""Ill I (! 1 I ill t f 'iJ ' ml i Glass, COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT NOBLE LIVING AND GRAND ACHIEVEMENT. GIANTS OF THE REPUBLIC EMBRACING THE LIVES, DEEDS, AND PERSONAL TRAITS OF EMINENT STATESMEN, GREAT GENERALS, NOTED REFORMERS, SUCCESSFUL MEN OF BUSINESS, DISTINGUISHED LITER- ARY MEN, AND FAMOUS WOMEN. BY A CORPS OF COMPETENT BIOGRAPHERS: DR. HAMILTON W. MABIE, JOHN S. C. ABBOTT, PROF. W. W. BIRDSALL, DR. J. H. VINCENT, JAMES PARTON, FRANCES E. WILLARD, HENRY FERRIS, W. FLETCHER JOHNSON, AND OTHERS. INTRODUCTION BY EDWARD EVERETT HALE, LL.D., AUTHOR OF "A MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY," ETC., ETC. Wlnstrateo witb magnificent fnlUpaoc pbotaaravure portraits, AND A WEALTH OF OTHER FINE ENGRAVINGS. " Lives of great men all remind us We can make our lives sublime, And, departing, leave behind us Foot-prints on the sands of time." JOHN C. WINSTON & CO. PHILADELPHIA, CHICAGO, TORONTO, SYRACUSE. 1895. £T' Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1895, by JOHN C. WINSTON & CO., in the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. All rights reserved. ALL PERSONS ARE WARNED NOT TO INFRINGE UPON OUR COPYRIGHT BY USING EITHER THE MATTER OR THE PICTURES IN THIS VOLUME. GIANTS OF THE REPUBLIC. PAGH Introduction, 5 List of Contents, 13 List of Illustrations, 27 BOOK I. — Giant Founders of the Republic, 32 BOOK II. — Giant Builders of our Union, 132 BOOK III. — Giants of the Great Civil War, 230 BOOK IV. — Giants of the American Navy, 376 BOOK V.— Giants of our Re-united Country, 410 BOOK VI. — Giants of Inventive Achievement, 446 BOOK VII. — Giant Men of Business, 470 BOOK VIII. — Giants of Religious and Social Reform, 570 BOOK IX. — Giants of American Literature, 634 INTRODUCTION BY EDWARD EVERETT HALE, D. D., Author of " The Man Without a Country," etc. THE history of mankind is made up of the biographies of men. This is a simple enough thing to say, and yet it would seem, from a good many histories, that it had never occurred to their writers. It is quite certain, however, that we appre- ciate and understand the history of our race most thoroughly, in those periods where we know of the personal lives of many of the actors. The periods where we do not know anything of individual lives are to us dreary deserts. For in- stance, it would probably be fair to say that the reason we give the Dark Ages that bad name, is that most of us know little or nothing of the personal movements or of individual lives of men and women in those ages. The book in the reader's hands is compiled in the effort to bring together the lives of a hundred men and women who have led the United States since the middle of the last century. It is a very remarkable series. The people of the United States in that time have exhibited a genius for the science of govern- ment, such as the world has never elsewhere seen. In a hundred and fifty years following the first settlement of these coasts, there grew up on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean thirteen States. At the time of the Revolution these States were strong enough to equip armies and navies, and to defeat George the Third, who supposed that he was the strongest monarch in Europe when the Revolu- tion began. The people in these thirteen States then had to organize forms of government wholly new for themselves and their successors. They took the 5 EDWARD EVERET 6 INTRODUCTION. traditions and methods which had been developed in a century and a half, they studied with care the history of Europe, and they organized a set of constitu- tions which have made a new era in the political history of the world. In the first lives in this volume, the authors have tried to give to the careful reader some idea of the make-up of those men who engaged in work so remarkable ; and we shall be disappointed if the American reader does not appreciate more highly the successes of the great founders of the republic, from knowing more intimately the details of their lives and of their education. It is impossible to say that all these lives differ, in any one essential quality, from lives which have been led under the old civilizations of the European world. But in almost every one of them the reader will find a certain quality which he does not find in the average biography of persons brought up under European forms. If we compare a typical American with a typical European, the contrast is very strong. There is sometimes an American who has been educated in the European forms, and there is sometimes an inhabitant of the old continent who has been educated in unconventional forms, and in such a case the contrast between these two would not be strong. But, speaking in general, we may say that the book in the reader's hands will give him, if he reads it carefully, a good conception of what we mean when we speak of the American type, and so it will perhaps show to him how the history of the world has been affected by that providence which, in the discovery of America, gave white paper for the writing of its history. The misfortune of most biography is a certain blindness which comes over the writer, when he forgets that his special business is to show his hero to the reader, and that he is not engaged, in the first instance, to give the general history of the hero's time. Even Mr. Irving lapsed here when he wrote his Life of Washington. There are whole chapters of that life in which Washing- ton's name is not mentioned. More than half of it is a history of the United States, for the years when Washington was commander-in-chief of her army, or was President. On the other hand, the value of biography, as the common sense of the world has found out, is in such writing as Plutarch's. It may be doubted whether Plutarch were a very large man ; it is certain that he did not take very noble views, either of man, of God, or of history. But Plutarch had the great art of being entertaining. His speculations may be foolish, but his narrative is interesting. Whoever will carefully study his method, will see that there was perhaps an advantage to Plutarch that he wrote before the days of printing, and, in most cases, some centuries after the men had died whom he described. The law of selection applied, therefore, for those things which were interesting about these men were still remembered, while the uninteresting INTRODUCTION. 7 things had sunk to the bottom and Tvere forgotten, — by the mere law of the attraction of gravitation, one might say. Plutarch writes what had proved to interest mankind, and leaves the rest unwritten. And what is it that interests mankind ? Infallibly it is the narrative of events, if that narrative be enlivened by the personal characteristics of men engaged in the affair. In Plutarch's case, the most vivid of such characteristics shone through the dust and mist and smoke of centuries. He recorded what he knew, and did not record the rest, because he could not. The reader of this volume will find, as I hope, that the various accomplished authors who have been engaged in it have been working on the principle which is illustrated in Plutarch's great success. We shall be disappointed if readers do not see how the personality of such great men has affected the time in which they lived. They ought to learn that what is called the drift of history, or the order of events, really results from the original life and purpose of the men and women who make up history. The European critics of American life, who have never seen American life with their own eyes, are apt to construct a theory regarding us and our history which has no real foundation. John Stuart Mill, for instance, at many different times, expressed his opinion that in a social order resting upon universal suffrage, men will be forced by the pressure of a common life into a certain average existence, in which each man will resemble each other man, quite as so many shoe-pegs resemble each other when they are cut by the same machine. Mr. Mill does not say so, but if one were to give an illustration or two, he was afraid that an American Longfellow would be exactly like an American Lin- coln, or an American Franklin exactly like an American Benedict Arnold. To us, on this side of the water, who suppose that we are living in a world of per- sons curiously unlike each other, such grave criticisms as these by Mr. Mill, Mr. Matthew Arnold, and other critics, who are writing about that of which they know very little, seem amusing. The contrasts presented between different lives in this volume will show how little danger we are in from this source, at least for several centuries. Careful readers, again, will observe one distinguishing mark of American life, in the youth of many of the actors in our great dramas, so much younger are they than most of the men distinguished in similar work in the Old World. Thus, when the war of the Revolution began, Washington was only forty-three. It is amusing to see how his younger friends venerated his age. Of his aides. Hamilton was nineteen when he commanded a battery in New York and first attracted Washington's attention. Lafayette was nineteen when he was wounded at Brandywine. Pickering, who was quartermaster-general when the 8 INTRODUCTION. war ended, was but twenty-seven when* it began. Knox was twenty-five. Nathan Hale, the hero of young Americans, was but twenty-one when he died for his country, and expressed his regret that he had but one life to give for her. Of the five leaders in the founding of the nation, whose biographies we have here, the average age when the war began was but thirty-three. Adams and Jefferson, as is well remembered, were so young that they lived to see the greatness of their country half a century after that Declaration of Independence with which they had been so closely connected. The readiness with which young men thus come forward into positions of trust and authority is readily accounted for by any one who has seen the condi- tions of a new settlement. Those conditions mark the arrangements of a rising State. The new town needs every one it can call into service. If a young man can do a man's work, he must. To revert again to the conditions of the war of the Revolution, when Burgoyne had driven in the American advance on the shore of Lake Champlain, when there was danger that his well-equipped army might sweep through the whole valley of the Connecticut, the States of Massachusetts and Connecticut ordered out every boy who was above the age of fifteen to meet the invading force. If he could carry a musket, the boy was old enough and big enough. Conditions like those lead to the rapid advance of young men. And even when the circumstances have all changed, the power of such conditions, through generations before, shows itself all through the social order. The division into different books, which we have adopted, brings together those great characters who illustrate the service which has been rendered to our country in different fields of activity. The reader will readily note for himself the points at which the lives of these great men touch each other. He ought also to see how largely each life is affected by the influ- ences of republican government, and those conditions which belong to States in their youth or in their infancy. Fulton in his earlier life painted a portrait of Dr. Franklin, which is one of the curious memorials of that time. John Ouincy Adams is now most often remembered for the marvelous activity and spirit which he showed in his old age ; -but, as the reader will see, his personal memories ran back to the days when he copied documents for his father in the time of the Revolution. Young men should remember, indeed, that all through his early diary we find his expressions of regret that he had not the skill of an orator, and it should encourage them to recollect that when he died he was most often called the "old man eloquent." But, without attempting in detail to show how closely the work of one of these heroes depends upon that of another, we ought to call the reader's atten- tion to that many-sidedness of American life which, in each case, compels strong INTRODUCTION. 9 people to occupy themselves in public affairs. To a true American, there must be no jealous seclusion of himself from his fellow-men. It is not simply that at each election he has his part to bear ; in every civil contest he must define his position. The literature of the country is therefore very closely connected with its politics, with its invention, with its discovery. Although at certain times we call very naturally upon the strongest men to go into the administration of the gov- ernment, on the whole we are well pleased if such a man as Beecher keeps his position in the pulpit of Plymouth Church, and does not seek an appointment as a diplomatist or a. member of the House of Representatives. If Mrs. Stowe o-ives her prayer and thought and time and genius to writing " Uncle Tom's Cabin," we are as well pleased at the result as if she had been canvassing for votes in the choice of a supervisor for the schools. George Peabody spent most of his life in London ; the habits of his life were those of a banker and a financier. But, all his life through, he loved his country, and he believed in the principles on which the constitution of the country was founded. When the time came for the disposition of his great fortune, he was in touch with men of intelligence who knew the country better than he did, and he was able, therefore, to make the magnificent gifts which he made for education, for hospitals, and for the right study of history. He is to be remembered, therefore, as one of the real benefactors of America, with just as much gratitude as if he had served her in diplomacy, in Congress, or on the bench. And that man is a very careless reader who does not see that William Lloyd Garrison, quite outside of the administration of government, became a more important factor in the con- trol of the history of this country, than many of those persons who occupied high official positions. Indeed, the young reader should observe that many of those persons are now entirely forgotten, and would have no place in any col- lection of the real leaders of America. We shall, therefore, be very much disappointed if those who study this book do not learn the great lesson that he who does the duty next his hand, serves, in the providence of God, in the great purpose for which this nation exists, if only he loyally remember that he is a citizen of the nation and that the nation relies upon him. Alexander Hamilton may have thought, when he was a young man, that his genius was thwarted and humbled by the mercantile training to which he was bound. But it proved that Alexander Hamilton, precisely because he had a knowledge of financial and mercantile affairs, was the person on whose life the credit of the nation depended, in the great adjustment of its finances in the administration of Washington. George Washington himself may well have thought that in the monotonous services which he rendered, as one of the House of Burgesses in Virginia, he was throwing away abilities which deserved a nobler field. But in time the nobler field was opened, and it proved that George io INTRODUCTION. Washington had been gaining that knowledge of men, and of the way to handle men, which was all-important for his country when he entered upon his great career. Of every person whose life is described here, the same could be said. They were " faithful in a few things," and because they were faithful there was given them the rule of great things. Henry Clay, with a marvelous gift of eloquence and with a careful preparation for the bar, had at the same time made the larger study of the American people. He knew what it was and what it was not. He knew what it needed, and he forecast its destiny. Precisely because he understood this people better than did most of the older men who were around him, he became, one may say, their idol, and he was able to render service to his country which no closet-student, trained simply in the methods of older dynasties, could ever have done. In an entirely different line of life, the same is true of Andrew Jackson. Precisely because he did not trammel him- self with precedent or conditions, which even to a well-trained lawyer may have seemed important, — because, on the other hand, in the difficulties of frontier warfare he had accustomed himself to look at the national life, from a broad and at the same time practical point of view, — he saved the constitution when the constitution was really endangered. This book will fall into the hands of clubs and schools, for study more careful than is involved in one superficial reading. In introducing it to readers who study it, I make one suggestion, of which I hope they will try the value ; they will find similar suggestions made, with some detail of illustration, more than once in Miss Edgeworth's admirable suggestions for education. Let any group of readers cultivate the habit of impersonating, if they please, the char- acters whose lives interest them in American history, and bringing these people together for imaginary conversations, for common action, in such scenes and at such times as history will justify. Imaginary conversations, such as Madame de Genlis suggests ; imaginary correspondence, such as even classical writers were amused with, will prove not only amusing but of permanent value in giving a vivid sense of the life of older times. Better yet, perhaps, for the purpose of maintaining the life and interest of a club or society of readers, would be the dramatic representation, in a parlor or a school-room, of scenes such as bright pupils would imagine, which shall introduce several of the great men or women of whom they read. Thus, there is a curious home letter from a private soldier in Braddock's army, which makes it well-nigh certain that Franklin, at the age of forty-nine, met Washington when he was but twenty-three, as Braddock's army advanced toward its ruin. It would be easy, in some parlor theatricals, to represent the scene, to bring in these two men who were unconscious of their future greatness, INTRODUCTION. u to surround them with such figures as those of Braddock and Gage and Morris, and in dialogue or in pantomime to interest the whole company. A date thus fixed, a transaction thus made real, take their places in memory, and, as an old friend says, "give something to knit upon " as one works out his own fabric of history. When the Revolutionary War began, every rencontre between the soldiers of England and those of America brought people together in such dramatic fashion. When Gage addressed Washington and Washington replied to him, parted only by the Charles River, it was with recollections of the time when they sat at the same mess-table, when they copied the same despatch, as they both served on the staff of Braddock. When Franklin met Lord Howe, in 1776, it was to recall the memory of how they had played chess together in London. When Clinton sailed into New York, after his repulse at Charleston, it was to show to the younger officers the streets and homes of the town where he had spent his boyhood, in which, probably, he was more at home than he was in London. Perhaps, indeed, when he passed the burial-ground by King's Chapel in Boston some one took pains to point out to him the grave of his relative, Isaac Johnson, Arbella Johnson's husband, who had come from the family home in England, which Clinton must have remembered well. Indeed, an accurate reader could bring together Jefferson, Jay, and Adams, in more than one imagin- ary colloquy, which would fix in the memory of all who saw those characters well presented the various contributions which such men made, for weal or for woe, to the progress of the nation. The contrast of the fanfaronade and love of glory of Paul Jones, against the drollery and simplicity of Franklin, and the half-concealed annoyance of John Adams, might make a very amusing scene in such a performance as I have suggested. It is not so easy to imagine Henry Clay in London, arranging with George Peabody how he may draw for money. But such men never met but that each of them affected the life of the other. I venture to recommend to all clubs or societies of young people who read this book together, that they try some such impersonations, which will bring history in visible form before them. The preparations will be in some regards more difficult, in some more easy, than they think at first. But it may well be that they shall find, in many instances, that they are working up some detail of the local history of the place in which they live, which would otherwise have been neglected and eventually forgotten. And such students should remember that there is many an attic which is yet to give up its store of old papers of great value in the working out of our history. It is generally said, and it is true, that thus far America has not developed, or at least has not shown, much power in the writing of entertaining memoirs. For the history of the Revolution the most vivid local color is supplied by those bright, accomplished young Frenchmen, to whom everything was a surprise, and 12 INTRODUCTION. who, therefore, wrote down what our own fathers thought a matter of course and left for forgetfulness. The gaps in our history, which are left by the inabil- ity of the fathers to write entertaining memoirs, must be supplied now from their ledgers and day-books and from the old correspondence, when by good fortune it has been preserved. What the artists call "local color," and the vivid- ness which is given by what they call "broken lights," may often improve our historical picture, if contributed by some antiquarian student who works with imagination. I cannot but hope that, by the wide circulation of this very book, there may be roused up some young Parkman or Prescott or Bancroft, who shall be tempted to make the researches which will bring to light memoranda of use, because of interest, in the construction of the history of the republic. Edward Everett Hale. MONUMENT TO COLUMBUS AT GENOA. LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. BOOK I. #htnt Jfomtbers of % Jupbltc. GEORGE WASHINGTON, PAGE Father and Founder of the Republic, 33 Greatness of Washington's character — Virginia two centuries ago — Augustine Washington — George's early days — His mother — The young surveyor — A perilous journey — Braddock's expedition — Washing- ton's heroism — Marriage- — Outbreak of the Revolution — Bombardment of Boston — Battle of Long Island — " How long shall we fly ?" — Newjerseycampaign — A Christmas surprise — Aid from France — Lafayette — Valley Forge — Monmouth — Dark Days — Arnold's treason — The war in the South— Washington's descent upon Yorktown — Surrender of Cornwallis — Farewell to the army — Constitutional Convention — First President of the Republic — Anecdotes of Washington — Last days at Mount Vernon — The closing scene. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, The Inventor, Philosopher, and Statesman, 59 A self-made man — Franklin's autobiography — His character as a boy — His love of books — The young vegetarian — Writing for the newspaper — Journey to Philadelphia — First sight of his future wife — Employment as a printer — Journey to England — A temperance missionary — Another start in busi- ness — The Junto — The secret of his success — He marries Miss Read — " Poor Richard's Almanack " — Defense of the Colonies — Franklin in demand — Postmaster-General — The War with France — How Franklin secured wagons— His mission to England — The Stamp Act — How to lose revenue and gain ill-will — A sum in arithmetic — The Continental Congress— Signing the Declaration of Independence — A grim joke — Franklin at Paris — His humane efforts to lessen the horrors of war — The Treaty of Peace — Return to Philadelphia — Letter to Thomas Paine— Franklin's death and burial — His epitaph. JOHN ADAMS, The Revolutionary Patriot and Statesman, 75 The great men of the Revolution — The pre-eminence of Adams — Boyhood and education — The young lawyer — Marriage — Aggressions of the British — The birth of American Independence — The Boston Massacre — Adams defends the soldiers — Delegate to the Continental Congress — Friendship with Jef- ferson — Drafting the Declaration of Independence — Adams's prophetic letter — Sent to Frante to secure aid — Contrast with Franklin — Adams not popular — His blunt manners — Negotiating the Treaty of Peace — Adams's success with the Dutch Government — His sickness in Paris — Terrible winter journey — Minister to England — His presentation at Court — An awkward moment — Return to America — The Constitutional Convention — Adams's dislike of France— Election to the Presidency — His failure to make friends — Retirement from public* life — Adams in old age — His son's election to the presidency — Nearing the end — July 4, 1826, death of Adams and Jefferson. 13 I4 LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. JOHN JAY, The First Chief Justice of the United States, 93 Jay's French Ancestry— Different kinds of heroism— Life in college— Refuses to be an informer— Studying law— Member of the Continental Congress— Address to the people of Great Britain— President of Con- gress — Chosen Minister to Spain— Trials of his new position— Begging and borrowing for America— The Treaty of Paris— Return to America— Secretary of State— The Constitutional Convention— Jay's important part — "The Federalist" — Its masterly ability — Washington's testimony to Jay's ability — The first Chief Justice — His opposition to slavery — Special mission to England— Jay's ability as a diplo- matist—Lord Sheffield's opinion— " The impolitic treaty of 1794"— Jay's return to America— Governor of New York— Retirement from public life— His death in 1829— Jay's spotless character. ALEXANDER HAMILTON, The Architect of the Federal System, 101 What a West India hurricane did for Hamilton — Goes to the United States for an education — Stories of his life at college — Excitement over British exactions — Hamilton's first speech — Aid-de-camp to Wash- ington — His literary ability — Financial studies — Marriage — Retirement from the army — The Constitu- tional Convention — The great men who composed it — -Hamilton's pre-eminence — Opposition to the Constitution — Hamilton's able advocacy — Suspense in New York — Success at last — Hamilton first Secretary of the Treasury — His able administration — Talleyrand's anecdote — Retirement — Political disputes — The fatal duel. THOMAS JEFFERSON, The Pioneer of Democracy in America, 115 Jefferson's sympathy with the common people — The success of his principles — His Virginia home — The young lawyer — His opinions on slavery — Marriage to Mrs. Skelton — Sent to the Continental Congress — Writing the Declaration of Independence — Cornwallis's depredations — Jefferson's losses — End of the war — Appointment as Foreign Minister — His popularity in France — Secretary of State under Washing- ton Stormy politics — Jefferson and Hamilton opposed — Vice-President under Adams — Washington City in 1800 — Mrs. Adams' amusing account — The election of 1800 — Jefferson chosen President — Dis- may of the Federalists — Sweeping success of Democratic principles — The purchase of Louisiana — Death of his daughter— Comfort from the Bible — Re-election— Troubles with England— Return to private life— His habits of life at home— Extensive hospitality— Jefferson's religion— Financial troubles — Gifts from friends — The last scene, July 4, 1826. BOOK II. iiititl guilders of #ur Union. ANDREW JACKSON, The Hero of the War of 181 2, and Popular President, 131 Why Jackson is remembered— His strong individuality— Wretchedness of his early life — Cruelties of the British in South Carolina— Studying law— Removal to Tennessee— Wild life on the Frontier— Marriage under peculiar circumstances— Early political life— Duels with Dickenson and Benton — War with the Indians— The Great Battle of Horse-Shoe Bend— Attacks of the British on New Orleans— Jackson's glorious defense— Awful slaughter of the British— Honors to Jackson— The Seminole War— United States Senator— Election to the Presidency in 1828— Death of his wife— His memorable administration — Sufferings of his later life — His death in 1845. LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. 