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1
+ contract to work in specified mines and mills. There seemed to be no
2
+ limit to the factories, forges, refineries, and railways that could be
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+ built, to the multitudes that could be employed in conquering a
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+ continent. As for the future, that was in the hands of Providence!
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+
6
+ =Business Theories of Politics.=--As the statesmen of Hamilton's school
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+ and the planters of Calhoun's had their theories of government and
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+ politics, so the leaders in business enterprise had theirs. It was
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+ simple and easily stated. "It is the duty of the government," they
10
+ urged, "to protect American industry against foreign competition by
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+ means of high tariffs on imported goods, to aid railways by generous
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+ grants of land, to sell mineral and timber lands at low prices to
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+ energetic men ready to develop them, and then to leave the rest to the
14
+ initiative and drive of individuals and companies." All government
15
+ interference with the management, prices, rates, charges, and conduct of
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+ private business they held to be either wholly pernicious or intolerably
17
+ impertinent. Judging from their speeches and writings, they conceived
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+ the nation as a great collection of individuals, companies, and labor
19
+ unions all struggling for profits or high wages and held together by a
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+ government whose principal duty was to keep the peace among them and
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+ protect industry against the foreign manufacturer. Such was the
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+ political theory of business during the generation that followed the
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+ Civil War.
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+
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+
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+ THE SUPREMACY OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY (1861-85)
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+
28
+ =Business Men and Republican Policies.=--Most of the leaders in industry
29
+ gravitated to the Republican ranks. They worked in the North and the
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+ Republican party was essentially Northern. It was moreover--at least so
31
+ far as the majority of its members were concerned--committed to
32
+ protective tariffs, a sound monetary and banking system, the promotion
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+ of railways and industry by land grants, and the development of internal
34
+ improvements. It was furthermore generous in its immigration policy. It
35
+ proclaimed America to be an asylum for the oppressed of all countries
36
+ and flung wide the doors for immigrants eager to fill the factories, man
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+ the mines, and settle upon Western lands. In a word the Republicans
38
+ stood for all those specific measures which favored the enlargement and
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+ prosperity of business. At the same time they resisted government
40
+ interference with private enterprise. They did not regulate railway
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+ rates, prosecute trusts for forming combinations, or prevent railway
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+ companies from giving lower rates to some shippers than to others. To
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+ sum it up, the political theories of the Republican party for three
44
+ decades after the Civil War were the theories of American
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+ business--prosperous and profitable industries for the owners and "the
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+ full dinner pail" for the workmen. Naturally a large portion of those
47
+ who flourished under its policies gave their support to it, voted for
48
+ its candidates, and subscribed to its campaign funds.
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+
50
+ =Sources of Republican Strength in the North.=--The Republican party was
51
+ in fact a political organization of singular power. It originated in a
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+ wave of moral enthusiasm, having attracted to itself, if not the
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+ abolitionists, certainly all those idealists, like James Russell Lowell
54
+ and George William Curtis, who had opposed slavery when opposition was
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+ neither safe nor popular. To moral principles it added practical
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+ considerations. Business men had confidence in it. Workingmen, who
57
+ longed for the independence of the farmer, owed to its indulgent land
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+ policy the opportunity of securing free homesteads in the West. The
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+ immigrant, landing penniless on these shores, as a result of the same
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+ beneficent system, often found himself in a little while with an estate
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+ as large as many a baronial domain in the Old World. Under a Republican
62
+ administration, the union had been saved. To it the veterans of the war
63
+ could turn with confidence for those rewards of service which the
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+ government could bestow: pensions surpassing in liberality anything that
65
+ the world had ever seen. Under a Republican administration also the
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+ great debt had been created in the defense of the union, and to the
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+ Republican party every investor in government bonds could look for the
68
+ full and honorable discharge of the interest and principal. The spoils
69
+ system, inaugurated by Jacksonian Democracy, in turn placed all the
70
+ federal offices in Republican hands, furnishing an army of party workers
71
+ to be counted on for loyal service in every campaign.
