Ohio History Journal

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SALMON P

SALMON P. CHASE AND THE ELECTION

OF 1860

 

 

BY DONNAL V. SMITH

 

CHAPTER I

CHASE IN THE CAMPAIGN OF 1860

"I shall ever strive to be first wherever I may be, let

what success will attend the effort ...."

So wrote Salmon P. Chase in 1830, then a young at-

torney practicing with the famous Wirt firm in Wash-

ington.1 Shortly after, he moved to Cincinnati, the "Queen

City" of the West, there to begin a life of political ac-

tivity which, in a few short years, took him through

the various changes of the old Whig party, into the

Liberty party of 1844; then after acting with the Free

Soilers in the Harrison campaign he entered the ranks

of the Democratic party, only to find that because of

the question of negro slavery he could not remain there.

By 1856, Chase, now arrived at middle age, was a hope-

ful Republican and a leader of the party in Ohio. It is

true that politicians there knew about the "deal" that

had made him a Senator in 1849, and they smiled at

the mention of his reelection while he was yet Governor.

But if the politicians pretended to see something un-

savory in these elections the people did not. They re-

garded Governor Chase, the "Attorney General for the

Negro," as a leader against oppression, the champion of

 

1 J. W. Schuckers, Life and Public Services of Salmon P. Chase, 31,

(515)