ELECTION OF 1872: THE PASSING OF THE FIRST GENERATION
“The Hon. Horace Greeley, the “Liberal” Republican Candidate for President,”
in Harper’s Weekly, May 18, 1872.
“It Is Only a Truce to Regain Power (‘Playing Possom’),” in Harper’s
Weekly, August 24, 1872.
Republican apostates Greeley
and Charles Sumner encourage a black man gazing on his murdered family to
“clasp hands over the bloody chasm” with a Ku-Klux-Klansman and a racist Irishman.
In 1872 two major New York
illustrated weeklies were on opposite sides.
Harper’s supported Grant, and Frank Leslie’s supported
Greeley. Their cartoonists, Harper’s
Thomas Nast and Leslie’s Matt
Morgan, engaged in a lively exchange of graphic invective.
“Decorating the White House,” in Harper’s Weekly, June 1, 1872.
“The ‘Liberal’ Conspirators (Who You All Know Are Honorable Men),” in
Harper’s Weekly, March 16, 1872.
Nast likens Greeley’s supporters,
headed by Charles Sumner and Carl Schurz, to the Roman conspirators plotting
Caesar’s demise.
“Grant’s First and Last Vote,” in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper,
September 14, 1872.
“A Leaf from History for our Foreign-Born Citizens,” in Frank
Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, September 28, 1872.
These two cartoons question the political past of Grant and Wilson.
The last time Grant voted in a presidential election was in 1856, when
he voted for James Buchanan. And, Henry Wilson’s days in the Know Nothing
movement are recalled in this image of him kneeling before the alter of this
secret society.
“Our Modern Belshazzar. The People’s Handwriting on the Wall,” in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, April 1, 1872.
In this
biblical allusion, Grant presides over his court of Republican corruption
as the words of Greeley’s running mate, Benjamin Gratz Brown, magically appear
on the wall
Jasper Packard, The Republican
Party—Its Present Duties and Past Achievements, and Democratic
Repudiation. Speech . . . In the House
of Representatives, February 5, 1870 (Washington, 1870).
With political and fiscal
bankruptcy and violence undermining Republican governments in the South and
apathy and corruption weakening Republican resolve in the North, Republicans
struggled to find their way regarding Reconstruction and reform. Radical Republicans,
such as Packard of Indiana, argued for renewed Republican efforts to protect
republican government and the party in the South as a matter of principle and
self-interest and to endorse the 15th Amendment as a matter of
right.
Francis P. Blair, Protection of
Life, etc., in the South. Speech . . .
Delivered in the Senate of the United States, April 3 and 4, 1871
(Washington: F. & J. Rives & Geo. A. Bailey, 1871).
Conservative Republican
Blair, who had fought bitterly against the Radicals in his home state and had
been the Democratic nominee for vice president in 1868, thought the Republicans
had done enough by saving the Union and ending slavery and insisted that
further federal interference in state affairs to shore up unpopular regimes in
the South was unconstitutional and unwise.
Honest Government! Proceedings of the Liberal Republican
Convention, In Cincinnati, May 1st, 2d and 3d, 1872 (New York:
Baker & Godwin, Printers, 1872).
Amid personal and factional
disputes over policy and patronage, and disgust over the corruption plaguing
the Grant administration, a group of Republicans led by such Radicals as Carl
Schurz and Charles Sumner, split off from the regular party support for Grant
in 1872 to focus on civil service reform and “honest government.” They
nominated Horace Greeley as president on the pledge to restore morality to the
government and called “the best men” to public service, but retreated from
Reconstruction and ignored the needs of labor.
John T. Campbell, The Great
Problem of the Age. An Address on Labor
Reform, Delivered in Terre Haute, Indiana, January 31, 1872. Why Millions Must be Poor that Few May be
Rich (Philadelphia & Lancaster: Labor Tribune, Print., 1872).
The major parties’
preoccupation with Reconstruction, race, railroads, and even reform of the
political system left laboring men and women and others feeling abandoned in an
age of intense political consciousness. Third parties sprang up to address
particular needs ignored by the major parties. In 1872 the Labor Reform Party
organized to “fight monopolies” and defend labor’s interest—a harbinger of the
shift to economic issues that would drive politics by the end of the century.
“New York—Reception Given by Horace Greeley to the Committee of the Democratic
National Convention, at his Chappaqua Farm . . . ,” in Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, August 3, 1872.
The Democrats, divided among
themselves over a host of issues and desperate for a consensus candidate after
their debacle in 1868, offered the party’s nomination to Greeley in 1872,
adding the Liberal Republicans’ critique of Grant’s corruption to their own
campaign. Greeley’s nomination by party insiders outraged many Democrats, who
bolted the party to nominate their own candidate, and it embarrassed and
discouraged Liberal Republicans, who were now linked to the party of low
tariffs, white supremacy, and leaving southern Republicans to their own fate.
Everett Chamberlin, The Struggle
of ’72. The Issues and Candidates of
the Present Political Campaign . . . (Chicago: Union Publishing Co., 1872).
The Republican Party
machinery in 1872 cranked out loads of books, papers, pamphlets, hand cards,
broadsides, songsters, and any number of printed items drumming up support for
Grant and the regular party candidates. Party literature reminded voters that
Grant had saved the Union after the Democrats had conspired to destroy it.
Chamberlain’s Struggle of `72 was boilerplate Republican propaganda. It
pointed to General Grant’s biography as proof of his steady course while
mocking Greeley for his apostasy and waving the “bloody shirt” of Republican
patriotism and Democratic disunion, murder of Lincoln, and lawlessness after
the war.
Cartoon cards:
Republicans and Democrats
used cartoons distributed easily on hand cards to contrast the basic character
of the parties and candidates in the simplest terms.
How they Vote for Grant in the
4th Ward
The Reformers alias Democrats,
going overboard, like the Rebels will in November with Greely.
What are the Principles of the
Dem. Party?
Grant & Wilson! Eighth Ward, 10th Division
(Philadelphia, 1872).
An election day handbill.
“The Republic on the Brink,” in Frank
Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, November 9, 1872.
Grant won handily in 1872,
getting 286 Electoral College votes against 63 for all of his opponents and
none for Greeley. The defeated reformers likened Grant’s victory to the burial
of honest government, claiming that ballot-box stuffing and machine politics
delivered the vote to Grant and his allies but gave them a dubious claim to
legitimacy. Whatever divisions persisted among Republicans over governmental
ethics and obligations to extend and protect freedom in the South or elsewhere,
the 1872 election marked the coming of age of the Republican Party. A new
generation of Republicans, in many cases indifferent to the reform interests of
the party’s founding generation, stood ready to take command.