Ohio History Journal

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NOTES 73

NOTES                                                                        73

 

 

gregational church. Albert Shaw, "The Shandon Centennial," Ohio Archaeological and

Historical Quarterly, XIV (1905), 6-7; Shaw, Ohio Manuscript, chap. 11, p. 1, chap. 14,

pp. 12-15; interview with Albert Shaw, Jr., May 10, 1962.

13. Shaw, Ohio Manuscript, chap. 9, pp. 30, 44-48, chap. 11, pp. 39-45, chap. 12, pp.

14-27, chap. 14, p. 7.

14. Shaw, Ohio Manuscript, chap. 11, p. 19, chap. 12, pp. 5-14, chap. 13, pp. 5-7;

Albert Shaw, Diary kept from January 1 to April 28, 1874, entries of January 1, 2,

17, and February 13, Shaw Diaries, Shaw Manuscripts.

15. The prohibition episode can be followed in Shaw, Ohio Manuscript, chap. 8,

pp. 40-45, chap. 13, p. 48, and in his Diary for 1874, where the entries of January 4,

12, February 12, March 5, 9, 10, 16, 17, 30, and April 14 are informative. For a con-

temporary study of this movement in its statewide aspects J. H. Beadle's The Women's

War on Whisky (Cincinnati, 1874) is available. The activities of the young Republican

drummer are related in Shaw, Ohio Manuscript, chap. 13, pp. 49-50, 55.

16. Shaw, Ohio Manuscript, chap. 10, pp. 1-46. Shaw devoted entire chapters to his

father and Williams.

17. Halstead, Story of the Halsteads, 99.

18. Miami was closed from 1873 to 1885. The loss of its once numerous southern

clientele in the years following the Civil War, plus the persistent emphasis on a

classical education in an age that had become interested in science, produced a serious

shortage of students. Money was also lacking, and without these ingredients of a

successful school M. U. had to close. Walter Havighurst, The Miami Years, 1809-1959

(New York, 1958), 134-136.

19. Shaw, Ohio Manuscript, chap. 12, pp. 1-2, 20; Shaw, Diary, January 16, 1874;

Mary Shaw Fisher to Shaw, April 8, 1882, Shaw Family Letters, Shaw Manuscripts.

 

CORRESPONDENCE OF W. H. TAFT AND J. C. HEMPHILL

 

1. See George E. Mowry, Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Movement (Madi-

son, Wis., 1947), Chaps. II-VII; Henry F. Pringle, The Life and Times of William

Howard Taft (New York, 1939), II, 728-729 (hereafter cited as Pringle, Taft); New

York Times, October 17, 1911; Theodore Roosevelt, "The Trusts, the People, and the

Square Deal," The Outlook, XCIX (November 18, 1911), 649-656; John Hays Hammond,

The Autobiography of John Hays Hammond (New York, 1935), II, 578.

2. The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, II, 29-30; Willard B. Gatewood,

"James Calvin Hemphill: Southern Critic of Woodrow Wilson, 1911-1912," Georgia

Review, XIII (1959), 378-382; Herbert Ravenel Sass, The Outspoken: 150 Years of the

News and Courier (Columbia, S.C., 1953), 75-76; C. Vann Woodward, Origins of the

New South, 1877-1913 (Baton Rouge, La., 1951), 469-470; Theodore Roosevelt to

Benjamin Wiggins, August 14, 1907, in Elting Morison, ed., The Letters of Theodore

Roosevelt (Cambridge, Mass., 1951-55), V, 751n.

3. Gatewood, "James Calvin Hemphill," 380-384; see also Arthur S. Link, Wilson:

The Road to the White House (Princeton, N. J., 1947), 102, 339-340, 378.

4. See William H. Taft, Political Issues and Outlooks (New York, 1909), 176-187,

225-239; E. M. Coulter, "The Attempts of William Howard Taft to Break the Solid

South," Georgia Historical Review, XIX (1935), 134-144; "Mr. Taft's Southern Ap-

pointments," Literary Digest, XXXVIII (June 5, 1909), 952-954; William Howard Taft

to James Calvin Hemphill, December 26, 1907, Hemphill to Taft, November 7, 1908,

Taft to Hemphill, November 30, 1908, James Calvin Hemphill Papers, Duke University

Library, Durham, North Carolina. All letters cited here are in this collection.

5. Taft to Hemphill, February 25, 1910; Hemphill to Taft, December 11, 1911;

Archibald Butt, Taft and Roosevelt: The Intimate Letters of Archie Butt, Military

Aide (New York, 1930), I, 96, 294-296.

6. In 1909 Hemphill suggested in the News and Courier that Taft should assume

the leadership in a new "alignment of political forces," i. e., a new party shorn of

the "bitterness of Republican machines and the expediencies of the Democratic camp."

Quoted in Literary Digest, XXXVIII (1909), 953.

7. Hemphill to Taft, February 20, 1909; Charles D. Hilles to Hemphill, September 20,

1912; Taft to Hemphill, June 27, 1910; J. Rion McKissick, Men and Women of Carolina:

Selected Addresses and Papers of J. Rion McKissick (Columbia, S. C., 1948), 70.

8. Hemphill to Taft, November 13, 1911.

9. Taft to Hemphill, November 16, 1911.

10. Hemphill became editor of the Charlotte Daily Observer on November 1, 1911.

11. Taft apparently believed that North Carolina, more than any other southern

state, offered the best hope for a Republican renaissance in the Solid South.

12. The progressive Republicans had suspected the sincerity of Taft's statements in