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  1. Walter Quintin Gresham (Lanesville, 17 de marzo de 1832-Washington D. C., 28 de mayo de 1895) fue un político y jurista estadounidense. Fue general del Ejército de la Unión durante la guerra civil estadounidense, participando en el sitio de Vicksburg y otras batallas importantes.

  2. Walter Quintin Gresham (March 17, 1832 – May 28, 1895) was an American attorney, jurist, statesman, and politician who served in the cabinets of presidents Chester A. Arthur and Grover Cleveland. Gresham was the 31st postmaster general of the United States under Arthur from 1883 to 1884 and briefly the 35th U.S. secretary of the ...

  3. 24 de may. de 2024 · Walter Quintin Gresham (born March 17, 1832, near Lanesville, Ind., U.S.—died May 28, 1895, Washington, D.C.) was a leading Republican politician after the American Civil War who abandoned his party to serve as U.S. secretary of state (1893–95) under the Democratic administration of President Grover Cleveland.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Walter Quintin Gresham, 33rd Secretary of State. Rise to Prominence. Gresham was born in Harrison County, Indiana, on March 17, 1832. He attended Indiana State University, subsequently studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1854. He entered politics and won a seat in the State legislature as a Republican in 1860.

  5. Walter Q. Gresham. Fue un político y jurista estadounidense. Fue general del Ejército de la Unión durante la guerra civil estadounidense, participando en el Sitio de Vicksburg y otras batallas importantes.

  6. Upon the death of Secretary of the Treasury Charles J. Folger in September 1884, Walter Q. Gresham (1832 - 1895) accepted President Arthur's stopgap appointment as Secretary. Gresham, previously Arthur's Postmaster General, had been close to Folger and shared his ideas on finance.

  7. President Grant named him a district judge for Indiana in 1869. Gresham's most famous action on the bench was the injunction he issued against unions in the great railroad strike of 1877, urging President Rutherford Hayes to use federal troops to break the strike.