15 PAGE The Second War of Independence, or the War of 1S12, 144 Meaning of the war— Its causes — Neutral rights — Impressing American sailors — Insults and outrages — The " Chesapeake " and the " Leopard " — Injury to American commerce — Paper blockades — The Orders in Council — Embargo as retaliation — Our naval glory in this war — -Failure of the campaign against Canada — Hull's surrender at Detroit — Splendid victories at sea — The " Constitution " and the " Guer- ncre " — The "Wasp" and the "Frolic" — Other sea-duels — American Privateers — On the Lakes — Perry's great victory — Land operations — Battle of the Thames — Wilkinson's Fiasco — The " Shannon " and the " Chesapeake " — English reinforcements — Lundy's Lane and Plattsburg — The burning of Washington — Baltimore saved — General Jackson at New Orleans— The treaty of peace. JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, The Accomplished President, and Great Defender of the Right of Petition, . 161 Adams not a " self-made man " — His excellent equipment — To Europe at eleven years of age — At school abroad — Private Secretary to the Russian Minister — Studies at the Hague — Honors at Harvard — Studying law — Minister to the Netherlands — Washington's high praise — Love and marriage — United States Senator — Professor at Harvard — Mission to Russia — The Emperor's tact — Minister to England — Secretary of State — Elected President — Attacks on Adams — His manners contrasted with those of Jack- son — Brief retirement — The ex-President goes to the House of Representatives — The right of peti- tion — Stormy scenes in the House — " I will put the question myself" — Honors to a veteran — Mr. Adams's simple prayer — " This is the last of earth " — Death of the patriot statesman. HENRY CLAY, Popular Hero, Patriot, and Statesman, 177 Slavery — An overshadowing question — Clay's devotion to the Union — His popularity — Stories of his boy- hood — -"The Mill Boy of the Slashes" — A clerk in Richmond — His personal appearance — His magnifi- cent voice — Removal to Kentucky — Success as a lawyer — His marriage — Member of the House of Representatives — Clay's advocacy of the war of 1S12 — Goes to Europe — " I liked the Kentucky man best " — Speaker of the House — Popularity with the masses — The admission of Missouri — The Missouri Compromise — Clay's great influence — Jackson's hatred of Clay — Clay makes Adams President — Cry of corrupt bargain — Secretary of State — Returns to private life — Re-election to the Senate — The nullifica- tion troubles — Clay's compromise tariff — The panic of 1S37 — Harrison's nomination and Clay's disap- pointment — Grief of the Whigs — Friends discharge his debts — Clay's compromise measures of 1850 — His failing health — The country in danger — Clay's devotion — His last great speech — Denunciation of disunion — His death — The object of his public life. DANIEL WEBSTER, The Defender of National Union, 193 Memorable scene in Congress — The " Reply to Hayne " — The great work done by Webster for the Union — A New Hampshire boy — Characteristic stories of his early life — Family sacrifices for education — Studying law — His imposing presence — Great ability as a lawyer — Description of his argument in the famous D.utmouth College case — The Plymouth Rock oration — Mr. Ticknor's account — The " Reply to Hayne" — Mr. Everett's anxiety — Description of the scene in the Senate — Webster's splendid triumph — Secretary of State — The annexation of Texas — The compromise of 1850 — Webster's " 7th of M irch Speech " — Alienation of friends — His Marshfield home — Injury and ill health — His death-bed — Pathetic scenes at his funeral — His resting-place. JOHN C. CALHOUN, The Great Advocate of State Rights, 207 A question of history — Calhoun's character and influence — His birth and ancestry — Early Democratic opinions — Member of Legislature and Congress — Secretary of War — Vice-President under Adams and Jackson — The " Tariff of Abominations" — Calhoun's argument for nullification — The great debate — 16 LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. Hayne's speech and Webster's reply — The ordinance of nullification — Jackson's proclamation — South Carolina calls out her soldiers— The conflict avoided — Clay's compromise tariff — Calhoun's defense of slavery — Miss Martineau's reminiscences — The contest of 1850— Calhoun's last days. SAMUEL HOUSTON, PAGE And the Story of Texan Independence, 217 The new race of statesmen — Houston's early life in Virginia — " Over the Mountains into Tennessee" — Life among the Indians — A soldier under Jackson — Study of law — Elected Governor of Tennessee — His marriage — The event which changed his life — A mystery — Again among the Indians — Houston abandons civilized life — Watching events in Mexico — Settlers from the United States — Their hatred of Mexican rule — Houston joins fortunes with Texans — Massacres of the Alamo and Goliad — Texas declares her independence — The battle of San Jacinto — " Remember the Alamo" — Freedom for Texas — Houston's second marriage — Annexation of Texas — Governor and United States Senator — The era of Secession — Houston's devotion to the Union — An amusing practical illustration — Houston deposed from the Governorship — His death in 1863. BOOK III. ^knts of [\t Cibil Mar. ABRAHAM LINCOLN, The Preserver of the Union 229 Lincoln's increasing fame — Comparison with Washington — His birth in 1809 — Wretchedness of his early life — The poor whites of Kentucky — His mother's influence — Lincoln's odd appearance as a back- woodsman — His love of study — Scarcity of books — " Speechifying" — Removal to Illinois — Kindliness to a worthless dog — The slave auction at New Orleans — " If I ever get a chance to hit slavery, I will hit it hard " — Studying surveying — The young politician — His practice of law — His marriage — Elected Representative to Congress — His opposition to slavery — His famous debates with Douglas — " If he gives that answer, he can never be President " — The Cooper Institute speech — The campaign of i860 — Intense excitement — The Chicago convention — Seward's advantages — The surprise of Lincoln's nomination — His triumphant election — Pathetic farewell to Springfield — Threats of Secession — Firing on Sumter — Great Success — Perplexities — The dark days of the war — Lincoln's wonderful management of men — The emancipation question — The great proclamation — Lincoln's abilities as a soldier and diplomatist — His caution — End of the war — The great tragedy — His death on April 15th — Country in mourning — The solemn funeral procession — The beauty and greatness of his character. WILLIAM H. SEWARD, The Statesman and Diplomatist, 253 William H. Seward's college days — Ran away from home — Enters the law — Receives Lafayette — Governor of New York — Contest with the Governor of Virginia — Discards wine at his official receptions — Refuses to pardon criminals — Returns to practice of law — Enters the U. S. Senate in 1848 — Expected the nomi- nation for President — Works for Lincoln's election — Services as Secretary of State — Purchase of Alaska —Estimate of his character — " He was faithful." CHARLES SUMNER, The Great Advocate of Freedom, 265 Cultured New England ancestors — Did not feel the pinch of poverty — School and college life — Practices law in Boston — His distinguished friends — Spends three years in Europe — Receives marked attention in England " — Musical accomplishments — Practices law for five years — First great speech — " That picture LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. 17 made me Senator " — Four hours speech in United States Senate — Turmoil in Congress — "The Crime against Kansas " — Caned by Brooks — Returns to the Senate — His radical position — Usefulness during the war— Lincoln and Sumner — His opinion of President Johnson — Strained relations with Grant — Personal peculiarities — Character. ULYSSES S. GRANT, PAGE The Hero of the Civil -War, 277 A man for the occasion — The day of heroes not past — Life before the war — His graduation at West Point — Services in the Mexican War — The Missouri farmer — Stories of his boyhood — His love for horses — A bold dash at Monterey — Lincoln's opinion — "Wherever Grant is, things move" — "A very obstinate man" — Brigadier General — First battle — "We must cut our way out as we cut our way in" — "All quiet on the Potomac " — Attack on Forts Henry and Donelson — " Unconditional Surrender " — The First great victory — Battle of Shiloh — The first day's fighting — The tide turns on the second day — Denuncia- tions of Grant — The autumn of 1862 — Depression in the North — Grant's determination to win a vic- tory — The Vicksburg campaign — A hazardous movement — The long siege — Surrender — A glorious Fourth of July — Lincoln's acknowledgment — Narrow escape in New Orleans — A new command — Chattanooga- — Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge — A glorious victory — Call for Grant to lead the armies — The Virginia campaign — Battles of the Wilderness — Spottsylvania — Cold Harbor — Lincoln's impression — "Not a retreating man " — Closing in on Richmond — Sherman's march — Grant's letter to Lee — The surrender at Appomattox — After the war — Election to the Presidency — His administration — Re-election — Retirement — His journey around the world — A triumphal progress — Business misfortunes — His " Personal Memoirs" — Fighting off death — The nation's sympathy — Ravages of disease — Death at Mt. McGregor — The tribute of the nation. The Story of the Civil War, 295 Secession — Not exclusively a Southern ide.i — An irrepressible conflict — Coming events — Lincoln — A nation in arms — Sumter — Anderson — McClellan — Victory and defeat — Monitor and Merrimac — Antietam — Shiloh — Buell — Grant — George H . Thomas — Rosecrans — Porter — Sherman — Sheridan — Lee — Gettys- burg — A great fight— Sherman's march — The Confederates weakening — More victories — Appomattox — Lee's surrender — From war to peace — etc., etc. WILLIAM T. SHERMAN, The Hero of the -'March to the Sea," 317 Memorable events of the Civil war — Sherman's early days — "Take Cump, Mr. Ewing" — Life at West Point — At Fort Moultrie — Marriage — Banking in California — Superintendent of the New Orleans Mili- tary Academy — Breaking out of the war — President Lincoln's views — Bull Run — Shiloh — " He fights by the week" — At Chattanooga — Capture of Atlanta — Starting on the great march — The day of jubilee — A Christmas gift of Savannah — End of the war — The grand review — Study of Sherman's campaigns in England — Life after the war. GEORGE B.McCLELLAN, First Commander of the Army of the Potomac. •. 329 McClellan's great abilities — Birth and education — Fine military training — Early days of the war — His suc- cess in West Virginia — The army of the Potomac — The Peninsula campaign — Obstacles to success — Stanton's contempt — A terrible emergency — Confidence in " Little Mac " — Antietam — A great victory — McClellan relieved — His popularity — Lee's opinion— Personal qualities. • PHILIP H. SHERIDAN, The Hero of the "Valley Campaign," 335 Sheridan's victories — His ability to inspire his men — Boyhood days — Premature war at West Point — The Great Rebellion — Chattanooga and Lookout Mountain — Grant's confidence — The Valley campaign — 1 8 LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. Early sent " whirling through Winchester " — Fun in Richmond at Early's expense — Cedar Creek — A surprise — "Face the other way, boys! " — Turning defeat into victory — Destruction of Early's army — Five Fork's — Lee's surrender — Custer's tribute — Sheridan's personal influence — Life after the war. GEORGE G. MEADE, PAGE Victorious Commander at Gettysburg, 343 A critical day — The invading army of Lee— Climax of the battle— The last tremendous effort of the Con- federate Army — Pickett's famous charge — A storm of grapeshot from Cemetery Hill — Meade's great victory — Thanks of Congress — Subsequent movements in Virginia — Grant's confidence in Meade — The gratitude of the nation — Colonel McClure's eulogy — Meade the unrewarded hero. GEORGE H. THOMAS, The Great General in the War for the Union, 349 The ideal soldier — Graduation at West Point— Breaking out of the war — Mill Spring and Murfreesboro — The battle of Chickamauga — Longstreet's advance — A desperate encounter — " The Rock of Chicka- mauga " — Battle of Chattanooga — Thomas storms Missionary Ridge — The battle of Nashville — Thomas's deliberation — A splendid triumph — Thomas's modesty — His fine character — Death in 1S70. ROBERT E. LEE, The Great Commander of the Confederate Armies, 355 Lee's acknowledged greatness — His life before the war — His devotion to Virginia — Difficulty in deciding on his course — Resigns his commission — Prepares the Southern people for a long and bloody war — His great influence — The simplicity of his habits — He shares the fare of the soldiers — Story of a campaign dinner — " I jest borrowed dat piece o' meat" — Defeat of McClellan on the peninsula — Tri- umphs at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville — Gettysburg — Superiority of the. North in resources — A question of endurance — The campaign of 1S64 — Lee's superior skill — Destitution of his army — The inevitable end— Surrender at Appomattox — Gratitude and affection of the South — Offers of a home • — Becomes President of Washington College — Beauty of his private character — His great influence in restoring good feeling — Devotion to his invalid wife — Death in 1870. THOMAS JONATHAN JACKSON, The Great Confederate General, 369 His birth and education — Honors won in the Mexican war — Professor in the Virginia Military Institute— His peculiar conscientiousness — The secession of Virginia — In command at Harper's Ferry — The "Stonewall Brigade" — Origin of the name — Wounded at Bull Run — Waiting for his turn — Brilliant warfare of 1862 — Fredericksburg — The movement at Chancellorsville — Jackson mortally wounded — Personal characteristics — His dependence on prayer — Father Hubert's tribute. BOOK IV. dianis of tlje American Uaun. JOHN PAUL JONES, The First Hero of Our Navy 377 The origin of the American navy — John Paul Jones and his famous victory — Sights on guns and what they did — Suppressing the Barbary pirates — Opening Japan — Port Royal — Passing the forts — The " Monitor " and " Merrimac " — In Mobile Bay — The " Kearsarge " and the " Alabama " — Naval architecture revo- lutionized — The Samoan Hurricane — Building a new navy. LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. 19 OLIVER H. PERRY, PAGE Hero of the Battle of Lake Erie, 397 Perry's fame as a naval commander — Boyhood and education — His mother's influence — " Mrs. Perry's victory " — Enters the navy as a midshipman — Great ability in training — The war of 1812 — The conflict on the lakes — The building of two navies — The battle on the lake — A splendid victory — Perry's immor- tal message — Honors from Congress. DAVID G. FARRAGUT, The Great Union Naval Commander, 401 Admiral Farragut's fame — His early career — The battle in Valparaiso harbor — The New Orleans expedi- tion — Farragut bombards the forts — Torpedoes and fire ships — Preparations for passing the forts — A mighty conflict — A scene of devastation — Farragut's splendid victory — Capture of New Orleans — Operations below Vicksburg — The forts in Mobile Bay — Arrival of the Confederate ram Tennessee — Preparations for the attack — A great procession of war vessels — Farragut in the rigging of the Hart- ford — Torpedoes- — Sinking of the "Tecumseh" — "Damn the torpedoes, go ahead" — Ramming iron clads with wooden vessels — Gallant fighting of the Hartford — " Save the Admiral "—Surrender of the Confederate fleet — Farragut's indomitable spirit — Wonderful bravery of the sailors — Welcome at New York. BOOK V. iianfs of our |u-unitcb Country. JAMES A. GARFIELD, The Martyr President, 411 Thelong summer of 1881 — The nation's suspense — A people's love for Garfield — Hisearlydays — A widow's son — His love of books — The young carpenter — Life on the canal towpath — Earning an education — At Hiram College — Williams College — Doing four years' work in two — Head of Hiram College — The Civil War — A teacher-soldier — Fighting in Kentucky — Shiloh — The battle of Chickamauga — Elected to Congress — The campaign of 1880 — Garfield's victory — Contest with Conkling — The assassin's bullet — Weeks of suffering — The end — Blaine's tribute. SAMUEL J. TILDEN, The Great Reform Governor, 425 The contested election of 1876 — Tilden's patriotism — Boyhood days in New York — The young politician — Great ability as a lawyer — The Flagg case — Success at the bar — A great fortune — The Tweed Ring— " What are you going to do about it?" — Unraveling the conspiracy— Tilden's triumph — Governor of New York — The "Canal Ring " — The St. Louis Convention — Enthusiasm forTilden — The famous cam- paign— A doubtful result — The Electoral Commission — A great library — Tilden's last days. JAMES G. BLAINE, The Brilliant and Successful Statesman, 433 After the war — A new era — Blaine's early life — A plucky boy — Life at college — Teaching in Kentucky — Marriage — Work among the blind — Removal to Maine — Editor and politician — Speaker of the Maine Assembly — The Chicago Convention of i860 — Election to Congress — Lincoln's friendship — After the war — Speaker of the House — The era of scandal — Attacks on Blaine — The Convention of 1876 — In- gersoll's speech — The " Plumed Knight " — In Garfield's cabinet— The tragedy of 18S1 — The campaign of 1884 — The Burchard incident — Blaine's defeat — Reply to President Cleveland's message — Secretary of State — The Peace Congress — Sorrow and affliction — Death in 1893 — Depew's tribute. LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. BOOK VI. dmntts of Iniuntik Jtljirbement. ROBERT FU LTON, PAGE The Pioneer of Steam Navigation, 447 The gap between invention and achievement — The practical man — A Pennsylvania boy — Fulton's artistic talents — His mechanical abilities — His rapid success — Visit to England — Turns h'is attention to steam navigation — A working model — Accident to the model — His partnership with Livingston — Buildir.g of the "Clermont" — The great trial trip — Incredulity of the spectators — Astonishment and dismay on shore — A successful trip — " The Car of Neptune " — Legal complications — Exposure and illness — Death in 1815. SAMUEL F. B. MORSE, Inventor of the Electric Telegraph, 453 Importance of the telegraph — What it has done for the world — Morse's early days — An artist's career — The voyage to Europe — Return in the " Sully " — Conception of the telegraph — Dark days — Receives his patent at last — Aid from Congress — An ignorant official — Triumphant success — Honors to Morse — The Atlantic cable. THOMAS A. EDISON, And the Story of American Invention, 459 Public interest in Edison — His boyhood days — -An enterprising newsboy — Amateur journalism and chem- istry — A stroke of luck— Studying telegraphy — His first invention — A labor-saving genius — Too inge- nious by half— Trouble on the Albany wire — Edison locates the difficulty — The " stock ticker " — Finan- cial success — Edison in trouble — Fifteen hours without rest or food — The typical inventor — A poor business man — Appearance and personal traits. OTHER GREAT INVENTORS AND THEIR INVENTIONS, . 463 Invention and agriculture — The scythe — Cradle — Plow — Eli Whitney and the cotton-gin — Cyrus H. Mc- Cormick — Mowers and reapers — Inventions — Oliver Evans — Grist milling — The steam engine — Jacob Perkins and the nail machine — Elias Howe and his sewing machine — Eli Terry — Chauncey Jerome- Clocks — Watches. BOOK VII. dpmtt glen of iiustiuss. JOHN JACOB ASTOR, Our Pioneer Business Man and First Millionaire, 471 Astor's experience of the extremes of poverty and wealth — Life of a German peasant in the last century — Astor resolves to go to America — The fur business — English monopoly of the trade — Astor's journeys in the fur regions — His marriage— His large profits — A bank clerk's estimate — The Astoria scheme — Betrayed by his agents — Astor's disappointment — His business qualities — His great success. GEORGE PEABODY, Our First Millionaire Philanthropist, 481 A new kind of millionaire — Tribute due to Peabody — His birth and early training — A store boy in New- buryport — Removal to the District of Columbia— Firm of Riggs & Peabody — His popularity and suc- cess — Branch house in England — The terrible crisis of 1837 — High reputation in England — An Ameri- can merchant in London — Aid for America at the World's Fair of 1851— Mr. Peabody's simple habits— LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. 21 His love of justice — His great gifts to education — A magnificent keepsake from the Queen — His death in 1869 — Reception of his remains in America — Mr. Peabody's charitable works. . CORNELIUS VANDERBILT, PAGE And the Story of American Railroads, 491 Scenes of Vanderbilt's youth — An enterprising boy — How a twelve-year-old boy managed a puzzling situation — Earning his first hundred dollars — The war of 1812 — -Vanderbilt's marriage— Voyages and profits — The new system of steam navigation — A shrewd captain — Eluding a sheriff's officer — Building of a steamer of his own — At the head of the business — Investments in railroads — Operations in Har- lem and Hudson River — A conspiracy against Harlem — The tables turned — His large profits — A great millionaire — Love for his old home — Death in 1877. The Story of Our Railroads, 490 The first locomotive — Early railways — Trial trips — The Mohawk and Schenectady Road — A trial trip — Improvements — A railway mania — Old-time coaches — Across the continent — Parlor and sleeping cars — Consolidation — The great railway companies — Horse versus engine — The New York Central Railway — The Pennsylvania system — Bridges — The electric railway — The outlook, etc. CYRUS W. FIELD, The Successful Projector of the Atlantic Cable, 517 The man who succeeds — Field's early years — Retirement from business — Mr. Gisborne's plan — Tield takes up the idea — A company organized — Aid of British and American governments — The first attempt — breaking of the cable — Another trial and disappointment — A new plan — Using two steamers — Thecable successfully laid — Messages transmitted — A sudden stop — One more trial — The " Great Eastern " — Part- ing of the cable in mid-ocean — -Grappling — A fresh start — Intense public interest — Success at last — Honors to Mr. Field. LELAND STANFORD, And the Story of California, 525 Opening up of the great West — Stanford's memory in California — The discovery of gold in 184S — The excitement that followed — California in the early days — The sea voyage — California wages — Specula- tion and gambling — " Miners' justice" — Stanford's early life in New York — An enterprising boy — The young lawyer — Marriage — Going West — Chicago in 1850 — Lake Michigan mosquitoes — Arrival in Cali- fornia — His popularity — Political foresight — Need of railroads — The Pacific Railway enterprise — Marvelous railroad building — Governor of California — An era of prosperity — The Palo Alto ranch — Death of his son — The Leland Stanford, Jr., University — A noble monument — Death in 1892. GEORGE W. CHILDS, The Great Publisher and Philanthropise, 54^ A noble character — Mr. Childs' universal popularity — Early life in Baltimore— Coming to Philadelphia — The book business — Mr. Childs' own account of his start — A young publisher — Ambition to own the "Ledger" — "Don't buy!" — How Childs gathered wealth — How he scattered it — His good sense in giving — The " Ledger " employees — Public gifts — The home at "Wootton'' — Distinguished guests — Childs and Drexel — How to make life worth living. MARSHALL FIELD, The Modern Business Man, 553 Cities of the great West — What Marshall Field has done for Chicago — A Massachusetts country boy — Ambition to be a merchant — Going to Chicago — The city in 1856 — A new position — The panic of 1857 — Becomes a junior partner — Speculative business — Mr. Field's conservatism — Shortening up on credits — Prosperity — The great fire of 1873 — A new start — A- great building — Business methods of Marshall Field & Co. 22 LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. JOHN WANAMAKER, ^ PAGE The Great Business Organizer, 561 Doing what others cannot do — Wanamaker as a book-store boy — Climbing the ladder — A better position — Starting in business — Novel methods — Rapid success — A great purchase — Organizing a great depart- ment store — How the " Wanamaker methods " have revolutionized business — Young Men's Christian Association — The Bethany Sunday-school — Small beginnings — Mr. Wanamaker's organizing powers — Postmaster-General — Public work and gifts. BOOK VIII. §mU of Religious anfa Social JUfornt. HENRY WARD BEECHER, The Great Pulpit Orator and Reformer, 571 Lyman Beecher and his family — His son's boyhood and training — Henry's love of adventure — How his father made him a minister instead of a sailor — His cheerfulness and fun — Theological studies at Lane Seminary — Marriage and settlement in Indiana — Preacher and man-of-all-work — Call to Plymouth Church — Anti-slavery work — Thrilling scene in the church — The ransomed slave — The war of 1861 — Mr. Beecher's patriotic labors — Visit to England — Triumph over English mobs — Raising the old flag on Sumter — The Beecher-Tilton trial — Fidelity of his friends — Reviewing his life-work — The end of his career — A soldier of humanity. Bishop Vincent's Story of the American Church, 583 Survey of the closing century — What is the American Church? — The Christian idea of freedom — Rnce difficulties to contend with — Cultivation and worship — Not a state church — God in all history — Method- ism in all churches — -Unity of faith and effort — Modification of creeds — Proposed united church in small towns — Roman Catholic movement — No creed but republicanism — Chautauqua movement. WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON, The Great Pioneer Abolitionist, 595 Contrast of Garrison and Calhoun — Garrison's great victory — Birth and early life — Partnership with Ben- jamin Lundy — He declares for immediate emancipation — Imprisonment for libel — Released by Arthur Tappan — Decline of the " Genius " — Establishment of the " Liberator " — Living on bread and water — • An unequal contest — " I am in earnest " — Alarm and wrath in the South — Rewards for Garrison's ab- duction — The journey to England — Mobs in Boston — Garrison dragged through the streets — Therescue — Horrors of slavery — Garrison's bold words — Annexation of Texas — How colored men were treated in 1845 — Threats of secession — Garrison's course in the war — " I did not foresee that death and hell would secede " — Abolition of slavery — Victory at last — Garrison's psalm of praise — The evening of life. The Story of American Slavery, 603 The negro in America — The first cargo — Beginning of the slave traffic — As a laborer — Increase in num- bers — Slavery ; its different character in different States— Political disturbances — Agitation and agita- tors — John Brown — War and how it emancipated the slave — The free negro. FRANCES E. WILLARD, And Her Story of Famous American Women, 621 Two distinct early types — The Northern and the Southern —No place for girls in the New England public schools — No education for women in colonial period — Girls first admitted to public schools — Church and schools — Admission to high schools — Universities — Women as teachers — Southern women — Self- support — 'Fields now open to them — In literature — In the professions — In reform movements — The sphere of woman — etc., etc. LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. 