Henry May (Maryland)
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Henry May (February 13, 1816 – September 25, 1866) was a United States House of Representatives, U.S. Representative from Maryland.


Early life

May was born in Washington, D.C., on February 13, 1816. He was a son of Dr. Frederick May (1773–1847) and Juliana Mathilda (née Slacum) May (1793–1822). His siblings included John Frederick May, William May, Julia Matilda (née May) Oelrichs (mother of Hermann Oelrichs, Charles May Oelrichs and Lucie Oelrichs William Jay (Colonel), Jay), Laura (née May) Wise (the wife of Gen. George D. Wise (Union), George D. Wise), and Julian S. May. His father, who was born in Boston, was a physician who spent nearly the last fifty years of his life practicing in Washington. His paternal grandparents were Abigail (née May) May and Col. John May, who participated in the Boston Tea Party and became a prominent soldier in the American Revolutionary War. He attended Columbian College (later George Washington University), also in Washington, D.C. He studied law, was Admission to the bar in the United States, admitted to the bar in 1840, and commenced practice.


Career

In 1850, May was sent by President Franklin Pierce to Mexico to investigate claims under the United States' treaty of peace with Mexico. He moved to Baltimore, Maryland. In 1852, May was elected as a Democratic Party (United States), Democrat to the 33rd United States Congress, Thirty-third Congress, serving one term from March 4, 1853 to March 3, 1855. He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1854 to the 34th United States Congress, Thirty-fourth Congress, but was elected as a Unionist Party (United States), Unionist to the 37th United States Congress, Thirty-seventh Congress, serving form March 4, 1861 to March 3, 1863. May sat in the special session of Congress held in summer 1861 after the outbreak of the American Civil War, Civil War. In September 1861 May was arrested without charges or recourse to habeas corpus on suspicion of treason and held in Fort Lafayette. (Lincoln had unilaterally suspended habeas in Maryland in spring 1861, a move ruled unconstitutional without Congressional authorization in June 1861 by Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Taney in ''ex parte Merryman'', a disputed ruling which Lincoln disregarded.) May was eventually released—no charges were ever brought or evidence produced—and returned to his seat in Congress in December 1861. In March 1862 he introduced a bill requiring the federal government to either indict by grand jury or release all other "political prisoners" held indefinitely without recourse to habeas. The provisions of May's bill were included in the Habeas Corpus Suspension Act 1863, March 1863 Habeas Corpus Act in which Congress finally authorized Lincoln to suspend habeas corpus, but required actual indictments for suspected traitors. The "political prisoners" affected included Baltimore newspaper editor, and vocal Lincoln critic, Frank Key Howard, who had been a co-prisoner with May, and was also a grand-nephew of Chief Justice Taney's wife Anne Key, (Francis Scott Key's sister). In 1862, Henry May and Ohio Congressman Clement Vallandigham, an Copperhead (politics), anti-war Democrat, led an investigation into telegraphic censorship of the press instituted by Lincoln's Secretary of State William H. Seward in certain cities.


Personal life

On November 29, 1845 May was married to Henrietta de Courcy (1820–1919) in Chester, Maryland. She was the daughter of William Henry de Courcy and Eliza Bond (née Rozier) de Courcy. Together, they were the parents of: * Frederick DeCourcy May (1846–1893), a surgeon who served in the Franco-Prussian War and, later, as president of the New York Shipbuilding Corporation; he married Cecilia Coleman. * Rosalie May (1848–1922), who married John S. Gittings, John Sterett Gittings, the Treasurer of Maryland, in 1877. * Henry May (1854–1936), who married Isabel Theresa Coleman of New Jersey in 1881. * George May (1855–1931), who became a prominent Baltimore banker with Alex. Brown & Sons. * Julia May (1859–1954), who married George Albert Bech, a son of Edward Bech, in 1887. After Bech's death in 1890, she married William Babcock and moved to California. * Lilian Marie May (1863–1958), who married William Bagot, 4th Baron Bagot, the Aide-de-Camp to the Governor General of Canada, in 1903. He died on September 25, 1866, in Baltimore, and is interred in New Cathedral Cemetery, Cathedral Cemetery. His widow died in Hove, Sussex in 1919.


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:May, Henry 1816 births 1866 deaths George Washington University Law School alumni Maryland Unionists Unionist Party members of the United States House of Representatives Democratic Party members of the United States House of Representatives from Maryland 19th-century American politicians