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Talk:John White (Kentucky politician)/GA2

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GA Review

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The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


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Nominator: Kentuckian (talk · contribs) 16:36, 13 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Reviewer: PCN02WPS (talk · contribs) 13:35, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]


Since it took me so long to get to looking at this after you asked me, I figured I might as well just do the review myself! Comments to follow. PCN02WPS (talk | contribs) 13:35, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

From previous review

Just to make sure there's no QF here, the major concern of the failed GA1 (not enough coverage of the subject) has been addressed. PCN02WPS (talk | contribs) 14:14, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Lead and infobox

  • I'm sure, having researched him to this extent, that you would have found his middle name by now if it was out there to be found, but I can imagine it's a little frustrating for you to find a middle initial and no middle name
  • "was an American lawyer and politician who served as the" → purely a personal preference and so not required for GA, but I am not a huge fan of the "served as" construction - this could be simplified to just "who was the 15th..." (see WP:SERVEDAS, one of my favorite essays, for more details)
  • "15th Speaker of the United States House of Representatives" → "speaker" does not need caps
  • "He also served as a member" → again, not required by any means, but if you change the above "served as" I'd recommend making this "He was also a member" too
  • "White was a member of the prestigious White family" → naming him by surname and then referring to his family's surname sounds a little awkward; maybe "John was a member of the..." or something like that?
  • "studied law at Greenville College in Tusculum, Tennessee" → recommend linking the school and the town; also (minor but I'm just curious) the page for Tusculum University says "Greeneville" instead of "Greenville" - do the sources support this?
  • "He was then admitted to the bar" → I know you're talking about White, but the last person mention is Owsley, so the "he" is a touch ambiguous
  • "bar, and quickly built a reputation as an adept lawyer" → remove comma (User:Sammi Brie/Commas in sentences is an excellent resource for this kind of thing, it's essentially my cheat sheet)
  • "White advanced to leader of the bar in Kentucky" → maybe simplify a bit to "Within several years, White was leading the Kentucky bar" or something?
  • "Whig Party, and won election" → remove comma
  • "member of the house, before he was appointed judge" → remove comma (also, genuinely asking, does "house" need caps here?)

Early life, etc

  • "which made the Whites particularly" → perhaps reword to "which made the White family" to avoid any misconception that you're talking about the race
  • "all of whom served in U.S. congress" → either remove "U.S." or add "the" before it; either way, capitalize and link Congress too (if you leave "U.S.", include that in the link)
  • "common schools,[2] and studied law" → remove comma
  • "at Greenville College" → same Greenville/Greeneville question as above

Career

  • "He was admitted to the bar" → "White was admitted to the bar" to avoid ambiguity
  • "1823, and quickly earned notoriety" → remove comma
  • "earning a substantial amount of clients" → since clients are counted discretely, I think this sounds more natural as "a substantial number of clients"

Early career

  • "the Whig Party, and was elected" → remove comma
  • "Kentucky's 9th Congressional district" → couldn't hurt to link this again, since it's only previously linked in the lead. Also, "congressional" doesn't need caps here
  • "During his time as a representative" → specify US representative, since you're also talking here about his time in the Kentucky House
  • "those in which the topic was tariffs" → simplify, "those about tariffs" or "those regarding tariffs"
  • "administration, and opposed the" → remove comma

Speaker of the House

  • Capitalize "House" in section title
  • "Many house Whigs seen" → "Many house Whigs saw"
  • "disbanded "in high dudgeon."" → move full stop outside quotes per MOS:LQ
  • "Whites challenger for speakership" → "White's"; also it sounds a little better to say "the speakership" to me
  • "believing he was too moderate on the issue of slavery" → is there anything specific in the sources that can be said about his view of slavery?
  • "The Whig controlled congress" → need hyphen between "Whig" and "controlled", also capitalize "Congress"
  • "action in repealing the Independent Treasury Act, and implemented a new Bankruptcy Act" → remove comma, consider linking Independent Treasury#First establishment and Bankruptcy Act of 1841 (the latter of which is an existing redlink at Bankruptcy Act)
  • "Although, most of the legislation passed" → I think the first word can be removed
  • "by president John Tyler" → I believe "President" should be caps here, if I'm interpreting MOS:OFFICE correctly
  • "the 1842–43 elections" → consider linking 1842–43 United States House of Representatives elections
  • "the 1840–41 elections" → consider linking 1840–41 United States House of Representatives elections
  • "the Whigs economic plan" → should be possessive, "the Whigs' economic plan"
  • "which made them look incompetent" → I would attribute this, so it doesn't sound like it's WP's voice
  • "White was the Whigs choice" → should be possessive

Post speakership

  • Should "Post speakership" have a hyphen?
  • "a debate was held" → I think this sounds better as active voice, so you can also easily specify who was holding the debate ("... ___ held a debate...")
  • "The house subsequently" → "House"
  • "and in a second vote his nomination" → was the second vote part of the procedure or did something happen with the first?

That's what I've got on prose from first read-through. Mostly minor stuff, overall the article is well done. I'll have another read-through and a look at sourcing once you get to these - no rush! PCN02WPS (talk | contribs) 14:14, 22 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I was unable to find anything in the sources that states anything about Whites view of slavery. Otherwise, I believe I've addressed your concerns.  Kentuckian |💬   14:59, 24 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.