Milburn was born on December 14, 1851, near Sunderland, England, in 1851, the son of a civil engineer. In his youth, he studied civil engineering at the insistence of his father. However, at the age of eighteen his sister wrote to him from Batavia, New York, urging him to emigrate to America, which he did the following year.[1]
Career
In 1867, he arrived in Batavia to study law with the firm of Wakeman & Watson. Though he was initially denied entrance to the bar because he was not an American citizen, several influential acquaintances successfully petitioned the New York State Legislature for an exception based on his intention to seek citizenship. He was granted admission to the bar in 1874.[1]
In 1876, the newly married Milburns moved to Buffalo, New York, which was developing as a major industrial city. He practiced law alone until 1879, when he formed the law firm of Sprague, Milburn & Sprague with Hon. E.C. Sprague and Henry W. Sprague. In 1882, after working for a year in Denver, Colorado, Milburn returned to Buffalo to form the law firm Rogers, Locke & Milburn, with Sherman Rogers and Francis Locke.
Milburn is perhaps best known as the President of the Pan-American Exposition, the 1901 World's Fair in Buffalo.[3] He prepared a suite in his house to host PresidentWilliam McKinley, who was coming to the Exposition. After the president was fatally shot by anarchistLeon Czolgosz at the Exposition on September 6, 1901, he was treated at the hospital and brought back to Milburn's home. He died there eight days later.[4]
Because of this event, the house became a popular tourist site. After it passed out of the family, it was later adapted as a hotel; it was demolished in 1957.[5]
In 1875, he married Mary Patty Stocking (d. 1930), a teacher at Bryan's Seminary and the daughter of farmers in Wyoming County.[6] Together, they were the parents of three sons:
John George Milburn, Jr. (1880–1932),[9][10] also a lawyer.[11][12]
Ralph Milburn (b. 1888), who married Anne Scarborough Hollingsworth, daughter of William Hollingsworth in 1910.[13][14][15]
Milburn died on August 11, 1930, at Claridge's Hotel while on a trip to London, England.[16] He was 78 years old.[1] His estate was worth $1,735,059 upon his death.[17]