23 BOOK IX. (§ rants of American f iterator c. HENRY W. LONGFELLOW, Colonial literature — Post-revolution literature — Irving — Culprit Fay — Marco Bozzaris — Bryant — Recent literature — Walt Whitman — Howells — Henry James — F. Marion Crawford — New England literature — Whittier — Lowell — Longfellow — Hawthorne — Minor novelists — The literature of the south and west — American historians — American oratory — Webster — Wendell Phillips — Contrast between English and American literature. WASHINGTON IRVING, Author of the "Sketch Book," 653 Beginnings of a real American literature — Irving's delicate health — Travel in Europe — Knickerbocker's " History of New York" — The "Sketch Book" — Irving's intimacy with great English authors — His popularity — " Who was Washington, mother?" — Life in Spain — The " Alhambra " tales — Sunnyside and its guests — Curtis on Irving. WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT, The Oldest of the Great American Poets 655 Bryant a link between the present and the past — " Thanatopsis " and its popularity — Removal from Massa- chusetts to New York — The Evening- Post — Bryant's long life and conspicuous position — His marriage — Poems to his wife — The " Forest Hymn " — Translation of Homer — His wonderful memory — A bad case of poetic idiocy — Bryant's striking appearance. JAMES FENIMORE COOPER, The Pioneer of American Historical Romance 657 Early life in the wilds of Central New York — Visits of the Indians — Yale College — His expulsion— Midship- man in the navy — Marriage — A poor novel — "I believe I could write a better story myself " — "The Spy " — " The Pilot " — Its effect on an old sailor — Cooper's unpopularity — Libel suits — Death in 1851. GEORGE BANCROFT, The Eminent American Historian, 659 Bancroft's fine opportunities — His education — Travel in Europe — Political life — First volume of his " His- tory of the United States " — Secretary of the Navy — Minister to England— Bancroft's patriotism — " A Fourth-of-July oration in ten volumes" — The oration on Lincoln — Rose-growing and horseback riding — His last years. RALPH WALDO EMERSON, The Concord Philosopher and Poet 660 Life at Harvard — His proficiency in literature — Study for the ministry — Resignation of his pastorate — His home at Concord — His attractive personality — Miss Bremer's description — His home life and charac- ter — His manners — His conception of the true object of life. EDGAR A. POE, The Brilliant Poet and Author 661 Poe's sad history— His parents and their poverty— His mother's death— Adoption by Mrs. Allan— A bril- liant scholar — His love of drink — His reckless marriage — A life of poverty — His wife's death — His powers as an elocutionist — His manners toward women — Death in 1840. 24 LIST OF CHAPTERS AND SUBJECTS. NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE, PAGE The Greatest American Writer of Romance, 663 The son of a Salem sea-captain— Life at college — Friendship of Longfellow and Pierce — Residence at Con- cord — " Mosses from an Old Manse " — " The Scarlet Letter " — Consul at Liverpool — European life and travel — His shyness and reserve — Mr. Fields' anecdote — His happy marriage — Tribute to his wife — Seclusion from society — Return from Europe — The unfinished romance — -Longfellow's beautiful poem. HENRY D. THOREAU, The Concord Hermit and Naturalist, 665 The " Concord group " of writers and philosophers — Thoreau's eccentricity — His hermit life — " Walden " — Failure of his first work — A surveyor-naturalist — His love for the fields and woods — His religion — Emerson's tribute to his character. JOHN G. WHITTIER, The Quaker Poet of America, 666 A New England farmer's son — Picture of his early life in "Snow Bound" — The youthful poet and his verses in the weekly paper — Garrison's visit — Whittier's poems in the cause of freedom — Threatened by mobs — His home life — Tribute to his sister Elizabeth — His appearance — Popularity of his poems : — His broadness and liberality — His plea for a little girl — The evening of life. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL, The Great Poet and Essayist, 668 Lowell's great powers — His versatility — Study at Harvard — Marriage — His wife's loveliness — Her poems — Her death in 1853 — " The Two Angels " — Professorship at Harvard — Editor of the " Atlantic Monthly" — Minister to Spain and Great Britain — His popularity in England — The " Biglow Papers " — His ardent patriotism — The " Commemoration Ode." WALT WHITMAN, The Author of " Leaves of Grass," 670 Whitman's originality — His boyhood — His love of nature and of humanity — A Brooklyn printer — " Leaves of Grass " — Severe criticism — Nurse in the Washington hospitals — Lincoln's death — " My Captain " — " Drum-taps " — Life in Camden — His striking appearance — Death in 1892. LOUISA M. ALCOTT, The Author of " Little Women," 671 Miss Alcott's life — Its deep interest and pathos — Her unpractical father — Life with a philosopher — From Germantown to Boston — Removal to Concord — Another breakdown — Louisa's unselfish efforts — Teach- ing and writing — Her growing reputation — Life as an army nurse — "Hospital Sketches" — "Little Women" — Its immense popularity — Other stories — Overwork and poor health — Death in 1S88 — " Transfiguration." HORACE GREELEY, The Founder of Modern Journalism, 675 Greeley's great influence — His picturesque character — " Let's see what old Horace says this week " — His birth and boyhood — His precocity — "No pupils from other towns except Horace Greeley" — An appren- tice to a printer — Forty dollars a year — -Goes to New York — Mistaken for a runaway apprentice — Em- ployment at last — The " New Yorker " and its disastrous collapse — " I would rather be in prison than in debt" — The "Log Cabin" Campaign — Harrison's triumph — Starting the "Tribune" — Helped by opposition — The " Tribune " loved and hated — Mrs. Greeley's " isms " — Able contributors — The Taylor campaign of 1848 — Greeley chosen to Congress — "Tell Brooks to keep still" — Making Congressmen uncomfortable — The " Tribune" a mighty power — Opposing the slavery measures — Greeley's course in LIST OF CHAPTERS AXD SUBJECTS. 25 the War — " On to Richmond " — Attachment of his readers — Greeley's efforts for peace — Goes bail for Jefferson Davis — Nominated for President — Mrs. Greeley's sickness and death — Her husband's devo- tion — His own sickness and death — His monument. PAGE Newspapers and Journalism, 685 The first printed sheets — Newspapers in the times of the Pilgrims — Early American journals— Franklin and his work— The first libel suit — Rapid multiplication of the newspaper 'press — Magnitude and influ- ence of the institution at the present time — Improvement in presses and type setting — How a great paper of the present day is manufactured — -Two great editors — Competition in news-gathering — The illustrated press — The religious and literary press — The mission of the newspaper. HARRIET BEECHER S T O W E, The Author of America's Most Popular Novel 699 An immortal book — Mrs. Stowe's power — The family of Lyman Beecher — Removal to Cincinnati — Lane Seminary — Professor Stowe — Miss Beecher's marriage — Assistance to a fugitive slave — A struggle with poverty and ill-health — Removal to Brunswick, Maine — Mrs. Stowe's tribulations— A memorable year — The Fugitive Slave Law— Heart-rending scenes— Exhortation to write—" I will write something "—Tears of the children over " Uncle Tom"— The story first published in the " National Era "—Its immense success — Popularity in England — Removal to Massachusetts — Journey to England — Mrs. Stowe's busy pen— The influence of " Uncle Tom's Cabin "—Celebration of Mrs. Stowe's 70th birthday — Poems and addresses — Her response — Touching words of Whittier. ri.NNb.Vl.VAMA AVENUE, LOOKING TOWARD WASHINGTON. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Statue of James A. Garfield, in Capitol Grounds, Frontispiece. Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington 27 A Virginia Plantation Gateway ^ Washington's Reception at Trenton, ... 36 Washington Taking the Oath, 40 Washington Crossing the Delaware, ... 44 Old Birmingham Meeting House, .... 46 Washington Reproving Lee at Monmouth. . 47 Meeting of Washington and Rochambeau, . 50 The Tomb of Washington at Ml. Vernon, . 54 Penn's Treaty with the Indians, 56 Penn's Residence in Second Street, below Chestnut Street, 62 Death of Wolfe, 66 Rear View of Independence Hall, .... 69 Franklin's Crave 72 Old Building in Boston where the Tea Plot is Supposed to have been Hatched, . 77 The Monument on Bunker Hill 80 The Attack on Rioters at Springfield, Mass., in 1786 85 Old South Church. Boston, 88 PAGE View of the Capitol, Washington, .... 90 Banks of the Mississippi To-day, for whose Free Navigation Jay Negotiated 95 St. Paul's, New York, an Old Chun h of Jay's Time, 97 Cornwallis, • 103 Narrow Escape of Benedict Arnold, when Burning New London, Connecticut, . . 105 James Madison, Hamilton's Chi<*~ Aid in Writing "The Federalist," 108 Duel Between Burr and Hamilton 112 The Liberty Bell, as Exhibited at the New ■ Orleans Exposition 115 Independence Hall, Philadelphia 118 Stage-coach of Jefferson's Time, 120 Signing the Declaration of Independence. . 123 Fairfax Court House — A Typical Virginia Court House 125 Virginia Currency 127 An Indian Mother, 131 A Familiar Kentucky Scene in Jackson's Youth 133 The Indian's Dei laration of War 13- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. The Old Marigny House, a Relic of the War of 1812 139 An Indian Fight in Florida 141 View of a Cotton-chute, 146 Loading a Cotton Steamer, 148 Burning of Washington, 150 Statue of Commodore Perry, 152 View on Lake Ontario, 154 Weathersford and General Jackson, . . .156 The Light Ship 161 The White House at Washington, . . . .165 Opening of the Erie Canal, in 1825, . . .167 House of Representatives, 172 An Old Virginia Mansion, 1 79 An Old Virginia Mansion — Interior, . . .180 Turnpike in the Blue Grass Region of Kentucky, '183 Residence of a Southern Planter, . . . .188 Faneuil Hall, Boston, which Webster called " The Cradle of Liberty," 195 The Elms, Yale University, 204 Old Gates at St. Augustine, Florida, . . . 207 Entrance to a Cotton-yard, New Orleans. . 210 A "Corn Shucking" in Slavery Times, . . 212 Colonial Mansion. Residence of the Late William Bull Pringle, Esq., Charleston, . 214 A Scene on Texas Plains — Dispute over a Brand, 218 An Old Spanish House, 219 Fall of the Alamo, 221 The Goliad Massacre, 222 A Bucking Broncho, 224 Battle on the Plains 226 Lincoln's Boyhqod Home in Kentucky, . . 230 Home of Lincoln at Gentryville, Indiana, . 233 Opening of the Illinois and Michigan Canal, 234 Lincoln and His Son "Tad," 240 Libby Prison in Richmond, 244 Bird's-eye View of Andersonville Prison, . 246 The Capture of Booth, the Slayer of Lincoln, 247 Old New York Mansion Near Seward's Home, 254 Seal Catching in Alaska, 257 Idols Totem, of Alaska 260 The Vacant Seat in the Senate, Draped in Black, 271 Main Building of the Centennial Exposi- tion, opened by President Grant in 1876, . 277 Decoration Dav, 280 PAGE United States Mint, New Orleans, .... 284 Moist Weather at the Front, 286 Surrender of General Lee, 288 General Grant and Li Hung Chang, Vice- roy of China, 290 The Funeral Train of General Grant Pass ing West Point, 292 A Skirmisher, 295 The Arts of Peace and the Art of War, . .297 Fort Moultrie, Charleston, 299 Battle of Pittsburg Landing, 300 Antietam Bridge, 302 General Robert Edmund Lee, 305 Retreat of Lee's Army, 308 Entrance to Gettysburg Cemetery 310 Longstreet Reporting at Bragg's Head- quarters, . : 312 Battle of Kenesaw Mountain — Death of General Polk, 320 The "Swamp Angel" Battery Bombard- ing Charleston, 322 Review of Union Armies, 325 Statue of McClellan in City Hall Square, Philadelphia 331 United States 12-inch Breech-loading Mortar or Howitzer, 335 General Sheridan Turning Defeat into Victory at Cedar Creek 338 United States Military Telegraph Wagon, . 339 Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg, 345 Latest Model of Gatling Field Gun, . . . 346 A Railroad Battery, 350 John Brown after his Capture, 357 The James River and Country Near Rich- mond, 35 8 Libby Prison in 1884, Before its Removal to Chicago 360 " General Lee to the Rear," 362 Lee and the Ferryman 363 Lee and the Union Soldier, . ■ 364 Harper's Ferry 371 Battle of Chancellorsville, 372 House in which Stonewall Jackson Died. Richmond, Va 374 Sinking of the " Alabama," 3S5 The "Destroyer" Torpedo Vessel 588 Burnside's Expedition Crossing Hatteras Bar, 392 " Chicago," One of the New War Ships, . . 395 Eight-inch Gun of the " Baltimore," . . . 401 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 29 PAGE Bailey's Dam on the Red River, 403 One of the " Miantonomah's " Four Ten- inch Breech loading Rifles, 406 The Farragut Monument in Washington, . 407 Model of United States Man of War. . . . 408 The Home of Garfield's Childhood, . . . 41.' Garfield on the Towpath, 413 Hiram College 415 Garfield's Assassination, 420 Tablet in the Waiting-room of the Rail- way Station where Garfield was Shot, . . 422 The Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. 427 General View of the New York City Hall, . 428 Mr. Blaine's Birthplace, Brownsville, Pa., . 434 School House, Brownsville, Pa., where Mr. Blaine Began his Education 43^ Washington and Jefferson College, .... 438 The Blaine Residence at Augusta, Maine, . 441 Mississippi Steamboats of To-day, .... 450 Plan of the World's Fair Grounds 452 Shop in which the First Morse Instrument was Constructed 455 The New York Stock Exchange, 461 A Colonial Spinning-wheel, 463 Colonial Plow with Wooden Mold-board, . 464 A New England Weaver Winding the Spools, 464 Primitive Modes of Grinding Corn, . . . 466 Between the Mills, 467 A Great Modern Flour Mill, 467 A Modern New York Store, 471 Champlain's Fortified Camp in Quebec, . . 473 Mew on Broadway, New York, 475 Ancient Block House, Alaska, 476 Modern Stores in Boston, 4S3 Produce Exchange Building. New York, . . 4S6 First Train of Cars in America 491 " Johnny Bull," or No. 1, 493 Loading a Train of Tank Cars 495 The Vanderbilt Family Driving in Central Park, New York, 407 Suspension Bridge, Niagara Falls, .... 49S The Locomotive on the Plains, 499 New Terminal Station, Reading Railroad, . 501 On the Baltimore and Ohio Railway, . . . 503 The Loop above Georgetown, Colorado, . . 505 Entering Boulder Canon, Colorado, . . . 507 Mossbrae, 509 Arrival of the Great Eastern, 520 Elevated Railroad 111 New York, 522 Finding Gold in the Mill-race, 526 Gold Washing in California 52N Old Mission Indian of Southern California, 529 Execution by the Vigilam e < lommittee, . . 531 Giant Tree of the Yosemite Valley, . . . 533 A Bee Ranch in Lower California 536 Valley Irrigation in Southern California, . 537 Dome and Telescope, Lick Observation, . . 538 An Old Colonial House Near Philadelphia, 544 Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, . . . 547 The Drexel Institute, Philadelphia, .... 549 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 553 A Chicago Mansion in the Early Days, . . 554 The Burning of Chicago in 1873, .... 556 Wholesale Store of Marshall Field & Co.. . 557 Bethany Sunday-School Tent, 1859, . . . 564 Bethany Church and Sunday-School, . . .565 " Lindenhurst," Mr. Wanamaker's Country Residence, ' . . . 567 Places of Worship in New York in 1742. . 571 Bible Brought Over in the Mayflower, . . 571 ( )ld Dutch Church, Long Island 572 Moravian Easter Service, Bethlehem, Pa., . 574 Colonial Monastery, 577 Pa .over Supper, 581 A Slave Hunt, 597 Zachary Taylor, 600 Introduction of Slavery, 605 Executing Negroes in New York, 607 \ Cotton-field in Georgia 611 A Negro Village in Alabama 613 A Planter's House in Georgia 615 Statue of Washington, Richmond 618 Hawthorne's Birthplace, 638 The Old Manse, Concord 640 Whittier's Birthplace, 650 A Dutch Household, 654 Interior of Memorial Hall 668 Memorial Hall, Harvard University, . . . 669 Greenwood Cemetery, 682 Franklin's Printing Press, 687 Single Small Cylinder Press 691 The Bullock-Hoe Perfecting Press, .... 693 Negro Village in Georgia, ....... 700 A New England Cotton Mill, 706 FULL PAGE oSS, PORTRAITS. Edward Everett Hale 5 George Washington, 32 Benjamin Franklin 58 ' John Adams, 74 Benjamin Harrison 44 John Jay 92 Alexander Hamilton, 100 Thomas Jefferson, 114 Andrew Jackson, 130 1 Thomas A. Edison James G. Blaine, 432 George F. Edmunds, 439 Grover Cleveland 440 Chauncey M. Depew, 444 Robert Fulton, 446 Samuel F. B. Morse, 453 45 8 Martin Van Buren, 142 John Quincy Adams 160 1 Henry Clay 176 James K. Polk 186 Daniel Webster, 192 John Tyler 200' Millard Fillmore, 202 1 John C. Calhoun, 206' James Monroe, 20S Samuel Houston 216' Abraham Lincoln, 228 General Winfield Scott, 2 13 Andrew Johnson, 250 William H. Seward 252 William Ewart Gladstone, 262 Charles Sumner, 264 Ulysses S. Grant, 276 John Jacob Astor, 470 V. George Peabody, 480 */ Cornelius Vanderbilt, 490 John M. Toucey, •. . 5+© ' Cyrus W. Field, 516 Leland Stanford, 524 George W. Childs, 542 Marshall Field, 552 John Wanamaker, 560 John Wanamaker in Youth, 562 George H. Stuart, 563 Henry Ward Beecher, 570 Bishop J. H. Vincent, 583 William Lloyd Garrison, S94V Frances E. Willard, 620 ■ Hannah Whitall Smith, 623 Franklin Pierce. 269V Julia Ward Howe, 632 . James Buchanan 273 Henry W. Longfellow, 634 / Ralph Waldo Emerson, 642 William T. Sherman, 316^ Walt Whitman 644 George B. McClellan, 3-8'.' James Russell Lowell, 646 Philip H. Sheridan, 334 / | Louisa May Alcott, 648 George G. Meade, 342 \ William Cullen Bryant, 652 George H. Thomas 348M Washington Irving, 653 Robert E. Lee, 354 J J. Fenimore Cooper, 657 Thomas J. ("Stonewall ") Jackson, . . . .368 John Ericsson, 376 John Paul Jones, 379! David G. Farragut, 400 Admiral David D. Porter, ....... 404 ■ James A. Garfield, 410 Garfield at the Age of Sixteen, ..... 414 George Bancroft, 659 Edgar Allan Poe, 662 Nathaniel Hawthorne, 663 Henry D. Thoreau, 665 John G. Whittier, 666 Horace Greeley, 674 William Henry Harrison, 677 Hon. John Sherman 417 ' 1 Whitelaw Reid, Greeley's Successor, . . . 679 Chester Allen Arthur, Garfield's Successor, . 418 Jefferson Davis 681 Samuel J. Tilden 424 Harriet Beecher Stowe, 698 Rutherford Burchard Hayes 430 John Brown 704 '.I "Kc;i WAMIINCTi IN. GEORGE WASHINGTON, FATHER AND FOUNDER OR THE REPUBLIC. AMONG the multitude who in different lands and times have won fame in vary- ing degrees, a few stand out so distinct, so far above the rest, that they mark the eras of the world's progress. By them we measure our growth ; by them we test our advance or decline. We no longer judge them, but rather judge ourselves by them, by the extent to which we can appreciate and under- stand them. An age in which they are honored is glorious ; a generation by which they are not esteemed is con- temptible. Among the few thus truly- great is Washington. A thousand times has the story of his noble life been told ; yet never were men so eager to hear it as now. His character has endured every test; his fame is secure. "It will be the duty of the historian in all ages," says Lord Brougham, "to omit no occa- sion of commemorating this illustrious man ; . . . and until time shall be no more will a test of the progress which our race has made in wisdom and virtue be derived from the veneration paid to the immortal name of Washington." Two centuries ago Virginia was almost an unexplored wilderness ; but the climate, the soil, the rivers, bays, mountains, valleys, all combined to render it one of the most attractive spots upon our globe. Two young brothers, Law- rence and John Washington, were lured by these attractions to abandon their home in England, and seek their fortunes in this new world. They were both VIRGINIA PLANTATION 34 GEORGE WASHINGTON. gentlemen. Lawrence was a fine scholar, a graduate of Oxford ; John was an accomplished man of business. The two brothers had purchased a large tract of land about fifty miles above the mouth of the Potomac, and on its western banks. John built him a house, and married Anne Pope. Augustine, his second son, inherited the paternal homestead. Augustine's first wife, Jane Butler, as lovely in character as she was beautiful in person, died, leaving three little motherless children. The disconsolate father, in the course of years, found another mother for his bereaved household. He was singularly fortunate in his choice. Mary Ball was everything that husband or child could desire. She was beautiful in person, intelligent, accom- plished, energetic and prudent, and a warm hearted Christian. Augustine and Mary were married on the 6th of March, 1730. On the 22d of February, 1732, they received into their arms their first-born child. Little did they dream, as they bore their babe to the baptismal font and called him George Washington, that that name was to become one of the most memorable in the annals of time. BOYHOOD DAYS. From earliest childhood George developed a very noble character. He had a vigorous constitution, a fine form, and great bodily strength. In childhood he was noted for frankness, fearlessness, and moral courage ; and yet far removed from manifesting a quarrelsome spirit. He never tyrannized over others ; and none were found to attempt to tyrannize over him. After twelve happy years of union with Mary Ball, when George was but ten years of age, Augustine Washington died, leaving George and five other children fatherless. The mother was equal to the task thus imposed upon her. The confidence of her husband in her judgment and maternal love is indicated by the fact that he left the income of the entire property to her until her children should respectively come of age. Nobly she discharged the task. A nation's homage gathers around the memory of the mother of Washington. Life's severe discipline developed a character simple, sincere, grave, cheered with earnest and unostentatious piety. Her well-balanced mind gave her great influ- ence over her son, which she retained until the hour of her death. Mrs. Alexander Hamilton tells the story that, when George Washington was in the meridian of his fame, a brilliant party was given in his honor at Fredericksburg, Va. When the church-bell rang the hour of nine, his mother rose and said, " Come, George, it is nine o'clock : it is time for us to go home." George, like a dutiful son, offered her his arm, and they retired. Mrs. Hamil ton admits, however, that after Washington had seen his mother safely home he returned to the party. At sixteen years of age George, then a man in character, and almost a man LIFE IN THE WILDERNESS. 35 in stature, left school. He excelled in mathematical studies, and had become familiar with the principles of geometry and trigonometry and of practical sur- veying. In was then his intention to become a civil engineer. At that time, in this new and rapidly-growing country, there was great demand for such services, and the employment was very lucrative. He had formed his character upon the right model. Everything he did he did well. If he wrote a letter, every word was as plain as print, with spelling, capitals, punctuation, all correct. His dia- grams and tables were never scribbled off, but all executed with great beauty. These excellent habits, thus early formed, were retained through life. Upon leaving school George went to spend a little time with his elder brother, Lawrence, at Mount Vernon. Then, as now, that was an enchanting spot. The house, situated upon a swell of land, commanded an extensive view of the Potomac and of the surrounding country. It was nearly one hundred miles above the home of George. Lord Fairfax, a man of large fortune and romantic tastes, had been lured by the charms of this delightful region to pur- chase a vast territory, which extended far away, over the Blue Mountains. It was a property embracing rivers and mountains, forests and prairies, and wealth unexplored. Lord Fairfax was charmed with young Washington, his frankness, his intelligence, his manliness, his gentlemanly bearing, — a boy in years, a man in maturity of wisdom and character ; and he engaged this lad, then but one month over sixteen years of age, to explore and survey these pathless wilds, a large portion of which was then ranged only by wild beasts and savage men. It may be doubted whether a lad of his age ever before undertook a task so ardu- ous. With a few attendants, the boy entered the wilderness. We have some extracts from the journal which he kept, which give us a vivid idea of the life he then led. Under date of March 15, 1748, he writes: — " Worked hard till night, and then returned. After supper, we were lighted into a room ; and I, not being so good a woodman as the rest, stripped myself very orderly, and went into the bed, as they call it, when, to my surprise, I found it to be nothing but a little straw matted together, without sheet or anything else, but only one threadbare blanket, with double its weight of vermin. I was glad to get up and put on my clothes, and lie as my companions did. Had we not been very tired, I am sure we should not have slept much that night. I made a promise to sleep so no more in a bed, choosing rather to sleep in the open air before a fire." On the 2d of April he writes, "A blowing, rainy night. Our straw, upon which we were lying, took fire ; but I was luckily preserved by one of our men awaking when it was in a flame. We have run off four lots this day." George returned from this tramp with all his energies consolidated by toil, peril, and hardship. Though but seventeen years of age, he was a responsible, self-reliant man. The State of Virginia now employed him as public surveyor.. WASHINGTON S RECEPTION AT TRENTON. A PERILOUS JOURNEY. 