THE POLITICAL CAMPAIGN OF 1875 IN
OHIO*
BY FORREST WILLIAM CLONTS, M. A.
SIGNIFICANCE OF CAMPAIGN.
As a purely state contest, the
political campaign of
1875 in Ohio was of more than ordinary
significance. It
was unusually long, intensely
conducted, bitterly fought
and the conclusion might be interpreted
to have decided
at least one very important question
for the people of
the entire country. Widespread
attention served to
arouse the citizens of Ohio to the meaning
of the prin-
cipal issue involved. Outside of Ohio
certain sections of
the country participated to such an
extent that the re-
sult of the election was partly
attributed to this external
influence. It is not often that single
state elections at-
tract such extensive notice as was
given this one. It
was in this campaign of 1875 that one
question became
very positively decided for the two
major parties of the
country. It was also in this campaign
that a man was
placed in a position for receiving the
presidential nomi-
nation of his party. Although all the
officers to be
elected were to fill state positions
there was only one
question injected into the contest
involving the welfare
of Ohio alone.
Sometime before the actual canvass of
the state was
begun and even before any issues were
definitely decided
upon, attention was directed to Ohio
because of the
bearing it was conceded the result
would have on the
*A thesis presented for the degree of
Master of Arts in the Ohio
State University.
(38)
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio 39
national election of the following
year. At that time
Ohio was an important state. In 1874
the election had
gone heavily against the Republicans,
as it had done in
many other states. The contest in Ohio
was one of the
early ones to be decided in 1875 and it
was believed by
both the Democrats and Republicans that
the outcome
here would be to some extent an
influence on later state
elections, if not indication of the result
of the presiden-
tial campaign in 1876. And while very
advantageous
conditions favorably inclined toward a
Democrat vic-
tory in Ohio, the Republicans early
determined on a vig-
orous campaign in order to overcome the
odds against
which they evidently had to contend.
This aspect, however, was materially
changed by the
injection into the campaign of an issue
of great im-
portance to the entire country. It was
a question con-
cerning the national currency. Since
the Civil War the
currency had been a perplexing problem
of the federal
government. The suspension of specie
payments and
the circulation of paper money had
created a baneful
condition that was not easy to correct.
The issuing of
national bank notes also added to the
confusion because
they were suspected by the people of
some parts of the
United States. Not a few came to regard
a return to
specie payment as meaning contraction.
They were un-
willing to give up the convenience of
even a depreciated
currency. The lines of cleavage ran
according to section
rather than to party. Although the
major parties were
disunited in 1874, the long delayed
resumption act of
1875 had been regarded as having
settled the currency
issue. But the question had not been
decided by the peo-
ple. It remained for Ohio, in the
campaign of 1875, to
solve this question. The battle was
fought in Ohio for
40 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications
the entire country, the situation being
aptly compared by
an Eastern journal to the two champions
who stood out
before the armies and singly determined
the contest.'
It was a gigantic struggle and the
result in this case
was heeded by the major parties as an
expression of the
sentiment of the country on the
currency question.
There was for the candidates an
underlying stim-
ulant, - a sort of unbreathed feeling
that a greater
prize would finally result from
victory. The presiden-
tial election was to come in 1876.
Because of the im-
portance of the Ohio situation, many
recognized that a
Republican who could carry the State
under such un-
favorable circumstances would be an
acceptable candi-
date for the supreme executive of the
nation. With the
opening of the campaign it was also
evident that should
the Democrats carry the state their
financial doctrines
would capture the national convention
and the success-
ful leader in the state would be
nominated for the presi-
dency. This was no idle dream of the
gubernatorial
candidates. It was widely asserted. And
when the
Terre Haute Express said that
"the man who is elected
governor of Ohio this fall will be the
next presidential
nominee of his party," it spoke
something of the com-
mon mind2. So for the
principal candidates there was
a greater prize at stake which, though
they dared not
discuss, they were doubtless cognizant
of.
Besides the currency question and the relation
of the
campaign to the presidential election
in 1876 there arose
one minor issue concerning only the
State. This was
the public school question,
unfortunately brought in
because of the passage of a bill by the
legislature that
1Harpers Weekly, Sept. 25.
2Terre Haute Express, quoted by
Cincinnati Enquirer, July 1.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio 41
was alleged to favor the Catholic
Church. The whole
charge hinged on the circumstances
surrounding the
passage of this measure rather than the
actual contents
of the act. While it cannot be
definitely ascertained to
what extent this question affected the
decision in the
election, it played a part of some
importance. The
question was one on which politicians
were able to
arouse the prejudices of many people.
Both parties
brought in the school system in their
campaign docu-
ments, but upon it they agreed. There
was, in truth, no
issue, although the "Grogan
Bill" had produced one of
those situations that afford an
opportunity for much
political wrangling.
In recounting the progress and result
of this cam-
paign, neither the unusual economic
conditions within
Ohio at that time nor the personalities
of the leading
party men in the State could be left
out of consideration.
Business had not revived since the financial
panic of
1873. This doubtless was responsible
for much of the
unwholesome thinking on the money
question that per-
vaded this campaign. But if economic
conditions were
bad, the state parties did not lack
able and experienced
men to lead them. The candidates for
governor were
men who had received many public
honors. They pos-
sessed long political records that
merited the confidence
of their parties and they were
supported in this partic-
ular instance by groups of notables
such as few states
could boast in that day.
SOME UNDERLYING INFLUENCES.
Just as in seeking the causes that
prompt this or that
distinct act on the part of an
individual many forces are
caught and scrutinized, so in examining
any expression
42
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
of the popular will there are
conditions underlying the
open issues that are materially to be
reckoned. Partic-
ularly is this true with respect to the
state political cam-
paign of 1875 in Ohio. National as well
as state con-
ditions must be borne in mind, for,
regardless of the fact
that the election concerned only state
officers, the prin-
cipal issue was national in its scope.
Since the begin-
ning of the Civil War national
politics, too, had affected
state elections. In connection with
this widespread in-
herent force in local politics at that
time must also be
considered the depressing economic
condition peculiar
to Ohio.
Of these two underlying influences the
strenuous
economic condition within Ohio in 1875
probably had
the more pronounced effect on the
political campaign of
that year. This campaign came at a time
of serious
business depression, which, if any
definite limits can be
assigned, lasted from 1873 to 1878. At
the time of the
panic of 1873 Ohio was making progress
scarcely com-
prehensible in the field of
manufacturing. Rich mines
of various substances were being
profitably worked to
supply the increased demand begun with
the Civil War
period. Agriculture, too, was keeping
pace in conse-
quence of favorable circumstances. But
the depression
wrought havoc to all of these
industries to the extent
that value declines, bankruptcies,
unemployment and the
penury of the masses become monotonous
in the process
of relating.
The whole field of industry in the
state had been
partially paralyzed by the panic of
1873. Banks were
forced to suspend business, merchants
either received
long extended credit or became
bankrupt, mills and
factories, many of which were just
developing into large
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 43
establishments, ceased operating, labor
was idle and the
farmers were unable to command more
than meager
returns for farm products. This
condition in Ohio, as
in the country at large, might be
spoken of, not as the
panic of 1873, but of the seventies. In
certain indus-
tries the severest years were
experienced after 1873.
This is, quite often, spoken of as the
aftermath of the
panic but too often its intensity is
forgotten in the con-
sideration of contemporaneous events.
Illustrations of
industrial depression characteristic to
this period may
be observed in iron production, coal
mining and the un-
happy labor conditions.
The statistics available in the iron
industry are not
to be taken as indicative of the true
state of affairs.
The few years immediately preceding the
panic of the
seventies were ones of enormous growth.
The increase
in the number of establishments and the
enlargement of
those already in existence point to
this progress.3 How-
ever the statistics, as reported by the
secretary of state,
are not only not in keeping with this
growth but are so
untrustworthy that persons were warned
against ac-
cepting them.4 Only a few of
the business establish-
ments made returns to the state
secretary and therefore
his report was very incomplete. For
this reason these
statistics are unreliable.
Cleveland alone, which had but eight
rolling mills
in 1870, had fourteen in 1872.5
It is also true that the
iron industry was among the most
seriously injured by
the panic. Its products were used
almost exclusively in
extensive enterprises that had to be
discontinued as a
3Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1872,
654.
4Ibid., 654.
5Ibid., 654.
44
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
result of the depression. There can be
no mistake in the
interpretation put upon the number of
blast furnaces
that were forced to discontinue
operation. Over half of
the furnaces in Ohio went out of
business between 1873
and 1878.6 The severest years were from
1875 to 1878.
It was during this period that charcoal
blast furnaces
found it nearly impossible to compete
with coke burning
furnaces and consequently many that were
idle became
permanently so.7 It was also
a time when steel, espe-
cially Bessemer, was supplanting the
use of iron for the
construction of rails.8 It
was a distinctly unsettled
period among those furnaces that
remained active. Add
to this the discharge of a large
percent of laborers and
something like a very general condition
may be realized.9
In another industry, at that time one
of Ohio's prin-
cipal ones, the situation was hardly
more favorable.
The depression in business caused a
reaction in the coal
industry from almost every direction.
Household as
well as manufacturing consumption was
reduced to the
lowest possible basis.10 Here,
too, the available statis-
tics cannot be relied upon for complete
information.
The output in bushels for 1872 was over
one hundred
and ten million as reported by the
state, but such figures
are quoted with the full knowledge that
the production
was far in excess of that amount.11 In
1874 the returns
show slightly over eighty-five million
bushels mined, and
in 1875 this was increased to almost
ninety-eight mil-
Ohio Labor Statistics, 1878, 75-77, 81.
7 Ibid., 83.
8 Ohio Labor Statistics, 1878,
88.
9Ibid., 81.
10Ibid., 1877,
116.
11Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1873,
613.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 45
lion.12 Some of the mines
were closed and the miners
moved away.13 Others were
worked only part time and
with much reduced forces. And yet, it
is not the de-
crease in the production of coal or
iron, nor the reduc-
tion in the number of employees that
lent so much color
to the morbid discontent. Many mines
and furnaces
that were discontinued were those that
had been oper-
ated at a profit only under extremely favorable
condi-
tions of high prices and an unsupplied
demand. The
depression had closed them permanently.
There was a
deeper cause for the widespread
discontent of 1875.
This was to be found in the appalling
reduction of wages
and the deplorable conditions under
which the laborers
were forced to work.
There is probably nothing more
disheartening than
to receive on pay-day a thinner
envelope for the usual
amount of labor than it is customary to
receive. Whether
the cost of living has decreased or not
this to a certain
extent is true. But when the reverse is
so, that is, when
wages are reduced more rapidly than the
cost of living
declines, the labor field is rife with
discontent. From
1872 to 1878 the average reduction of
wages in the coal
industry was thirty-three percent.14
In some important
enterprises the reduction was even
greater and in some
sections conditions were more
unsatisfactory than in
others. One decrease would be followed
shortly by an-
other. So many employees were laid off
that those
remaining could do nothing in the way
of protesting for
fear of losing their places. A striking
illustration of
12Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1875,
603.
13Ohio Labor tSatistics, 1878, 49.
14Ohio Labor Statistics, 1878, 253.
46 Ohio
Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
wage reductions may be seen in the report from Mahon-
ing Valley in regard to the wages of laborers employed
at the furnaces there. In this section six reductions
of
ten percent each were recorded. Laborers who received
$2.50 to $3.00 per day in 1873 received scarcely $1.50
a
day in 1878.15
To be considered in connection with the reduction of
wages is the closely allied cost of living. It did not
show
such a marked decrease when compared to the reduction
of wages. In 1878 groceries had not fallen exceeding
twelve percent as compared to the prices of 1873,
while
they were nearly twenty percent higher than in 1861.16
Many of the
articles of necessity had
scarcely been
lowered in price at all. In fact some of the staples
were
higher in the latter part of the financial depression
of
the seventies than they were in 1871.17 The laborers,
however, had little control over their circumstances.