72
+
73
+ Of all these things Republican leaders made full and vigorous use,
74
+ sometimes ascribing to the party, in accordance with ancient political
75
+ usage, merits and achievements not wholly its own. Particularly was this
76
+ true in the case of saving the union. "When in the economy of
77
+ Providence, this land was to be purged of human slavery ... the
78
+ Republican party came into power," ran a declaration in one platform.
79
+ "The Republican party suppressed a gigantic rebellion, emancipated four
80
+ million slaves, decreed the equal citizenship of all, and established
81
+ universal suffrage," ran another. As for the aid rendered by the
82
+ millions of Northern Democrats who stood by the union and the tens of
83
+ thousands of them who actually fought in the union army, the Republicans
84
+ in their zeal were inclined to be oblivious. They repeatedly charged the
85
+ Democratic party "with being the same in character and spirit as when it
86
+ sympathized with treason."
87
+
88
+ =Republican Control of the South.=--To the strength enjoyed in the
89
+ North, the Republicans for a long time added the advantages that came
90
+ from control over the former Confederate states where the newly
91
+ enfranchised negroes, under white leadership, gave a grateful support to
92
+ the party responsible for their freedom. In this branch of politics,
93
+ motives were so mixed that no historian can hope to appraise them all at
94
+ their proper values. On the one side of the ledger must be set the
95
+ vigorous efforts of the honest and sincere friends of the freedmen to
96
+ win for them complete civil and political equality, wiping out not only
97
+ slavery but all its badges of misery and servitude. On the same side
98
+ must be placed the labor of those who had valiantly fought in forum and
99
+ field to save the union and who regarded continued Republican supremacy
100
+ after the war as absolutely necessary to prevent the former leaders in
101
+ secession from coming back to power. At the same time there were
102
+ undoubtedly some men of the baser sort who looked on politics as a game
103
+ and who made use of "carpet-bagging" in the South to win the spoils that
104
+ might result from it. At all events, both by laws and presidential acts,
105
+ the Republicans for many years kept a keen eye upon the maintenance of
106
+ their dominion in the South. Their declaration that neither the law nor
107
+ its administration should admit any discrimination in respect of
108
+ citizens by reason of race, color, or previous condition of servitude
109
+ appealed to idealists and brought results in elections. Even South
110
+ Carolina, where reposed the ashes of John C. Calhoun, went Republican in
111
+ 1872 by a vote of three to one!
112
+
113
+ Republican control was made easy by the force bills described in a
114
+ previous chapter--measures which vested the supervision of elections in
115
+ federal officers appointed by Republican Presidents. These drastic
116
+ measures, departing from American tradition, the Republican authors
117
+ urged, were necessary to safeguard the purity of the ballot, not merely
118
+ in the South where the timid freedman might readily be frightened from
119
+ using it; but also in the North, particularly in New York City, where it
120
+ was claimed that fraud was regularly practiced by Democratic leaders.
121
+
122
+ The Democrats, on their side, indignantly denied the charges, replying
123
+ that the force bills were nothing but devices created by the Republicans
124
+ for the purpose of securing their continued rule through systematic
125
+ interference with elections. Even the measures of reconstruction were
126
+ deemed by Democratic leaders as thinly veiled schemes to establish
127
+ Republican power throughout the country. "Nor is there the slightest
128
+ doubt," exclaimed Samuel J. Tilden, spokesman of the Democrats in New
129
+ York and candidate for President in 1876, "that the paramount object and
130
+ motive of the Republican party is by these means to secure itself
131
+ against a reaction of opinion adverse to it in our great populous
132
+ Northern commonwealths.... When the Republican party resolved to
133
+ establish negro supremacy in the ten states in order to gain to itself
134
+ the representation of those states in Congress, it had to begin by
135
+ governing the people of those states by the sword.... The next was the
136
+ creation of new electoral bodies for those ten states, in which, by
137
+ exclusions, by disfranchisements and proscriptions, by control over
138
+ registration, by applying test oaths ... by intimidation and by every
139
+ form of influence, three million negroes are made to predominate over
140
+ four and a half million whites."
