Page 278 - PGM Compendium
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Of
M⸫W⸫ James E. Edmiston
1890-1891
Throwback Thursday – High on the roll of Washington's
distinguished citizens appears the name of James Ewen
Edmiston, Grand Master 1890 -1891, who was for many years
a resident of Dayton. His ideals of life were very high and in
early manhood he displayed conspicuously the traits of
character that made his career brilliantly successful.
Our brother was born in Washington County, Arkansas, on
March 29, 1849. In 1863, at the age of fourteen, he enlisted in
the Confederate Army. After the close of hostilities he returned
to his home in Arkansas and remained long enough to assist in
putting the plantation again into shape. He then went to Bentonville, Arkansas, where he attended
the Bentonville College for two years, and while a student there he also taught school. In 1870 he
went to Omaha, Nebraska, whence he made his way to the Pacific coast. He taught school for a
time in Oregon and also pursued a course of study at Corvallis College, from which he received
his degree in 1873.
On March 13, 1873 he was united in marriage to Helen Lacey, a native of Clackamas County,
Oregon. Soon after their marriage, they moved to Colfax, Washington, where for three years he
was engaged in teaching school. In 1876 he took up his abode in Dayton, where for some years
following he devoted his attention to teaching and then engaged in selling farm machinery. He
also operated a large sawmill and was identified with various other business interests which have
contributed to the material development and progress of this section of the state.
Our brother had been educated with a view to entering the ministry but subsequently turned his
attention to law and pursued his reading under the preceptorship of John Y. Ostrander. In 1885, he
was admitted to the bar and entered upon the practice of his profession, becoming one of the
prominent lawyers of Columbia County, being named Prosecuting Attorney for said county in
1886.
It has been said that he was remarkable among lawyers for the wide research and provident care
with which he prepared his cases. At no time was his reading ever confined to the limitations of
the questions at issue. It went beyond and compassed every contingency and provided not alone
for the expected but also for the unexpected, which happens in the courts quite as frequently as out
of them. His legal learning, his analytical mind, the readiness with which he grasped the points in
an argument all combined to make him one of the capable attorneys at the bar of Columbia County
and the public and the profession acknowledged him the peer of the ablest regarding him as a jurist
of exceptionally rare ability.