Strikes only added to the intensity of their poverty
and
resulted usually in their return to work at a still
further
reduction of wages or the closing of the plant
altogether.
Attending this general disorder there had been revived
15On the first day of Oct. 1873, laborers at furnaces
in Mahoning
Valley were paid the following prices per day; keepers,
$2.75; helpers,
$2.37; top fillers, $2.50; bottom fillers, $2.25;
laborers, $1.75; engineers,
$2.75; blacksmiths, $3.00; blacksmith's helpers, $2.00;
firemen, $2.25. In
Oct. 1873, these men were reduced in their wages ten
percent, in Nov.
1873, another ten percent deduction was made; in April
1874, a ten
percent, in Dec. ten percent, in Dec. 1875 ten percent,
and in 1877 still an-
other ten percent reduction was made, bringing the
prices paid for furnace
labor to as follows: Keepers, $1.45; helpers, $1.24;
top fillers, $1.45;
bottom fillers, $1.20; laborers, $1.00; engineers,
$1.50 to $1.75 and firemen
$1.20. Ohio Labor Statistics, 1878, 59.
16 Ibid.,
253.
17Ibid., 253. Some comparative prices of articles in 1861, 1871
and
1878 were:
1861
1871 1878
Flour ...... $5 35 to
$5 75 $5 30 to $5 75 $5 50 to $6 50 bbl.
Potatoes ... 25 to 30 95 to 1 00 55 bu.
Sugar ...... 061/2
to 09 13
to 14 09 to 121/2
lb.
Coffee ..... 20 25 to 26 33 to 35
lb.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 47
a practice in paying wages that was
disliked by the
laborer. While there were many evils,
the revival of
the use of the "truck" system
seems to have been the
most unfortunate.
The use of scrip or the "truck
system" as it was
generally called, was the paying of
wages in goods or
store orders. Before 1861 this practice
had been widely
known, but with the issuing of legal
tender money in
the form of greenbacks during the war
and the large
demand for labor incidental to that
period, workmen
had been able to ask peremptorily that
their wages be
paid in cash.18 However, a
different situation was cre-
ated by the panic. Money became scarce,
production
was diminished and labor exceeded its
market. And
with this came the revival of paying
wages with store
orders. The coal and iron industries
made the most use
of this system. Their orders were
usually promises to
pay, on demand, a specified amount in
merchandise.
Some were even transferable.19 These
served as a
medium of exchange, passing from hand
to hand just
as the greenbacks had done before the
depression. The
evils of such a system are evident. The
order, or scrip,
was issued on a company's store and
there the employees
had to purchase practically everything.
For cash a
person could buy more goods than he
would receive for
the same amount of scrip. There were
two prices, a
cash and a scrip price.20 It
is not difficult to imagine the
discontent among those workmen, who in
addition to
having wages reduced and the cost of
living relatively
higher, received their wages in goods
instead of cash.
18 Ohio Labor Statistics, 1877, 159.
19 Ibid., 183.
20 Ohio Labor Statistics, 1877, 159.
48 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications
Upon an investigation made by the Ohio
Bureau of
Labor Statistics in 1876-7 it was found
that this system
was very widely revived and it was
among the chief
causes of discontent in certain
industries. Especially
in rural communities was the practice
general. Even an
act of the legislature failed to stop
the practice. The
laborers themselves, with work so
scarce, were reticent
with regard to the abuse, although they
seriously felt its
injustice.21 One need only
review the first few reports
of the Bureau, beginning with the
initial issue in 1877,
to get a comprehensive idea of the
deplorable labor con-
ditions that existed during the years
1873-1878 in
almost every field of industry within
the state.
Little need be said concerning
agricultural conditions
in 1875. While the farmer was
relatively more fortu-
nate than the manufacturer and miner,
he did not readily
concede that his position was not more
hopeless. Almost
all production had been decreased in
1873 but the prin-
cipal food crops showed a marked
increase in 1874.22
With such produce as tobacco there had,
of course, been
an almost automatic decrease of some
extent, but such
crops did not constitute a major part
of farm cultiva-
tion.23 The year 1875 opened
with bright prospects for
a profitable year. The Western farmer
was in a more
excellent condition than he had been
for the two pre-
vious years.24 And yet, he
seems to have taken a dark
outlook. The President of the State
Agricultural Con-
vention in his address in 1875 gives an
indication of the
state of many minds. The drawback of an
unfavorable
21 Ohio Labor Statistics, 1878, 115-129.
Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1875,
602.
23 Ibid.
24Ohio Statesman, Mar. 25, 1875.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 49
season, together with dull markets, he
said, and strin-
gent money matters had caused a
distrust in the minds
of many.25 It was, in truth,
this distrust in the minds
of the farmers that gave to them their
bodings of evil
times.
The other potent influence affecting
the election in
Ohio of 1875 was the character of the
major parties.
Nationally the Republican party had
created during the
few years preceding 1875 a seemingly
questionable rep-
utation.26 Such affairs as the Credit Mobilier,
the
increased-pay act of congressmen,
commonly called the
"Salary Grab," the New York
custom house corruption,
the Sanborn contracts, the unscrupulous
dealings of Mr.
Butler and the unsatisfactory
settlement of southern
troubles were fresh in the minds of the
people. Almost
any one of these disagreeable things
would serve to dis-
credit a party in normal times, and yet
the Republicans
went into the campaign of 1875 with all
of them on
record. In 1874 it had been unnecessary
for the Dem-
ocratic party to advocate any
constructive policy to win
in many state elections. It merely had
to display before
the people the Republican scandals of
the immediately
preceding years.
Of even more recent attraction was the
attempted
settlement of the election trouble in
Louisiana during
the first few weeks of 1875. Conditions
there had been
viewed by many people of the North with
some appre-
hension but the employment of federal
force to control
25 Ohio Agricultural Report, 1875, 73.
26 No attempt has been made at using
original sources in portraying
something of the national situation
respecting politics. Rhodes, History
of the United States, 1850-1877, VII, has been more often consulted than
any other one general source. For the
Ohio view point, Randall and
Ryan, History of Ohio, IV, has
supplemented the sources of general
history.
Vol. XXXI-4.
50
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
the state election had so aroused the
public that many
Republicans as well as Democrats became
indignant.
Large meetings in New York, Boston and
other North-
ern cities protested against the action
of the adminis-
tration. Speeches in Congress and a
Congressional com-
mittee report increased an already
damaging sentiment
against Republican leaders. Not all,
however, was dis-
approval. The whole affair was defended
by the more
partisan Republicans and in some
sections the question
was assuming the appearance of a
political issue. In
no instance did the Democrats lose an
opportunity to
give publicity to the very distasteful
aspect of the entire
situation.
But the Democratic party was not
without an in-
auspicious past. It still had an
unfavorable war record
to defend, or rather to outlive, and a
marked feeling
continued that its control of the
government would result
in restoring the power of the South.
This was a factor
of some importance even a decade after
the surrender
of General Lee at Appomattox. Speakers
and writers
played upon the sensibilities of many
individuals in the
North and excited much prejudice in
reviving some of
the questions of the Civil War. No
campaign at this
time was free from its war influence
and in the North it
worked to the detriment of the Democrat
party.
The foregoing facts, while not intended
to be either
an intensive study of national
political conditions of the
time or the economic situation in Ohio,
will bring to
mind some of the important influences
affecting the
state campaign of 1875. While the
Republicans had a
very undesirable national reputation to
defend, the Dem-
ocrats were partly distrusted. In the
state, business con-
ditions were generally bad, as
illustrated by the decrease
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio 51
in production, the diminution of wages,
the lack of
employment and the material decrease in
the amount of
currency in circulation. Before this
dark background
stood out a number of strong men in
both parties to con-
tend for opposing principles of the
currency.
CANDIDATES AND LEADERS.
Ohio in 1875 had several notable party
men whose
previous activities had won them state
and national
prominence. Both the Republicans and Democrats
could boast of such men. So in the
events preceding
and attending this political campaign
the influence of
these men was felt and must be
considered if we would
understand the outcome. The Democrats
were fortu-
nate in having the larger number of
notables. They
were in control of the state
government. But what the
Republicans lacked in numbers, they
made up in the
great force of character possessed by
their leaders. In
addition, they were aided by one or two
persons from
outside of the state whose weight told
especially with
certain elements.
Among the noted Democrats was Mr. Allen
G. Thur-
man, whose fame, as a party man, was
national.27 Of
aristocratic Southern birth, he was by
inheritance an
old school Democrat. In order to begin
the practice of
law Mr. Thurman had been forced to work
hard and this
he continued to do when he entered
politics. Before the
Civil War he became a state supreme
court judge and
27 Biographical
facts obtained from: Lee, History of the City of
Columbus, I, 855-6; Western Biographical Publishing Company, Historical
and Biographical Cyclopaedia of the
State of Ohio, 195-7; Biographical
Encyclopaedia of Ohio of the 19th
Century, 342-3; Ohio Archaeological
and Historical Society, Publications,
iv. 478.
52
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
served one term in Congress. In 1867,
as the Demo-
cratic gubernatorial candidate he
reduced the Repub-
lican majority of forty-three thousand
the year before
to less than three thousand.28 And
although defeated
for governor, the legislature went
Democratic and Mr.
Thurman was chosen United States
Senator. He had
grown up a Democrat of the strictest
type and from
these views he did not easily recede.
With his aid and
the organization which he had helped to
build in the
state, the Democrats carried the state
in 1873
and he was re-elected to the Senate. Of
noteworthy
significance in relation to the
campaign of 1875 were
Mr. Thurman's currency views. In the
Senate he had
consistently shown himself to be in
favor of a currency
based only on specie payment and he
wished a return to
that standard as early as possible. His
position on this
and other national questions was
supported by such
logical argument that he had come to be
regarded favor-
ably throughout the country as a
candidate for the
presidency.
Mr. Thurman's mind on the currency is
most clearly
revealed in a speech made in the United
States Senate
on March 24, 1874.29 It was a speech
made in reply
to a personal attack which aimed to
show that he had
not heeded the demands of his
constituents for inflation
and had attempted to dodge the currency
issue by being
absent when certain votes had been
taken. At the con-
clusion of Mr. Thurman's speech there
was no doubt in
the mind of anyone as to the
consistency of his position.
He said that while he was opposed to
legislation that
would force an immediate return to
specie payment,
Lee, History of the City of Columbus,
I, 855.
29Congressional Record, 43rd Cong., 1st Sess., 2393 et seq.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio 53
never had anyone heard him utter one
word in favor of
inflation. Demonitizing gold and silver
in perpetuity
and substituting an irredeemable paper
based upon gov-
ernment credit and depending upon the
opinions and
interest of the members of congress was
what he held
inflation to mean. He said that he was
too old-fash-
ioned a Democrat, had preached and
heard too many
hard-money lessons to advocate such a
principle as that.
He denied that he had ever believed
that the currency
had been responsible for the panic of
1873 and he gave
in support of his position the facts on
which he based
his belief. He denied that the
sentiment in Ohio favored
inflation. While he admitted that the
state was divided
on the currency question and that some
of his friends
had found occasion to differ with
himself on that issue,
he stated that not a single petition
from Ohio had been
received by him asking for inflation.
In spite of the prominence of Mr.