141
+
142
+ =The War as a Campaign Issue.=--Even the repeal of force bills could not
143
+ allay the sectional feelings engendered by the war. The Republicans
144
+ could not forgive the men who had so recently been in arms against the
145
+ union and insisted on calling them "traitors" and "rebels." The
146
+ Southerners, smarting under the reconstruction acts, could regard the
147
+ Republicans only as political oppressors. The passions of the war had
148
+ been too strong; the distress too deep to be soon forgotten. The
149
+ generation that went through it all remembered it all. For twenty
150
+ years, the Republicans, in their speeches and platforms, made "a
151
+ straight appeal to the patriotism of the Northern voters." They
152
+ maintained that their party, which had saved the union and emancipated
153
+ the slaves, was alone worthy of protecting the union and uplifting the
154
+ freedmen.
155
+
156
+ Though the Democrats, especially in the North, resented this policy and
157
+ dubbed it with the expressive but inelegant phrase, "waving the bloody
158
+ shirt," the Republicans refused to surrender a slogan which made such a
159
+ ready popular appeal. As late as 1884, a leader expressed the hope that
160
+ they might "wring one more President from the bloody shirt." They
161
+ refused to let the country forget that the Democratic candidate, Grover
162
+ Cleveland, had escaped military service by hiring a substitute; and they
163
+ made political capital out of the fact that he had "insulted the
164
+ veterans of the Grand Army of the Republic" by going fishing on
165
+ Decoration Day.
166
+
167
+ =Three Republican Presidents.=--Fortified by all these elements of
168
+ strength, the Republicans held the presidency from 1869 to 1885. The
169
+ three Presidents elected in this period, Grant, Hayes, and Garfield, had
170
+ certain striking characteristics in common. They were all of origin
171
+ humble enough to please the most exacting Jacksonian Democrat. They had
172
+ been generals in the union army. Grant, next to Lincoln, was regarded as
173
+ the savior of the Constitution. Hayes and Garfield, though lesser lights
174
+ in the military firmament, had honorable records duly appreciated by
175
+ veterans of the war, now thoroughly organized into the Grand Army of the
176
+ Republic. It is true that Grant was not a politician and had never voted
177
+ the Republican ticket; but this was readily overlooked. Hayes and
178
+ Garfield on the other hand were loyal party men. The former had served
179
+ in Congress and for three terms as governor of his state. The latter had
180
+ long been a member of the House of Representatives and was Senator-elect
181
+ when he received the nomination for President.
182
+
183
+ All of them possessed, moreover, another important asset, which was not
184
+ forgotten by the astute managers who led in selecting candidates. All
185
+ of them were from Ohio--though Grant had been in Illinois when the
186
+ summons to military duties came--and Ohio was a strategic state. It lay
187
+ between the manufacturing East and the agrarian country to the West.
188
+ Having growing industries and wool to sell it benefited from the
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+ protective tariff. Yet being mainly agricultural still, it was not
190
+
191
+ without sympathy for the farmers who showed low tariff or free trade
192
+ tendencies. Whatever share the East had in shaping laws and framing
193
+ policies, it was clear that the West was to have the candidates. This
194
+ division in privileges--not uncommon in political management--was always
195
+ accompanied by a judicious selection of the candidate for Vice
196
+ President. With Garfield, for example, was associated a prominent New
197
+ York politician, Chester A. Arthur, who, as fate decreed, was destined
198
+ to more than three years' service as chief magistrate, on the
199
+ assassination of his superior in office.