37 For three years he was engaged in these laborious duties, which introduced him to scenes of romance and adventure. Though he often, during these three years, visited his mother, his headquarters were with his brother at Mount Vernon, as this was much nearer. Lord Fairfax, who, it is said, was the victim of a love disappointment, had built him a substantial stone mansion in the valley beyond the Blue Ridge, where he was living in a sort of baronial splendor, and where George was an ever welcome guest. MISSION TO THE FRENCH COMMANDER. Having performed his duty as surveyor so well, he was chosen adjutant- general, with the rank of major, over a portion of the militia whose duty it was to repel the encroachments of the French and Indians. In the meantime, how- ever, he was absent four months in Barbadoes with a sick brother. The next year, being then twenty-one years of age, he was sent as commissioner by Governor Dinwiddie to demand of the French commander why he had invaded the king's colonies. For seven hundred and fifty miles, more than half of the distance through an unbroken wilderness, he made his way, accompanied by only seven persons ; and after forty-one days of toil, in the middle of Decem- ber he reached his destination. Having concluded his mission, he set out in the dead of winter to retrace his dreary route. The horses after a while gave out, and the drivers were left to take care of them, while he and one companion pushed on alone, on foot, through the wilderness. Traveling in this manner, they came upon an Indian, who, under the pretence of acting as guide, led them off their route, and then shot at them. Sparing his life, contrary to the wishes of his friend, Washington soon got rid of him, and walked all night to escape pursuit. Coming to the Alleghany river, they found it only partly frozen over, and here the two friends lay down upon the bank in the cold snow, with nothing but their blankets over them, and thus, weary and hungry, passed the dreary night. The next morning they set to work with a single hatchet to build a raft. They worked all day long on the frail thing, and just after sunset suc- ceeded in launching it on the turbulent stream. When nearly half across, huge fragments of floating ice came driving down the current, and, jamming against the crazy fabric, jerked them overboard, into ten feet of water. The two adventurers swam and waded to an island, where, amid frost and snow, wet to the skin, without a blanket to cover them or a spark of fire, with their clothes frozen stiff upon their backs, they passed the long, wintry night. They were now without the means of reaching either shore ; but the biting cold that be- numbed their limbs froze also the river, so that when morning dawned it was bridged over with ice between them and the shore. Escaping the shot of the Indian, the dangers of the forest, and death by cold, they at length, after an absence of eleven weeks, arrived safely at home. 38 GEORGE WASHINGTON. Washington's journal of this tour was published in London, and attracted much attention, as it contained conclusive proof that the French would resist any attempts of the English to establish their settlements upon the Ohio. The Legislature of Virginia was in session at Williamsburg when Washington returned. Modestly, and unconscious that he would attract any attention, he went into the gallery to observe the proceedings. The Speaker chanced to see him, and, rising, proposed that " The thanks of this house be given to Major Washington, who now sits in the gallery, for the gallant manner in which he has executed the important trust lately reposed in him by his excellency the governor." Every member of the house rose to his feet ; and Washington was greeted with a simultaneous and enthusiastic burst of applause. Embarrassed by the unexpected honor, and unaccustomed to public speaking, the young hero en- deavored in vain to give utterance to his thanks. Out of this painful dilemma the eloquent Speaker helped him as generously as he had helped him into it. " Sit down, Mr. Washington," said he, in his most courteous manner, "your modesty equals your valor, and that surpasses the power of any language that I possess." Nothing could be more elegant or skilful than this double stroke, which not only relieved Washington, but paid him at the same time the highest compliment that could be bestowed. braddock's expedition. Early in the spring of 1755 General Braddock, a self-conceited, stubborn man, landed in Virginia with two regiments of regular troops from Great Britain. Arrogant in the pride of his technical military education, he despised alike Frenchmen, Indians, and colonists. With his force, Braddock started on a march through the wilderness for the reduction of Fort Duquesne. Washing- ton accompanied him as volunteer aid. In a straggling line four miles in length, this army of two thousand men, totally unacquainted with Indian warfare, and thoroughly despising such barbaric foes, commenced its march, with ponderous artillery and a cumbrous baggage-train, through the forest, for the distant junc- tion of the Alleghany and the Monongahela. Washington, who well knew the foe they were to encounter, was alarmed at this recklessness, and urged greater caution. The regular British general was not to be taught the art of war by a provincial colonel, who had never even seen the inside of a military school. Suc- cessfully they had threaded the wilderness, and on a beautiful summer's day they were exultingly marching along the banks of the Monongahela, when they entered a defile of picturesque beauty. Suddenly, like the burst of thunder from the cloudless heavens, came the crash of musketry, and a tempest of lead swept through their ranks. Crash followed crash in quick succession, before, behind, on the right, on the left. No foe was to be seen ; yet every bullet accomplished its mission. The ground was • BRADDOCK'S DEFEAT. 39 soon covered with the dead and wounded. Amazement and consternation ran through the ranks. An unseen foe was assailing - them. Braddock stood his ground with bull-dog courage, until he fell, pierced by a bullet. When nearly half of the army were slain, the remnant broke in wild disorder and Med. The ambush was entirely successful. Six hundred of these unseen assailants were Indians. They made the forest ring with their derision in scorn of the folly of Braddock. Washington, through this awful scene, which he had been constantly antici- pating, was perfectly collected, and, with the coolest courage, did everything which human sagacity could do to retrieve the disaster. Two horses were shot beneath him, and four bullets passed through his coat. Eight hundred of Brad- dock's army, including most of the officers, were either dead or wounded. Washington rallied around him the few provincials, upon whom Braddock had looked with contempt. Each man instantly placed himself behind a tree, according to the necessities of forest warfare. As the Indians burst from their ambush, the unerring fire of the provincials checked them and drove them back. But for this the army would have been utterly destroyed. All Washington's endeavors to rally the British regulars were unavailing. Indignantly he writes, "They ran like sheep before the hounds." Panic-stricken, abandoning artillery and baggage, they continued their tumultuous retreat to the Atlantic coast. The provincials, in orderly march, protected them from pursuit. Braddock's defeat rang through the land as Washington's victory. The provincials, who, submit- ting to military authority, had allowed themselves to be led into this valley of death, proclaimed far and wide the precautions which Washington had urged, and the heroism with which he had rescued the remnant of the army. The French made no attempt to pursue their advantage, but quietly retired to Fort Duquesne, there to await another assault, should the English decide to make one. A force of about seven hundred men was raised, and placed under the command of Washington, to protect the scattered villages and dwellings of this vast frontier. For three years Washington gave all his energies to this arduous enterprise. It would require a volume to record the awful scenes through which he passed during these three years. In November, 1758, Fort Duquesne was wrested from the French, and the valley of the Ohio passed from their control forever. The Canadas soon after surrendered to Wolfe, and English supremacy was established upon this conti- nent without a rival. Washington was now twenty-six years of age. The beautiful estate of Mount Vernon had descended to him by inheritance. On the 6th of January, 1759, he married Mrs. Martha Custis, a lady of great worth and beauty. Wash- ington was already wealthy ; and his wife brought with her, as her dower, a fortune of one hundred thousand dollars. After the tumultuous scenes of his CHANCELLOR WASHINGTON TAKING THE OATH AS PRESIDENT, APRIL 30, I7S9, ON THE SITE OF THE PRESENT TREASURY BUILDING, WALL STREET, NEW YORK CITY. Virginia gave us this imperial man, Cast in the massive mould Of those high-statured ages old Which into grander forms our mortal metal ran ; Mother of States and undiminished men, Thou gavest us a Country, giving hin -James Russell Lowell. THE BEGINNING OF WAR. 41 youth, he retired with his bride and her two children to the lovely retreat of Mount Vernon, where he spent fifteen years of almost unalloyed happiness. He enlarged the mansion, embellished the grounds, and by purchase made very considerable additions to his large estate. OUTBREAK OF THE REVOLUTION. During these serene years of peace and prosperity an appalling storm was gathering, which soon burst with fearful desolation over all the colonies. The British ministry, denying the colonists the rights of British subjects, insisted upon exercising the despotic power of imposing taxes upon the colonists, while withholding the right of representation. All American remonstrances were thrown back with scorn. Troops were sent to enforce obedience to the man- dates of the British Crown. The Americans sprang to arms, called a Congress, and chose George Washington commander-in-chief. ■ To the Congress which elected him he replied : "I beg leave to assure the Congress that, as no pecuniary consideration could have tempted me to accept this arduous employment at the expense of my domestic ease and happiness, I do not wish to make any profit from it. I will keep an exact account of my expenses. Those, I doubt not, they will discharge. That is all I desire." To his wife, the object of his most tender affection, he wrote that it was his greatest affliction to be separated from her, but that duty called, and he must obey. He said that he could not decline the appointment without dishonoring his name, and sinking himself even in her esteem. On the 2d of July Washington arrived in Cambridge and took command of the army. The ceremony took place under the elm-tree which still stands immortalized by the event. General Gage was commander of the British forces. Twelve thousand British regulars were intrenched on Bunker's "Hill and in the streets of Boston. About fifteen thousand provincial militia, wretchedly armed and without any discipline, occupied a line nearly twelve miles in extent, en- circling, on the land side, Charlestown and Boston. The British war-ships held undisputed possession of the harbor. At length, in March, 1776, after months of toil and surmounting difficulties more than can be enumerated, Washington was prepared for decisive action. In a dark and stormy night he opened upon the foe in the city, from his encir- cling lines, as fierce a bombardment as his means would allow. Under cover of this roar, of the batteries and the midnight storm, he dispatched a large force of picked troops, with the utmost secrecy, to take possession of the Heights of Dorchester. There, during the hours of the night, the soldiers worked with the utmost diligence in throwing up breastworks which would protect them from the broadsides of the English fleet. Having established his batteries upon those heights, he commanded the harbor. 42 GEORGE WASHINGTON. In the early dawn of the morning, the British Admiral saw, to his con- sternation, that a fort bristling with cannon had sprung up during the night almost over his head. He immediately opened upon the works the broadsides of all his ships ; but the Americans, defiant of the storm of iron which fell around them, continued to pile their sand-bags and to ply their shovels, until they had thrown up ramparts so strong that no cannonade could injure them. The British fleet was now at the mercy of Washington's batteries. In a spirit almost of desperation, the Admiral ordered three thousand men in boats to land and take the heights at every hazard. But a great storm came to the aid of the colonists. The gale increased to such fury that not a boat could be launched. Before another day and night had passed the redoubt was made so strong that it could defy any attack. It was the morning of the 17th of March, 1776. The storm had passed away. The blue sky overarched the beleaguered city and the encamping armies. Washington sat upon his horse, serene and majestic, and contemplated in silent triumph, from the Heights of Dorchester, the evacuation of Boston. The whole British army was crowded on board the ships. A fresh breeze from the west filled their sails ; and the hostile armament, before the sun went down, had disappeared beyond the distant horizon. It was a glorious victory. Such another case, perhaps, history does not record. Washington, without ammuni- tion, had maintained his post for six months within musket-shot of a powerful British army. During this time he had disbanded the small force of raw militia he at first had with him, and had recruited another army ; and had then driven the enemy into his ships, and out into the sea. The latter part of June, just before the Declaration of Independence, two large British fleets, one from Halifax and the other direct from England, met at the mouth of the Bay of New York, and, disembarking a powerful army, took possession of Staten Island. Washington had assembled all his available mili- tary force to resist their advances. The British Government regarded the leaders of the armies, and their supporters in Congress, as felons, doomed to the scaffold. They refused, consequently, to recognize any titles conferred by Congress. By the middle of August the British had assembled, on Staten Island and at the mouth of the Hudson River, a force of nearly thirty thousand soldiers, with a numerous and well-equipped fleet. To oppose them Washington had about twelve thousand men, poorly armed, and quite unaccustomed to military discipline and the hardships of the camp. A few regiments of American troops, about five thousand in number, were gathered near Brooklyn. A few thousand more were stationed at other points on Long Island. The English landed with- out opposition, fifteen thousand strong, and made a combined assault upon the Americans. The battle was short, but bloody. The Americans, overpowered, sullenly retired, leaving fifteen hundred of their number either dead or in the A CAMPAIGN OF RETREATS. 43 hands of the English. A vastly superior force of well-trained British troops, flushed with victory, pressed upon the rear of the dispirited colonists. Their (situation seemed desperate. Again Providence came to our aid. The wind died away to a perfect calm, so that the British fleet could not move. A dense fog was rolled in from the ocean. The Americans, familiar with every foot of the ground, improved the propitious moments. Boats were rapidly collected ; and, in the few hours of that black night, nine thousand men, with nearly all their artillery and military stores, were safely landed in New York. The transportation was conducted so secretly that, though the Americans could hear the English at work with their pickaxes, the last boat had left the Long Island shore ere the retreat was sus- pected. The American army was now in a deplorable condition. It had neither arms, ammunition, nor food. The soldiers were unpaid, almost mutinous, and in rags. There were thousands in the vicinity of New York who were in sympathy with the British. Nearly all the Government officials and their friends were on that side. A conspiracy was formed, in which a part of Washington's own guard was implicated, to seize him, and deliver him to that ignominious death to which the British Crown had doomed him. Washington was equal to the crisis. He saw that the only hope was to be found in avoiding an engagement, and in wearing out the resources of the enemy in protracted campaigns. He slowly retired from New York to the Heights of Harlem, with sleepless vigilance watching every movement of the foe, that he might take advantage of the slightest indiscretion. Here he threw up breast- works, which the enemy did not venture to attack. The British troops ascended the Hudson and East River to assail Washington in his rear. A weary cam- paign of marches and counter-marches ensued, in which Washington, with scarcely a shadow of an army, sustained, in the midst of a constant succession of disasters, the apparently hopeless fortunes of his country. At one time General Reed in anguish exclaimed, — " My God ! General Washington, how long shall we fly ?" Serenely Washington replied, "We shall retreat, if necessary, over every river of our country, and then over the mountains, where I will make a last stand against our enemies." THE NEW JERSEY CAMPAIGN. Washington crossed the Hudson into the Jerseys. The British pursued him. With consummate skill, he baffled all the efforts of the foe. With an army reduced to a freezing, starving band of but three thousand men, he retreated to Trenton. The British pressed exultantly on, deeming the conflict ended and the Revolution crushed. It was December. The foe tracked the patriots by the blood of their lacerated feet on the frozen ground. With great difficulty Wash- THE SURPRISE AT TRENTON. 45 ington succeeded in crossing the Delaware in boats, just as the British army arrived upon the banks of the stream. They needed but to cross the river to take possession of Philadelphia. The ice was so rapidly forming that they would soon be able to pass at any point without obstruction. The enemy, with apparently nothing to fear, relaxed his vigilance. The night of December 25, 1776, was very dark and intensely cold. A storm of wind and snow raged violently. The British, considering the patriots utterly dispersed, and that a broad, icy river flowed between them and the retreating American bands, gathered around the firesides. In the darkness of that wintry night, and amidst the conflict of its elements, Washington re- embarked his troops to recross the Delaware. Forcing his boats through the floating blocks of ice, he succeeded, before daylight the next morning, in land- ing upon the opposite shore twenty-four hundred men and twenty pieces of cannon. The British were carelessly dispersed, not dreaming of danger. The Americans sprang upon the first body of the foe they met, and, after a short but bloody strife, scattered them, capturing a thousand prisoners and six cannon. The British retreated to Princeton, and Washington took possession of Trenton. Soon Lord Cornwallis, having received large reinforcements, marched upon Trenton, confident that General Washington could no longer escape them. At the close of a bleak winter day his army appeared before the lines which Washington had thrown up around Trenton. "To-morrow," he said, "at the break of day, I will attack them. The rising sun shall see the end of the rebellion." The sun rose the next morning, cold but cloudless. In the night the American army had vanished. Replenishing his camp-fires to deceive the enemy, at midnight, with the utmost precaution and precipitation, he evacuated his camp, and, by a circuitous route, fell upon the rear of the English at Prince- ton. A hundred and sixty of the British were shot down, and three hundred were taken prisoners. Cheered by this success, Washington led his handful of troops to the Heights of Morristown. There he intrenched them for winter-quarters. He, however, sent out frequent detachments, which so harassed the enemy that, in a short time, New Jersey was delivered from their presence. The country was animated by these achievements, and Congress roused itself to new energies. During the remainder of the winter .vigorous efforts were made in prepara- tion for the opening of the spring campaign. The different States sent troops to join the army at Morristown. The people of France, in sympathy with our cause, sent two vessels. The Marquis de Lafayette left his mansion of opulence, and his youthful bride, to peril his life in the cause of American independence. The British, harassed by Washington's sleepless vigilance, yet unable to compel him or to lure him into a general engagement, left New York in a fleet, with 4 6 GEORGE WASHINGTON. eighteen thousand soldiers, to capture Philadelphia. They landed near Elkton, at the head of Chesapeake Bay. Washington, with but eleven thousand men, marched to encounter them. The two armies met on the banks of the Brandy- wine. A bloody battle ensued. Lafayette was wounded. The Americans, overpowered, were compelled to retreat. Washington, after a short but severe engagement at Germantown, retired, and the British took possession of Phila- delphia. Congress precipitately adjourned to Lancaster, and thence to York. Winter again came. The British were comfortably housed in Philadelphia. Washington selected Valley Forge, about twenty miles from Philadelphia, as his winter-quarters. Eleven thousand men here passed the winter of 1777 and OLCKBlRtniMCJiAM MEETIM& HOUSE ™ £ BATTLE •( BRA.NDYWINE 1778. It was a period of great discouragement and suffering. The army was in a state of destitution, which Washington did not dare to proclaim abroad, lest the foe should rush upon him in his helplessness. In this dark hour France came forward to our aid ; recognizing our inde- pendence, entering into a friendly alliance with us, and sending both a fleet and an army to our support. The British army in New York and Philadelphia amounted to thirty thousand men. The whole American army did not exceed fifteen thousand. But the British, apprehensive that a French fleet might soon appear, and thus endanger the troops in Philadelphia, evacuated the city, and the troops commenced their march through New Jersey. The cold of winter had given place to the heat of summer. LEE'S TREACHERY. 47 Washington followed close in the rear of the foe, watching for a chance to strike. The 28th of June, 1778, was a day of intense heat. Not a breath of air was stirring, while an unclouded sun poured down its blistering rays upon pursuers and pursued. The British troops were at Monmouth. The march of one more day would so unite them with the army in New York that they would be safe WASHINGTON REPROVING LEE AT MONMOUTH. from attack. General Lee, with five thousand men, was in the advance. Washington sent orders to him immediately to commence the onset, with the assurance that he would hasten to his support. As Washington was pressing eagerly forward, to his inexpre sible chagrin he met General Lee at the head of his troops, in full retreat. It 48 GEORGE WASHINGTON. is said that Washington, with great vehemence of manner and utterance, cried out, "General Lee, what means this ill-timed pr.udence?" The retreating General threw back an angry retort. But it was no time for altercation. Washington turned to the men. They greeted him with cheers. At his com- mand they wheeled about and charged the enemy. A sanguinary battle ensued, and the English were driven from the field. The colonists slept upon their arms, prepared to renew the battle in the morning. When the morning dawned, no foe was to be seen. The British had retreated in the night, leaving three hundred of their dead behind them. The Americans lost but sixty-nine. DARK DAYS OF THE WAR. Another cold and cheerless winter came. The British remained within their lines at New York. They sent agents, however, to the Six Nations of Indians, to arm them against our defenseless frontier. These fierce savages, accompanied by Tory bands, perpetrated horrors too dreadful for recital. The massacres of Cherry Valley and of Wyoming were among the most awful trage- dies ever witnessed on this globe. The narrative of these fiendish deeds sent a thrill of horror through England as well as America. Four thousand men were sent by Washington into the wilderness, to arrest, if possible, these massacres. The savages and their allies were driven to Niagara, where they were received into an English fortress. General Clinton commenced a vigorous prosecution of a system of violence and plunder upon defenseless towns and farm-houses. The sky was reddened with wanton conflagration. Women and children were driven houseless into the fields. The flourishing towns of Fairfield and Norwalk, in Connecticut, were reduced to ashes. While the enemy was thus ravaging that defenseless State, Washington planned an expedition against Stony Point, on the Hudson, which was held by the British. General Wayne conducted the enterprise, on the night of the 15th of July, with great gallantry and success. Sixty-three of the British were killed, five hundred and forty-three were taken prisoners, and all the military stores of the fortress captured. During this summer campaign the American army was never sufficiently strong to take the offensive. It was, however, incessantly employed striking blows upon the English wherever the eagle eye of Washington could discern an exposed spot. The winter of 1779 set in early, and with unusual severity. The American army was in such a starving condition that Washington was compelled to make the utmost exertions to save his wasting band from annihilation. These long years of war and woe filled many even of the most sanguine hearts with despair. Not a few patriots deemed it madness for the colonies, impoverished as they were, any longer to contend against the richest and most powerful nation upon the globe. General Arnold, who was at this time in command at West Point, THE WAR IN THE SOUTH. 49 saw no hope for his country. Believing the ship to be sinking, he turned traitor, and offered to sell his fortress to the English. The treason was detected, but the traitor escaped ; and the lamented Andre, who had been lured into the position of a spy, became the necessary victim of Arnold's crime. Lord Cornwallis was now, with a well-provided army and an assisting navy, overrunning the two Carolinas. General Greene was sent, with all the force which Washington could spare, to watch and harass the invaders, and to furnish the inhabitants with all the protection in his power. Lafayette was in the vicinity of New York, with his eagle eye fixed upon the foe, ready to pounce upon any detachment which presented the slightest exposure. Washington was everywhere, with patriotism which never flagged, with hope which never failed, cheering- the army, animating: the inhabitants, rousing- Congress, and sanding' with his well-balanced mind both military and civil legislation. Thus the dreary year of 1780 lingered away. As the spring of 17.81 opened, the war was renewed. The British directed their chief attention to the South, which was far weaker than the North. Rich- mond, in Virginia, was laid in ashes ; and a general system of devastation and plunder prevailed. The enemy ascended the Chesapeake and the Potomac with armed vessels. They landed at Mount Vernon. The manager of the estate, to save the mansion from pillage and flames, furnished them with abun- dant supplies. Washington was much displeased. He wrote to his agent: — " It would have been a less painful circumstance to me to have heard that, in consequence of your non-compliance with their request, they had burned my house and laid the plantation in ruins. You ought to have considered yourself as my representative, and should have reflected on the bad example of commu- nicating with the enemy, and making a voluntary offer of refreshments to them, with a view to prevent a conflagration." Lord Cornwallis was now at Yorktown, in Virginia, but a few miles from Chesapeake Bay. There was no force in his vicinity seriously to annoy him. Washington resolved, in conjunction with our allies from France, to make a bold movement for his capture. An army of six thousand men, under Count Rochambeau, had been sent by France to aid the American cause. This army with the French fleet, were most important aids to Washington. He succeeded in deceiving the English into the belief that he was making great preparations for the siege of New York. Thus they were prevented from rendering any aid to Yorktown. By rapid marches from the neighborhood of New York Washington has- tened to Virginia. Early in September Lord Cornwallis, as he arose one morn- ing, was amazed to find himself surrounded by the bayonets and batteries of the Americans. At about the same hour the French fleet appeared, in invincible strength, before the harbor. Cornwallis was caught. There was no escape ;. 