Thurman, the man
on whom the eyes of Democrats rested in
the summer
of 1875 was Mr. William Allen,30 at
that time governor
of the state and a candidate for
re-election. He was
the uncle of Mr. Thurman, had been born
in the South
and during his youth was a member of
the Thurman
household. He was admitted to the bar
at the age of
twenty and when elected to the 23rd
Congress was the
youngest members in that body. He rose
suddenly to
influence through his gift of oratory.
Having realized
that his success lay in that gift he
exerted every effort
to attain his mastery. Thus when a
meeting of the
30 Facts relating to Mr. Allen's life
obtained from: Biographical
Cyclopaedia of Ohio, (1880) 91; Historical and Biographical Cyclopaedia
of Ohio, (1883) I, 154-5; History of Ross and Highland
Counties, (1880),
222-3; History of Ross County, (1917),
158-160.
54
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
Democratic leaders of the state was
held in 1837 to
select a candidate for the United
States Senate, Mr.
Allen so electrified this gathering by
one of his ad-
dresses that he was immediately
selected as the can-
didate for that office. With the
success of the Dem-
ocrats in that hour Mr. Allen was sent
to the Senate
where he continued a leading orator in
a body that
numbered among its members such men as
Daniel Web-
ster and Henry Clay. After serving a
second term Mr.
Allen retired to a country home in the
state, where he
remained aloof from political life and
especially the
turbulence of the Civil War strife
until the campaign of
1873, when as a candidate for governor
he was elected.
The remainder of the Democratic ticket
in that year
was defeated. His leadership was
further attested by
the fact that he was the first Democrat
to serve as gov-
ernor of Ohio after the Civil War.
Mr. Allen was another of the old-school
Democrats
but he had not been so out-spoken on
the currency as
Mr. Thurman. His attention had been
directed to other
subjects. Although his term as governor
lacked any
events approaching the spectacular, he
directed the
efforts of the administration toward
strict economy in
the expenditure of public funds. Coming
at a time when
the people of the state most felt the
burden of taxes, his
efforts greatly pleased those who had
elected him to
office. He was the sole candidate for
governor in the
Democratic convention of 1875 and his
popularity was
such that the Republicans realized that
it would be ex-
ceedingly difficult to defeat him.
Two other prominent Democrats in the
State cam-
paign of 1875 were Mr. Samuel Cary and
Mr. George
H. Pendleton. Mr. Cary was the
Democratic nominee
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio 55
for lieutenant-governor.31 As
the campaign progressed
Mr. Cary's activities became more and
more pronounced
until he was regarded as one of the
chief advocates of
the new currency views adopted by the
Democratic
party in the State. In consideration of
this fact, his his-
tory is of much weight. He was by
inheritance a Whig.
Later he became a Republican. But these
political par-
ties he had not followed consistently
because of his inde-
pendent impulses. As a lawyer Mr. Cary
had been suc-
cessful but he abandoned his practice
to devote his entire
energies to philanthropic work. The
direction in which
this energy moved was first the
temperance field, for
which he wrote and spoke throughout the
United States.
Later he turned his attention to the
labor cause. In
1867 he was elected to Congress on an
independent
ticket, supported largely by the labor
men. Because of
his vote against the impeachment of
President Johnson
and his opposition to the
"Southern Policy" of the Re-
publican leaders in Congress, Mr. Cary
won the friend-
ship of many Democrats. He continued in
Congress his
appeals in behalf of labor and
temperance. Some of his
speeches received wide circulation,
noteworthy being one
he delivered in the House on the needs
of labor.
It was while a member of Congress that
Mr. Cary
found himself leaning towards
Democratic views and he
soon afterwards joined that party. His
career was quite
varied. He followed his philanthropic
ideas to such an
extent that he could not be called a
conservative person.
He sought after the new and untried,
and his labor-
temperance views combined with his
economic theories
Facts concerning the life of Mr. Cary
were obtained from: Bio-
graphical Cyclopaedia of Ohio, (1876), 585-6; National Cyclopaedia of
American Biography, XI, 480; Greve, Centennial History of Cincinnati,
II, 529-31.
56 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications
made him neither a faithful Republican
nor a strict
Democrat. But that which he believed he
advocated
with a force of expression and a method
of presentation
that rendered him a formidable
opponent.
Mr. Pendleton,32 although
not a candidate for any
office, was among the nationally
prominent figures in the
Democratic party at this period. He had
achieved many
honors in his political activities, the
first of importance
being his election to the state senate
in 1854. At that
time he had the additional honor of
being the youngest
member of that body. Three years later
he was elected
a representative to Congress and he
continued among
the few Democrats to hold a seat there
during the four
years of the Civil War. In 1868 Mr.
Pendleton re-
ceived on the first ballot in the
National Democratic
Convention almost as many votes for
president as all
the other candidates combined. However
he failed to
receive the nomination. In the
following year he ac-
cepted, much against his judgment, the
nomination for
governor of the State and although
defeated by the man
who was leading the Republicans in
1875, Mr. Hayes,
he received a very remarkable vote,
considering the
conditions of that year.
Mr. Pendleton was among the early
advocates of
plenty of greenbacks. In the Democratic
National Con-
vention of 1868 he had advocated what
was popularly
called "The Ohio Idea," which
was nothing more than a
program of inflation.33 His
views regarding the cur-
32Information concerning Mr. Pendleton's
life obtained from: Bio-
graphical Encyclopedia of Ohio, (1876), 616-17; Historical and Bio-
graphical Cyclopaedia of Ohio, (1883), 143-4; History of Cincinnati and
Hamilton County, Ohio, (1894), 546-8; National Cyclopaedia of American
Biography, III, 278; Haynes, Third Party Movements, 105.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 57
rency were no doubt partly responsible
for the strong
inflation sentiment in and around
Cincinnati.
There were other prominent Ohio
Democrats who
supported the party in the campaign of
1875 but without
distinct or notable influence on the
outcome. Such was
Mr. Thomas Ewing, who spoke with zeal
and energy
throughout the campaign. But in spite
of the number
of strong and popular party men, the
Democrats were
unfortunate in having leaders of
diverse views. The
Republicans, in contrast, had a few
very forceful men
who were thoroughly in accord. Mr.
Hayes and Mr.
Sherman led their party without
opposition within the
party on the one decided issue of the
hour.
When the call came for a man to defeat
the popular
Democratic Governor, Mr. Allen, the
name of Mr.
Hayes became the hope of his party.34
While showing
much interest in politics, Mr. Hayes
was not a promi-
nent party man, even within the state,
before the close
of the Civil War. The only public
position he held up
to that time was that of solicitor for
the City of Cincin-
nati. But during the war, in the
capacity of an officer,
he found an opportunity to display his
ability as a leader.
Before the close of that struggle he
had attained by
meritorious service the rank of brevet
major-general
and while still in the field he had
been nominated and
elected to Congress from his home
district. This was
the beginning of his political career.
In 1867 he de-
feated Mr. Thurman for the governorship
and two years
later the popular Mr. Pendleton. But in
1872, under
very adverse conditions, Mr. Hayes was
defeated for
34 Biographical notes obtained from
Williams, Rutherford Birchard
Hayes, I, unless otherwise indicated. This work is compiled
chiefly from
the diary of Mr. Hayes and it gives in
detail many of his personal views
relating to government and politics.
58
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
congressman. With this event he decided
to retire to
his home in Fremont.
Mr. Hayes was an exceedingly modest and
retiring
person. He never sought for office or
honor although
he attained both through his ability to
work, his con-
sistently sound thinking and his
natural quality of lead-
ership. He had never held any other
currency theory
than that of redeemable paper. This
fact is evidenced
by an expression recorded in his diary
before he became
of age.35 Mr. Hayes never
forsook this principle. It
was in the congressional campaign of
1872 that he said
that one of the things of vital
importance to the country
at that time was a sound financial
policy. This, he held,
could only be reached by the
establishment of gold as
the basis of the currency. But the
defeat in that year
aroused a longing to return permanently
to the enjoy-
ment of private life and it was his
sincerest wish that
this hope would be realized when he went
to Fremont
in 1873.
As a co-worker with' Mr. Hayes in this
campaign of
1875, the record and position of Mr.
John Sherman were
fittingly advantageous. Like most of
the leading party
men in Ohio at this time Mr. Sherman
had early fol-
lowed his inclination into politics.36
In his "Recollec-
tions" he thus stated his
political bias; "I was by inher-
itance and association a Whig boy,
without much care
35 September 6, 1841, Mr. Hayes wrote in
his diary, "I hoped we
should . . . have a stable currency of
uniform value, but since Tyler
has vetoed one way of accomplishing
this, I would not hesitate to try
others," Williams, Rutherford
Birchard Hayes, I, 99
36 Unless otherwise stated, facts
relating to Mr. Sherman's life were
obtained from: Sherman, Recollections, I;
Burton, John Sherman;
Wilson, James Grant, Ed. Presidents
of the United States, (Hayes, by
Schurtz) III, 107-159.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 59
for or knowledge of parties or
political principles. No
doubt my discharge from the engineer
corps by a Demo-
cratic Board of Public Works
strengthened this bias.37
The Whig party in Mr. Sherman's
district was in the
minority but this did not prevent him
from exerting his
efforts on every issue for that party.
In 1854 he made
his initial attempt as a candidate for
public office. The
basis of this campaign and the principle
on which Mr.
Sherman was elected to Congress was the
anti-slavery
cry of a new party, at that time
without a name.38 After
three terms as congressman, Mr. Sherman
was elected
United States Senator, which position
he was holding
at the time of the political campaign
of 1875 in Ohio.
With the panic of 1857 Mr. Sherman
became keenly
interested in the finance of the
country. This subject he
made his specialty from that time. From
almost the
beginning of the Civil War until his
retirement from
public life, he was reputed the leading
authority in Con-
gress on the condition of the currency.
He took the lead
in the fight for resumption after the
war. When Con-
gress convened in December, 1873, more
than sixty bills,
resolutions and propositions were
introduced to relieve
the financial situation of the country.
They showed
every shade of opinion from plans for
immediate coin
payments to unthinkable schemes of
inflation. To these
propositions, Mr. Sherman, as chairman
of the com-
mittee on finance, reported a
resolution which stated that
the duty of Congress was the
fulfillment of its pledge of
March 18, 1867, which promised a return
to specie pay-
ment. A substitute for this resolution
was proposed,
directing an inflation of the currency,
and it was upon
37Sherman, Recollections, I, 91.
38Ibid., 103.
60 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications
this adverse resolution that Mr.
Sherman delivered one
of his famous speeches on finance.39
He based his argu-
ment upon two distinct points. First, that a specie
standard was the only true standard of
values; and
second, that the United States was
bound both by public
faith and good policy to bring its
currency to the gold
standard. Although supported by the
most logical and
perspicuous argument, he could not
persuade the ma-
jority of the Senate to his views. This
was a fair indi-
cation of the divided opinion
throughout the country.
But Mr. Sherman continued to oppose
inflation. After
the veto of the inflation bill in 1874,
he again set forth
to secure a return to specie payment
and this time his
efforts led to the enactment of the
Resumption Act of
January, 1875. It was in connection
with this act that
Mr. Sherman became the leading
hard-money man in
the country and the object of bitterest
attack by the
greenback advocates. As this Resumption
Act of 1875
was one of the subjects of political
controversy of that
year, especially in the state of Mr.
Sherman's residence,
it was natural that he should, as its
author and sponsor,
exert a wide influence on the outcome
of the canvass.