200
+
201
+ =The Disputed Election of 1876.=--While taking note of the long years of
202
+ Republican supremacy, it must be recorded that grave doubts exist in the
203
+ minds of many historians as to whether one of the three Presidents,
204
+ Hayes, was actually the victor in 1876 or not. His Democratic opponent,
205
+ Samuel J. Tilden, received a popular plurality of a quarter of a million
206
+ and had a plausible claim to a majority of the electoral vote. At all
207
+ events, four states sent in double returns, one set for Tilden and
208
+ another for Hayes; and a deadlock ensued. Both parties vehemently
209
+ claimed the election and the passions ran so high that sober men did not
210
+ shrink from speaking of civil war again. Fortunately, in the end, the
211
+ counsels of peace prevailed. Congress provided for an electoral
212
+ commission of fifteen men to review the contested returns. The
213
+ Democrats, inspired by Tilden's moderation, accepted the judgment in
214
+ favor of Hayes even though they were not convinced that he was really
215
+ entitled to the office.
216
+
217
+
218
+ THE GROWTH OF OPPOSITION TO REPUBLICAN RULE
219
+
220
+ =Abuses in American Political Life.=--During their long tenure of
221
+ office, the Republicans could not escape the inevitable consequences of
222
+ power; that is, evil practices and corrupt conduct on the part of some
223
+ who found shelter within the party. For that matter neither did the
224
+ Democrats manage to avoid such difficulties in those states and cities
225
+ where they had the majority. In New York City, for instance, the local
226
+ Democratic organization, known as Tammany Hall, passed under the sway of
227
+ a group of politicians headed by "Boss" Tweed. He plundered the city
228
+ treasury until public-spirited citizens, supported by Samuel J. Tilden,
229
+ the Democratic leader of the state, rose in revolt, drove the ringleader
230
+ from power, and sent him to jail. In Philadelphia, the local Republican
231
+ bosses were guilty of offenses as odious as those committed by New York
232
+ politicians. Indeed, the decade that followed the Civil War was marred
233
+ by so many scandals in public life that one acute editor was moved to
234
+ inquire: "Are not all the great communities of the Western World growing
235
+ more corrupt as they grow in wealth?"
236
+
237
+ In the sphere of national politics, where the opportunities were
238
+ greater, betrayals of public trust were even more flagrant. One
239
+ revelation after another showed officers, high and low, possessed with
240
+ the spirit of peculation. Members of Congress, it was found, accepted
241
+ railway stock in exchange for votes in favor of land grants and other
242
+ concessions to the companies. In the administration as well as the
243
+ legislature the disease was rife. Revenue officers permitted whisky
244
+ distillers to evade their taxes and received heavy bribes in return. A
245
+ probe into the post-office department revealed the malodorous "star
246
+ route frauds"--the deliberate overpayment of certain mail carriers whose
247
+ lines were indicated in the official record by asterisks or stars. Even
248
+ cabinet officers did not escape suspicion, for the trail of the serpent
249
+ led straight to the door of one of them.
250
+
251
+ In the lower ranges of official life, the spoils system became more
252
+ virulent as the number of federal employees increased. The holders of
253
+ offices and the seekers after them constituted a veritable political
254
+ army. They crowded into Republican councils, for the Republicans, being
255
+ in power, could alone dispense federal favors. They filled positions in
256
+ the party ranging from the lowest township committee to the national
257
+ convention. They helped to nominate candidates and draft platforms and
258
+ elbowed to one side the busy citizen, not conversant with party
259
+ intrigues, who could only give an occasional day to political matters.
260
+ Even the Civil Service Act of 1883, wrung from a reluctant Congress two
261
+ years after the assassination of Garfield, made little change for a long
262
+ time. It took away from the spoilsmen a few thousand government
263
+ positions, but it formed no check on the practice of rewarding party
264
+ workers from the public treasury.
265
+
266
+ On viewing this state of affairs, many a distinguished citizen became
267
+ profoundly discouraged. James Russell Lowell, for example, thought he
268
+ saw a steady decline in public morals. In 1865, hearing of Lee's
269
+ surrender, he had exclaimed: "There is something magnificent in having a
270
+ country to love!" Ten years later, when asked to write an ode for the
271
+ centennial at Philadelphia in 1876, he could think only of a biting
272
+ satire on the nation:
273
+
274
+ "Show your state legislatures; show your Rings;
275
+ And challenge Europe to produce such things
276
+ As high officials sitting half in sight
277
+ To share the plunder and fix things right.
