Liston McMillen
Liston McMillen, legist and author, whose influence in behalf of
high standards in social and business life and in citizenship has
left its influence for good in Mahaska county, where he is well
known and in many other localities where his published volumes
have been read, was born in Richwood, Union county, Ohio, on the
l0th of December, 1847. His paternal grandfather, John McMillen,
was a soldier of the war of 1812 and became a pioneer teacher and
representative citizen of this county. He died at the age of
eighty-four years and was buried in a quiet little cemetery in
Monroe township by the side of his wife, who passed away at the
age of eighty years. Their son, Benjamin F. McMillen, father of
Liston McMillen, was born in Wheeling, West Virginia, studied
medicine and in 1868 came to Oskaloosa, where for many years he
successfully engaged in practice, being recognized as one of the
ablest members of the medical fraternity in this district. He was
born in 1820 and died in 1889. In early manhood he had wedded Miss
Caroline A. Maxwell, also a native of West Virginia and a daughter
of Robert Maxwell, a prominent pioneer and stock man, who resided
near Cardington, Ohio, and died at the advanced age of ninety-one
years, while his first wife, Mrs. Rosanna Maxwell, passed away at
the early age of thirty years. Unto Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin McMillen
were born a son and two daughters: Liston; Leoni; and Lena M., the
wife of Dr. William S. Windell, lecturer in Penn College, at
Oskaloosa.
Liston McMillen began his education in the common schools in
Richwood, Ohio, and continued his studies in Cardington until
fourteen years of age, when he entered the Ohio Wesleyan
University at Delaware, from which institution he was graduated in
1867. In April of the following year he came to Iowa and studied
law in the office of Hon. G. D. Woodin, of Sigourney, being
admitted to the bar in 1869. In the fall of the latter year he
came to Oskaloosa, where he has since been engaged in practice and
in point of residence he is the oldest practitioner of the city.
His position, too, is among the foremost representatives of the
bar and his capability, making him known far beyond the borders of
the county, has classed him with the prominent lawyers of Iowa.
Mr. McMillen is a republican in politics. Recognizing the fact
that offices are few and aspirants many he believes that good
standing at the bar has as much glory as comes to the office
holder and has therefore concentrated his energies upon his law
practice and kindred interests. He is the author of two volumes,
one called Christian Hygiene, published in 1895. The other is
McMillen's Monograph on International Peace, published in July,
1905, the basic thought of which is the Golden Rule as being the
essence of all jurisprudence whether national or international and
all ramifications of law are simply evolutions of this principle.
A copy of this work was placed in the hands of President Roosevelt
during the Portsmouth conference and in the president's message
issued the following December the same doctrine is announced and
for the first time in any state paper the Golden Rule is
mentioned. Mr. MeMillen and many friends of peace were highly
gratified to. find this confirmation of the doctrine in such
influential public papers as the president's message. It is a seed
sower the world over. Whether the president imbibed the thought
from Mr. McMillen's book or not the correspondence grants
encouragement to every worker for the splendid result no matter
how humble his efforts.
Mr. McMillen's name appears in more than one hundred cases of
published volumes of the supreme court reports of Iowa. He has
been admitted to practice in the United States supreme court, the
Ohio supreme court and in the Dakotas. Some of the cases which he
has tried have become matters of recognized authority upon certain
judicial principles. One especially is that of Smothers versus
Hank, which is cited as authority in all modern works on questions
concerning the degree of skill required of lawyers and physicians.
Another notable case with which Mr. McMillen was connected was
that of Allen versus Central, settling the question as to the
right to sue a railway company whose property was in the hands of
a receiver. The case of Whitaker versus Parker, in which Mr.
McMillen was also one of the lawyers, clearly brought out the
thought that the reasonableness of the story of witnesses must be
taken into consideration in the weighing of testimony.
Mr. McMillen has always been a supporter of public improvement and
progress and has been a close and earnest student of sociological,
economic and political questions as well as those more directly
connected with his profession. He manifests a statesman's grasp of
affairs and keeps in touch with the trend of modern thought. He
has never identified himself with any lodge or secret society for
the reason that he has found ample fraternal and social life in
the brotherhood of the church, his membership being in the
Congregational church. He is the author of a little treatise on
the Proofs of the Resurrection of Christ and lectures on the
subject as occasion offers, this being the field peculiarly
adapted to his training and experience as a lawyer.
On the 14th of September, 1901, Mr. MeMillen was married to Miss
Minnie Foreman, at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and they have one
son, John Franklin, born June 14, 1902. Happy in his home life and
in his social relations, Mr. McMillen has a nature that has
constantly expanded under the influences of general development
and has grown by his keen research and investigation into matters
of public moment. His life exemplifies a rare and valuable
combination of high ideals and practical methods.