Ohio History Journal

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"SUNSET" COX, OHIO'S CHAMPION OF COMPROMISE IN

"SUNSET" COX, OHIO'S CHAMPION OF COMPROMISE IN

THE SECESSION CRISIS OF 1860-1861

 

by DAVID LINDSEY

Associate Professor of History, Baldwin-Wallace College

 

Among the political leaders of the "blundering generation" of

1860-61, no one deplored the tragic drift of events toward armed

conflict more than Samuel Sullivan Cox of Ohio. Son of a pioneer

printer from New Jersey, Cox had been born and reared in Zanes-

ville, and schooled at Ohio University and Brown University.1 Mar-

ried to the daughter of a well-to-do grain merchant, Alvah T. Buck-

ingham, he had practiced law briefly in partnership with George E.

Pugh in Cincinnati before moving to Columbus, where he became

editor and part owner of the Daily Ohio Statesman in 1853.2 Here

with a florid, front-page editorial describing a spectacular sunset, he

won for himself the nickname "Sunset," which not only fitted exactly

his initials but also proved a useful handle for the voters to attach

to an aspiring politician.3

A lifelong Democrat, Cox in 1856 was first elected to congress

from Ohio's twelfth district, which then included Licking, Franklin,

and Pickaway counties. At the national capital he immediately

identified himself with the Douglas wing of the Democratic party

in the struggle over the admission of Kansas.4 As the storm clouds

of impending conflict thickened in 1859 and 1860, Cox urged mod-

eration, a conciliatory spirit, and full respect for the rights of all

 

1 William V. Cox and Milton H. Northrup, Life of Samuel Sullivan Cox (Syracuse,

1899), 22-39, 43-46, 54-56; Norris F. Schneider, Y Bridge City: The Story of Zanes-

ville and Muskingum County (Cleveland, 1950), 78-115; General Catalogue of the

Ohio University 1804-1857 (Athens, 1857), 12-13; personal interview with the late

Professor Thomas N. Hoover, historian of Ohio University; Brown University records

in the registrar's and alumni offices. The John Hay Library of Brown University has a

substantial collection of Cox's correspondence written in later years.

2 James Buckingham, The Ancestors of Ebenezer Buckingham . . . and His Descend-

ants (Chicago, 1892), 96-98; Cox and Northrup, Samuel Sullivan Cox, 59; S. S. Cox,

The Scholar as the True Progressive and Conservative (Columbus, 1852).

3 Ohio Statesman, May 19, 1853.

4 Charles J. Foster (Democratic national committeeman) to Cox, August 21, 1856,

William Bell to Cox, May 20, 1856, in Cox Papers, Brown University Library; Ohio

Statesman, September 21, 23, October 4, 1856; Ohio State Journal (Columbus), Octo-

ber 11, November 10, 1856.

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