278
+ If that don't fetch her, why, you need only
279
+ To show your latest style in martyrs,--Tweed:
280
+ She'll find it hard to hide her spiteful tears
281
+ At such advance in one poor hundred years."
282
+
283
+ When his critics condemned him for this "attack upon his native land,"
284
+ Lowell replied in sadness: "These fellows have no notion of what love of
285
+ country means. It was in my very blood and bones. If I am not an
286
+ American who ever was?... What fills me with doubt and dismay is the
287
+ degradation of the moral tone. Is it or is it not a result of democracy?
288
+ Is ours a 'government of the people, by the people, for the people,' or
289
+ a Kakistocracy [a government of the worst], rather for the benefit of
290
+ knaves at the cost of fools?"
291
+
292
+ =The Reform Movement in Republican Ranks.=--The sentiments expressed by
293
+ Lowell, himself a Republican and for a time American ambassador to
294
+ England, were shared by many men in his party. Very soon after the close
295
+ of the Civil War some of them began to protest vigorously against the
296
+ policies and conduct of their leaders. In 1872, the dissenters, calling
297
+ themselves Liberal Republicans, broke away altogether, nominated a
298
+ candidate of their own, Horace Greeley, and put forward a platform
299
+ indicting the Republican President fiercely enough to please the most
300
+ uncompromising Democrat. They accused Grant of using "the powers and
301
+ opportunities of his high office for the promotion of personal ends."
302
+ They charged him with retaining "notoriously corrupt and unworthy men in
303
+ places of power and responsibility." They alleged that the Republican
304
+ party kept "alive the passions and resentments of the late civil war to
305
+ use them for their own advantages," and employed the "public service of
306
+ the government as a machinery of corruption and personal influence."
307
+
308
+ It was not apparent, however, from the ensuing election that any
309
+ considerable number of Republicans accepted the views of the Liberals.
310
+ Greeley, though indorsed by the Democrats, was utterly routed and died
311
+ of a broken heart. The lesson of his discomfiture seemed to be that
312
+ independent action was futile. So, at least, it was regarded by most men
313
+ of the rising generation like Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts, and
314
+ Theodore Roosevelt, of New York. Profiting by the experience of Greeley
315
+ they insisted in season and out that reformers who desired to rid the
316
+ party of abuses should remain loyal to it and do their work "on the
317
+ inside."
318
+
319
+ =The Mugwumps and Cleveland Democracy in 1884.=--Though aided by
320
+ Republican dissensions, the Democrats were slow in making headway
321
+ against the political current. They were deprived of the energetic and
322
+ capable leadership once afforded by the planters, like Calhoun, Davis,
323
+ and Toombs; they were saddled by their opponents with responsibility for
324
+ secession; and they were stripped of the support of the prostrate
325
+ South. Not until the last Southern state was restored to the union, not
326
+ until a general amnesty was wrung from Congress, not until white
327
+ supremacy was established at the polls, and the last federal soldier
328
+ withdrawn from Southern capitals did they succeed in capturing the
329
+ presidency.
330
+
331
+ The opportune moment for them came in 1884 when a number of
332
+ circumstances favored their aspirations. The Republicans, leaving the
333
+ Ohio Valley in their search for a candidate, nominated James G. Blaine
334
+ of Maine, a vigorous and popular leader but a man under fire from the
335
+ reformers in his own party. The Democrats on their side were able to
336
+ find at this juncture an able candidate who had no political enemies in
337
+ the sphere of national politics, Grover Cleveland, then governor of New
338
+ York and widely celebrated as a man of "sterling honesty." At the same
339
+ time a number of dissatisfied Republicans openly espoused the Democratic
340
+ cause,--among them Carl Schurz, George William Curtis, Henry Ward
341
+ Beecher, and William Everett, men of fine ideals and undoubted
342
+ integrity. Though the "regular" Republicans called them "Mugwumps" and
343
+ laughed at them as the "men milliners, the dilettanti, and carpet
344
+ knights of politics," they had a following that was not to be despised.
