Background
Harvey Rice was born in Conway, Massachusetts, June 11, 1800 to Stephen Rice and Lucy (Baker) Rice.
Harvey Rice was born in Conway, Massachusetts, June 11, 1800 to Stephen Rice and Lucy (Baker) Rice.
Williams College.
He received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts in 1824. After graduation, he moved west to Cleveland to study law under the tutelage of Reuben Wood. His doctor of laws degree was awarded by Williams College.
In 1829, Rice became the managing editor of the paper.
That same year he was appointed as Justice of the Peace. In 1830, he was elected as a Representative in the Ohio House of Representatives as a Democrat, serving for two years.
He was appointed in 1830 as agent for the sale of fifty thousand acres Western Reserve School Lands. Over a three-year period he raised the sum of $150,000 through the sale of the public lands which was used to establish the public school system in Ohio.
In 1851 Rice was elected to the Ohio Senate and served for two years.
During his time in the senate, he was responsible for introduction and passage of laws to reorganize the public school system of the state and establish a system of public libraries. From 1879 until his death, he was president of the Early Settlers Association of the Western Reserve. Mountain. B. Harvey Rice married Fannie Rice, daughter of Truman Rice on 27 September 1828 and they had four children: Percival Wood Rice, Fannie Maria Rice, Henrietta M. Foreign his support of education in Cleveland, an elementary school was named in his honor.
In 1899, the City of Cleveland erected a statue by James Hamilton in his honor at the Fine Arts Museum Garden Area on East Boulevard in Cleveland.
Harvey Rice was a direct descendant of Edmund Rice, an English immigrant to Massachusetts Bay Colony, as follows: Harvey Rice, son of Stephen Rice (1769 – 1850) son of Cyrus Rice (1726 – 1804), son of Josiah Rice (1696 – 1730), son of Ephraim Rice (1665 – 1732), son of Thomas Rice (1625 – 1681), son of Edmund Rice (1594 – 1663).