4 MEETING OF WASHINGTON AND KOCH A.MliEAU. THE TRIUMPH AT YORKTOWN. 51 there was no retreat. Neither by land nor by sea could he obtain any supplies. Shot and shell soon began to fall thickly into his lines. Famine stared him in the face. After a few days of hopeless conflict, on the 19th of October, 1781, he was compelled to surrender. Seven thousand British veterans laid down their arms. One hundred and sixty pieces of cannon, with corresponding mili- tary stores, graced the triumph. When the British soldiers were marching from their intrenchments to lay down their arms, Washington thus addressed his troops : " My brave fellows, let no sensation of satisfaction for the triumphs you have gained induce you to insult your fallen enemy. Let no shouting, no clamorous huzzaing, increase their mortification. Posterity will huzza for us." This glorious capture roused renewed hope and vigor all over the country. The joyful tidings reached Philadelphia at midnight. A watchman traversed the streets, shouting at»intervals, "Past twelve o'clock, and Cornwallis is taken'" Candles were lighted ; windows thrown up ; figures in night-robes and night-caps bent eagerly out to catch the thrilling sound ; shouts were raised ; citizens rushed into the streets, half clad, — they wept ; they laughed. The news flew upon the wings of the wind, nobody can tell how , and the shout of an enfranchised people rose, like a roar of thunder, from our whole land. With such a victory, repub- lican America would never again yield to the aristocratic government of England. Early in May, 1782, the British Cabinet opened negotiations for peace. Hostilities were, by each party, tacitly laid aside. Negotiations were protracted in Paris during the summer and the ensuing winter. Early in the following spring the joyful tidings arrived that a treaty of peace had been signed at Paris. The intelligence was communicated to the American army on the 19th of April, 1783, — just eight years from the day when the conflict was commenced on the Common at Lexington. Late in November the British evacuated New York, entered their ships, and sailed for their distant island. Washington, marching from West Point, entered the city as our vanquished foes departed. America was free and inde- pendent. Washington was the savior of his country. After an affecting farewell to the officers of the army, Washington set out for his Virginia home. At every town and village he was received with love and gratitude. At Annapolis he met the Continental Congress, where he was to resign his commission. It was the 23d of December, 1783. All the members of Congress, and a large concourse of spectators, were present. His address closed with the following words : — " Having now finished the work assigned me, I retire from the great theatre of action, and bidding an affectionate farewell to this august body, under whose orders I have so long acted, I here offer my commission, and take my leave oi all the employments of public life." 52 GEORGE WASHINGTON. The next day he returned to Mount Vernon, where he expected to spend the remainder of his days as a private citizen. This, however, could not be. The wisdom and ability of which he had given such abundant proof was soon required once more in his country's service. The great problem which now engrossed all minds was the consolidation of the thirteen States into a nation. To this subject Washington, who had suffered so intensely from the inefficiency of the Continental Congress, devoted his most anxious attention. A convention was called in the year 1787. Washington was a delegate from Virginia, and was unanimously chosen to preside over its deliberations. The result was the present Constitution of the United States ; which created a nation from the people of all the States, with supreme powers for all the purposes of a general government, and leaving with the States those questions of local law in which the integrity of the nation was not involved. The Constitution of the United States is, in the judgment of the millions of the American people, the most sagacious document which has ever emanated from uninspired minds. It has created the strongest government upon this globe. It has made the United States of America what they now are. The world must look at the fruit, and wonder and admire. FIRST PRESIDENT OF THE NEW NATION. Upon the adoption of the Constitution all eyes were turned to Washington a.s chief magistrate. By the unanimous voice of the Electors he was chosen the first President of the United States. There was probably scarcely a dissentient voice in the nation. New York was then the seat of government. As Wash- ington left Mount Vernon for the metropolis to assume these new duties of toil and care, we find recorded in his journal : — "About ten o'clock I bade adieu to Mount Vernon, to private life, and to domestic felicity ; and, with a mind oppressed with more anxious and painful sensations than I have words to express, set out for New York, with the best disposition to render service to my country in obedience to its call, but with less hopes of answering its expectations." On his journey to New York Washington was met and escorted by crowds of people, who made his progress a march of triumph. At Trenton a beautiful arch, decorated with flowers, spanned the road, commemorating his victory over the Hessians in 1776. His path was strewn with flowers, and troops of children sang songs of welcome. Washington was inaugurated President of the United States on the 30th of April, 1789. He remained in the presidential chair two terms of four years each. At the close of his administration, in the year 1796, he again retired to the peaceful shades of Mount Vernon. Soon after his return he wrote a letter to a friend, in which he described the manner in which he passed his time. He rose with the sun, and first made preparations for the business of the day. PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS. 53 " By the time I have accomplished these matters," he adds, "breakfast is ready. This bciny over, I mount my horse, and ride round my farms, which employs me until it is time to dress for dinner, at which I rarely miss to see strange faces, come, as they say, out of respect to me. And how different ii this from having a few friends at the social board ! The usual time of sitting at table, a walk, and tea, bring me within the dawn ol candle-light; previous t<> which, if not prevented by company, I resolve that, as soon as the glimmering taper supplies the place of the great luminary, I will retire to my writing-table', and acknowledge the letters I have received. Having given you this history of a day, it will serve for a year." The following anecdotes have been related, illustrative of President Wash- ington's habits of punctuality. Whenever he assigned to meet Congress at noon, he seldom failed of passing the door of the hall when the clock struck twelve. His dining-hour was at four o'clock, when he always sat down to his table, whether his guests were assembled or not, merely allowing five minutes for the variation of time-pieces. To those who came late, he remarked, "Gen- tlemen, we are punctual here : my cook never asks whether the company has arrived, but whether the hour has." Captain Pease had a beautiful span of horses, which he wished to sell to the President. The President appointed five o'clock in the morning to examine them at his stable. The Captain arrived with his span at quarter past five. He was told by the groom that the President was there at five o'clock, but was then gone to attend to other engagements. The President's time was wholly occu- pied for several days, so that Captain Pease had to remain a whole week in Philadelphia before he could get another opportunity to exhibit his span. * Washington, having inherited a large landed estate in Virginia, was, as a matter of course, a slaveholder. The whole number which he held at the time of his death was one hundred and twenty-four. The system met his strong disapproval. In 1786 he wrote to Robert Morris, saying, "There is no man living who wishes more sincerely than I do to see a plan adbpted for the aboli- tion of slavery." Long before this he had recorded his resolve : "I never mean, unless some particular circumstances should compel me to it, to possess another slave by purchase ; it being among my first wishes to see some plan adopted by which slavery in this country may be abolished by law." Mrs. Washington, immediately after her husband's death, learning from his will that the only obstacle to the immediate emancipation of the slaves was her right of dower, immediately relinquished that right, and the slaves were at once emancipated. The 1 2th of December, 1799, was chill and damp. Washington, however, took his usual round on horseback to his farms, and returned late in the after- 54 GEORGE WASHINGTON. noon, wet with sleet, and shivering with cold. Though the snow was clinging to his hair behind when he came in, he sat down to dinner without changing his dress. The next day three inches of snow whitened the ground, and the sky was clouded. Washington, feeling that he had taken cold, remained by the fire- side during the morning. As it cleared up in the afternoon, he went out to THE TOMB OF WASHINGTON AT MOUNT VERNON. superintend some work upon the lawn. He was then hoarse, and the hoarse- ness increased as night came on. He, however, took no remedy for it, saying, "I never take anything to carry off a cold. Let it go as it came." He passed the evening as usual, reading the papers, answering letters, and conversing with his family. About two o'clock the next morning, Saturday, the LAST HOURS. 55 14th, he awoke in an ague-chill, and was seriously unwell. At sunrise his physician, Dr. Craig, who resided at Alexandria, was sent for. In the mean- time he was bled by one of his overseers, but with no relief, as he rapidly grew worse. Dr. Craig reached Mount Vernon at eleven o'clock, and immediately bled his patient again, but without effect. Two consulting physicians arrived during the day ; and, as the difficulty in breathing and swallowing rapidly increased, venesection was again attempted. It is evident that Washington then considered his case doubtful. He examined his will, and destroyed some papers which he did not wish to have preserved. His sufferings from inflammation of the throat and struggling for breath, as the afternoon wore away, became quite severe. Still, he retained his mental faculties unimpaired, and spoke briefly of his approaching death and burial. About four o'clock in the afternoon he said to Dr. Craig, "I die hard ; but I am not afraid to go. I believed, from my first attack, that I should not survive it : my breath cannot last long." About six o'clock, his physician asked him if he would sit up in his bed. He held out his hands, and was raised up on his pillow, when he said, " I feel that I am going. I thank you for your attentions. You had better not take any more trouble about me, but let me go off quietly. I cannot last long." He then sank back upon his pillow, and made several unavailing attempts to speak intelligibly. About ten o'clock he said, "I am just going. Have me decently buried, and do not let my body be put into the vault until three days after I am dead. Do you understand me?" To the reply, "Yes, sir," he remarked, "It is well." These were the last words he uttered. Soon after this he gently expired, in the sixty-eighth year of his age. At the moment of his death Mrs. Washington sat in silent grief at the foot of his bed. "Is he gone?" she asked, in a firm and collected voice. The physician, unable to speak, gave a silent signal of assent. " 'Tis well," she added, in the same untremulous utterance. "All is now over. I shall soon follow him. I have no more trials to pass through." On the 1 8th his remains were deposited in the tomb at Mount Vernon, where they still repose ; and his name and memory live on immortal, forever enshrined in the hearts of a grateful people. " How sleep the brave who sink to rest By all their country's wishes blest ! By fairy hands their knell is rung; By forms unseen their dirge is sung ; There Honor conies, a pilgrim gray, To bless the turf that wraps their clay; And Freedom shall awhile repair To dwell, a weeping hermit, there." BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, THE INVENTOR, PHILOSOPHER, AND STATESMAN. /jfffo O ONE," says a well-known writer, "ever started from a lower point than the poor apprentice of Boston ; no one ever raised himself higher by his own urn _^ aided forces than the inventor of the lightning-rod. ¥► tj fi't.'. Better than the biographies of Plutarch, this life, f \ ISmr s " long and so well filled, is a source of perpetual jL vp instruction to all men. Every one can there find &_ ../* counsel and example." Franklin's autobiography is one of the most , /i\- <%•' fascinating books in the language. It has the charm of tfL ^^S&' style common to all of his writings ; and no one who has opportunity should miss reading this unrivaled book. It was undertaken at first lor the edification of the members of his own family, and afterward continued at the pressing request of friends in London and Paris. His autobiography, however, covers only the first fifty years of his life. For three hundred years at least Franklin's family lived in the village of Ecton, in Northamptonshire, England, the eldest son, who inherited the prop- erty, being always brought up to the trade of a smith. Franklin himself "was the youngest son of the youngest son for five generations back." Franklin's father, Josiah, took his wife and three children to New England, in 1682, where he practiced the trade of a tallow-chandler and soap-boiler. Franklin was born in 1 706, and was the youngest of seventeen children. Benjamin being the youngest of ten sons, his father intended him for the Church, and sent him to school when eight years of age. Although he made very rapid progress in the school, his father concluded he could not afford a college education. At the age of ten young Benjamin was taken home to assist in cutting the wicks of candles, and otherwise to make himself useful. Until twelve years of age Benjamin continued in his father's business, but as he manifested a great dislike for it, his parents set about finding some trade more congenial to his tastes. With this view his father took him to see various artificers at their work, that he might observe the tastes of the boy. This 59 60 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. experience was very valuable to him, as it taught him to do many little jobs for himself. During this time Benjamin spent most of his pocket-money in purchas- ing books, some of which he sold when he had read them, in order to buy others. He read through most of the books in his father's very limited iibrary. At length Franklin's fondness for books caused his father to decide to make him a printer. His brother James had already entered that business, and had set up in Boston. He signed his indentures when only twelve years old, apprenticing himself to his brother until the age of twenty-one. Meeting with a book on vegetarianism, Franklin determined to give the system a trial. This led to some inconvenience in his brother's housekeeping, so Franklin proposed to board himself if his brother would give him half the sum he paid for his board. Out of this he was able to save a considerable amount for the purpose of buying books. Moreover, the time required for his meals was now so short that the dinner-hour afforded considerable leisure for reading. In 1720 or 1 72 1 James Franklin began to print the New England Courant. To this paper, which he helped to compose and print, Benjamin became an anonymous contributor. The members of the staff spoke highly of his contribu- tions, but when the authorship became known, James conceived a jealousy of his younger brother, which led to their separation. An article in the paper having offended the Assembly, James was imprisoned for a month, and forbidden to print the paper. He then secretly freed Benjamin from his indentures, in order that the paper might be published in his name. At length, a disagreement arising, Benjamin took advantage of the canceling of his indentures to quit his brother's service. As he could get no employment in Boston, he obtained a passage to New York, whence he was recommended to go to Philadelphia, which he reached after a very troublesome journey. His whole stock of cash then consisted of a Dutch dollar and about a shilling's worth of coppers. His first appearance in Philadelphia, about eight o'clock on a Sunday morning, was certainly striking. A youth between seventeen and eighteen years of age, dressed in his working clothes, which were dirty through his journey, with his pockets stuffed out with stockings and shirts, his aspect was not calculated to command respect. "I walked up the street," he writes, "gazing about, till near the market- house I met a boy with bread. I had made many a meal on bread, and, inquir- ing where he got it, I went immediately to the baker's he directed me to, on Second street, and ask'd for bisket, intending such as we had in Boston ; but they, it seems, were not made in Philadelphia. Then I asked for a threepenny loaf, and was told they had none such. So, not considering or knowing the dif- ference of money, and the greater cheapness, nor the name of his bread, I bade him give me three-penny-worth of any sort. He gave me, accordingly, three great puffy rolls. I was surpriz'd at the quantity, but took it, and having no FRANKLIN IN PHILADELPHIA. 61 room in my pockets, walk'd off with a roll under each arm, and eating the other. Thus I went up Market street as far as Fourth street, passing by the door of Mr. Read, my future wife's father ; when she, standing at the door, saw me, and thought I made, as I certainly did, a most awkward, ridiculous appear- ance. Then I turned and went down Chestnut street and part of Walnut street, eating my roll all the way, and, coming round, found myself again at Market street wharf, near the boat I came in, to which I went for a draught of the river water ; and, being filled out with one of my rolls, gave the other two to a woman and her child that came down the river in the boat with us, and were waiting to go further." FRANKLIN IN PHILADELPHIA. In Philadelphia Franklin obtained an introduction to a printer, named Kei- mer, who had set up business with an old press which he appeared not to know how to use, and one pair of cases of English type. Here Franklin obtained em- ployment when the business on hand would permit, and he put the press in order and worked it. Keimer obtained lodging for him at the house of Mr. Read, and, by industry and economical living, Franklin soon found himself in easy circumstances. Sir William Keith, the Governor of Pennsylvania, hearing of Franklin, called upon him, and promised to obtain for him the Government print- ing if he would set up for himself. Josiah Franklin thought his son too young to take the responsibility of a business, whereon the Governor, stating that he was determined to have a good printer there, promised to find the means of equip- ping the printing-office himself and suggested Franklin's making a journey to England to purchase the plant. He promised letters of introduction to various persons in England, as well as a letter of credit. These were to be sent on board the ship, and Franklin, having gone on board, awaited the letters. When the Governor's despatches came, they were all put into a bag together, and the captain promised to let Franklin have his letters before landing. On opening the bag off Plymouth, there were no letters of the kind promised, and Franklin was left, without introductions and almost without money, to make his own way in the world. In London he learned that Governor Keith was well known as a man in whom no dependence could be placed, and as to his giving a letter of credit, " he had no credit to give." A friend of Franklin's, named Ralph, accompanied him from America, and the two took lodgings together. Franklin immediately obtained employment at a printing-office, but Ralph, who knew no trade but aimed at literature, was unable to get any work. He could not obtain employment, even as a copying clerk, so for some time the wages which Franklin earned had to support the two. Among Franklin's fellow-passengers from Philadelphia to England was an American merchant, a Mr. Denham. This gentleman always remained a firm friend to Franklin, who, during his stay iu London, sought his advice when any 62 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. important questions arose. When Mr. Denham returned to Philadelphia, he offered Franklin an appointment as clerk, which was afterward to develop into a commission agency. The offer was accepted, and the two returned to Phila- delphia in October, 1726. Here he found that Miss Read, to whom he had become engaged before leaving for England, and to whom he had written only once during his absence, had married. Shortly after starting in business, Mr. Denham died, and thus left Franklin to commence life again for himself. Kei- mer had by this time obtained a fairly extensive establishment, and employed a FENN'S RESIDENCE IN SECOND STREET, BELOW CHESTNUT STREET. number of hands, but none of them of much value ; and he made overtures to Franklin to take the management of his printing-office. Franklin set the print- ing-house in order, started type-founding, made the ink, and, when necessary, executed engravings. While working for Keimer, Franklin formed a club, called the Junto, which was destined to exert considerable influence on American politics. It was essen- tially a debating society, the subject for each evening's discussion being proposed at the preceding meeting. The Club, lasted for about forty years, and became "POOR RICHARD'S ALMANACK:' 63 the nucleus of the American Philosophical Society, of which Franklin was the first president. On leaving Keimer's, Franklin went into partnership with one of his fellow- workmen, Hugh Meredith, whose father found the necessary capital, and a print- ing-office was started which soon excelled its two rivals in Philadelphia. Frank- lin's industry attracted the attention of the townsfolk, and inspired the merchants with confidence in the prospects of the new concern. " In order to secure my credit and character as a tradesman, I took care not only to be in reality industrious and frugal, but to avoid all appearances to the contrary. I drest plainly ; I was seen at no places of idle diversion. I never went out a-fishing or shooting ; a book, indeed, sometimes debauch'd me from my work, but that was seldom, snug, and gave no scandal ; and, to show that I was not above my business, I sometimes brought home the paper I purchas'd at the stores thro' the streets on a wheelbarrow. Thus being esteem'd an indus- trious, thriving young man, and paying duly for what I bought, the merchants who imported stationery solicited my custom ; others proposed supplying me with books, and I went on swimmingly. In the meantime, Keimer's credit declin- ing daily, he was at last fore'd to sell his printing-house to satisfy his creditors." On September 1, 1730, Franklin married his former fiancee, whose previous husband had left her and was reported to have died in the West Indies. The marriage was a very happy one. Industry and frugality reigned in the house- hold of the young printer. Mrs. Franklin not only managed the house, but assisted in the business, folding and stitching pamphlets, and in other ways making herself useful. TUBLIC SERVICE AND RESPONSIBILITY. In 1732 appeared the first copy of " Poor Richard's Almanack." This was published by Franklin for about twenty-five years in succession, and attained a world-wide fame. Besides the usual astronomical information, it contained a collection of entertaining anecdotes, verses, jests, etc., while the "little spaces that occurred between the remarkable events in the calendar" were filled with proverbial sayings, inculcating industry and frugality as helps to virtue. These sayings were collected and prefixed to the almanack of 1757, whence they were copied into the American newspapers, and afterward reprinted as a broad-sheet in England and in France. In 1736 Franklin was chosen Clerk to the General Assembly, an office to which he was annually re-elected until he became a member of the Assembly about 1750. There was one member who, on the second occasion of his election, made a long speech against him. Franklin determined to secure the friendship of this member. Accordingly, he wrote to him to request the loan of a very scarce and curious book which was in his library. The book was lent 64 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. and returned in about a week, with a note of thanks. The member ever after manifested a readiness to serve Franklin, and they became great friends — " Another instance of the truth of an old maxim I had learned, which says, 'He that has once done you a kindness will be more ready to do you another than he whom you yourself have obliged! And it shows how much more profitable it is to prudently remove, than to resent, return, and continue inimical proceedings." Spain, having been for some years at war with England, was joined at length by France. This threatened danger to the American colonies. Franklin pub- lished a pamphlet entitled "Plain Truth," setting forth the unarmed condition of the colonies, and recommending the formation of a volunteer force for defensive purposes. The pamphlet excited much attention. The provision of war material was a difficulty with the Assembly, which consisted largely of Quakers, who, though privately willing that the country should be put in a state of defense, hesitated to vote in opposition to their peace principles. Hence, when the Government of New England asked a grant of gunpowder from Penn- sylvania, the Assembly voted ^3000 "for the purchasing of bread, flour, wheat, or other grain'.' When it was proposed to devote ^60 toward the erection of a battery below the town, Franklin suggested that it should be proposed that a fire-engine be purchased with the money, and that the committee should "buy a great gun, which is certainly a fire-engine!' The "Pennsylvania fireplace" was invented in 1742. A patent was offered to Franklin by the Governor of Pennsylvania, but he declined it on the principle "that, as we enjoy great advantages from the inventions of others, we should be glad of an opportunity to serve others by any invention of ours ; and this we should do freely and generously.'" Having practically retired from business, Franklin intended to devote him- self to philosophical studies, having commenced his electrical researches some time before in conjunction with the other members of the Library Company. Public business, however, crowded upon him. He was elected a member of the Assembly, a councillor, and afterward an alderman of the city, and by the Governor was made a justice of the peace. As a member of the Assembly, he was largely concerned in providing the means for the erection of a hospital, and in arranging for the paving and cleansing of the streets of the city. In 1753 he was appointed, in conjunction with Mr. Hunter, Postmaster-General of America. The post-office of the colonies had previously been conducted at a loss. In a few years, under Franklin's management, it not only paid the stipends of himself and Mr. Hunter, but yielded a considerable revenue to the Crown. In 1754 war with France appeared to be again imminent, and a Congress of Commissioners from the several colonies was arranged for. Of course, Franklin was one of the representatives of Pennsylvania, and was also one ol the members who independently drew up a plan for the union of all the colonies JOURNEY TO ENGLAND. 