Harrison Tweed

How are you related to Harrison Tweed?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Harrison Tweed

Also Known As: "Charles Harrison Tweed", "Jr."
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, United States
Death: June 16, 1969 (83)
New York, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Charles Harrison Tweed, Sr. and Helen Minerva Tweed
Husband of Barbara Tweed
Ex-husband of Eleanor Jenckes Roelker and Michael Strange
Father of Eleanor von Metzler; Katharine Winthrop Tweed and Private
Brother of Helen Wadsworth; Katharine Winthrop Blaine; Max Tweed and Mary Winthrop Tweed

Occupation: Attorney, Rechtsanwalt in New York [NY]
Managed by: Jessica Marie German
Last Updated:

About Harrison Tweed

Tweed was born in New York City on October 18, 1885. He was the son of Charles Harrison Tweed, the general counsel for the Central Pacific Railroad, Chesapeake and Ohio and other affiliated railroad corporations, and his wife, (Helen) Minerva Evarts. His maternal grandfather was William M. Evarts, who served successively from 1868 to 1891 as United States Attorney General, United States Secretary of State, and United States Senator from New York, and was one of the leaders of the American Bar Association. His maternal great, great, great grandfather was Paul Dudley Sargent Revolutionary war hero, one of the founding overseers of Bowdoin College. Tweed graduated from St. Mark's School in Southborough, Massachusetts, and received a B.A. from Harvard College in 1907. At Harvard Law School, he served on the law review and was awarded an LL.B. in 1910.

His career at the bar began with a clerkship in the office of Byrne and Cutcheon in New York City. After service as a captain in World War I, he joined one of the predecessor firms to Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy, where he remained as a partner the remainder of his life. Milbank, Tweed was the outside legal arm of Chase Manhattan Bank and the Rockefeller family. Tweed specialized in drafting wills and trust agreements, for the administering of major estates. He wrote briefs in litigation arising out of them and argued, and won, several notable appeals in the New York courts and the United States Supreme Court. Because he was born partially deaf, he never tried a case. In conferences with other lawyers he usually spoke last, and his views generally became the group's consensus. Imitating Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, he had no desk in his office, instead writing at a lectern.

Tweed's appointment as chairman of the legal aid committee of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York in 1932, led to a continuing involvement in bar organizations. He became an enthusiastic convert to the necessity of providing competent legal services to all people. Legal aid, he wrote, was "operation equal justice," "an obligation of the bar," and essential to secure the success of the adversary system. He served as president of the Legal Aid Society of New York from 1936 to 1945, later publishing a history of its first seventy-five years, and of the National Legal Aid & Defender Association from 1949 to 1955.

In 1945, Tweed was elected president of the New York City bar association. To rejuvenate the staid organization, he brought in younger lawyers, established a bulletin, reorganized committees that issued reports, and created the position of executive secretary. All of this was done in a spirit of openness, equality, informality, and fun (a recurring word with Tweed). In this way, Tweed transformed a stuffy club into a strong progressive force for public service. C. C. Burlingham, the doyen of the New York bar, said that Tweed was "the best president the Bar Association has ever had."

In 1947, Tweed became president of the American Law Institute (ALI). He was a guiding force in its major labors—the updating of the institute's published Restatements, as well as the preparation of the Uniform Commercial Code, model codes and statutes on penal law and taxation, and the first restatement on the foreign-relations law of the United States. He took a light, subtle approach, usually talking around the matter at hand so as to envelop the object of his attention; only occasionally did he take a direct part in the proceedings over which he smoothly presided.

Starting in 1947, Tweed was chairman of the ALI - American Bar Association (ABA) joint committee on continuing legal education. Refreshment of the law, Tweed believed, was a professional responsibility. He wrote articles, spoke to lawyers' groups, buttonholed bar leaders, and organized conferences. For many years, a colleague noted, he "was the committee." The number of administrators of state continuing-legal-education programs increased markedly during his tenure.

Educational matters and public service occupied much of Tweed's time. He served as a trustee of Sarah Lawrence College from 1940 to 1965, including eight years as chairman of the board of trustees (1947 to 1955), and was interim president of the college in 1959-1960. In his term as interim president, he is credited with saving the college from bankruptcy by increasing the number of students. He also served as an overseer of Harvard University from 1950 to 1956, and from 1951 to 1967 he was a trustee of the Cooper Union Center for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York City.

New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey in 1953 appointed him chairman of the state’s commission to study the reorganization of the judicial branch (courts); many of its recommendations, including the formation of a new judicial conference of the state's judges, were later adopted by the state. In 1963, at the request of US President John F. Kennedy, Tweed became co-chairman of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a position that he held for two years.

Tweed believed that lawyers' training to define complicated issues enabled them to play a special role outside the practice of law: "Even if he contributes nothing more than a sense of orderliness and an ability to organize thought and to pose the right questions, the lawyer will have pulled his weight in the boat." Of his year as president of Sarah Lawrence College, he wrote, "I think that I did manage to bring to the faculty an organization and an understanding of democratic procedures which no one but a lawyer could have done."

