Francis Lynde Stetson
Francis Lynde Stetson (April 23, 1846 – December 5, 1920) was an American lawyer. He was president of the New York City Bar Association from 1910 to 1911.
Biography
He was born at Keeseville, New York, the son of Lemuel Stetson who served in the New York state assembly and as a representative in the 28th U. S. Congress. He was graduated from Williams College in 1867 and from Columbia Law School in 1869. He was admitted to the bar in 1869 and practiced in New York City. He devoted attention chiefly to corporation and railway law, becoming eminent in those lines. He became general counsel of the International Mercantile Marine Company, the Northern Pacific Railway, the Southern Railway, and the United States Rubber Company; also director in several railway companies and other corporations. In 1894, he formed the firm of Stetson, Jennings & Russell (a predecessor to the modern-day Davis Polk & Wardwell), which represented J. P. Morgan's United States Steel Corporation; he was also Morgan's personal attorney. President Grover Cleveland was a partner in the firm between his two terms as President, and a close friend. Stetson also served as counsel for Samuel J. Tilden in the controversy over the 1876 presidential election. He was president of the New York City Bar Association from 1910-1911.
Legacy
He established an estate in Ringwood, New Jersey from farm in the Ramapo Mountains that would become the New Jersey State Botanical Gardens in Ringwood State Park.
Williams College offers a scholarship in his name.
Published work
- Was New York’s vote stolen? (New York: The North American review publishing co. [1914])
- "Preparation of corporate bonds, mortgages, collateral trusts, and debenture indentures" in Some legal phases of corporate financing, reorganization, and regulation (New York : Macmillan, 1917.)