Sheppard, Eli T.

Hide Profile

Diplomat and lawyer.

From the description of Papers, 1872-1924 (bulk 1872-1880). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 34149532

From the description of Papers of Eli T. Sheppard, 1872-1924 (bulk 1872-1880) (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 79455755

BIOGRAPHY

Eli T. Sheppard, whose papers form a large portion of this collection, was a diplomat and lawyer; American consul at Tientsin, China (1871-1876) and advisor in international law to Japanese foreign office (1876-1880).

From the guide to the East Asia collection, 1877-1923, (Stanford University. Libraries. Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives.)

Biography

When the distinguished professor of history of the University of California at Berkeley, Henry Morse Stephens, returned some letters he had borrowed from Eli Taylor Sheppard, he wrote the former American Consul to China, "May I beg you to see that this most interesting correspondence...is preserved in some safe place, -I dare not suggest the Bancroft Library, -on account of its very real historical value." Fifty-four years later, the Bancroft Library, through the generous gift of Mrs. William S. Hilbert was indeed to receive the fascinating and rich collection of Papers of her grandfather, Eli Taylor Sheppard.

Eli Taylor Sheppard, lawyer and diplomat, was born in Belmont County, Ohio, on September 26, 1842, and spent his early years on his father's farm. By 1858, he had begun teaching in the nearby Pumpkin Ridge county school. At the outbreak of the Civil War, he enlisted with the 85th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, serving until April 1863. Encouraged by Mr. John A. Bingham in his desire to read law, Sheppard entered the Union Law College in 1864, graduating with honors in March 1865. His early practice with the firm of Bingham, Stanton and Lewton led to his appointment as Proctor in Admiralty in the Circuit and District Courts of the United States, and in 1867 as Register in Bankruptcy.

Soon after the visit in 1868 of the first Chinese Ambassador to the United States, the commercial exchanges between the two countries necessitated the sending of American officials to China. At the instigation of Anson Burlingame, who had been instrumental in the development of relations with China, Sheppard, eager to apply his knowledge of international law, applied for, and obtained an appointment as U.S. Consul to China in April of 1869. He took up residence in Chinkiang for two years, after which he was transferred, with the title of U.S. Consul for North China, to the port of Tientsin.

Throughout these years, Mr. Sheppard gained a reputation for dealing with firmness and tact in such varied matters as his intervention in the case of the persecution of an American missionary at Chimi near Chefoo. His friendly relations with the metropolitan viceroy, Li Hung Chang, the real ruler of China, were instrumental in Sheppard's ability to adjust differences between China and the treaty powers, especially in the Formosan difficulty with Japan in 1873, and later in disputes arising between China and Japan concerning Korea and the Lew Chew Islands.

At this time, however, his mentor, Mr. Bingham, now minister to Japan, urged Sheppard to come to Japan as Advisor in International Law. Upon his arrival in Japan in 1877, he found the country to be undergoing exciting changes in its transition from insular feudalism to the mainstream of international life, responsive to outside aid, and generally more in touch with the West than was China. Here Sheppard assisted in establishing a consular service modeled on European and American systems, worked in clarifying rights and duties of foreigners residing in China and Japan in relation to treaty revisions and extraterritoriality. Other legal questions to be untangled included the nature of the rights of foreign vessels in offshore Japanese waters, issues of naturalization, etc.

Suffering from ill health, Sheppard decided to abandon his post, returning to California in 1881. He settled down temporarily in Napa, then near Sonoma, growing grapes at the Madrone Vineyards which he later sold to Senator George Hearst in 1889. After traveling in Europe, he resumed his law practice in San Francisco in 1890. He travelled to Mexico and Washington D.C., lectured at the University of California, Berkeley on international law and on the American Consular Service, and from 1912 spent his remaining years in Oakland, where he died in 1927.

From the guide to the Eli Taylor Sheppard Papers, ca. 1858-1927, (The Bancroft Library)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Sheppard, Eli T. Papers, 1872-1924 (bulk 1872-1880). Library of Congress
referencedIn East Asia collection, 1877-1923. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Doren, Gustavus Adolphus, 1838-1905. Papers 1854-1905. Ohio History Connection, Ohio Historical Society
creatorOf Eli T. Sheppard Papers, 1872-1924, (bulk 1872-1880) Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
creatorOf Eli Taylor Sheppard Papers, ca. 1858-1927 Bancroft Library
referencedIn Chit Chat Club. Chit Chat Club records, 1877-2011. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Lefoy, J. A. J.A. Lefoy letter to Richard Gillis : Mokelumne Hill, Calif. : ALS, 1887 Feb. 3. UC Berkeley Libraries
creatorOf East Asia collection, 1877-1923 Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Chit Chat Club. corporateBody
associatedWith Doren, Gustavus Adolphus, 1838-1905. person
associatedWith Japan. Gaimushò„. corporateBody
associatedWith Lefoy, J. A. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
China--Tientsin
China
China
Japan
United States
China
Japan
United States
Japan
China--Tianjin
Subject
American
Americans
Commercial law
Consuls
Consuls
Diplomatic and consular service, American
Diplomatic and consular service, American
International law
Occupation
Consuls
Diplomats
Lawyers
Activity

Person

Active 1872

Active 1924

Information

Permalink: http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6r78qkd

Ark ID: w6r78qkd

SNAC ID: 24483373