Tall, erect, and lean, Tweed was "the most democratic of aristocrats."He was the only lawyer to be awarded medals for distinguished service from the New York City, New York State, and American bar associations. The ABA tribute noted that his was "the Horatio Alger story in reverse." "I have a high opinion of lawyers," Tweed said in 1945. "With all their faults, they stack up well against those in every other occupation or profession. They are better to work with or play with or fight with or drink with than most other varieties of mankind." He died in New York City. -- Roger K. Newman Family

Tweed was married three times and divorced twice. By his first marriage on June 14, 1914 to Eleanor Roelker, he had two children. Following his divorce in 1928, he married Blanche Oelrichs Barrymore, the former wife of John Barrymore who used the name Michael Strange in her acting and writing careers. They were divorced in 1942. He married Barbara Banning on 21 November 1942; they had one child.

His daughter (with Eleanor Roelker) Katherine Winthrop Tweed married Archibald Bulloch Roosevelt, Jr. in 1940 and was divorced in 1950. She had one son, Tweed Roosevelt, born in 1942.

Further reading:

Tweed's history of the Legal Aid Society was published as The Legal Aid Society, New York City, 1876-1951) (1954). See his chapter, "One Lawyer's Life," in Albert Love and James Saxon Childers, eds., Listen to Leaders in Law (1963). A series of interviews dealing largely with his law practice are in the Columbia Oral History Collection, Tributes to Tweed appear in the 1969 Association of the Bar of the City of New York Yearbook and the 1970 American Law Institute Proceedings. George Martin, Causes and Conflicts (1970), deals with Tweed's activities in the New York City bar association. An obituary is in the New York Times, June 17, 1969.] References.

__________________________________________________________________________

118. HELEN MINERVA EVARTS (73. Hon. William M. Evarts, Mehetabel (Sherman) Evarts, Hon. Roger10 Sherman, William,0 Joseph,5 Capt. John,7 John,5 Henry,5 .Henry,4 Thomas,5 John,2 Thomas1), b. at New York City, Mar. 8, 1856. m. in St. Paul's Church, at Windsor, Vt., Oct. 27, 1881, Charles Harrison Tweed, son of Harrison and Huldah Ann (Pond) Tweed, b. at Calais, Me., Sept. 26, 1844; d. at New York City, Oct. 11, 1917. Buried at Windsor. B.A. Harvard, 1865. Admitted to Bar of New York, May 18, 1868. Lawyer. Member of firm of Evarts, Southmayd & Choate, Jan. 1, 1874, to Jan. 1, 1883. Afterwards general counsel of Central Pacific and other railroads for several years. Chairman of board of directors of Southern Pacific R. R., 1900-1902. President of Pacific Mail S.S. Co. Banker. Member of New York firm of Speyer & Co., Jan. 1, 1903, 5to Jan. 1, 1907. Retired, 1907. Lived in New York City and Beverly, Mass. Children:

I. Helen Tweed, b. at New York City, Oct. 25, 1883. m. at New York, May 23, 1912, William Wadsworth, son of Charles David and Clara Lewinia (Blanchard) Wadsworth, b. at Plainfield, N. J., June 18, 1882. B.A. Harvard, 1904. Children:

1. Helen Minerva Wadsworth, b. at New York, Feb. 5, 1914.

2. William Blanchard Wadsworth, b. at Chappaqua, N. Y., July 18, 1915.

3. Charles Harrison Wadsworth, b. at Hartsdale, N. Y., May 24, 1918. d. at Niverville, N. Y., Oct. 5, 1919.

4. Clara Wadsworth, b. at Albany, N. Y., Feb. 23, 1920.

II. Harrison Tweed, b. at New York, Oct. 18, 1885. B.A. Harvard, 1907. LL.B., 1909. Lawyer. Member of New York City firm of Humes, Smith & Tweed. Enlisted in U. S. A. In Field Artillery, Central Officers' Training School, Camp Zachary Taylor. Received diploma and honorably discharged at close of war, 1918. m. at East Greenwich, R. I., June 24, 1914, Eleanor Roelker, daughter of William Greene and Eleanor (Jenckes) Roelker, b. at East Greenwich, July 3, 1890. Children b. at New York City:

1. Eleanor Tweed, b. Dec. 31, 1915.

2. Katharine Winthrop Tweed, b. Jan. 16, 1920.

III. Katharine Winthrop Tweed, b. at Beverly, Mass., Aug. 7, 1888. m. at New York City, Jan. 5, 1918, Graham Burt Blaine. B.A. Harvard, 1917. 2nd Lieut. 303rd U. S. Infantry; son of Charles Hodge and Emma Josephine (Burt) Blaine, .b. at Taunton, Mass., Mar. 26, 1894. Child:

1. Graham Burt Blaine, Jr., b. at Boston, Mass., Oct. 16, 1918.

IV. Max Tweed, b. at Pomfret, Conn., Sept. 8, 1893; d. there Sept. 30, 1893.

V. Mary Winthrop Tweed, b. at New York City, Nov. 19,1895. Unm.

Bibliographic information:

  • Sherman Genealogy Including Families of Essex, Suffolk and Norfolk, England: Some Descendants of the Immigrants, Captain John Sherman, Reverend John Sherman, Edmund Sherman and Samuel Sherman, and the Descendents of Honorable Roger Sherman and Honorable Charles R. Sherman
  • Author Thomas Townsend Sherman
  • Publisher T. A. Wright, 1920
  • Original from the University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Digitized Nov 29, 2007
  • Length 474 pages
  • Page 376
view all

Harrison Tweed's Timeline

1885
October 18, 1885
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, United States
1915
December 31, 1915
New York, Kings County, New York, United States
1920
January 16, 1920
New York, New York, United States
1969
June 16, 1969
Age 83
New York, United States