Although Mr. Hayes and Mr. Sherman were
the
only Republicans within the state at
that time whose
personal influence was of great
importance in this cam-
paign, there were one or two men from
outside the
state who came in and whose influence
was powerful
with certain elements. The foremost of
these was Mr.
Carl Schurz,40 a very
remarkable independent-thinking
39Speeches and Reports on Finance and Taxation by John
Sherman,
(1879), 402-452.
40Biographical facts obtained from: National
Cyclopaedia of Amer-
ican Biography, III, 202-3, and sketch by Frederick Bancroft and
William
H. Dunning, The Reminiscences of Carl
Schurz, III, 313-436.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio
61
American of German birth. Because of
his activity in
the revolution of 1848 in Germany he
was forced to flee
from that country, coming to the United
States in 1852.
With the organization of the Republican
party he joined
with its followers in the anti-slavery
movement. Mr.
Schurz was an orator of more than
ordinary ability and
his speeches before the Civil War,
given in German,
were credited with being the most
potent factor in turn-
ing Wisconsin against the extension of
slavery. Imme-
diately he became a national figure.
After aiding in
the election of Mr. Lincoln, he was
sent by him as min-
ister to the important Spanish post,
but resigned in the
same year, 1861, to enter the Union
army. Successful
in military pursuits, he continued to
favor and be
favored by the Republican party. In
1869 he was elected
United States Senator from Missouri.
But in Congress his independent mind
caused him to
bolt the Republican party. He opposed
the Southern
policy of the Republican leaders and
objected to some of
the individual plans of these men. In
1872 he was
affiliated with the liberal movement
that nominated Mr.
Greeley for the presidency and for the
next few years
Mr. Schurz was considered an
independent party man.
It was in this capacity that he came to
Ohio in 1875.
During the preceding year he made
several effective
speeches in the Senate in support of a
return to specie
payment. The most ardent of these was
delivered on
the 14th of January, at which time he
summed up his
arguments in sixteen points. These
related principally
to the evils of an irredeemable
currency, the wisdom of
a return to specie payment and the duty
of the govern-
ment to fulfill its promise and
obligation.41 Because of
41 Congressional Record, 43rd Cong., 1st Sess., 635-645.
62 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications
his citations from economists and his
references to
results from similar conditions in
other countries he was
dubbed by his opponents a mere
theorist. But he thor-
oughly believed in a currency based
only on the precious
metals and to this position he drew, by
his sound reason-
ing, many converts.
Of those who came from without the
State, Mr.
Morton, United States Senator from
Indiana, deserves
some mention, although not because of
his influence on
the chief issue. His record on the
currency issue was
not one to create confidence. In 1874
he was committed
to the inflation idea and led the
opposition to the argu-
ments of Mr. Sherman and Mr. Shurz. His
speeches
in the campaign of 1875 were of no
particular weight,
being chiefly to revive the Civil War
sentiment. The
difference between Mr. Schurz and Mr.
Morton is shown
in one of their clashes in the Senate.
Mr. Schurz made
a reference to Mr. Morton's
inconsistent record on the
currency question, to which Mr. Morton
replied that he
would change again whenever he came to
think his
opinion wrong, but that he had never so
changed his
mind as to be obliged to go out of his
party. This drew
from Mr. Schurz a defense of his
position with a sig-
nificant conclusion. "He (Morton)
has never left his
party," said Mr. Schurz, "I
have never betrayed my
principles. That is the difference
between him and
me."42
THE TREND OF PLATFORMS AND PARTIES.
While Congress pledged on March 18th,
1869, a
return to specie payment, the promise
was not followed
consistently by either party during the
following six
42Bancroft and Dunning, Reminisicences
of Carl Schurz, III, 357-8.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio 63
years. Resumption was looked on by a
large portion of
both parties as meaning contraction.
The years imme-
diately preceding the panic of 1873,
too, were ones of
prosperity and speculation. In general,
the people of
the West, irrespective of party,
opposed resumption and
the people of the East favored it.
Neither party nor
section, however, was anxious to force
the issue during
a period of satisfactory business conditions,
but with
the collapse of industry the issue was
drawn to the fore-
front as a political question.
In 1868 Mr. Pendleton, as a candidate
for the pres-
idential nomination of the Democrat
party, had advo-
cated the payment of government bonds
in greenbacks.43
The enthusiasm for this idea is shown
in the fact that
Mr. Pendleton received practically half
of the votes of
the convention on the first ballot. The
opposition to the
"Yourn Greenback," as Mr.
Pendleton was then called,
is strikingly shown in the fact that it
was impossible to
secure the necessary two-thirds vote to
receive the nom-
ination. But he was ardently supported
by all the dele-
gates from Ohio on the principle he
advocated of paying
the bonds in greenbacks, equal taxation
and one currency
for all.
In 1869 the state platform of the
Democrat party
opposed the payment of bonds, which had
been bought
with greenbacks, in gold. And in this
it went so far as
to say that if the claims of bond
holders to the payment
of all government bonds in gold were
persisted in, repu-
diation would be forced upon the
people.44 On the cur-
rency the Republican platform of that
year was silent.
Again in 1870 the state Democratic
platform had a res-
43 Haynes, Third Party Movements, 105.
44Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1869,
550.
64
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
olution in regard to the currency. It
proposed the aboli-
tion of national banks and the
substitution of treasury
notes for the notes of such banks.45
The following year the Democratic
convention
stated, at great length, "that the
true mode of returning
to specie payment is to make customs
duties payable in
legal tender currency and stop gambling
in gold."46 It
was in this year, 1871, that the
Republican state plat-
form declared that "specie is the
basis of all sound cur-
rency, and that true policy requires as
speedy a return
to that basis as is practicable,
without distress to the
debtor class of the people."47
The Republican state convention fails
to deal with
the currency question at its meetings
in 1872 and 1873.
And although the Democratic platform is
silent on that
subject in 1872, in 1873 a sound money
policy is in-
dorsed in the following terms: "It
[the Democratic
party] recognizes the evils of an
irredeemable currency,
but insists that in a return to specie
payment care shall
be taken not to seriously disturb the
business of the
country, or unjustly injure the debtor
class."48 This
much of the platform, Mr. Thurman
claims, was writ-
ten with his own hand.49 The
resumption element of
the Democratic party was at that time
in control of the
convention. But in 1874 the Democratic platform
shows strongly that tendency which
culminated in the
stand it took in 1875. The first and
foremost resolution
in the platform of 1874 was as follows:
- "a sound
currency is indispensable to the
welfare of a country,
45Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1870,
601.
46 Ibid., 1871, 611.
47Ibid., 1871, 610.
48Ibid, 1873, 610.
49 Congressional Record, 43rd Cong., 1st Sess., 2395.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 65
that its volume should be regulated by
the necessities of
business, and that all laws that
interfere with such nat-
ural regulation are vicious in
principle and detrimental
in their effect. We are in favor of
such an increase of
the circulating medium as the business
interest of the
country may from time to time
require."50 In the same
year the Republican convention
committed the party to
the fulfilment of the promise of Congress
of March,
1869. "It is," the convention
declared, "the duty of the
National Government to adopt such
measures as shall
gradually but certainly restore our
paper money to a
specie standard."51 And
so in 1874, while the two major
parties within the state showed some
difference on the
currency problem, the difference was
not sufficient to
make the question an open issue at that
time.
Almost with the commencement of the
year 1875,
both the Democratic and Republican
parties within the
State began to make an inspection of
the field and to
summon all the forces at their command
that might
affect favorably the interest of the
party in the fall elec-
tion. The Democrats were in control of
the state gov-
ernment. Although Mr. Allen had been elected
in 1873
with a majority of less than a
thousand,52 in the follow-
ing year, in the congressional
election, the Democratic
majority for the state officers had
been increased to
almost nineteen thousand, while that of
the congressmen
totaled nearly thirty thousand.53 The
whole state ticket
of the Democrats was successful and
thirteen out of
twenty congressmen were elected. The
Republicans
charged their defeat to the woman's
temperance cru-
50 Appleton, Annual
Cyclopaedia, 1874, 667.
51 Ibid, 1874,
668.
52 Report of Secretary of State.
53 Cincinnati Enquirer, July 19, 1875.
Vol. XXXI-5.
66
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
sade, which took place in that year,
and which they
claimed added to the Prohibition vote
from the ranks
of the Republicans.54 The
Democrats believed that its
vote had been increased partly as a
result of the sym-
pathy expressed in its platform of 1873
for the cause
of the laboring man.55 In
truth, national political con-
ditions were a disturbing element.
Of some significance were the municipal
elections in
the State in April, 1875. They could
not be interpreted
as a singular victory for either party.
There was much
scratching, indicating an unsettled
condition of opinion,
and quite a few partial Republican
victories. However
the Democrats considered the outcome as
being gener-
ally favorable. They carried Columbus,
Cleveland, Cin-
cinnati, Dayton, Newark and many of the
smaller
places.56
During the earlier part of the year no
decided issue
appeared upon which the October
election would be con-
tested. In January, it is true, the
Louisiana affair was
played with by both sides. Each report
from that state
was the occasion for partisan comment
by both sides.
Such remarks as that of the Ohio
Statesman to the effect
that on the Louisiana affair the Republican
party was
mad appeared frequently in the
Democratic press.57
A more decided issue arose early in
April over the
passage of the Grogan Bill by the state
legislature.
From the contents of the Bill58 there
was nothing to
54 Powell, Democratic Party of Ohio, 226.
Ibid., 226.
56 Ohio Statesman, April
8, 1875.
57 Ibid., February
11, 1875.
58 Appleton, Annual
Cyclopaedia, 1875, 605, "Be it enacted, etc., That
as liberty of conscience is not
forfeited by reason of conviction for
crime, or . .
detention in any penal, . . . or public asylum in
this state, no person in any such
institution shall be compelled to attend
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 67
warrant so much debate but the
circumstances surround-
ing its passage, when magnified, gave
to the bill a
curious aspect. The act provided for
the giving of sec-
tarian instruction in matters of
religion in the penal
reformatory institutions of the State.
While the bill
was pending, a letter from Mr. Grogan,
a Catholic and
the author of the measure, to a friend,
was made public.
The letter spoke of the bill as an act
of justice to the
Roman Catholic Church and said that its
passage had
been urged as a debt due by the
Democrats, then in the
majority in the legislature, to the
party members of that
faith.
At the same time the Cincinnati Catholic
Telegraph published some articles demanding the
passage of the bill. The connecting of
all these incidents
arrayed the Republican members against
the act. It
passed by a strict party vote and
immediately became a
party issue.59 The
discussion in the press, in some in-
stances, became ridiculously strained.
All efforts of the
Republicans centered on arousing the
prejudices of the
anti-Catholic and foreign elements.
Concerning the
Grogan Act, Harper's Weekly said,
"A bill was intro-
duced into the Ohio assembly by a Mr.
Grogan, one
plain object of which is stated in
several of the Ohio
papers to be, to prevent the lay
members of the Y. M.
C. A. from performing any religious
duties in the re-
form houses and other public
institutions and to confer
unusual privileges upon the Roman
Catholic priests."60
In some of the local papers whole pages
were devoted
worship . . . which is against the
dictate of his or her conscience;
and it shall be the duty of every
director . . . to permit ample and
equal facilities to all such persons for
receiving the ministrations of the
authorized clergymen of their own
religion . . . under such reason-
able rules as the trustees shall make .
59Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1875,
605.
60Harper's Weekly, quoted by Ohio Statesman, Arp. 29.
