Ohio History Journal

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NOTES 173

NOTES                                                                      173

 

30. Halstead to Harrison, March 19, 1889; Halstead to J. M. Dalzell, March 8, 1889,

copy, Harrison Papers.

31. Halstead to Harrison, January 19, 1889, Harrison Papers.

32. Commercial Gazette, March 24, 28, 1889; New York Times, March 26, 27, 1889.

33. Stanley P. Hirshson, Farewell to the Bloody Shirt (Bloomington, Indiana, 1966),

135-142.

34. Richard Smith to John Sherman, March 28, 1889; Smith to Sherman, n.d.; Henry

Watterson to Sherman, n.d., John Sherman Papers, Library of Congress. Some com-

mentators suggested that the editor's nomination had now become an embarrassment

to Harrison and should be withdrawn before the Senate voted to reconsider, but Hal-

stead demanded that "his flag be not hauled down under fire." Richard Smith to Sher-

man, March 29, 1889, Sherman Papers.

35. Commercial Gazette, March 29, 1889; New York Times, March 29, 1889.

36. Ibid., March 30, 1889.

37. J. C. S. Blackburn to Halstead, March 31, 1889, Halstead Papers. The New

York Times suggests that Henry Watterson had been able to "assert control over Mr.

Blackburn," while Call's motives could be traced to desires for patronage in Florida.

New York Times, March 31, 1889.

38. It was generally believed that Senator Quay's vote was a protest against Har-

rison for the President's failure to name a member of the Quay machine as postmaster

at Philadelphia. Ibid.

39. Ibid., March 29, 1889; Commercial Gazette, March 31, 1889; James E. Pollard,

The Presidents and the Press (New York, 1947), 543; New York Epoch, n.d., Hal-

stead Papers.

40. Commercial Gazette, March 31, 1889.

41. Ibid.

42. Ibid., April 1, 1889.

43. Quoted in ibid., March 30, 1889.

44. Ibid., April 7, 1889.

45. Quoted in ibid., April 1, 1889.

46. Quoted in ibid., March 31, 1889.

47. Quoted in ibid., April 5, 1889.

48. Quoted in ibid., April 1, 1889.

49. Rutherford B. Hayes to Halstead, April 1, 1889; Halstead to Hayes, April 3,

1889; Hayes to Halstead, April 4, 1889, Rutherford B. Hayes Papers, The Rutherford

B. Hayes Library.

50. Foster to Halstead, April 4, 1889 and April 15, 1889, Halstead Papers; Com-

mercial Gazette, April 9, 1889.

51. Halstead to Harrison, April 1, 1889, Harrison Papers; Carl Schurz to Halstead,

May 4, 1889, Halstead Papers; Smith to Sherman, March 29, 1889, Sherman Papers;

William Halstead Manuscript, Cincinnati Historical Society, 196.

52. Commercial Gazette, June 15, 1889.

53. Ibid., July 2, 3, 4, 1889.

54. Ibid., January 19, 1890.

55. Ibid., July 3, 1889 and January 30, 1887.

56. New York Times, March 31, 1889.

 

 

HENRY KURTZ: MAN OF THE BOOK

 

1. The only biography of Kurtz is Harry A. Brandt, Meet Henry Kurtz (Elgin,

Ill., 1941), a fictionalized account based on the then available information. Biographical

sketches are found in D. L. Miller and G. B. Royer, eds., Some Who Led (Elgin, Ill.,

1912), 41-43; T. S. Moherman, ed., A History of the Church of the Brethren: North-

eastern Ohio (Elgin, Ill., 1914), 34-39, 296-299; J. H. Moore, Some Brethren Pathfinders

(Elgin, Ill., 1929), 194-208; [S. Z. Sharp], "Biography of Elder Henry Kurtz,"

Brethren's Almanac for... 1878 (Huntingdon, Pa., [1877]), [13]; and Edgar G. Diehm,

ed., The Church of the Brethren in Northeastern Ohio (Elgin, Ill., 1963), 313-315.

2. Information on Kurtz's parents is found in his article, "Obituary -- Regina Hen-

rietta Kurtz," The Gospel-Visitor, VII (April 1857), 128. Full runs of the periodical

are located in the Brethren Historical Library, Elgin, Ill. and in Bethany Theological

Seminary Library, Oak Brook, Ill.

3. [Henry Kurtz], "Gestandnisse des Friedensboten," Der Friedensbote von Con-

cordia (May 1827), 122. This and other translations from German sources are by the

author.