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The Earle family : Ralph Earle and his descendants

The Earle family : Ralph Earle and his descendants

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Gen.] GENEALOGY. 207<br />

make Worcester county the stronghold of conscientious <strong>and</strong> determined<br />

political opposition to slavery. It was called the ' banner<br />

county' of the State, in that great conflict of opinion which resulted<br />

in the war of the rebellion <strong>and</strong> the extermination of chattel bondage<br />

in the United States. "Mr. <strong>Earle</strong> had few superiors in the country<br />

in editorial ability <strong>and</strong> experience, <strong>and</strong> there are few who have<br />

devoted so many years to journalism. In t<strong>his</strong> regard, as well as in<br />

some others, he much resembled <strong>his</strong> distinguished friend, William<br />

Cullen Bryant."<br />

Among various official positions which he held, aside from <strong>his</strong><br />

arduous duties as a journalist, he was Representative to the General<br />

Court in the years 1844, 1845, 1846, 1850, 1851 <strong>and</strong> 1852, <strong>and</strong> Sen-<br />

ator in 1858. During <strong>his</strong> service as member of the Legislature, he<br />

was in the habit of writing the leading editorial articles for the Spy<br />

in the cars on the way to Worcester at night ; frequently pencilling<br />

<strong>his</strong> criticisms of public men <strong>and</strong> measures on the blank margin of the<br />

Boston Journal.<br />

He was likewise a member of the Convention for the revision of<br />

the Constitution of the State, which held its meetings in the State<br />

House in Boston, in 1853. In a letter written April 16 of that year,<br />

he says, " <strong>The</strong> Convention will meet in about two weeks. I shall go<br />

in favor of very radical changes in our system, taking all patronage<br />

from the Governor <strong>and</strong> other executive officers, <strong>and</strong> bringing all elec-<br />

tions as near to the people in their primary organizations as possible.<br />

I shall therefore go for representation, in both branches, by election<br />

in single districts, the apportionment thereof based not upon popula-<br />

tion but upon voters, so that the representation shall be, what it pro-<br />

fesses to be, one of the actual sovereignty."<br />

While political journalism was <strong>his</strong> work during so many years,<br />

conchology, botany <strong>and</strong> horticulture were <strong>his</strong> recreation <strong>and</strong> delight.<br />

As a pomologist, botanist, &c, he had few superiors in t<strong>his</strong> country,<br />

being hardly second even to <strong>his</strong> friend, the Hon. Marshall P. Wilder,<br />

with whom he was always very intimate. He studied botany, both<br />

theoretically <strong>and</strong> practically, in <strong>his</strong> early years, generally carried <strong>his</strong><br />

box for flowers with him when riding in the country in the floral<br />

months, <strong>and</strong> frequently traversed field, meadow <strong>and</strong> forest in search<br />

of specimens. Hence few were so well acquainted as he with the<br />

flora of Worcester county. He was one of the founders of the<br />

Worcester County Horticultural Society, one of its officers from the

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