65 under one government, for defensive and other general purposes, and his was the plan finally approved by Congress for the union, though it was not accepted by the Assemblies or by the English Government, being regarded by the former as having too much of the prerogative in it, by the latter as being too democratic. Franklin wrote respecting this scheme : " The different and contrary reasons of dislike to my plan makes me suspect that it was really the true medium ; and I am still of opinion that it would have been happy for both sides the water if it had been adopted. The colonies, so united, would have been sufficiently strong to have defended themselves ; there would then have been no need of troops from England ; of course, the subsequent pretense for taxing America, and the bloody contest it occasioned, would have been avoided." In the following year General Braddock started on his famous expedition against Fort Duquesne. Franklin's services were called for in providing horses and wagons from the Pennsylvania farmers ; and in the disastrous defeat which Braddock suffered, and in the long years of the French and Indian war which followed, Franklin took a prominent part in devising means of protection for the Colonies. When at last the war was ended by the victory and death of Wolfe on the heights of Quebec, Franklin's attention was turned to the relations of the Colonies to the mother country, which were becoming daily more strained by the oppressions of the British Parliament. FRANKLIN SENT TO ENGLAND. In 1757 Franklin was sent by the Assembly of Pennsylvania to London, to present a remonstrance against the conduct of the Governor, who refused to assent to bills for raising revenue for the king unless the proprietary estates were exempted from taxation. When Franklin reached London he took up his abode with Mrs. Margaret Stevenson. For Mrs. Stevenson and her daughter Mary, then a young lady of eighteen, he acquired a sincere affection, which con- tinued throughout their lives. Miss Stevenson spent much of her time with an aunt in the country, and some of Franklin's letters to her respecting the con- duct of her "higher education " are among the most interesting of his writings. In coming to England, Franklin brought with him his son William, who entered on the study of law. To his wife and daughter Franklin frequently sent pres- ents, and his letters to Mrs. Franklin give a pretty full account of all his doings while in England. During his visit he received the honorary degrees of D.C.L. from the University of Oxford, and LL.D. from that of Edinburgh. In August, 1762, he started again for America, and reached Philadelphia on November 1, after an absence of five years. His son William had shortly before been appointed Governor of New Jersey. From this time William Franklin became very much the servant of the proprietaries and of the English government, but no offer of patronage produced any effect on the father. FOLLY OF THE STAMP ACT. 67 Franklin's stay in America was of short duration. While there he was mainly instrumental in quelling' an insurrection in Pennsylvania, and was en- gaged in long and tedious efforts to compose^ the incessant disputes between the Assembly and the proprietary governors. As soon as the Assembly was convened, it determined to send Franklin to England, to take charge of a peti- tion for a change of government. The merchants subscribed ^1100 toward his expenses in a few hours, and in twelve days he was on his journey, being accompanied to the ship by a cavalcade of three hundred of his friends. Arrived in London, he at once took up his old lodgings with Mrs. Stevenson. He was a master of satire, equaled only by Swift, and during the quarrels which preceded the War of Independence, as well as during the war, he made good use of his powers. One of Franklin's chief objects in coming to England was to prevent the passing of the Stamp Act. The colonists urged that they had always been liberal in their votes, whenever money was required by the Crown, and that Parliament had no right to tax America so long as the colonists were unrepre- sented in Parliament. " Had Mr. Grenville, instead of that act, applied to the King in Council for requisitional letters, I am sure he would have obtained more money from the colonies by their voluntary grants than he himself expected from the sale of stamps. But he chose compulsion rather than persuasion, and would not receive from their good-will what he thought he could obtain without it." The Stamp Act was passed, stamps were printed, distributors were ap- pointed, but the colonists would have nothing to do with the stamps. The distributors were compelled to resign their commissions, and the captains of vessels were forbidden to land the stamped paper. The cost of printing and distributing amounted to ,£12,000; the whole return was about ^1500, and that mainly from Canada and the West Indies. In 1 767 Franklin visited Paris. Though Parliament had repealed the Stamp Act, it nevertheless insisted on its right to tax the colonies. The Duty Act was scarcely less objectionable than its predecessors. On Franklin's return from the continent, he heard of the retaliatory measures of the Boston people, who had assembled in town-meetings, formally resolved to encourage home manu- factures, to abandon superfluities, and, after a certain time, to give up the use of some articles of foreign manufacture. A quantity of tea sent by the East India Company to Boston was destroyed by the people. The British Government then blockaded the port. This soon led to open hostilities. Franklin worked hard to effect a reconciliation. He drew up a scheme, setting forth the conditions under which he conceived a reconcilia- tion might be brought about, and discussed it fully with Mr. Daniel Barclay and Dr. Fothergill. This scheme was shown to Lord Howe, and afterward brought before the Ministry, but was rejected. All his negotiations were fruitless. At 5 68 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. last he addressed a memorial to the Earl of Dartmouth, Secretary of State, complaining of the blockade -of Boston, which had then continued for nine months, and had "during every week of its continuance done damage to that town equal to what was suffered there by the India Company ;" and claiming reparation for such injury beyond the value of the tea which had been destroyed. This memorial was returned to Franklin by Mr. Walpole, and Franklin shortly afterward returned to Philadelphia. THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR. Before Franklin reached America, the War of Independence, though not formally declared, had fairly begun. He was appointed a member of the second Continental Congress, and one of a committee to confer with General Washing- ton respecting the Continental Army. On October 3, 1775, he wrote to Priestley : — '.' Tell our dear good friend, Dr. Price, who sometimes has his doubts and despondencies about our firmness, that America is determined and unanimous ; a very few Tories and placemen excepted, who will probably soon export themselves. Britain, at the expense of three millions, has killed a hundred and fifty Yankees this campaign, which is ,£20,000 a head ; and at Bunker's Hill she gained a mile of ground, half of which she lost again by our taking the post on Ploughed Hill. During the same time sixty thousand children have been born in America. From these data his mathematical head will easily calculate the time and expense necessary to kill us all and conquer our whole territory." On the 4th of July Franklin took part in the signing of the Declaration of Independence. When the document was about to be signed, Mr. Hancock remarked, "We must be unanimous ; there must be no pulling different ways ; we must all hang together." Franklin replied, "Yes, we must indeed all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately." In the autumn of 1776 Franklin was unanimously chosen a Special Com- missioner to the French Court. He took with him his two grandsons, William Temple Franklin and Benjamin Franklin Bache, and leaving Marcus Hook on October 28th, crossed the Atlantic in a sloop of sixteen guns. In Paris he met with an enthusiastic reception. M. de Chaumont placed at his disposal his house at Passy, about a mile from Paris. Here he resided for nine years, being a con- stant visitor at the French Court, and certainly one of the most conspicuous figures in Paris. He was obliged to serve in many capacities, and was very much burdened with work. Not only were there his duties as Commissioner at the French Court, but he was also made Admiralty Judge and Financial Agent, so that all financial negotiations, either with the French Government or con- tractors, had to pass through his hands. Perhaps the most unpleasant part of his work was his continued applications to the French Court for monetary AID FROM FRANCE. 69 advances. The French Government warmly espoused die cause of die Ameri- cans, and to the utmost of its ability assisted them with money, material, and men. REAR VIEW OF INDI -.I'1'NI PENCE HALL, PHILADELPHIA. At first the British Government, regarding the Americans as rebels, did not treat their prisoners as prisoners of war, but threatened to try them for high treason. Their sufferings in the English prisons were very great. Mr. David Hartley did much to relieve them, and Franklin transmitted money for the pur- 70 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN pose. When a treaty had been formed between France and the United States, and fortune began to turn in favor of the united armies, the American prisoners received better treatment from the English Government, and exchanges took place freely. In a letter to Mr. Hartley, Franklin showed something of the feelings of the Americans with respect to the English at that time : — " You may have heard that accounts upon oath have been taken in America, by order of Congress, of the British barbarities committed there. It is expected of me to make a school-book of them, and to have thirty-five prints designed here by good artists, and engraved, each expressing one or more of the horrid facts, in order to impress the minds of children and posterity with a deep sense of your bloody and insatiable malice and wickedness. Every kindness I hear of done by an Englishman to an American prisoner makes me resolve not to proceed in the work." Franklin always advocated freedom of commerce, even in time of war. He was of opinion that the merchant, the agriculturist, and the fisherman were bene- factors to mankind. He condemned privateering in every form, and endeav- ored to bring about an agreement between all the civilized powers against the fitting out of privateers. He held that no merchantman should be interfered with unless carrying war material. He greatly lamented the horrors of the war, but preferred anything to a dishonorable peace. To Priestley he wrote : — " Perhaps as you grow older you may . . . repent of having murdered in mephitic air so many honest, harmless mice, and wish that, to prevent mischief, you had used boys and girls instead of them. In what light we are viewed by superior beings may be gathered from a piece of late West India news, which possibly has not yet reached you. A young angel of distinction, being sent down to this world on some business for the first time, had an old courier-spirit assigned him as a guide. They arrived over the seas of Martinico, in the middle of the long day of obstinate fight between the fleets of Rodney and De Grasse. When, through the clouds of smoke, he saw the fire of the guns, the decks covered with mangled limbs and bodies dead or dying ; the ships sinking, burning, or blown into the air ; and the quantity of pain, misery, and destruction the crews yet alive were thus with so much eagerness dealing round to one another, — he turned angrily to his guide, and said, 'You blundering blockhead, you are igno- rant of your business ; you undertook to conduct me to the earth, and you have brought me into hell !' ' No, sir,' says the guide, ' I have made no mistake ; this is really the earth, and these are men. Devils never treat one another in this cruel manner ; they have more sense and more of what men (vainly) call humanity.' " Franklin maintained that it would be far cheaper for a nation to extend its possessions by purchase from other nations than to pay the cost of war for the sake of conquest. VIEWS ON RELIGION. 71 At last, after two years' negotiations, a definitive treaty of peace was signed between Great Britain and the United States, Franklin being one of the Commissioners for the latter, and Mr. Hartley for the former, and therewith terminated the seven years' War of Independence. Franklin celebrated the surrender of the armies of Burgoyne and Cornwallis by a medal, on which the infant Hercules appears strangling two serpents. RETURN TO AMERICA. On May 2, 1785, Franklin received from Congress permission to return to America. He was then in his eightieth year. On July 12th he left Passy for Havre, whence he crossed to Southampton, and there saw for the last time his old friend, the Bishop of St. Asaph, and his family. He reached his home in Philadelphia early in September, and the day after his arrival he received a congratulatory address from the Assembly of Pennsylvania. In the following month he was elected President of the State, and was twice re-elected to the same office, it being contrary to the Constitution for any President to be elected for more than three years in succession. The following extract from a letter, written most probably to Thomas Paine, is worthy of the attention of some writers : — "I have read your manuscript with some attention. By the argument it contains against a particular Providence, though you allow a general Providence, you strike at the foundations of all religion. For without the belief of a Provi- dence that takes cognizance of, guards and guides, and may favor particular persons, there is no motive to worship a Deity, to fear His displeasure, or to pray for His protection. I will not enter into any discussion of your principles, though you seem to desire it. But were you to succeed, do you imagine any good would be done by it ? You yourself may find it easy to live a virtuous life without the assistance afforded by religion ; you having a clear perception of the advantages of virtue and the disadvantages of vice, and possessing strength of resolution sufficient to enable you to resist common temptations. But think how great a portion of mankind consists of weak and ignorant men and women, and of inexperienced, inconsiderate youth of both sexes, who have need of the motives of religion to restrain them from vice, to support their virtue, and retain them in the practice of it till it becomes habitual, which is the great point for its security. And perhaps you are indebted to her originally, that is, to your religious education, for the habits of virtue upon which you now justly value yourself. You might easily display your excellent talents of reasoning upon a less hazardous subject, and thereby obtain a rank with our most distinguished authors. For among us it is not necessary, as among the Hottentots, that a youth, to be raised into the company of men, should prove his manhood by beating his mother. 72 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. " I would advise you, therefore, not to attempt unchaining the tiger, but to burn this piece before it is seen by any other person ; whereby you will save yourself a great deal of mortification by the enemies it may raise against you, and perhaps a good deal of regret and repentance. If men are so wicked with religion, what would they be if without it ? I intend this letter itself as a proof of my friendship, and therefore add no professions to it ; but subscribe simply yours." During the last few years of his life Franklin suffered from a painful disease, which confined him to his bed and seri- ously interfered with his literary work, preventing him from completing his bio- graphy. During this time he was cared for by his daughter, Mrs. Bache, who resided in the same house with him. He died on April 17, 1790, the immediate cause of death being an affection of the lungs. He was buried beside his wife in the cemetery of Christ Church, Philadelphia, the marble slab upon the grave bearing no other inscription than the name and date of death. In his early days (1728) he had written the fol- lowing epitaph for himself: — The Body FRANKLIN S GRAVE. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Printer (like the cover of an old book, its contents torn out and stript of its lettering and gilding), lies here, food for worms. hut the work shall not be lost, for it will (as he believed) appear once more in a new and more elegant edition, revised and corrected THE AUTHOR. JOHN ADAMS, THE REVOLUTIONARY PATRIOT AND STATESMAN. N SEPTEMBER, 1774, there assembled in Philadelphia one of the greatest bodies of men which the world has ever seen. "For solidity of reason, force of sagacity, and wis- dom of conclusion," said the great Earl of Chatham, "no body of men can take precedence of the Continental Con- gress." One of -the foremost of that renowned Congress was the man whose name every schoolboy associates with American Independence, — the name of John Adams. " He was our Colossus," says his great colleague, Thomas Jef- ferson ; "the great pillar of support to the Declaration of Independence, and its ablest advocate and champion on the floor of the House, was John Adams. Not graceful, not always fluent, he yet came out with a power, both of thought and expres- sion, which moved us from our seats." The name of Adams is "with the country's woven" to a remarkable extent. The son of the first John Adams was John Quincy Adams, also Presi- dent, and one of the purest and ablest men who ever sat in the executive chair. After him came his son, Charles Francis Adams, whose services as minister to England during the stormy days of our great civil war will not soon be forgot- ten. The interest which we naturally feel in this remarkable family is increased by the ample materials which they have given us to satisfy it. A fluent pen seems to belong in the Adams line. A tendency to keep records is a family trait. The Diary of John Quincy Adams, in twelve large volumes, edited by his son, is one of our best sources of the current history of his time ; and Charles Francis Adams has also edited the "Life and Works of John Adams," in ten volumes ; so that we not only have in this great line of statesmen a most interesting subject, but also the amplest materials for its study. John Adams was born in Braintree, Massachusetts, on the 30th of October, 1 735- His father was a farmer of moderate means, a worthy, industrious man, toiling early and late. He was anxious to give his son a collegiate education, hoping that he would become a minister. John entered Harvard College at the 75 76 JOHN ADAMS. age of sixteen. He had to struggle with small means. When he graduated at twenty years of age, he was considered as having received his full share of the small patrimony ; and, with his education as his only capital, he went out to take his place in the conflicts of the world. For two years John Adams lived in Worcester, then a town of but a few hundred inhabitants, teaching a public school and studying law. When but twenty-two years of age he returned to his native town of Braintree, and, open- ing a law office, devoted himself to study with renewed vigor. His native powers of mind and untiring devotion to his profession caused him to rise rapidly in public esteem. In October, 1764, he married Miss Abigail Smith, daughter of Rev. William Smith, pastor of the church in Weymouth. She was a lady of rare endowments of person and mind, and, by the force of her character, contributed not a little to her husband's celebrity. DIFFICULTIES WITH ENGLAND. When the memorable Stamp Act was issued, Adams entered with all the ardor of his soul into political life. He drew up a series of resolutions, remon- strating against the Act, which were adopted at a public meeting of citizens at Braintree, and which were subsequently adopted, word for word, by more than forty towns in the State. John Adams boldly took the ground that the Stamp Act was an assumption of arbitrary power, violating both the English Consti- tution and the charter of the province. It is said that this was the first direct denial of the unlimited right of Parliament over the colonies. To suppress the spirit of independence, daily becoming more manifest among the people, the British crown sent two regiments of soldiers to Boston. A more obnoxious menace could not have been devised. The populace insulted the soldiers ; the soldiers retaliated with insolence and threats. On the 5th of March, 1770, a small party of soldiers, thus assailed, fired upon the crowd in Boston, killing and wounding several. Mutual exasperation was now roused almost to frenzy. The captain and six soldiers were arrested and tried for murder. Very nobly, and with moral courage rarely equaled, John Adams and Josiah Ouincy undertook the task of their defense. They encountered unmeasured obloquy. They were stigmatized as deserters from the cause of popular liberty and the bribed advocates of tyranny. Captain Preston and the soldiers were acquitted, excepting two, who received a very slight punishment. Though Boston instituted an annual commemoration of the massacre, Mr. Adams' popularity suffered so little that he was elected by the citizens of Boston, to which place he had removed, as one of their representa- tives to the. colonial Legislature. In 1773, in spite of the opposition of the colonists, several ships loaded with tea were sent from England to Boston. The patriots were firmly resolved THE "BOSTON TEA-PARTY." 77 that the tea should not be landed ; and a band of resolute men, meeting in secret, made arrangements to prevent it by force, if necessary. After exhaust- ing every lawful means, a party of men disguised as Indians boarded the vessels, broke open the chests, and emptied the contents into the harbor. It may be imagined that John Adams was not a mere passive spectator in the proceedings which thus led to the famous " Boston Tea-party." John Adams was one of the five delegates sent from Massachusetts to the OLD BUILDING IN* BOSTON WHERE THE TEA-PLOT IS sflTOSEIl TO HAVE BEEN HATCHED. Continental Congress. He was entreated by a friend, the king's attorney-gen- eral, not to accept his appointment as a delegate to the Congress. " Great Britain," said the Attorney General, "has determined on her system. Her power is irresistible,, and will be destructive to you, and to all those who shall persevere in opposition to her designs." The heroic reply of John Adams was : " I know that Great Britain has determined on her system ; and that very determination determines me on 78 • JOHN ADAMS. mine. You know that I have been constant and uniform in my opposition to her measures. The die is now cast. I have passed the Rubicon. Sink or swim, live or die, survive or perish with my country, is my fixed, unalterable determination." The battle of Bunker Hill was fought on the 17th of June, 1775. The next afternoon, which was Sunday, Mrs. Adams wrote to her husband : — "The day, perhaps the decisive day, is come, on which the fate of America depends. My bursting heart must find vent at my pen. I have just heard that our dear friend Dr. Warren is no more. Charlestown is laid in ashes. The battle began upon our intrenchments upon Bunker's Hill, Saturday morning, about three o'clock, and has not ceased yet ; and it is now three o'clock, Sab- bath afternoon. The constant roar of the cannon is so distressing that we can- not either eat, drink, or sleep." These scenes had aroused the country around Boston to the very highest pitch of excitement. The farmers had come rushing in from all the adjoining towns with rifles, shot-guns, pitchforks, and any other weapons they could grasp. Thus a motley mass of heroic men, without efficient arms, supplies, powder, or discipline, amounting to some fourteen thousand, were surrounding Boston, which was held by about eight thousand British regulars, supported by a powerful fleet. Washington hastened to Massachusetts to take command of the army. Five days after his appointment Thomas Jefferson made his appearance upon the floor of Congress. A strong friendship immediately sprang up between Adams and Jefferson, which, with a short interruption, continued for the remainder of their lives. After a brief adjournment, Congress met again in September. The battle was still raging about Boston ; and the British, with free ingress and egress by their fleet, were plundering and burning and commit- ting every kind of atrocity in all directions. John Adams presented and car- ried the decisive resolution, that, in view of the aggressions and demands of England, "it is necessary that the exercise of every kind of authority under said crown should be totally suppressed." On the 7th of June, 1776, Richard Henry Lee, of Virginia, offered the memorable resolution, which John Adams seconded, — " That these United States are, and of right ought to be, free and inde- pendent." A committee was then appointed to draught a Declaration of Independ- ence. It consisted of Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, Sherman, and Livingston. Jefferson and Adams were appointed, by the rest, a sub-committee to draw up the Declaration. At Mr. Adams' earnest request Mr. Jefferson prepared that immortal document, which embodies the fundamental principles of all human riehts. At this time Mr. Adams wrote to a friend : — THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. 