Background
Bushnell was born in Rome, New York and moved to Springfield, Ohio at age 17.
Bushnell was born in Rome, New York and moved to Springfield, Ohio at age 17.
He served as the 40th Governor of Ohio. Prior to becoming Governor, he served as the president of the Warder, Bushnell and Glessner Company, which became one of four companies that merged to form International Harvester. Other roles in business included serving as president of the Springfield Gas Company and the First National Bank of Springfield.
During the American Civil War, he raised a company of men for the 152nd Ohio Infantry, a 100 days regiment, and served as captain from May to September 1864.
He was a Presidential elector in 1884 for Blaine/Logan. A business executive, Bushnell served as the Ohio State Republican Party Chair in 1885.
He succeeded William McKinley as governor, serving two two-year terms from 1896 to 1900. Valentine Anti-Trust Acting
During the Bushnell administration, Ohio took an early leadership role in trust-busting.
The Valentine Anti-Trust Acting was signed into law by Bushnell.
This Acting prohibited price fixing, and production limitation. All of these practices helped businesses by driving up the prices for their products, thus harming the consumer. In addition to Valentine Anti-Trust Acting, Bushnell"s attorney general pursued the monopolistic practices of the Standard Oil Company in the courts.
Eventually, United States. Senator John Sherman of Ohio introduced the Sherman Antitrust Acting in the United States Congress in 1890.
This law served as the first serious attempt by the federal government to break up monopolies and trusts, though successful enforcement of anti-trust laws was still more than a decade, and new political commitment, away. Death
Bushnell came from his home at Springfield in January 1904 to attend the inauguration of Governor Myron T. Herrick at Columbus.
After the ceremony, he entered his carriage to return home, was struck with apoplexy before reaching the railroad station, and died at a Columbus hospital four days later. He was buried in the Ferncliff Cemetery, Springfield on January 18, 1904.
Bushnell married Ellen Ludlow of Springfield, September 17, 1857.
The house was not designed by Henry Hobson Richardson, but by Richardson’s firm soon after the architect"s death. Glessner"s house is considered one of Richardson"s greatest designs. The Bushnell House is part of Springfield"s East High Street Historic District, which is on the National Register of Historic Places.