345
+
346
+ The campaign which took place that year was one of the most savage in
347
+ American history. Issues were thrust into the background. The tariff,
348
+ though mentioned, was not taken seriously. Abuse of the opposition was
349
+ the favorite resource of party orators. The Democrats insisted that "the
350
+ Republican party so far as principle is concerned is a reminiscence. In
351
+ practice it is an organization for enriching those who control its
352
+ machinery." For the Republican candidate, Blaine, they could hardly find
353
+ words to express their contempt. The Republicans retaliated in kind.
354
+ They praised their own good works, as of old, in saving the union, and
355
+ denounced the "fraud and violence practiced by the Democracy in the
356
+ Southern states." Seeing little objectionable in the public record of
357
+ Cleveland as mayor of Buffalo and governor of New York, they attacked
358
+ his personal character. Perhaps never in the history of political
359
+ campaigns did the discussions on the platform and in the press sink to
360
+ so low a level. Decent people were sickened. Even hot partisans shrank
361
+ from their own words when, after the election, they had time to reflect
362
+ on their heedless passions. Moreover, nothing was decided by the
363
+ balloting. Cleveland was elected, but his victory was a narrow one. A
364
+ change of a few hundred votes in New York would have sent his opponent
365
+ to the White House instead.
366
+
367
+ =Changing Political Fortunes (1888-96).=--After the Democrats had
368
+ settled down to the enjoyment of their hard-earned victory, President
369
+ Cleveland in his message of 1887 attacked the tariff as "vicious,
370
+ inequitable, and illogical"; as a system of taxation that laid a burden
371
+ upon "every consumer in the land for the benefit of our manufacturers."
372
+ Business enterprise was thoroughly alarmed. The Republicans
373
+ characterized the tariff message as a free-trade assault upon the
374
+ industries of the country. Mainly on that issue they elected in 1888
375
+ Benjamin Harrison of Indiana, a shrewd lawyer, a reticent politician, a
376
+ descendant of the hero of Tippecanoe, and a son of the old Northwest.
377
+ Accepting the outcome of the election as a vindication of their
378
+ principles, the Republicans, under the leadership of William McKinley in
379
+ the House of Representatives, enacted in 1890 a tariff law imposing the
380
+ highest duties yet laid in our history. To their utter surprise,
381
+ however, they were instantly informed by the country that their program
382
+ was not approved. That very autumn they lost in the congressional
383
+ elections, and two years later they were decisively beaten in the
384
+ presidential campaign, Cleveland once more leading his party to victory.
385
+
386
+
387
+ =References=
388
+
389
+ L.H. Haney, _Congressional History of Railways_ (2 vols.).
390
+
391
+ J.P. Davis, _Union Pacific Railway_.
392
+
393
+ J.M. Swank, _History of the Manufacture of Iron_.
394
+
395
+ M.T. Copeland, _The Cotton Manufacturing Industry in the United States_
396
+ (Harvard Studies).
397
+
398
+ E.W. Bryce, _Progress of Invention in the Nineteenth Century_.
399
+
400
+ Ida Tarbell, _History of the Standard Oil Company_ (Critical).
401
+
402
+ G.H. Montague, _Rise and Progress of the Standard Oil Company_
403
+ (Friendly).
404
+
405
+ H.P. Fairchild, _Immigration_, and F.J. Warne, _The Immigrant Invasion_
406
+ (Both works favor exclusion).
407
+
408
+ I.A. Hourwich, _Immigration_ (Against exclusionist policies).
409
+
410
+ J.F. Rhodes, _History of the United States, 1877-1896_, Vol. VIII.
411
+
412
+ Edward Stanwood, _A History of the Presidency_, Vol. I, for the
413
+ presidential elections of the period.