79 "I am engaged in constant business, — from seven to ten in the morning in committee, from ten to five in Congress, and from six to ten again in committee. Our assembly is scarcely numerous enough for the business. Everybody is engaged all day in Congress, and all the morning and evening in committees." On the 4th of July, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was adopted by Congress, and signed by each member. This was one of the boldest acts in the records of time. Every man who affixed his signature to that paper thus cast the glove of mortal defiance at the foot of the greatest power on this globe. The scene was one upon which the genius of both pen and pencil has been lavished. In its grandeur it stands forth as one of the most sublime of earthly acts. Of the fifty-five who signed that Declaration, there was not prob- ably one who would deny that its most earnest advocate, and its most eloquent defender, was John Adams. The day after this momentous event, Mr. Adams wrote to his wife as follows : — " Yesterday the greatest question was decided that was ever debated in America ; and greater, perhaps, never was or will be decided among men. A resolution was passed, without one dissenting colony, ' That these United States are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States.' The day is passed. The 4th of July, 1776, will be a memorable epoch in the history of America. I am apt to believe it will be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival. It ought to be commemorated, as the day of deliverance, by solemn acts of devotion to Almighty God. It ought to be solemnized with pomps, shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires, and illuminations, from one end of the continent to the other, from this time forward forever. You will think me transported with enthusiasm ; but I am not. I am well aware of the toil and blood and treasure that it will cost to maintain this Declaration, and sup- port and defend these States ; yet, through all the gloom, I can see that the end is worth more than all the means, and that posterity will triumph, though you and I may rue, which I hope we shall not." Until November, 1776, Mr. Adams was assiduous in his attendance upon Congress, devoting himself with tireless diligence to his public duties. In 1777 he was appointed a delegate to France, to cooperate with Benjamin Franklin and Arthur Lee, who were then in Paris, in the endeavor to obtain assistance in arms and money from the French government. This was a severe trial to his patriotism, as it separated him from his home, compelled him to cross the ocean in winter, and exposed him to imminent peril of capture by the British cruisers. Capture would lodge him in Newgate. He would be tried in England for treason, and Mr. Adams had no doubt that they would proceed to execute him. But, on the other hand, our country was in extremest peril. It was clear that, without the aid of some friendly European power, our feeble armies must be 8o JOHN ADAMS. crushed. As was to be expected of the man, he resolved to run all the risks. It was several months before a frigate could be got ready. On a cold day in February, 1778, a wintry wind roughening Massachusetts Bay, Mr. Adams took a sad leave of his wife and three children, and accompanied by his son, John Ouincy, then but frigate Boston, riding The voyage was five days out, on the were seen, probably Two of them were sailer, continued the clouds hastened the ten years of age, was rowed out to the at anchor at some distance from the shore, stormy, uncomfortable, and eventful. When 1 5th of February, three large English frigates cruising for the Boston. They gave chase, soon run out of sight. The third, a better pursuit. The wind rose to a gale. The approach of the darkness of the night, in which the ships lost sight of each other ; and when the morn- ing dawned the British frigate was nowhere to be seen. On the 14th of March another sail hove in sight. Trust- ing that it might prove a prize which they would be able to take, they gave chase, and it was soon overtaken nd captured. Captain Tucker begged Mr. Adams to retire to a place of safety be- low. Soon after, as the balls of the hos- tile ship were flying over their heads, Captain Tucker saw Mr. Adams on deck with a musket in his hand, fighting as a common marine. In the excitement of the moment he rushed up to his illustrious passenger, exclaiming, "Why are you here, sir? I am commanded to carry you safely to Europe, and I will do it ; " and, seizing him in his arms, he forcibly carried him from the scene of danger. THE MONUMENT ON BUNKER HILL. EXPERIENCE IN EUROPE. 81 On the morning of March 30th they made Bordeaux light-house, and ran safely into the river. There was a French ship in the stream, and Mr. Adams and his son were invited to a very elegant entertainment, served up in style to which they had been quite unaccustomed in their frugal provincial home. They there learned that Dr. Franklin, who had been received by Louis XVI. with great pomp, and who, from his courtesy of manners, affability, and aptness in paying compliments, was admirably adapted to impress the French mind, had already succeeded in concluding a treaty with Prance. MR. ADAMS' BLUNT MANNERS. Indeed, it is probably fortunate that Mr. Adams did not arrive any sooner. He was not at all at home in French diplomacy. While Franklin was greatly admired and caressed, Mr. Adams was decidedly unpopular in the Parisian court. His virtues and his defects were those of a blunt, straightforward, un- polished Englishman. In Paris he met with David Hartley, a member of the British House of Commons. They came together like two icebergs. Mr. Hartley, on his return to London, said to Sir John Temple and others : " Your Mr. Adams, that you represent as a man of such good sense — he may have that ; but he is the most ungracious man I ever saw." Mr. Adams' first interview with the President of the Parliament of Bor- deaux was alike characteristic of the affable Frenchman and the bluff Yankee. The premier received him not only respectfully and politely, but with affection which was even tender. " I am charmed," said he, " to see you. I have long felt for you a brother's love. I have trembled for you in the great perils through which you have passed. You have encountered many dangers and sufferings in the cause of liberty, and I have sympathized with you in them all, for I have suffered in that cause myself." We learn how Mr. Adams received these cordial advances by the following ungracious entry in his journal : — " Mr. Bondfield had to interpret all this effusion of compliments. I thought it never would come to an end ; but it did ; and I concluded, upon the whole, there was a form of sincerity in it, decorated, and almost suffocated, with French compliments." In a sketch of his colleagues, Mr. Adams writes of Dr. Franklin : — "That he was a great genius, a great wit, a great humorist, a great satirist, a great politician, is certain. That he was a great philosopher, a great moralist, a great statesman, is more questionable." On the other hand. Dr. Franklin writes of his colleague : " Mr. Adams is always an honest man, often a wise one ; but he is sometimes completely out of his senses." Mr. Adams' earnest patriotism induced him to practice the most rigid 82 JOHN ADAMS. economy while abroad, that Congress might be put to as little expense as pos- sible. The treaty of alliance with France was already formed before his arrival, and, soon finding that there was but little for him to do in Paris, he resolved that he had rather run the gauntlet through all the British men-of-war, and all the storms of the ocean on a return, than remain where he was. On the 17th of June, 1779, he embarked on board the French frigate "Sensible," and arrived safely in Boston with his son on the 2d of August, after an absence of seventeen months. In September Mr. Adams was chosen again to go to Paris, there to hold himself in readiness to negotiate a treaty of peace and of commerce with Great Britain so soon as the British cabinet might be found willing to listen to such proposals. The Chevalier de la Luzerne, the French Minister, who had accom- panied Mr. Adams to America, wrote him a very polite note, congratulating him upon his appointment, and offering him a passage in the return French frigate. M. Marbois had been so much impressed with the distinguished talents of Mr. Adams' son, John Ouincy, that he sent his father a special injunction to carry him back, that he might profit by the advantages of a European education. On the 13th of November, 1779, Mr. Adams was again on board the "Sensible," outward bound, and reached Paris on the 5th of February, 1780. He was to remain in the French capital until an opportunity should present itself to open negotiations with Great Britain. The Count de Vergennes assumed that France, our powerful ally, should be specially consulted upon any terms which were to be presented to the British cabinet ; and that it would be manifestly unjust for the United States to negotiate a separate peace with Great Britain without the approval of the French nation. On the other hand, Mr. Adams assumed that the United States had not placed their destinies in the hands of France, so as to lose all independent power. He acted upon the principle that sympathy with Americans, as victims of oppression, had no influ- ence whatever with FYance ; that the French Government, in its alliance, was influenced by pure and undiluted selfishness. Dr. Franklin did not sympathize in these views, and did not give Mr. Adams his support. Much annoyed, Mr. Adams at length decided to go to Holland. In taking his departure, he wrote a letter to the Count de Vergennes, which did but increase the alienation. The Count was so indignant that he sent to the Congress at Philadelphia, soliciting the recall of the commissions which had been intrusted to Mr. Adams. Mr. Adams ever regarded, and justly, his mission to Holland as the great- est success of his life. On the very day that he was received by the States- General he proposed a treaty of amity and commerce ; and on the 7th of Octo- ber, 1782, had the pleasure of announcing the second alliance entered into by the United States as a sovereign power. The glory of this great event belongs undeniably to John Adams. It was deemed so important that two medals were ILLNESS IN FRANCE. 83 engraved in Holland in its commemoration. "Monsieur," said a French gentle- man to Mr. Adams on his return to Paris, " you are the Washington of negotia- tion." Mr. Adams was highly gratified by the compliments which were lavished upon him ; but he intimates that Dr. Franklin wQuld die of jealousy should he hear them. After a vast amount of diplomatic maneuvering, a definite treaty of peace with England was signed at Paris on the 21st of January, 1783. The reaction from the excitement, toil, and anxiety through which Mr. Adams had passed threw him into a fever. He occupied the Hotel du Roi, in the Place du Car- rousel. It was a thoroughfare over whose pavements a constant stream of carriages was rolling, with a noise like thunder, incessantly for twenty-one hours out of the twenty-four. Burning with fever, he found sleep impossible. His friends despaired of his recovery. As soon as Mr. Adams could be removed he was taken to Auteuil, where he enjoyed the pure air and silence of the country. But recovery was very slow. Feeble, emaciated, languid, his friends advised him to go to England to drink the waters of Bath. On Monday, the 20th of October, he set out, with his son and one servant, for London. While Mr. Adams was in England, still drooping and desponding, he received dispatches urging the indispensable ne- cessity of his repairing immediately to Amsterdam to negotiate another loan. "It was winter," writes Mr. Adams. " My health was very delicate. A journey to Holland, at that season, would very probably put an end to my labors. I scarcely saw a possibility of surviving it. Nevertheless, no man knows what he can bear till he tries. A few moments' reflection determined me." While in England Mr. Adams had enjoyed the intense gratification of hear- ing George III., from his throne, announce to Parliament that he had concluded a treaty of peace, in which he recognized the independence of the United States. While in Holland Frederick II. of Prussia made overtures to Mr. Adams fo'r a treaty of commerce. At the same time Mr. Adams received a new commission, authorizing him to act with Franklin and Jefferson to negotiate treaties of com- merce with any of the foreign powers. As it was evident that his residence abroad was to be extended, he wrote to Mrs. Adams to join him with their family. The happy reunion took place in the summer of 1784; and they selected for their residence a quiet retreat at Auteuil, near Paris. And now came probably the happiest period of Mr. Adams' life. His wife, his eldest son, John Quincy, then rising into a youth of great promise, and his daughter, whose beauty and accomplishments made her justly the pride of both father and mother, were with him. On the 24th of February, 1785, peace with England having been pro- claimed, Congress appointed Mr. Adams envoy to the Court of St. James. 84 JOHN ADAMS. He crossed the Channel to assume these new, arduous, and delicate responsi- bilities. He was now to meet, face to face, the King of England, who had so long regarded him as a traitor, and against whose despotic power he had assisted the nation so successfully to contend. Mr. Adams, in his despatch to Mr. Jay, has left an interesting account of his first public reception. He rode to court, by invitation of Lord Carmarthen, in his coach. In the ante-chamber he found the room full of ministers of state, generals, bishops, and all sorts of courtiers, each waiting his turn for an audience. He was soon conducted into the king's closet, where he was left alone with the king and his secretary of state. Mr. Adams, according to the court etiquette, upon which he had carefully informed himself, made three low bows, — one at the door, another when he made a couple of steps, and the third when he stood before the king. He then, in a voice tremulous with the emotion which the scene was calculated to inspire, addressed his Majesty in the following words : — " Sire, the United States of America have appointed me their minister plenipotentiary to your Majesty, and have directed me to deliver to your Majesty this letter, which contains the evidence of it. It is in obedience to their express commands that I have the honor to assure your Majesty of their unanimous disposition and desire to cultivate the most friendly and liberal intercourse between your Majesty's subjects and their citizens, and of their best wishes for your Majesty's health and for that of the royal family. "The appointment of a minister from the United States to your Majesty's court will form an epoch in the history of England and America. I think myself more fortunate than all my fellow-citizens in having the distinguished honor to be the first to stand in your Majesty's royal presence in a diplomatic character ; and I shall esteem myself the happiest of men if I can be instru- mental in recommending my country more and more to your Majesty's royal benevolence, and of restoring the entire esteem, confidence, and affection, or, in better words, the old good-nature and the old harmony between people who, though separated by an ocean and under different governments, have the same language, a similar religion, and kindred blood. I beg your Majesty's permis- sion to add, that although I have sometimes before been intrusted by my coun- try, it was never, in my whole life, in a manner so agreeable to myself." The king listened to this address in evident emotion. He seemed not a little agitated ; for to him it was an hour of deep humiliation. With a voice even more tremulous than that with which Mr. Adams had spoken, he replied : — "Sir, the circumstances of this audience are so extraordinary, the language you have now held is so extremely proper, and the feelings you have discovered so justly adapted to the occasion, that I must say that I not only receive with pleasure the assurance of the friendly disposition of the people of the United States, but that I am very glad that the choice has fallen upon you as their INTERVIEW WITH THE KING. minister. But I wish you, sir, to believe, and that it may be understood in America, that I have done - nothing in the late contest but what I thought myself indispensably bound to do by the duty which I owed to my people. I will be frank with you I was the last to Jn| conform to the separation ; but the separation having been made, and hav- ing become inevita- ble, I have always said, as I say now, i0 that I would be the first to meet the friendship of the United States as an independ- ent power. The moment I see such sentiments and lan- guage as yours prevail, and a disposition to give this country the preference, that moment I shall say, Let the circum- stances of language, religion, and blood have their full effect." As Great Britain did not condescend to appoint a minister to the United States, and as Mr. Adams felt that he was accomplishing but little, he solicited IN I7S6. 86 JOHN ADAMS. permission to return to his own country, and reached his rural home in Brain- tree, from which he had so long been absent, in June of 1788. When some persons accused Mr. Adams of being covertly in favor of monarchical institutions, Mr. Jefferson replied: "Gentlemen, you do not know that man. There is not upon this earth a more perfectly honest man than John Adams. It is not in his nature to meditate anything which he would not publish to the world. I know him well ; and I repeat, that a more honest man never issued from the hands of his Creator." In 1787 delegates were appointed by the various States of the Confederacy to form a Constitution for the United States of America. They met in Inde- pendence Hall, in Philadelphia, where the great Declaration had been signed. The Constitution which they drew up was accepted by the States, and we became a nation. George Washington was unanimously chosen President for four years, and John Adams Vice-President. THE FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT. During the first Presidency, Congress was tossed by angry passions and stormy debates. Both Washington and Adams were assailed with intensest bitterness. Both were accused of monarchical tendencies, and of fondness for the pomp and pageantry of royalty. The democratic party was now rapidly rising into controlling power. Still both Washington and Adams were reelected,, and again, on the 4th of March, 1 793, took the oaths of office. Just about this time the French Revolution shook the continent of Europe. Mr. Adams felt no sympathy with the French people in this struggle ; for he had no confidence in their power of self-government, and utterly abhorred the athe- istic character of those philosophers, who, in his judgment, inaugurated the movement. On the other hand, Jefferson's sympathies were strongly enlisted in behalf of the French people, struggling to throw off the yoke of intolerable despotism. Hence originated the alienation between these two distinguished men. Washington at first hailed the French Revolution with hope ; but as its disorders became more developed he leaned more strongly to the views of Mr. Adams. Two very powerful parties were thus soon organized. Adams was at the head of the one whose sympathies were with England. Jefferson led the other, in sympathy with France. England proclaimed war against the French republicans ; played the tyrant over weaker nations upon the ocean ; and, despising our feeble navy, insulted and harassed our commerce. This conduct swept the current of popular feeling increasingly toward Mr. Jefferson and his party. Upon the retirement of Washington, at the close of his second Presidential term, there was a very hotly contested election ; and Mr. Adams, by a slender majority, was chosen President, and Thomas Jefferson, Vice-President. RETURN TO PRIVATE LIFE. 87 Those were stormy days, and it required great wisdom safely to navigate the ship of state. The excitement which the French Revolution created in this country, as the community ranged themselves on the side of England or of France, was intense. For four years Mr. Adams struggled through almost a constant tempest of assaults. He was never a popular man. The party arrayed against him, with the Vice-President at its head, was powerful in numbers, and still more powerful in ability. He was not a man of conciliatory manners or of winning speech. After four years of harassment, which must have been the four least happy years of his life, he was mortified by losing a reelection. Jefferson was chosen President ; and Aaron Burr, Vice-President ; and John Adams was left to return to his farm at Ouincy. His chagrin was so great as to lead him to the lamentable mistake of refusing to remain in Philadelphia to witness the inauguration of his successful rival. There ensued a breach in the friendship of these illustrious men which was not closed for thirteen years. About the time of Mr. Adams' retirement, his eldest son, who was mar- ried and settled in New York, suddenly died, leaving to his father's care a wife and two infant children. He then spoke of this event as the deepest affliction of his life. He was then sixty-six years of age. A quarter of a century still remained to him before he died. He generally avoided all public gatherings, and took little part in political questions, devoting his time mainly to the culti- vation of his farm. When England, looking contemptuously upon our feeble navy, persisted in the outrage of searching American ships, both John Adams and his son, John Ouincy, nobly supported the policy of Mr. Jefferson in resenting these outrages. It seems strange that a man could be found in America willing to submit to such insolence. But for this Mr. Adams was bitterly accused of being recreant to his principles, and of joining the party who were charged with seeking an excuse for dragging our country into a war against England, that we might thus aid France. On this occasion John Adams, for the first time since his retirement, broke silence, and drew up a very able paper, exposing the atrocity of the British pretensions. Mr. Adams had been associated with a party hostile to France, and in favor of submission to the British pretensions. In advocating resistance, he was regarded as abandoning his old friends, and with bitter animosity was he assailed. MR. ADAMS' HOME LIFE. In 1 8 1 8, when Mr. Adams was eighty-two years of age, his noble wife, who had shared with him the joys and griefs of more than half a century, died, at the age of seventy-four. The event threw over him a shade of sadness which never disappeared. A gentleman who visited Ouincy a year or two before her death gave a description of the interview. Mr. Adams was, in body, very infirm, tot- tering and shaking with age ; but his mind seemed as vigorous, and his heart as JOHN ADAMS. young, as ever. There was a boy's joyousness and elasticity in his hearty laugh. He joked, was full of fun, and talked about everybody and everything with the utmost freedom and abandon. His knowledge seemed to his visitor bound- less ; for he was equally at home upon whatever subject might be introduced. Nothing could be more entertaining than his conversation, it was so replete with anecdote and lively sallies of wit. While thus conversing, Mrs. Adams came in, — a tall and stately lady of rather formal address. "A cap of exquisite lace surrounded features still ex- hibiting intellect and energy. Her dress was snowy white, and there was that immaculate neatness in her appear- ance which gives to age almost the sweetness of youth. With less warmth of manner and sociableness than Mr. Adams, she was sufficiently gracious, and her occasional remarks betrayed intellectual vigor and strong sense. The guest went away, feeling that he should never again behold such living specimens of the 'great old.' " While his drooping frame and feeble step and dimmed eye showed the ravages of years, Mr. Adams' mind retained its wonted vigor. He read until his vision failed, and was then read to, many hours every day. He loved, in conversation with his friends, to recall the scenes of his younger years, and to fight his battles over again. His son, John Ouincy, rose to distinction, and occupied high posts of honor at home and abroad. In 1825 his parental pride was gratified by the elevation of his son to the chair which the father had honored as President of the United States. When John Ouincy Adams received a note from Rufus King, informing him of his election, he inclosed it to his father, with the following lines from his own pen, under date of February 9, 1825 : — My dear and honored Father : — The inclosed note from Mr. King will inform you of the event of this day ; upon which I can only offer you my con- gratulations, and ask your blessing and prayers. Your affectionate and dutiful son, John Ouincy Adams. UTH (•[IllRL'ir, l)i.l"'v DEATH OF ADAMS AND JEFFERSON. 89 John Adams was now ninety years of age. His enfeebled powers indicated that his end was drawing nigh. The 4th of July, 1826, came. The nation had made arrangements for a more than usually brilliant celebration of that anni- versary. Adams and Jefferson still lived. It was hoped that they might be brought together, at some favored spot, as the nation's guests. But, as the time drew near, it was evident that neither of them could bear a journey. On Friday morning, the 30th of June, a gentleman called upon Mr. Adams to obtain a toast to be presented on the 4th of July at the celebration at Ouincy. "I give you," said he, "Independence forever." He was now rapidly declining. On the morning of the 4th his physician judged that he would scarcely survive the day. There was the ringing of bells, the exultant music of martial bands, the thunders of artillery from ships and forts, from hills and valleys, echoing all over our land, as rejoicing millions welcomed the natal day of the nation. Mr. Adams, upon his dying couch, listened to these sounds of joy with silent emotion. " Do you know what day it is ?" some one inquired. "Oh, yes!" he replied: "it is the glorious 4th of July. God bless it! God bless you all ! It is a great and glorious day." "Thomas Jefferson," he murmured at a later hour to himself, "still survives." These were his last words. But he was mistaken. An hour or two before, the spirit of Jefferson had taken its flight. The sands of his own long and memorable life were now run out, and gently he passed away into that sleep from which there is no earthly waking. VIEW OF THE CAPITOL. WASHINGTON. JOHN JAY, FIRST CHIEF JUSTICE OE THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT. HEN, in 1685, Louis XIV. of France revoked the Edict of Nantes, that famous act of toleration under which French Protestants had for so long lived and flourished, his bigotry set in motion forces whose efforts reached every nation of the earth, and turned the current of history for centuries after. Among the multitudes of indus- trious and ingenious men who were then driven from France to other lands was one Pierre Jay, a merchant of La Rochelle, who fled to England to escape persecution. His son, a West India merchant, came to New York, and married the daughter of one of the early Dutch settlers ; and thus their distinguished son, John Jay, one of the founders of our government, and its first chief justice, was remarkable among early American statesmen as having not a drop of English blood in his veins. There is little in the history of Jay that is picturesque or striking ; but there are few among the worthies of the Revolution to whom posterity owes a greater debt. "Life," says the poet Lowell, — "may be given in many ways, And loyalty to truth be sealed As bravely in the closet as the field." That Jay had the true heroic spirit is shown by an episode of his life in college. A number of his fellow-students, in some rough play in the college hall, which he saw but had no part in, broke a table. The noise reached the ears of the president, who suddenly appeared, but not in time to discover them in the act. All those present, except jay and one other student, flatly denied that they broke the table, or knew who did. Jay and his comrade admitted that they knew who did it, but refused to tell their names, Jay maintaining that there was nothing Q3 94 JOHN JAY. in the laws of the college requiring him to play the part of an informer. This manly conduct, however, was deemed by the authorities a grave offense, and Jay and his companion were suspended. Upon his graduation from college Jay entered on the study of the law, and was admitted to the New York bar in 1768. He is said to have " combined in a remarkable degree the dignity and gravity of manhood with the ardor of youth." He soon acquired a large practice, and great influence in political affairs. As a member of the Continental Congress, in 1774, he drew up the famous Address to the People of Great Britain, which at once gave him the reputation of being one of the ablest and most eloquent writers in America. "Are not the proprietors of the soil of Great Britain," he says, "lords of their own property ? Can it be taken from them without their own consent ? . . . Why, then, are the proprietors of the soil of America less lords of their prop- erty than you are of yours ? or why should they submit it to the disposal of your Parliament, or any other parliament or council in the world not of their own election ? . . . Such declarations we consider as heresies in English poli- tics, and can no more operate to deprive us of our property than the interdicts of the Pope can divest kings of scepters which the laws of the land and the voice ot the people have placed in their hands." Referring to the ability and character of the men who formed the famous Continental Congress, Lord Chatham said: "When your lordships look at the papers transmitted to us from America, when you consider their decency, firm- ness, and wisdom, you cannot but respect their cause, and wish to make it your own. For myself, I must declare and avow that, . . . for solidity of reasoning, force of sagacity, and wisdom of conclusion, ... no nation or body of men can stand in preference to the General Congress at Philadelphia." JAY'S TRIALS IN SPAIN. In 1778 Jay was chosen President of Congress, and fulfilled the difficult duties of that station for nearly two years, when he was sent as minister to Spain to negotiate for a loan of $5,000,000, and for the free navigation of the Mississippi. "While I am sensible," wrote another delegate to Jay, " of the advantages we shall reap from your eminent services there, I have my fears that they will be missed importantly where you now are." The trials and vexations of his new position were very great. "The Spaniards will not easily give their dollars," truly wrote Lafayette to Washington ; and, far from giving up to America the navigation of the Mississippi, they wished to obtain sole con- trol of it themselves. "Poor as we are," wrote Franklin to Jay, "as I know we shall be rich, I would rather agree with them to buy, at a great price, the whole of their right on the Mississippi than to sell a drop of its waters. A neighbor might as well ask me to sell my street door." , TREATY OF PEACE WITH ENGLAND. 