BIO: Hon. William BIGLER, Clearfield County, PA
 
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From Twentieth Century History of Clearfield County, Pennsylvania,
and Representative Citizens, by Roland D. Swoope, Jr.,
Chicago: Richmond-Arnold Publishing Company, 1911, 337-339.
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REPRESENTATIVE CITIZENS  337

  HON. WILLIAM BIGLER, deceased, who served the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 
as its chief executive from 1851 until 1855, later represented his people 
with distinction in the United States Senate, and for years responded to the 
call of public duty, often to the detriment of his private interests, which, 
from early manhood, were important to himself and to those associated with 
him.  His useful life covered the most important years of his country's 
history and his name is indissolubly connected with its making.  Where his 
fellow citizens at times questioned his judgment but never his integrity, the 
present day conditions have vindicated many of his thwarted plans and shown 
his wisdom.
  William Bigler came of sturdy Pennsylvania German stock.  His parents were 
Jacob and Susan (Dock) Bigler, types of a class of honest, hard-working 
people, whose mental outlook is apt to be limited and whose ambitions are 
negligible.  One of a large family, William Bigler was born January 13, 1813, 
at Shermansburg, Cumberland county, Pa., prior to the removal of the family 
to a pioneer farm in Mercer county.  The father died there while the children 
were young.  The home farm was small and the eldest son soon pushed out into 
the world beyond, and in 1829 he was ready to offer employment to his young 
brother William, in his printing office at Bellefonte.  His name was John 
Bigler and at that time he was proprietor of the Center Democrat and later 
attained to gubernatorial honors in California, and left an impress on that 
state no less indelible than did the younger brother on Pennsylvania.
  William Bigler was mainly educated in the printing office, his advantages 
prior to 1829 having been exceedingly limited.  He remained with his brother 
until his apprenticeship was completed and then, with characteristic 
determination, although practically without funds and at that time with 
absolutely no influential friends, went to Clearfield and there founded the 
Clearfield Democrat.  He was thus entirely dependent upon the ability with 
which he could interest an unknown constituency in his efforts to advance the 
principles of Jacksonian Democracy.  At first he was his own complete office 
force and his initial efforts would have been more or less amusing had they 
not been tragic.  However, it was this spirit of persistency and enterprise 
that first attracted the public, which later read, admired and bestowed 
confidence and what was then necessary, gave substantial support to the 
venture.  This newspaper introduced him into public affairs and his manner of 
handling the grave questions of the day editorially aroused the political 
leaders and henceforward until his final retirement, he was more or less in the 
public eye.
  Although in 1836, Mr. Bigler disposed of his newspaper in order to give his 
full attention to large lumbering interests with which he became connected in 
association with his father-in-law, A. B. Reed, he was not permitted to 
withdraw from public attention and he was more than once offered the 
nomination for the state legislature.  Although he consistently declined 
these marks of public approval for a time, in 1841 he accepted the nomination 
to the State Senate and was elected by a very large majority, and in 1844 was 
re-elected and served two terms and was twice elected speaker.  This period 
was one of great moment to the State of Pennsylvania and the speeches and 
efforts made by Senator Bigler for the passage of a law of taxation to meet 
the public indebtedness and pay the interest on the state debt, also for the 
procuring of the passage of a law for abolishing imprisonment for debt, and 
also for the passage of the laws regulating questions of internal 
improvement, all testified to the public spirit, ability, and true conception 
of public duty, that marked him as a statesman and a sincere friend of the 
people.
  In 1848 Senator Bigler's name was presented to the Democratic convention as 
a candidate for governor, but internal conflicts of personal interests 
resulted in the election of another candidate.  In 1849 he was appointed 
revenue commissioner, and in 1851 he was nominated by his party for governor, 
by acclamation, and was triumphantly elected, and this honor came to him 
before he had reached his thirty-eighth year.  It is an interesting episode 
to record that his election as governor of Pennsylvania was simultaneous with 
the election of his brother, John Bigler, to the same high office in 
California.
  Governor Bigler's administration was just such as the acts of his public 
life had indicated prior to this.  He believed in and advocated the old-time 
virtues of economy, efficiency, industry and integrity in dealing with public 
affairs as with private interests and he had the support of all the people 
with the exception of a class that existed then as now, which sought special 
privileges and had counted on the executive granting them, and found out 
their mistake in their estimate of his character.  The annals of the state 
tell how faithfully and fearlessly he faced these private interests and how 
conscientiously and courageously he carried out the laws according to the 
constitution.  In March, 1854, he was again unanimously nominated for 
governor, but the strain of public cares had told on him and he made no 
personal canvass and in the contest was defeated by the Know Nothing party.  
In January, 1855, he was elected to the United States Senate, where he served 
with great credit to himself and his state for six years, and it was during 
this period, in 1857, that, as a member of the committee on commerce, he made 
an elaborate report concerning the construction of a ship canal across the 
Isthmus of Panama, a scheme considered then by the country at large as 
dangerous and entirely visionary.  In that, as in many other public projects, 
Senator Bigler was a man ahead of his times.  In 1860 he was a member of the 
Democratic convention that assembled at Charleston, where he opposed the 
nomination of Judge Douglas, and he was temporary chairman of the convention at 
Chicago, in 1864, which nominated George B. McClellan.  In 1868 he was a 
delegate to the National Democratic Convention in New York, which nominated 
Horatio Seymour.  In 1872, he was nominated a delegate-at-large to the 
convention for the revision of the constitution, but later he voluntarily 
withdrew his name, but subsequently, for political reasons consented to fill the 
vacancy caused by the resignation of S. H. Raynolds, and took a leading part in 
the deliberations of that body.  He was associated closely with party affairs of 
large importance up to 1875, after which he withdrew more or less in order to 
give his attention to local matters beneficial to his county and to his 
individual interests.  On March 23, 1836, William Bigler was married to Maria J. 
Reed, who was born in Clearfield county, Pa., a lady well qualified to both 
advance his public prestige and to adorn his home and rear a happy family.  Of 
their children but one survives, a son, Harry F. Bigler, who is president of the 
Clearfield Steam Company and a director in the Center County National Bank.  
Distinguished as were his public services, William Bigler's memory is tenderly 
preserved by those who knew him best for the personal qualities which added to 
their pride in him and also made him generally beloved.  His death occurred at 
his home on August 9, 1880.