68
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
to discussion of this measure in which
it was declared
to guarantee to the Roman Catholics
opportunities for
proselyting which no other sect could
obtain or ask for.61
All kinds of dangers and every
conceivable harm would
result in the control of the government
by the Catholics,
it was prophesied. The school question
was dragged
in with the Catholic issue and gave
rise to many heated
discussions.
But as the time for the State political
conventions
drew near still other features of the
political situation
emerged. The Republicans believed their
success de-
pended upon nominating the right man
for governor.
As early as March a meeting in Columbus
of prominent
Republicans from all parts of the State
declared that a
good man, no side issues and the record
of the Repub-
lican party was what it would take to
win the fall elec-
tion.62 The caucus was
unanimous for Mr. Hayes.63
As the year advanced the idea that only
the strongest
man in the party would be able to
defeat Mr. Allen
became generally accepted by the
Republicans. In spite
of the emphatic and repeated statements
of Mr. Hayes
that he could not accept the nomination
if tendered, the
Republican press turned to him with
increasing appeals
through May and June.
On June 2, the state Republican
convention met in
Columbus. The platform adopted showed
no decided
sensibility to any issue upon which
victory in the cam-
paign would be staked. Concerning the
currency it said
that "that policy of finance
should be steadily pursued
which, without necessary shock to
business or trade will
For example, Cincinnati Gazette, quoted
by McConnelsville Herald,
April 9.
62 Ohio State Journal, March 25.
63 Williams, Rutherford Birchard
Hayes, I, 382.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 69
ultimately equalize the purchasing
capacity of the coin
and paper dollar."64 All
the enthusiasm of the conven-
tion was manifested in the selection of
a gubernatorial
candidate. Because of the repeated
refusal of Mr.
Hayes to have his name submitted, the
nomination of
Mr. Taft, of Cincinnati, was favorably
received at the
beginning of the balloting. But the
friends of Mr.
Hayes and those who understood the
situation in the
state so aroused the convention in
their appeals that
Mr. Hayes finally won the nomination in
what was
described as an "earthquake of
enthusiasm."65 In a
telegram to the convention, Mr. Hayes
accepted the
nomination.
Before the meeting of the Democratic
state conven-
tion occurred, a fight was anticipated
over the currency
question.66 It was generally
known that a large element
in the Democratic ranks within the
state favored an
inflation platform. This wing of the
party received its
strongest support from the Cincinnati Enquirer,
which
advocated inflation with all degrees of
fervor. On the
other hand, Senator Thurman, the
leading Democratic
party man within the State at that
time, was openly
committed to the earliest possible
return to specie pay-
ment. In regard to issues, the
Cincinnati Enquirer said
that the Republican party had declared
against a third
term for president, against a division
of school funds
and the union of church and state, and
it approved a
tariff for revenue, all of which the
Democrats would
likewise approve. "There is, then," continued the
Enquirer, "no live issue upon which the parties can be
64Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1875.
65 Ohio State
Journal, June 3.
66McConnelsville Herald, June 11.
70
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
divided, save that of finance. If the
Republican plat-
form in this respect is indorsed, there
is no reason why
we should have two political
organizations in Ohio."67
A few days later, June 17, the
Democratic state con-
vention met in Columbus. A spirit of
elation was ex-
hibited because of the favorable
prospects of the party in
the coming election, but underlying
this there was a
feeling of intense excitement because of
the questions
which it was foreseen would come before
the convention.
It was conceded that Mr. Allen would be
unopposed in
the nomination for governor, since he
had brought vic-
tory to the party two years before and
had served the
party creditably since. There was no
contention over
his re-nomination. But true to general
anticipation, a
contest arose over the currency.
The first controversy came in the
meeting of the
committee on platform. In this, the
hard-money group
won. But when the platform was brought
before the
general body of the convention for
adoption a minority
report was made favoring what was
called soft-money.
After a display of heated feeling, the
minority report
was adopted by a vote of 386 to 266.68
In this contest
soft money had won. Besides declaring
that the na-
tional banks were a nuisance and
demanding that the
government cease discrediting its own
currency, the plat-
form attacked the Republican policy
regarding the cur-
rency and proposed that its volume be
made and kept
equal to the wants of trade.69 Mr.
Allen accepted the
37 Cincinnati Enquirer, quoted by Ohio State Journal, June
15.
68Powell, Democratic Party of Ohio,
226.
69 Three important resolutions of the
Democratic state convention of
1875 were:
"That the contraction of the
currency heretofore made by the Re-
publican party, and the further
contraction proposed by it, with a view
to the forced resumption of specie
payment, has already brought disaster
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio
71
nomination of the convention for
governor and for lieu-
tenant-governor Mr. Cary was selected.
Since Mr. Cary
was only a recent convert to the
Democratic party, a
temperance worker and a labor man, the
spirit of the
convention is revealed in his
nomination.
The new currency policy of the
Democratic party
was one not all Democrats would agree
to, although
some of these remained loyal to the
party. The Ohio
Statesman, one of the best edited weekly newspapers in
the State in 1875, said in its issue of
the week following
the Democratic convention that it
considered this the
best declaration of principles that had
ever gone before
the people. But, "upon one
important question, however,"
it continued, "our life-long
convictions compel us to dis-
sent and that is upon the currency
question. There is
a virtual demand in the platform for an
increase in the
currency. We do not now believe nor
have we ever
believed, that the interest of the
people will be promoted
by flooding the country with
depreciated greenbacks.
We have always contended and now
contend that true
and substantial prosperity lies in the
direction of a sound
currency. Not that we believe in contraction,
but we
to the business of the country and
threatens it with general bankruptcy
and ruin. We demand that this policy be
abandoned, and that the volume
of currency be made and kept equal to
the wants of trade, leaving the
restoration of legal tenders to par with
gold to be brought about by
promoting the industries of the people,
and not by destroying them.
"That the policy already initiated
by the Republican party, of abolish-
ing legal tenders and giving national
banks all the power to furnish all
the currency, will increase the power of
an already dangerous monopoly
and the enormous burdens now oppressing
the people, without any com-
pensating advantage. And that we, who
oppose this policy, demand that
all the national bank circulation be
promptly and permanently retired, and
legal tenders issued in its place.
"That public interest demands that
the government should cease
to discredit its own currency, and
should make its legal tenders receivable
for public dues, except where respect
for the obligation of contracts re-
quire payment in coin; and that we favor
the payment of at least one-
half of the customs in legal
tenders." Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia,
1875, 607.
72
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
are totally and unalterably opposed to
drifting further
away from specie payment than we are at
present.
From the birthday of the Democratic
party, 'hard money'
has been the true Democratic
doctrine."70 It was further
stated in the same article that the
question could not
become strictly a party one because
Republicans as well
as Democrats were alike divided on the
issue. It is note-
worthy that, although the question did
become a party
issue in the state, and although the Statesmen
remained
true to the Democratic party, not one
time during the
campaign did it contain one word in
favor of the inflation
program advocated by the inflation
leaders.
THE CAMPAIGN.
With leaders chosen and issues drawn,
both sides
spent some time in preparing to carry
the contest to the
people. Meanwhile the press of the
state and nation
took up the Ohio campaign. Besides the
bearing the
election would have on the presidential
election the fol-
lowing year, the principal issue, which
was recognized
generally with the adoption of the
Democratic platform,
was one of considerable importance to
all sections of the
country and concerned vitally the
welfare of the two
major parties. While the inflation
demands of the Dem-
ocratic convention came as a surprise
to many even
within the ranks of the Democratic
party in the state,
it was commonly known that a large
element was advo-
cating a currency policy that would
appeal to numerous
groups in view of the existing
financial depression. The
whole East was startled by the
possibility of the coun-
7O Ohio Statesman, June 24.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio 73
try's being captured by the
inflationists.71 In fact the
conditions in Ohio were so favorable
for such a result
that it struck terror to the financial
interest of the
country. National politicians were not
eager to take
sides but to some it was impossible to
stand aloof.
One national figure that could not
avoid the sudden
departure of his party was Mr. Thurman.
At that time
he aspired to the Democratic nomination
of the follow-
ing year for the presidency. He had
openly declared
himself to be a hard-money man and in
such terms that
to recant would be an actual disgrace.
Ohio was his
home. What could he do? The papers over
the entire
country immediately saw that the action
of the state
convention had sacrificed Mr. Thurman
on the inflation
altar and had killed his chance for the
presidential nom-
ination.72 All shades of
forecast were advanced by the
press as to the position he would take.
But a few weeks
later when Mr. Thurman began his
activities in the in-
terest of the party, he showed that he
had not forsaken
his currency views nor his party.
As the Cincinnati Enquirer had
taken the forefront
in advocating the policy adopted by the
Democratic con-
vention, it led the press of the state
for those principles
in the campaign following. Before the
leading party
men inaugurated the vigorous speaking
tours that so
thoroughly aroused the state during the
months of July
and August, the Enquirer was
assiduously promulgating
its stand. Its cry was "greenbacks
and sufficient cur-
rency against national banks and
contraction."73 This
71For example, see Cincinnati
Enquirer, July 5, 8, and 9. See re-
print from Newark Advocate in
issue of July 5 and art. "Jay Gould's
Organ, etc." in issue of July 9.
72 Ohio State Journal, June 24,
(numerous reprints).
73 Cincinnati Enquirer, July 1.
74 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
theme was developed from almost every
conceivable
angle. "In the last twelve
years," it said, "there has not
been the slightest doubt about our
money. When the
panic of 1873 commenced the first
business of everybody
was to hoard the greenbacks as the
safest and best thing
going. They were a scarce commodity.
Not a bank in
the United States had enough of them.
They all closed
their doors on their depositors. What is
wanted is
plenty of greenbacks. Then interest
will come down
and business will revive."74 Such
were the currency
ideas of the inflationists. The
distressing conditions of
business were attributed to the lack of
greenbacks in
circulation and the way to get them
there, they main-
tained, was for the government to issue
more.
Concerning the economic depression the Enquirer
said, "Cast an eye up the Ohio
River and see the de-
struction of the iron industry. The
laboring people are
threatened, actually threatened, with
beggary and star-
vation. What is the election of this or
that man to office
in comparison with such a thing? It is
a small matter in
itself whether William Allen or General
Hayes is elected
Governor of Ohio, but it is a serious
concern whether
they have the means afforded them of
earning their daily
bread."75 Arguments
such as this were continued
throughout the campaign and many of
them went di-
rectly to the hearts of the western
people.
The Republican press, led in the state
at that time
by the Ohio State Journal, took
much of its argument
from eastern newspapers and magazines.
Many articles
were copied from New York Democratic
papers that
were unconditionally opposed to the
Democratic pro-
74 Cincinnati Enquirer, July 2.
75 Ibid., July 13.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio
75
gram in Ohio. Besides the inherent
force of such arti-
cles, they embittered the two wings of
the Democratic
party and pleased to no small degree
the opposing Re-
publicans. But in this campaign there
was no Ohio
party paper that led the Republicans as
the Cincinnati
Enquirer did the Democrats. It remained for the Re-
publican campaign speakers and journals
outside the
state to furnish the burden of
argument.
The Democrats were first to enter the
forensic arena.
Mr. Cary began speaking about the
middle of July,76 but
the official launching of the campaign
took place on the
twenty-first. On this latter date Mr.
Allen, Mr. Pen-
dleton
and Mr. Walker, of West Virginia,
made
speeches at Gallipolis to what were
then described as
"great gatherings."77 So
spectacular was this opening
of the Democratic campaign that it
deserves particular
mention. The people came by steamers,
carriages and
wagons to Gallipolis on that day and
each town or town-
ship coming in had its banner.78 These, with their
"greenback,"
"rag-baby" and "golden-calf" ideas, indi-
cate the popularity of the new currency
views of the
Democratic party.
