having to leaves school in the
spring of 1870 by reason of an attack of typhoid fever, he became principal of
the Ogdensburg High school in the fall of 1870, and closed the school in the
spring to graduate two weeks later with his original class of 1871. He was a
charter member at Cornell of the Delta Upsilon Fraternity. Andrew D. White, the
first president of Cornell, is still his close friend. Among the many
distinguished men under whom he took lectures may be mentioned James Russell
Lowell, Goldwin Smith, George A . Benton of Rochester, P. C. J. DeAngelis of
Utica, Albert H. Sewel of Walton, and John M. Kellogg of Ogdensburg. Judge
O'Neill has been active in Alumni matters, and has served as president of the
Northwester Alumni Association of his Alma Mater. Upon receiving his B. A. from
Cornell, he entered the law office of Joseph McNaughton, at Ogdensburg, a
distinguished lawyer, who has recently left that place $100,000 for a hospital.
With this preparation, Judge O'Neill entered the Albany Law School and graduated
in 1873, with the degree of LL. B. Soon after graduation, he came to Neillsville
to visit his uncle, arriving here Sept. 18, 1873. Being persuaded to stay, he
cast his lot here, and has since become one of the county's leading men. During
his years as a lawyer, he handled some of the county's most important
litigation. For a time he practiced alone. Then H. W. Sheldon was a partner for
awhile. After Mr. Sheldon's death in 1878, he was alone for awhile, and then for
a short time had Joseph Morley as a partner.. Mr. Morley retired to enter the
banking business and then after another period alone, Judge O'Neill formed a
partnership with Spencer M. Marsh, now a judge of the Supreme Court of
California and living at San Diego. In July 1887 he was appointed district
attorney of Clark County, and re-elected in the fall of 1888 by the largest vote
on the ticket. In 1890 and 1892 he was nominated by the Republican party as a
candidate for attorney general, but this was the time of the Bennett Law
agitation, and the whole ticket was defeated each time. Jan. 1, 1898 he went on
the bench of the Seventeenth Circuit, and five years ago assumed in addition to
the work of this circuit, the duties of holding court at Baraboo. In local
affairs, Judge O'Neill has been a member of the county board and of the school
board. Prominent at all times in the Republican Party, he was an especially
active figure, before his elevation to the bench, in county, district and state
conventions. In 1885 he served in the legislature, and in 1888 was a delegate to
the Republican National Convention. Of recent years, he has been an ardent
worker in the cause of abstinence, and it is a matter of pride with him that all
four of the county seats of his judicial circuit are now dry. One of the
pleasant memories of Judge O'Neill is his trip to Europe in 1901, when in
addition to touring various points of interest he visited Shane's Castle, on the
O'Neill Estate, County Antrim, Ireland, the family seat of his ancestors, and
the birthplace of a long line of his forebears. He has been a lifelong member of
the Episcopal Church. Judge O'Neill was married June 6, 1876, to Marian
Robinson, daughter of David H. and Emma F. (Brown) Robinson, pioneers of
Wisconsin. This union has been blessed with two children, Ernest A. and Marian.
Ernest A. was born March 10, 1877, graduated from the Neillsville High School in
1895, from the academic department of the University of Wis. with the degree of
B. A., in 1899, and from the law department of the same university with the
degree of LL. B. in 1902. At college he was a member of the Delta Upsilon
Fraternity. He died Oct. 5, 1905. This young man was the embodiment of manly
character, a deep student, and possessed of an engaging personality. The world
is the better for his having lived in it, even for so short a time. Marian was
born Jan. 22, 1883, received her higher education in Grafton Hall, Fond du Lac;
Downer College, Milwaukee; and the University of Wis., Madison, and spent
several years studying music in Milwaukee. She was married June 6, 1912, to
Forest D. Calway, who is court reporter of the Circuit Court, residing at
Neillsville, Wis. Judge O'Neill is a gentleman of the old school, a typical
judge of the old type. A student of men and events and books, he is a close
observer, and is of an ideal judicial temperament.. Desiring ever the best of
his fellow men, he is striving in every way to do his share toward the cause of
righteousness and justice, and few men in this region are held in such high
regard and universal veneration. His influence in Clark County life will
continue to be felt for many generations to come.
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