414
+
415
+
416
+ =Questions=
417
+
418
+ 1. Contrast the state of industry and commerce at the close of the Civil
419
+ War with its condition at the close of the Revolutionary War.
420
+
421
+ 2. Enumerate the services rendered to the nation by the railways.
422
+
423
+ 3. Explain the peculiar relation of railways to government.
424
+
425
+ 4. What sections of the country have been industrialized?
426
+
427
+ 5. How do you account for the rise and growth of the trusts? Explain
428
+ some of the economic advantages of the trust.
429
+
430
+ 6. Are the people in cities more or less independent than the farmers?
431
+ What was Jefferson's view?
432
+
433
+ 7. State some of the problems raised by unrestricted immigration.
434
+
435
+ 8. What was the theory of the relation of government to business in this
436
+ period? Has it changed in recent times?
437
+
438
+ 9. State the leading economic policies sponsored by the Republican
439
+ party.
440
+
441
+ 10. Why were the Republicans especially strong immediately after the
442
+ Civil War?
443
+
444
+ 11. What illustrations can you give showing the influence of war in
445
+ American political campaigns?
446
+
447
+ 12. Account for the strength of middle-western candidates.
448
+
449
+ 13. Enumerate some of the abuses that appeared in American political
450
+ life after 1865.
451
+
452
+ 14. Sketch the rise and growth of the reform movement.
453
+
454
+ 15. How is the fluctuating state of public opinion reflected in the
455
+ elections from 1880 to 1896?
456
+
457
+
458
+ =Research Topics=
459
+
460
+ =Invention, Discovery, and Transportation.=--Sparks, _National
461
+ Development_ (American Nation Series), pp. 37-67; Bogart, _Economic
462
+ History of the United States_, Chaps. XXI, XXII, and XXIII.
463
+
464
+ =Business and Politics.=--Paxson, _The New Nation_ (Riverside Series),
465
+ pp. 92-107; Rhodes, _History of the United States_, Vol. VII, pp. 1-29,
466
+ 64-73, 175-206; Wilson, _History of the American People_, Vol. IV, pp.
467
+ 78-96.
468
+
469
+ =Immigration.=--Coman, _Industrial History of the United States_ (2d
470
+ ed.), pp. 369-374; E.L. Bogart, _Economic History of the United States_,
471
+ pp. 420-422, 434-437; Jenks and Lauck, _Immigration Problems_, Commons,
472
+ _Races and Immigrants_.
473
+
474
+ =The Disputed Election of 1876.=--Haworth, _The United States in Our Own
475
+ Time_, pp. 82-94; Dunning, _Reconstruction, Political and Economic_
476
+ (American Nation Series), pp. 294-341; Elson, _History of the United
477
+ States_, pp. 835-841.
478
+
479
+ =Abuses in Political Life.=--Dunning, _Reconstruction_, pp. 281-293; see
480
+ criticisms in party platforms in Stanwood, _History of the Presidency_,
481
+ Vol. I; Bryce, _American Commonwealth_ (1910 ed.), Vol. II, pp. 379-448;
482
+ 136-167.
483
+
484
+ =Studies of Presidential Administrations.=--(_a_) Grant, (_b_) Hayes,
485
+ (_c_) Garfield-Arthur, (_d_) Cleveland, and (_e_) Harrison, in Haworth,
486
+ _The United States in Our Own Time_, or in Paxson, _The New Nation_
487
+ (Riverside Series), or still more briefly in Elson.
488
+
489
+ =Cleveland Democracy.=--Haworth, _The United States_, pp. 164-183;
490
+ Rhodes, _History of the United States_, Vol. VIII, pp. 240-327; Elson,
491
+ pp. 857-887.
492
+
493
+ =Analysis of Modern Immigration Problems.=--_Syllabus in History_ (New
494
+ York State, 1919), pp. 110-112.
495
+
496
+
497
+
498
+
499
+ CHAPTER XVIII
500
+
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