Mr. Allen's speech was eagerly awaited,
as it was
expected to sound the keynote of the
Democratic cam-
paign. The inflationists were not
disappointed. The
major part of his address was devoted
to presenting the
76 Cincinnati Enquirer, July 19.
77 Ibid., July 22.
78 Some
of these mottoes were, "Public property struggles in the
grasp of the money kings. We are sans-culottes,
because Wall Street
has stripped us. We prefer the rag-baby
to the golden calf! The World
demands specie payment, - So did Judas
Iscariot. From a subsidized
press, the New York World, the
flesh and the devil, good Lord deliver
us. Greenbacks are the Government's
offspring and must not be dis-
owned. Greenbacks saved the Union and
let them avert starvation.
United the West and South rule forever.
Greenbacks are the motive
power of progress."--etc., etc., Cincinnati
Enquirer, July 22.
76
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
new currency views adopted at Columbus.
The Repub-
licans, Mr. Allen said, rise up and
call this money they
have issued "rag-money" and
they charge the Democrats
with wanting to ruin the country by
letting this same
money stand. The curtailing of the
circulating medium
has already put all manufacturers,
laborers and business
men on the verge of bankruptcy, and
"they still cry out,"
he continued, "more contraction. They
still clamor for
specie payment. Now this specie payment
is a thing
worth looking at. In the first place we
want to know
what makes a silver dollar worth
one-hundred cents?
If there be a bar of lead, a bar of
iron and a bar of gold
lying here, as long as they exist in
those bars they are
not circulating medium. A piece of pig
iron is just as
much money as a piece of gold until
public authority has
stamped it and said it shall be taken
for so much. It is
public authority and that alone which
gives a piece of
metal its characteristics of money and
makes it circulat-
ing medium." 79 This, of course,
was the most radical
doctrine held by the inflationists but
it was wildly ap-
plauded by men who were out of work,
men whose busi-
nesses had failed and farmers who could
not sell their
crops. To others it sounded reasonable.
In discussing the Resumption Act of
January, he said,
"The party that is howling all
over the country for
specie payment passed a currency act in
the last Congress
and they couldn't tell, to save their
own souls, whether
that act was an act of inflation or
contraction. One por-
tion of the Republican party swears it
was contraction;
the other swears it was inflation; but
whatever act it was
they wouldn't debate it or give any
reason for passing
79 Ohio Statesman, July 29. Cincinnati Enquirer, July 22.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 77
it. They put off the day which was to
carry deliverance
to the nation for nearly four years.
Now, if specie pay-
ment was such a good thing, why didn't
they put it into
operation right away? Because they know
the presi-
dential election would have to occur
before the expira-
tion of the four years." 80
Such arguments were persuasive when
spoken by
Mr. Allen, who, above all else, was an
orator. He had
wit. He used effective sarcasm. He was
humorous.
Because of his deep sonorous voice he
was often re-
ferred to as "Fog Horn
Allen." But whenever he spoke
he was listened to by both friend and
enemy, regardless
of whether they called him "Bill
Allen," "Honest Old
Bill Allen," or "Fog
Horn."
With Mr. Allen at Gallipolis was Mr.
Pendleton,
whose speech had rather a peculiar
tone. He did not
follow the inflation principles to the
extent of Mr. Allen
although he had been regarded as a
"greenback" man
since the national Democratic
convention of 1868. In
his address he said, "I speak for
myself alone. I do
not assume to speak for the Democratic
party. Its con-
vention has spoken for it. But I
believe I interpret
truly its opinions and platform when I
say that we are
in favor of coin as the basis of the
currency."81 He ad-
vocated the earliest possible return to
specie payment
and said that "we are not now and
never have been in
favor of an unlimited issue of
greenbacks or bank
notes." 82 He denounced
repudiation. Evidently he
was not in perfect accord with the
radical wing that had
won the state convention, or the
outburst in certain sec-
80 Cincinnati Enquirer, July 22.
81 Ibid, July 22.
82Ibid., July 22.
78
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
tions of the country had been
sufficient to change his
opinions. So for the remainder of the
campaign he did
not take the part that would be
expected of one so prom-
inently associated with the origin of
the greenback
movement.
Mr. Cary, from this time, assumed much
of the
prominence formerly possessed by Mr.
Pendleton. He
was an advocate of the doctrine held by
Mr. Allen and
in his efforts he was unsurpassed by
any man who took
part in the campaign.
Although the Republican convention was
held first,
its active campaign was begun later
than that of the
Democrats. On July 31, Mr. Hayes and
Senator Sher-
man inaugurated the Republican speaking
campaign at
Marion. By devoting most of his address
to an attack
on the currency doctrines of Mr. Allen,
Mr. Hayes be-
gan an offensive battle. Although he
stated the grounds
on which he believed in a specie
currency only, and de-
sired an early return to that standard,
the greater por-
tion of his speech related to the
financial doctrines of
the Democrats.83 He quoted
at length from the speeches
of Mr. Cary and Governor Allen. He also
gave ex-
tracts from the speech of Senator
Thurman, delivered
in the Senate in April of 1874. He
quoted from the
Democratic state platforms, emphasizing
the resolution
of the 1873 convention on the currency,
to show the in-
consistency of the present position of
that party.
But it remained for Mr. Sherman, the
Republican
champion of specie resumption in
Congress, to disclose
those principles and facts upon which a
specie currency
was based. Mr. Sherman thoroughly
understood the
financial situation in the United
States and in this speech
Williams, Rutherford Birchard Hayes, I,
392-7.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 79
at Marion he set forth clearly and
brilliantly those prin-
ciples and convictions on which he
based his stand.84 He
undertook to explain why a depreciated
currency was
undesirable, why gold only could be the
standard, and
why, so long as a depreciated currency
remained, the
business of the country would be in an
unhealthy state.
He defended the acts of Congress
regarding finance,
and concerning the Resumption Act he
stated that the
reason it was not to be executed until
1879 was in order
to give debtors time to prepare for
this return to an
equal standard. The arguments used in
the speeches of
Mr. Sherman and Mr. Hayes at Marion on
July 31,
formed the gist of almost all of their
speeches during
the entire campaign.
On the same day that the Republicans
began their
canvass, Mr. Thurman delivered a speech
in which he
said, "We do not believe in an
irredeemable paper cur-
rency, we believe that such a currency
must necessarily
fluctuate in value, lead to speculation
and extravagance,
and benefit none except money-shavers
and speculators.
We believe that our currency should
consist of gold and
silver, and, for convenience, paper
convertible at par
into gold and silver at will of holder.
In this we concur
with the uniform teachings of the
Democratic party; with
the opinion of every really eminent
political economist
the world over, with the lessons of
experience found in
the history of every commercial nation,
and with the
views of almost the entire body of
business men of
America.
"It has been roundly asserted that
the platform of
our late convention means just the
opposite of our opin-
84 Ohio State Journal, August 2.
80
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
ion; that it means an irredeemable
paper currency now
and forever. But certainly no such idea
is expressed in
the platform, nor do I believe it is
entertained by a ma-
jority of those who approve it. It
denounces contrac-
tion, but does not say in plain words,
give us inflation.
What it does say is 'that the volume of
currency be
made and kept equal to the wants of
trade,' and that is
all. All men must agree to that. To say
so is a mere
truism, a mere abstraction. The
practical question is,
Have we that volume now? And upon this
question the
platform is silent."85
The words of Mr. Thurman speak for
themselves.86
In comparing his expressions with those
of Mr. Allen
the division of the Democratic
leadership is revealed.
Many Democrats held the same views as
did Mr. Thur-
man although they did not desert the
party. The Cleve-
land Plain Dealer, in commenting on "Judge" Thur-
man's speech said that he held
precisely the view that it
believed in. The Plain Dealer admitted
that there was
a wide diversity of opinion on the
subject of finance and
it maintained that the widest latitude
should be allowed
everyone on that question.87 This
was the same position
that the Ohio Statesman had
already taken. But such
a division among Democratic leaders
regarding what
was being made the chief issue
strengthened the argu-
ments of the Republicans.
There was a minor issue, or topic, in
the campaign
that played some part in the final
outcome. This was
the Catholic question, brought in by
the passage of the
85 Ohio State Journal, August 2.
86 Randall and Ryan, History of Ohio,
IV, 332-3, says that Mr. Thur-
man finally joined with Mr. Allen and
others in advocating inflation but
I found no evidence to support that
statement.
87 Cleveland Plain Dealer, August 2.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 81
Grogan Bill early in the year. The
Republicans claimed
that through the Democratic party the
American school
system was being threatened. Mr. Hayes
stressed in
his first campaign speech the situation
under which the
Grogan Bill was passed.88 It
also formed the substance
of many campaign speeches and the basis
for many po-
litical documents. But concerning the
school question
the Democratic platform declared everything
that the
Republican platform stated.89 In
fact, efforts were made
by those Democrats who did not concur
in the financial
theories of the inflationists to make
this the foremost
topic.90 Although they did
not succeed in this, they
vigorously defended the record of the
Democrats.
A mid-campaign survey was somewhat
discouraging
to the Republicans in spite of the
efforts of their able
leaders. The enthusiasm for the
Democrats' new doc-
trine had not abated. An echo of the
situation was
sounded in an eastern journal.
"The times are hard," it
said, "and labor is scarce, and
Cary speaks to workmen
out of employment that the cause of the
trouble is in the
want of rag money, that a piece of
paper, if printed by
the government is as good as gold * * *
and that
if the amount of paper dollars were
indefinitely in-
creased, there would be a universal
revival of industry,
workmen would have enormous wages, and
happiness
and plenty would abound." 91 Grave
concern was now
being felt by many who had earlier only
ridiculed the
88Williams, Rutherford Birchard
Hayes, I, 397-400.
89Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1875, 607.
90 The Ohio Statesman of Sept. 2,
said that the Republicans were
turning aside from the money question
and were beginning to give more
attention to the Catholic and school
question. The speeches of Senator
Thurman about this time were being given
entirely to a discussion of
this question. On the last Saturday in
August and the first one in
September such speeches were made by him
in Cleveland.
91Harpers Weekly, September 11.
Vol. XXXI-6.
82
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
ideas of Mr. Allen. "With that
frank and concerted
ignorance of his which has made him the
favorite of the
most stupid section of the Democratic
party, Governor
Allen," declared the New York Tribune,
"does not even
care to consider an argument addressed
to his intelli-
gence. He roars out, 'Don't talk to me
about principles
or theories. The times are too hard for
that. Theories
wont fill a working man's belly,' and
his crowds answer
with rapturous plaudits."92 And
it was true that Mr.
Allen was receiving tremendous applause
wherever he
spoke. Mr. Cary, too, was speaking to
enormous crowds
and from them no discouragement was
perceived.
So far in the campaign the only
Republican of a na-
tional character from outside the state
who appeared be-
fore the voters in behalf of the state
ticket was Mr.
Morton. His speeches were not ones that
would win
confidence on the currency issue. He
came into the
state to revive the issues of the Civil
War. A very
pointed criticism, in this respect, was
advanced by the
Nation when it declared: "The currency question is again
coming up and is again assuming a
threatening aspect
and exerting a depressing influence on
the business of
the country, mainly because the party
in power for the
last fifteen years has either avoided
dealing with it at
all, or has only dealt with it in a
half-hearted and in-
sincere way. Senator Morton's speech
shows clearly
that the Republican chiefs do not wish
to go before the
people on the currency question and
have nothing very
positive to say about it. They have ten
words to offer
about apocryphal murders at the South
for one about
finance." 93 Before the
campaign opened the Republi-
92 New York Tribune, quoted by the Ohio State Journal, Sept. 22.
93Nation, August 19.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 83
cans had decided to send such men as
Conklin, Blaine,
Dawes and others of equal honor into
the state because
of the effect the result would have on
the presidential
election.94 But the only one
of these who actually came
was Mr. Morton, and his currency views
were of no
great aid to a party advocating the
retirement of green-
backs.
But the outcome of the Ohio election
was giving no
little concern at this time to the
"Independents," of
whom E. L. Godkin, Horace White, Gen.
J. D. Cox,
Samuel Bowles, Chas. Nordhoff, Murat
Halstead,
Henry and Charles Francis Adams, Jr.,
and Carl Schurz
constituted a sort of national
committee.95 Mr. Schurz,
the most influential, if not the most
prominent Inde-
pendent then, had left the United
States in the spring
for a visit to Europe. But before
leaving a conference
had been held at which it was agreed
that they would
either impose their liberal views on one
of the major
parties or enter the presidential race
in 1876 as a dis-
tinct party.96 At an early
stage in the Ohio campaign
the Independents saw in the election of
Mr. Allen a
mortal blow to their party. On July 31,
Mr. Charles
Francis Adams, Jr., wrote to Mr. Schurz
saying that,
"Allen's election will be our
destruction; his nomination
on the rag-money issue was a defiance
and insult to us,
and his success would render us
contemptible * * *
The weapon with which to kill him is
the German vote.
It is the only effective weapon at
hand, and you are its
holder. You must come back in time to
strike in just at
the close with all the freshness and
prestige of your re-
94 Ohio Statesman, Feb. 25.
Carl Schurz, Reminiscences, III,
362.
Carl Schurz, Speeches, III, 159.
84
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
cent German reception." 97 Others
followed Mr. Adams
in urging Mr. Schurz to return and
participate in the
Ohio campaign.98 But Mr.
Schurz was in favor of
leaving the campaign to work itself
out. Because of the
bearing the contest in Ohio would have
on the presiden-
tial campaign in 1876 he deemed it
sound policy for the
Independents, as such, not to
demonstratively attach
themselves to either party.99
His refusal to return to
the United States in time to do
anything in the Ohio
contest was not accepted. Mr. Adams and
his friends
repeated their letters asking him to
use his influence to
defeat the inflation principles that
would, with success
in Ohio, gain strength throughout the
country. On
August 18, Mr. Schurz wrote to Charles
Francis
Adams, Jr., saying, that out of respect
for the opinions
of his friends he was returning
immediately to the
United States to participate in the
Ohio canvass. On
September 27, he spoke at Turner Hall
in Cincinnati.100
As a political address, as a
presentation of the prin-
ciples on which the chief issue of the
campaign rested,
as an appeal to the
independent-thinking voter, this
speech surpasses any other in the political
campaign in
Ohio. Before any discussion of the
currency issue was
entered, Mr. Schurz made some
preliminary statements
in regard to his relation to the two
major parties in the
contest and, in the clearest language,
he gave his reasons
for accepting the invitation to address
the people of the
state on the currency. He denied that
he came in the
interest of the Republican party, whose
errors and po-
liticians he had for sometime opposed. "It
is, there-
97Carl Schurz, Speeches, III,
157.
98 Carl Schurz, Reminiscences, III,
363.
99 Carl Schurz, Speeches, III,
160-1.
100 Carl Schurz, Ibid., III,
161-2.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 85
fore," he said, "no
sentimental partiality for the Repub-
lican party that brings me here."
101 And to the Demo-
crats he reviewed those conditions and
circumstances un-
der which he had formerly joined with
them in oppos-
ing the Republican party. He recited
the currency doc-
trines avowed by the Democratic party
at the time he
joined with them. They were the
principles of a specie
standard. He impressively stressed the
fact that he
came to Ohio to speak as an Independent
in the interest
of sound money and he emphasized
sufficiently that he
came not as an opponent of the
Demorcrats but a de-
fender of a specie standard currency.
The major por-
tion of his speech was devoted to the
evils that would
result from the execution of the
doctrines adopted by
the Democratic state convention and
advocated in the
campaign by Governor Allen and Mr.
Cary.
It was to no small audience that Mr.
Schurz spoke.
Every entrance to the building at
Cincinnati was
packed.102 And those who
were not able to hear him
had many opportunities to read what he
had said from
the numerous copies of his speech that
were printed and
circulated. Following this address at
Cincinnati, Mr.
Schurz made a tour of the state. He
spoke in both
English and German, and to the German
people he
spoke with telling effect.
The conclusion of the campaign
witnessed the issu-
ing of much political material by both
sides but no ad-
ditional arguments of weight were
advanced. The
work that counted had already been
performed. Party
leaders attempted to show a feeling of
confidence but
conservative spectators foresaw nothing
to indicate an
101 Carl Schurz, Speeches, III, 163.
102 Carl Schurz, Reminiscences, III,
363.
86 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications
overwhelming victory for either party. When the vote
was analyzed the strength of inflation was disclosed.
RESULTS OF THE CAMPAIGN AND THE NATIONAL
CONVENTION OF 1876.
Election day was the twelfth of October. At noon
on the thirteenth the Democrats conceded the election to
Republicans by a majority of between ten and fifteen
thousand.103 Returns had, however, come in slowly and
were very incomplete when the election was admitted a
Republican victory. In the afternoon of the thirteenth
Mr. Hayes' majority began to decrease as a result of
late returns. Steadily this was continued until the elec-
tion was again declared undecided. The Democratic
headquarters were closed to the public. People every-
where became wild with excitement when it was learned
that the election was again in doubt. With almost every
late return the Republican majority was cut down. The
whole state was thrown into confusion - but it did not
last long. The reduction was not enough to overcome
the great lead given Mr. Hayes in the early returns.
His majority was finally declared to be 5,544.104 The
vote was the largest ever cast in the state up to that
time. In a comparison of the returns of 1874 with
those of 1875, it is found that both parties increased
their vote in every county in the state, with the excep-
tion of Cuyahoga, in which the Democratic vote dimin-
ished nearly two thousand.105
103 Cleveland Plain Dealer, October 14.
104Report of Secretary of
State, 1875, 227.
Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1875, 607.
Governor
Lieutenant-Governor
Hayes, Rep. ............ 297,817 Young, Rep. ............ 297,931
Allen, Dem. ............ 292,273 Cary, Dem. ............. 287,990
Odell, Proh ............ 2,593 Thompson, Proh. ........ 8,630
105 Report of Secretary of
State, 1875, 228-231.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 87
While the Republicans acclaimed the
victory a great
success for the party, the Democrats
attempted to ex-
plain the reasons for their defeat. Mr.
Sherman at-
tributed the success of the Republicans
to the speeches
on the currency of Mr. Hayes and
himself.106 The Cin-
cinnati Enquirer maintained that Democratic defeat was
the result of Democratic interference
in New York.
"The state election
yesterday," it said, "was marked by
events of most extraordinary character.
The Demo-
cratic ticket was assailed, and the
platform upon which
it was nominated bitterly opposed by
the organs of the
so-called Democrats of New York. They
urgently called
upon the people to beat our nominees
and to elect our
Republican opponents. That it had some
influence upon
the result is beyond question. There
are thousands of
Democrats in Ohio who formerly lived in
New York
and who keep up connections with their
old homes
through the medium of New York papers.
We thus
lost very considerably through this
eastern interference
in our politics. But this was not all.
The wealthy Dem-
ocrats of New York contributed large
sums in behalf of
Hayes." 107 On the same day the Enquirer made this
criticism the Cleveland Plain Dealer
gave as the reasons
for the Democratic defeat an
unfortunately worded
platform and a specious charge of
improper legislation
that played upon the prejudices of the
people.108 It also
charged the Republicans with fraud and
pointed, in sup-
port of its charge, to the fact that
the Democrats had
carried those places where "brawn
and muscle" rule and
that the Republicans had made their
gains in large
105 Sherman,
Recollections, I, 521.
107 Cincinnati Enquirer, Oct. 13.
108 Cleveland
Plain Dealer, October 13.
88
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
places where repeating could be played
to advantage.109
It was true that the large Republican
gains were made
in the cities. Cuyahoga alone gave Mr.
Hayes a ma-
jority of 6,046 votes, which was more
than his entire
majority over Mr. Allen. In this
respect a map showing
the Democratic and Republican counties
(see map, page
97) is interesting.
The Ohio Statesman declared that
the election was
no surprise to those who understood the
fight the Demo-
crats had to make. "The wonder
will be," it held, "that
the Republican ticket did not have a
much larger ma-
jority than the returns at present
indicate. The Demo-
cratic party of Ohio had not alone the
Republican party
of this state, but the entire nation to
contend with." 110
And in spite of the effect of the
public school ques-
tion, which it would be almost
impossible to determine
definitely, the enormous vote given the
Democratic party
represented to a large extent the
inflation sentiment in
Ohio in 1875. It was a mere evasion, so
the St. Louis
Globe declared, to ignore, in the light of the recent elec-
tion in Ohio, the strength of inflation
ideas in the coun-
try.111
In addition to the influence the
Democratic inter-
ference from outside the state had on
bringing victory
to the Ohio Republicans, the effect of
Mr. Schurz'
speeches on the Independent and German
vote in the
state was of considerable importance.
The chairman
of the state Republican committee
ascribed much of the
credit to him for the victory gained
and offered to pay
the expenses Mr. Schurz had incurred in
coming into
109 Cleveland Plain Dealer, October 13.
110 Ohio Statesman, Oct. 14.
111 St. Louis Globe, quoted by the Ohio
State Journal, October 19.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 89
the state.112 But this offer
Mr. Schurz refused to accept,
saying that he was glad to have had the
opportunity to
aid in the cause of sound money.113
Mr. Charles Fran-
cis Adams, Jr., who had been the first
to advocate Mr.
Schurz' participation in the campaign,
wrote to him
from Boston saying, "I got home
this morning serene in
the knowledge that old Bill Allen's
grey and gory scalp
was safely dangling at your
girdle."114
Although the Republicans were
victorious they were
not in themselves credited with
winning. A criticism of
note was made by the Nation when
it declared that "the
Republican party will probably
hereafter appear every-
where as the champion of sound currency,
simply be-
cause it has been proved in Ohio that
the cause of sound
currency is the popular and winning
one. But, having
made this admission," continued
the Nation, "we must
earnestly warn all friends of reform
against the notion
that the Republican party as an
organization, such as it
is and with its present leaders, is in
any way entitled to
the credit of the Ohio victory. On the
contrary, to at-
tribute to it any such credit would be
a serious offense
against the cause of honest
government." 115 The Re-
publican party was charged with being
responsible for
the danger to which the country had
been exposed by
Mr. Allen and his associates. By its
failure to treat the
currency question as one of prime
importance and its re-
fusal to make it in a sense a party
issue, the Republican
party had, the Nation said,
prepared the way for the
serious assaults that had been made on
the public credit.
112 Schurz, Speeches,
III, 217.
113 Ibid., III, 215-6.
114 Ibid.
115 Nation, October
21.
90
Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications
But, in spite of such criticism, the
result of the election
was a Republican victory.
One more stand was made by the
inflation Demo-
crats of Ohio, and that was in the
National Convention
of 1876. The hardest fight in the
convention was on the
money question. The platform denounced
the resump-
tion clause of the act of 1875 and
called for its repeal.116
Five members of the committee on
resolutions objected
to the demand for repeal and offered to
the convention
a dissenting report. However, the
substitute offered by
Mr. Ewing, a man who had worked hard
for the infla-
tion doctrines in Ohio, was the cause
of indescribable
commotion. He offered to strike out the
clause for the
repeal of the Resumption Act and to
insert a more dras-
tic clause reading:
"The law for the resumption of
specie payment on the
first of January, 1879, having been
enacted by the Republican
party without deliberation in Congress
or discussion before the
people and being both ineffective to
secure its object, and highly
injurious to the business of the
country, ought to be forthwith
repealed." 117
The Democratic platform went on record
as favor-
ing specie payment, but its objection
to the Resumption
Act was that it was a hindrance to
resumption rather
than an aid. It was charged that no
preparation was
being made to meet payment or exchange
of greenbacks.
Mr. Ewing attacked the platform because
he claimed
that the Democrats inferred that they
wanted resump-
tion earlier than the date fixed in the
act of 1875.
When Mr. Ewing attacked the use of bank
notes
and the clause in the platform relative
to resumption,
116Appleton, Annual Cyclopaedia, 1876,
785.
117 National
Democratic Convention, Proceedings, 100.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 91
the convention at once became a scene
of turmoil. The
galleries became so disorderly that
they had to be emp-
tied. Mr. Voorhees, of Indiana,
following Mr. Ewing
said that New York had led the
Democratic party for
twelve years and each time to
disaster.118 He asserted,
as did Mr. Ewing, that he spoke for the
Mississippi Val-
ley and the West. After several hours
of heated debate
and parliamentary wrangling in which it
seemed that
the party was on the verge of disruption,
a vote was
taken which resulted in the defeat of
Mr. Ewing's reso-
lution.
It was a mighty attempt on the part of
Mr. Ewing
and the inflation element of the
Democratic party to cap-
ture the convention for the
anti-national bank and the
anti-resumption interest of the
country. The final ef-
fort was made in the nomination of Mr.
Allen for Presi-
dent. Here again Mr. Ewing was the
spokesman and
in a short but fiery speech he declared
Mr. Allen to be
the choice of the West, the defender of
the toiling
masses and a statesman, the compeer of
Clay and Web-
ster.119 On the first ballot
Mr. Allen received only the
votes of Ohio and West Virginia. Mr.
Tilden was seen
to be the choice of the convention and
on the second
ballot received the number of votes
necessary for his
nomination.120 Thus this
effort on the part of the green-
back Democrats of Ohio to swing the
national conven-
tion to the currency doctrines of the
opponents of specie
payment failed.
With the success of the Republicans in
Ohio and the
election of Mr. Hayes as Governor, hard
money was
118 National
Democratic Convention, Proceedings, 107.
119 Ibid., 137-8.
120 Ibid., 144-6.
92 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications
fairly on the road to victory in other
parts of the coun-
try. Iowa had declared against an
inflation program
on the same day as Ohio but the result
there was not so
important as the same result here. At
the time of the
election in this state a similar
campaign was under way
in Pennsylvania, with the Democrats
favoring a plat-
form analogous to that of the Ohio
Democrats121 and
the Republicans opposing such
principles. As Mr.
Hayes was looked upon for the nonce as
the leading
advocate of sound money he was invited
to participate
in the Pennsylvania contest for that
cause. The latter
part of October, Mr. Hayes went to
Pennsylvania and
for ten days toured the state, speaking
at Reading, Phil-
adelphia, Bethlehem, Boston, Allentown
and many other
places. He was flatteringly honored
throughout the
state, and in Philadelphia a great
celebration was given
in honor of the victory Mr. Hayes had
gained in Ohio.
This participation in the Pennsylvania
campaign,
and especially with the success of
sound money in that
state, increased enormously Mr. Hayes'
prominence in
the country.122 As the
currency tended more and more
to assume the aspect of a national
issue in the presiden-
tial campaign of the following year,
the name of Mr.
Hayes became more firmly attached to
the leadership of
the sound money doctrine.
Even with the conclusion of the Ohio
election, papers
in all parts of the United States began
to urge him for
the presidency.123 From this
time on a repeated and con-
tinual flood of letters, newspaper
articles and public
speeches improved the prospects of this
Ohio man.
121Annual Register, 1875,
310-11.
122Williams, Rutherford Birchard
Hayes, I, 407-8.
123Ibid., 406.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in Ohio 93
And with the development of
uncompromisable antagon-
isms between other strong Republican
leaders, it be-
came more clearly evident to the
forecasters of national
conditions that the neutral position of
Mr. Hayes made
his chances for the nomination
extremely good. In an
article by the New York Sun of
May 9, the situation is
portrayed as follows:
"All the signs continue to point to
the nomination of Gov-
ernor Hayes of Ohio as the Republican candidate for
President.
Mr. Hayes became known throughout the
country by his brilliant
success in defeating Governor Allen in
the state election in Ohio
last year. Previous to that time, but
little had been heard of
him outside of the state; but that event
at once made him con-
spicuous and marked his name upon the
list of candidates for
President.
"Greatly to his advantage, however,
it did not render him
so prominent as to excite those
antagonisms and animosities
which necessarily rise up against the
foremost men on the stage
of public life * * * . Each of the more
celebrated aspirants
and their friends with them, would
rather have him than either
of their immediate rivals. He will be
nominated, if such be his
fate, as Lincoln was nominated in 1860,
or Pierce in 1852, or
Polk in 1844. He is that kind of a
neutral man who is always
taken when the powerful chiefs can only
succeed in foiling each
other."124
Such proved to be the case when the
Republican na-
tional convention met at Cincinnati in
June. Mr. Hayes
was far from being the most popular man
on the first
ballot. The nomination appeared to lie
between Mr.
Blaine, Mr. Morton and Mr. Bristow. But
the rivalry
between these men would not permit of
the nomination
of either. Up until the seventh and
final ballot, Mr.
Blaine was much in the lead of any
other candidate, but
on that ballot Mr. Hayes gained two
hundred and sev-
124New York Sun, quoted by Williams, Rutherford Birchard Hayes,
I, 438-9.
94 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications
enty-one votes and was declared by the
president to be
the nominee of the convention.125
In the platform adopted by the
Republicans it was
declared that the pledge of the
government, which prom-
ised a return to specie payment, would
be fulfilled at the
"earliest practicable period.126
The party was proud of
the stand it had taken in regard to
specie payment and
there was no apparent demand for
delaying the process
of resumption. In fact, a substitute
for the currency
resolution adopted by the convention
was offered by
Mr. E. J. Davis, of Texas, favoring a
speedier return to
a specie standard than the Act of 1875
provided for.127
This, however, was lost and the party
was contented to
carry out the program already begun.
The 1875 political campaign in Ohio had
served a
valuable purpose. It was responsible
for the placing of
Mr. Hayes' name on the Republican list
of presidential
possibilities, which resulted in his
nomination and elec-
tion to the presidency. And it settled,
so far as the
major parties in the United States were
concerned, the
important currency question of that
time. With the re-
fusal of both the Democrat and
Republican parties to
accept the inflation doctrines, the
Greenback party,
which had its origin in 1874, gained
many adherents
from the ranks of both organizations.
Mr. Cary, with
his defeat in Ohio, was one of these.
Because of the
prominence he had gained in the Ohio
campaign he was
nominated by the Greenback national
convention of
1876 for the vice-presidency.128 In case Mr. Peter
125Tweedy, History of the Republican
National Conventions, 1856-
1908, 156-7.
126 Ibid., 147.
127 Ibid., 145.
128Haynes, Third Party
Movements, 112-3.
The Political Campaign of 1875 in
Ohio 95
Cooper declined the nomination for the
presidency, Mr.
Allen was mentioned as the second
choice.129 So, what
the Democrats of Ohio proposed gained
strength in the
Greenback party. But with the passing
of the Ohio
campaign the greatest danger of an
unsound money be-
ing adopted by the government of the
United States had
been averted.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
NEWSPAPERS.
Cincinnati Daily Enquirer.
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
McConnelsville Herald.
Ohio State Journal.
Ohio Statesman.
MAGAZINES.
Harpers Weekly.
The Nation.
BIOGRAPHICAL SOURCES.
Biographical Cyclopaedia and Portrait
Gallery with an Historic
Sketch of the State of Ohio, 6 vols. Cincinnati, 1895.
Biographical Encyclopaedia of Ohio of the Nineteenth
Century.
Cincinnati, 1876.
Burton, Theodore E. John
Sherman. (American Statesman
Series). Boston, 1906.
Grove, Chas. Centennial History of
Cincinnati and Represen-
tative Citizens. Chicago, 1904.
History of Cincinnati and Hamilton
County Ohio. Cincinnati,
1894.
History of Ross and Highland Counties
Ohio. Cleveland, 1880.
Lee. History of the City of Columbus.
New York and Chicago,
1892.
National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, 13 vols. New
York, 1892-1906.
Schurz, Carl. The Reminiscences of
Carl Schurz. New York,
1913.
Sherman, John. Recollections of Forty
years in the House,
Senate and Cabinet, 2 vols. Boston, 1906.
Standard History of Ross County Ohio.
New York and Chicago,
1917.
129 Ibid.,
113.
96 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications Williams, Charles Richard. Life of Rutherford Birchard Hayes, 2 vols. Boston, 1914. Bancroft, Frederick. Speeches, Correspondence and Political papers of Carl Schurz, 7 vols. New York, 1913. MISCELLANEOUS. Annual Register. London, 1758- Appleton. Amerivan Annual Cyclopaedia. New York, 1861- 1895. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Annual Report. (Ohio). 1877- 1913. The Congressional Record. Curtis, Francis. Republican Party, 1854-1904, 2 vols. New York, 1904. Haynes, Fred E. Third Party Movements since the Civil War. Iowa City, 1916. Ohio Archaeological and Historical Society Publication. Colum- bus, 1887- Ohio. Executive Documents. Columbus, 1836-1916. Powell, Thomas E. The Democratic Party of the State of Ohio, 2 vols. Columbus, 1913. Randall and Ryan. History of Ohio, 5 vols. New York, 1912. Rhodes. History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850-, 7 vols. New York. Speeches and Reports on Finance and Taxation by John Sherman. New York, 1879. State Board of Agriculture. Annual Report. (Ohio). 1847- 1913. Tweedy, John. History of the Republican National Conven- tions from 1856 to 1918. Danbury, Conn., 191O. |
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Vol. XXXI-7. (97) |
THE POLITICAL CAMPAIGN OF 1875 IN
OHIO*
BY FORREST WILLIAM CLONTS, M. A.
SIGNIFICANCE OF CAMPAIGN.
As a purely state contest, the
political campaign of
1875 in Ohio was of more than ordinary
significance. It
was unusually long, intensely
conducted, bitterly fought
and the conclusion might be interpreted
to have decided
at least one very important question
for the people of
the entire country. Widespread
attention served to
arouse the citizens of Ohio to the meaning
of the prin-
cipal issue involved. Outside of Ohio
certain sections of
the country participated to such an
extent that the re-
sult of the election was partly
attributed to this external
influence. It is not often that single
state elections at-
tract such extensive notice as was
given this one. It
was in this campaign of 1875 that one
question became
very positively decided for the two
major parties of the
country. It was also in this campaign
that a man was
placed in a position for receiving the
presidential nomi-
nation of his party. Although all the
officers to be
elected were to fill state positions
there was only one
question injected into the contest
involving the welfare
of Ohio alone.
Sometime before the actual canvass of
the state was
begun and even before any issues were
definitely decided
upon, attention was directed to Ohio
because of the
bearing it was conceded the result
would have on the
*A thesis presented for the degree of
Master of Arts in the Ohio
State University.
(38)