95 Jay wasted many months of fruitless and vexatious labor in Spain, Con- gress in the meantime not only failing to provide him with any means of sup- port, but expecting him to beg or borrow from Spain hundreds of thousands of dollars to pay bills of exchange which they drew upon him. When in the greatest extremity, Franklin, whose influence at the French court was very great, sent Jay $25,000 to aid in meeting these bills. " If you find any inclina- tion to hug me for the trood news of this letter," wrote Franklin, "I constitute IPI'I TO-DAY, For WHOSE FREE NAVIGATION JAY NEGOTIATED. and appoint Mrs. Jay my attorney, to receive in my behalf your embraces." Soon afterward Jay left Spain, and took a most important part in negotiating a treaty of peace with England, at Paris, in 1783, — a treaty so advantageous to America that the French Prime Minister remarked that "England had bought a peace, rather than made one." On his return to America Jay was made Secre- tary of State for Foreign Affairs, and filled that office until 1789. In 1787 met that renowned body of statesmen, the Constitutional Conven- 9 6 JOHN JAY. tion of 1787, which, "in order to form a more perfect union," drafted the pres- ent Constitution of the United States. In the labors of this convention probably no member bore a more important part than Jay. When the work of the convention was at last complete, and submitted to the people, there was violent opposition to it, especially in Jay's own State — New York. In this state of the public mind that trio of great men, Madison, Jay, and Hamilton, undertook to explain and vindicate the proposed instrument in I'he Federalist, a series of articles, originally published in the New York papers. "No constitution," says Chancellor Kent, "ever received a more masterly and successful vindica- tion." The opposition to its adoption was finally removed ; it was ratified by the States, and went into effect with the election of Washington as first Presi- dent, in 1789. Washington manifested his opinion of Jay's character and abilities by giving him a choice of the offices under the new government. He preferred the chief-justiceship, as being most suited to his turn of mind and his training. In an address at one of the first sessions he said : " Nothing but a strong govern- ment of laws, irresistibly bearing down arbitrary power and licentiousness, can defend it against those two formidable enemies. Let it be remembered that civil liberty consists, not in a right to every man to do just as he pleases, but in an equal right to all citizens to have, enjoy, and do, in peace, security, and with- out molestation, whatever the equal and constitutional laws of the country admit to be consistent with the public good." STRONG LANGUAGE ABOUT SLAVERY. Of all the statesmen of the Revolution, Jay was one of the most pro- nounced and uncompromising opponents of slavery. The inconsistency of demanding freedom for ourselves, while holding others in bondage, was one which his strong, logical mind could not tolerate, and which he did not attempt to reconcile. In 1780, writing from Spain to a friend in America, he says: "An excellent law might be made out of the Pennsylvania one for the gradual abo- lition of slavery. Till America comes into this measure, .her prayers to Heaven for liberty will be impious. ... I believe God governs the world, and I believe it to be a maxim in his, as in our court, that those who ask for equity, ought to do it." Again he says : " It is much to be wished that slavery may be abolished. . . . To contend for our own liberty, and to deny that blessing to others, involves an inconsistency not to be excused." Jay continued on the bench of the Supreme Court until 1794, when his services were required as special minister to England, to adjust the differences between the two countries, which were so great as to threaten war. His abili- ties as a diplomatist were shown by the treaty which he negotiated, under which England paid over ten millions of dollars for illegal captures of American pro- GOVERNOR OF NEW YORK. 97 perty in the war for independence, and of which Lord Sheffield afterward said, at the breaking out of the war of 1812, "We have now an opportunity of getting rid of that most impolitic treaty of 1 794, when Lord Grenville was so ST. PAUL'S, NEW YORK, AN OLD CHURCH OF [AYS TIME. perfectly duped by Jay.'' While Jay was yet in England he was elected Governor of New York, and was twice re-elected. He, however, declined serving a third term ; and also declined a second term as chief justice, to which 98 JOHN JAY. he had been nominated and confirmed in 1801. At the end of his second term as Governor of New York he retired from public life, and spent the remainder of his days on his estate in Westchester county, New York, where he died in 1829. The character of (ay is clearly shown forth in the record of his life. In devotion to his country, in clear judgment, in spotless integrity, he is not sur- passed even among the great men of his own time. He was modest, claimed no merit, and seldom alluded to the great events in which he took part. He was generous and charitable, while at the same time exact and careful. It has been beautifully said of him that "He lives in our memories a flawless statue, whose noble lineaments have everything to gain from the clear light of history." \ '\ T \ hvt~ m IHL'Jikb AN EIGHTEENTH CENTURY FIREn.ACE. Jgr^t ■'&&** - ALEXANDER HAMILTON, THE ARCHITECT OF THE FEDERAL SYSTEM:. 'MONG all the monuments in the great Cathedral of St. Paul's, in London, the proudest is a simple tablet to the memory of Sir Christopher Wren, the architect of that splendid pile. "Reader," it says, "if thou seekest his monument, look around thee." Turning from struc- tures of brick and stone to an edifice of a nobler kind, we of America have but to look around us to see in the mighty fabric of our national government the monument of Alfaander Hamilton. In the summer of 1772 that beautiful group of the West Indies known as the Leeward Islands were desolated by a hurri- cane. While its effects were still visible, and men were looking fear- fully into the skies, an account of the calamity appeared in the St. Christopher s Gazette, written with such singular ability that there was great curiosity to discover its author. It was traced to a youth employed in a St. Croix counting-house, a boy of only fifteen, named Alexander Hamilton. He was born in the tiny island of Nevis. His father was a Scotch gentleman, and his mother was of the good Huguenot stock of France. It was a happy day for our young author ; a lad who could write in this way, it was thought, should not spend his life in casting up accounts. It was at once determined to send him to New York to complete his education ; and in the month of October, in that year, he landed in Boston. Francis Barber, afterward a colonel, and a brave man in several battles, was at this time principal of a grammar-school of good repute in Elizabethtown, New Jersey ; and hither came the young West Indian to be prepared for college, — a handsome youth, erect, graceful, eagle-eyed, and "wise in conversa- tion as a man." Before the end of 1773 he had finished his preliminary studies, and proceeded to Princeton, to inquire of Dr. Witherspoon if he could enter the college with the privilege of passing from class to class as fast as he advanced in scholarship. The president was sorry, but the laws of the institution would not permit. Ham- 101 102 ALEXANDER HAMILTON. ilton was more successful in New York. In King's College (now Columbia Uni- versity) he might sue for a degree whenever he could show the title of sufficient learning ; and so Hamilton fixed upon the New York institution. Some great men of the future were then in King's College, but there was only one Alexander Hamilton there. In the debating club he controlled everything by his acute- ness and eloquence. His room-mate was awed, night and morning, by the fervid passion of his prayers, and has testified that Hamilton's firm faith in Christianity, and his mighty and convincing arguments, did much to confirm his own wavering faith. Hamilton was a versatile genius ; he wrote hymns and burlesques ; he was pious and punctilious ; ambitious and gay. THE STIRRING DAYS OF ' / 3. While Hamilton was at his studies in King's College, great events were taking place outside. The quarrel with Great Britain was becoming irrecon- cilable. In December, 1773, occurred the " Boston Tea Party," when a band of patriots, disguised as Indians, boarded the British vessels laden with tea, and emptied their contents in the harbor. The excitement throughout the country, already great, increased in intensity ; the methods of resistance to be adopted were on every man's tongue. In September, 1774, the first Continental Con- gress met in Philadelphia. Nothing was thought of but resistance to the tyranny of England. In college Hamilton never relaxed the severe application which his ambition and his tastes made natural ; but he was not unmindful of the storm gathering beyond his quiet cloisters. His mind, his pen, and his voice were from the first employed in defending colonial opposition to the acts of the British Parliament. He organized a military corps, mostly of fellow-students, who practiced their daily drill early in the morning, before the commencement of their college duties. They assumed the name of "Hearts of Oak," and wore a green uniform, surmounted by a leather cap, on which was inscribed " Freedom or Death !" Early and late he was busy, not only in promoting measures of resistance, but in mastering the science of political economy, the laws of com- merce, the balance of trade, and the circulating medium ; so that when these topics became prominent, no one was better equipped for dealing with them than Hamilton. Hamilton's first political speech to a popular assembly was delivered at "the great meeting in the fields," as it was long afterward called, called to choose delegates to the first Continental Congress. He was still a student, and exceedingly juvenile in appearance. Being unexpectedly called upon, he at first faltered and hesitated ; but soon he recovered himself, and the immense multitude were astonished and electrified by the " infant orator," as they called him. Alter a discussion, clear, forcible, and striking, of the great principles HIS FIRST SFEECH. 103 involved, he depicted in glowing colors die aggravated oppressions of the mother-country. Touching this point he burst forth in a strain oi bold and thrilling eloquence : — "The sacred rights of mankind," he declared, "are not to be rummaged for among old parchments or musty records ; they are written as with a sunbeam in the whole volume of human nature, by the hand of Divinity itself, and can never be erased or obscured by mortal power." He insisted on the duty of resistance, pointed out the means and certainty of success, and described " the waves of rebellion, spark- ling with fire, and washing back on the shores of Eng- land the wrecks of her power, her wealth, and her glory." Under this sponta- neous burst of mature elo- quence from lips so youth- ful, the vast multitude first listened in awe and surprise, and then rose with irrepres- sible astonishment. The death-like silence ceased as he closed, and repeated cheers resounded to the heavens. Then the whisper, " A collegian — it is a colle- gian!" passed in surprise from one to another through the crowd. In March, 1776, Ham- ilton left college, and, joining a band of volunteers, obtained the command of a [company of artillery. One day, while Washington was preparing for the 104 ALEXANDER HAMILTON. defense of New York, General Greene, on his way to headquarters, had his attention attracted to Hamilton's company, which was drilling in a neighboring field. The captain seemed a mere boy, small and slight, but quick in his move- ments, and with an air of remarkable intelligence ; and his company was handled with an ease and skill which roused Greene's admiration. He stopped to talk with him, and was soon convinced, from Hamilton's conversation, that he had met a youth of no common abilities. He spoke of Hamilton to General Wash- ington at the time, expressing his opinion of his character. At the passage of the Raritan, in the memorable retreat through New jersey, Washington observed with admiration the courage and skill of the youth- ful artillery officer, and ordered his aide-de-camp, Fitzgerald, to ascertain who he was, and to bring him to headquarters at the first halt of the army. In the evening Hamilton was appointed Washington's aide-de-camp, with the rank of colonel. From this time he continued until February, 1781, the inseparable companion of the commander-in-chief, and was always consulted by him, and by all the leading functionaries, on the most important occasions. He acted as his first aid at the battles of Brandywine, Germantown, and Monmouth. At the siege of Yorktown he led the detachment which carried by assault one of the strongest outworks of the foe ; and Washington, in recognition of his gallantry, ordered that Hamilton should receive the surrender of one of the divisions of Cornwallis's army. It would be difficult to overestimate the value of Hamilton's services during • the long period he acted as Washington's first aid and confidential secretary. The principal portions of the voluminous correspondence fell on him, and the most elaborate communications are understood to have been made essentially by his assistance. "The pen of our country,''' says Troup, "was held by Hamilton ; and for dignity of manner, pith of matter, and elegance of style, General Washington's letters are unrivaled in military annals." At the time of Arnold's treason, Hamilton's position led him into acquaint- ance with the ill-fated Andre, for whom he felt a strong admiration. He urged the wisdom and good policy of sparing Andre's life, arguing, with great force, that it would compel a cessation of British cruelties to American prisoners ; but unfortunately he was overborne, and Andre was executed. Hamilton's military achievements are such as to warrant the belief that he would have made a great soldier ; but his tastes and abilities alike tended toward the work of the statesman, and, fortunately for the country, led him in that direction. The embarrassments of the Treasury and consequent suf- ferings of the army prompted him to take up the study of finance, and in 1779, in private and anonymous communications to Robert Morris, he proposed a great financial scheme for the country, in which, rising above all the crude systems of that age, and pointing to a combination of public with private credit HIS FINANCIAL ABILITIES. 1 05 as the basis of his plan, he led the way to the establishment of the first Ameri- can bank. About a year later he addressed a letter to Mr. Duane, a member of the Congress from New York, on the state of the nation. t ^ % "This letter appears at this day," i= r, x says one, I ■ ' - "with all • - —^ i - .Y their first war with Great Britain our forefathers asserted and maintained their right to independent national existence; by their second war with Great Britain, they claimed and obtained equal consideration in international affairs. The War of 1812 was not based on a single cause; it was rather undertaken from mixed motives, — partly political, partly commercial, partly pa- triotic. It was always unpopular with a great number of the American people ; it was far from logical in some of its posi- tions ; it was perhaps precipitated by party clamor. But, despite all these facts, it remains true that this war established once for all the position of the United States as an equal power among the powers. Above all — clearing away the petty political and partisan aspects of the struggle — we find that in it the United States stood for a strong, sound, and universally beneficial principle — that of the rights of neutral nations in time of war. "Free ships make free goods" is a maxim of international law now universally recognized, but at the opening of the century it was a theory, supported, indeed, by good reasoning, but practically disregarded by the most powerful nations. It was almost solely to the stand taken by the United States in 18 12 that the final settlement of the disputed principle was due. The cause of the War of 18 12 which appealed most strongly to the patriotic feelings of the common people, though, perhaps, not in itself so intrinsically im- portant as that just referred to, was unquestionably the impressment by Great Britain of sailors from American ships. No doubt great numbers of English sailors did desert from their naval vessels and take refuge in the easier service and better treatment of the American merchant ships. Great Britain was strain- ing every nerve to strengthen her already powerful navy, and the press-gang was constantly at work in English sea-ports. Once on board a British man-of- war, the impressed sailor was subject to overwork, bad rations, and the lash. That British sailors fought as gallantly as they did under this regime will always remain a wonder. But it is certain that they deserted in considerable numbers, 144 THE "CHESAPEAKE" OUTRAGE. 145 and that they found in the rapidly-growing commercial prosperity of our carry- ing trade a tempting chance of employment. Now, Great Britain, with a large contempt for the naval weakness of the United States, assumed, rather than claimed, the right to stop our merchant vessels on the high seas, to examine the crews, and to claim as her own any British sailors among them. This was bad enough in itself, but the way in which the search was carried out was worse. Every form of insolence and overbearing was exhibited. The pretense of claim- ing British deserters covered what was sometimes barefaced and outrageous kidnaping of Americans. The British officers ivent so far as to lay the burden of proof of nationality in each case upon the sailor himself; if he were without papers proving his identity he was at once assumed to be a British subject. To such an extent was this insult to our flag carried that our Government had the record of about forty -five hundred cases of impressment from our ships between the years of 1803 and 1810; and when the War of 1812 broke out the number of American sailors serving against their will in British war vessels was variously computed to be from six to fourteen thousand. It is even recorded that in some cases American ships were obliged to return home in the middle of their voyages because their crews had been so diminished in number by the seizures made by British officers that they were too short-handed to proceed. In not a few cases these depredations led to bloodshed. The greatest outrage of all, and one which stirred the blood of Americans to the fighting point, was the capture of an Ameri- can war vessel, the "Chesapeake," by the British man-of-war, the "Leopard." The latter was by far the more powerful vessel, and the " Chesapeake " was quite unprepared for action ; nevertheless, her commander refused to accede to a demand that his crew be overhauled in search for British deserters. Thereupon the "Leopard" poured broadside after broadside into her until the flag was struck. Three Americans were killed and eighteen wounded ; four were taken away as alleged deserters; of these, three were afterwards returned, while in one case the charge was satisfactorily proved and the man was hanged. The whole affair was without the slightest justification under the law of nations and was in itself ample ground for war. Great Britain, however, in a quite ungrace- ful and tardy way, apologized and offered reparation. This incident took place six years before the actual declaration of war. But the outrage rankled all that time, and nothing did more to fan the anti- British feeling which was already so strong in the rank and file, especially in the Democratic (or, as it was often called then, Republican) party. It was such deeds as this that led Henry Clay to exclaim, "Not content with seizing upon all our property which falls within her rapacious grasp, the personal rights of our countrymen — rights which must forever be sacred — are trampled on and violated by the impressment of our seamen. What are we to gain by war? What are we not to lose by peace? Commerce, character, a nation's best treasure, honor ! " 146 STORY OF THE WAR OF 18 12. The attack on American commerce was also a serious danger to peace. In the early years of the century Great Britain was at war not only with France, but with other European countries. Both Great Britain and France adopted in practice the most extreme theories of non-intercourse between neutral and hostile nations. It was the era of "paper blockades." In 1806 England, for instance, declared that eight hundred miles of the European coast were to be VIEW OF A COTTON-CHUTE. considered blockaded, whereupon Napoleon, not to be outdone, declared the entire Islands of Great Britain to be under blockade. Up to a certain point the interruption of the neutral trade relations between the countries of Europe was to the commercial advantage of America. Our carrying trade grew and pros- pered wonderfully. Much of this trade consisted in taking goods from the colo- nies of European nations, bringing them to the United States, then trans-ship- ping them and conveying them to the parent nation. This was allowable under DESTRUCTION OF COMMERCE. i 4/ - the international law of the time, although the direct carrying of goods by the neutral ship from the colony to the parent nation (the latter, of course, beino- at war) was forbidden. But by her famous " Orders in Council " Great Britain ab- solutely forbade this system of trans-shipment as to nations with whom she was at war. American vessels engaged in this form of trade were seized and con- demned by English prize courts. Naturally, France followed Great Britain's example and even went further. Our merchants, who had actually been earnino- double freights under the old system, now found that their commerce was wofully restricted. At first it was thought that the unfair restriction might be punished by retaliatory measures, and a quite illogical analogy was drawn from the effect produced on Great Britain before the Revolution by the refusal of the colonies to receive goods on which a tax had been imposed. So President Jefferson's Administration resorted to the most unwise measure that could be thought of — an absolute embargo on our own ships. This measure was passed in 1807, and its immediate result was to reduce the exports of the country from nearly fifty million dollars' worth to nine million dollars' worth in a, single year. This was evidently anything but profitable, and the act was changed so as to forbid only commercial intercourse with Great Britain and France and their colonies, with a proviso that the law should be abandoned as regards either of these countries which should repeal its objectionable decrees. The French Government moved in the matter first, but only conditionally. Our non-intercourse act, however, was after 18 10 in force only against Great Britain. That our claims of wrono- were equally or nearly equally as great against France in this matter cannot be doubted. But the popular feeling was stronger against Great Britain ; a war with England was popular with the mass of the Democrats ; and it was the refusal of England to finally accept our conditions which led to the declaration of war. By a curious chain of circumstances it happened, however, that between the time when Congress declared war (June 18, 1S12) and the date when the news of this declaration was received in England, the latter country had already revoked her famous "orders in council." In point of fact, President Madison was very reluctant to declare war, though the Federalists always took great pleasure in speaking of this as " Mr. Madison's war." The Federalists through- out considered the war unnecessary and the result of partisan feeling and un- reasonable prejudice. It is peculiarly grateful to American pride that this war, undertaken in defense of our maritime interests and to uphold the honor of our flag upon the high seas, resulted in a series of naval victories brilliant in the extreme. It was not, indeed, at first thought that this would be chiefly a naval war. Presi- dent Madison was at one time greatly inclined to keep strictly in port our war vessels ; but, happily, other counsels prevailed. The disparity between the Amer- ican and British navies was certainly disheartening. The United States had 148 STORY OF THE WAR OF 18 12. seven or eight frigates and a few sloops, brigs, and gunboats, while the sails of England's navy whitened every sea, and her ships certainly outnumbered ours by fifty to one. On the other hand, her hands were tied to a great extent by the European wars of magnitude in which she was involved. She had to defend her commerce from formidable enemies in many seas, and could give but a small part of her naval strength to the new foe. That this new foe was despised by LOADING A COTTON STEAMER. the great power which claimed, not without reason, to be the mistress of the seas was not unnatural. But soon we find a lament raised in Parliament about the reverses, " which English officers and English sailors had not before been used to, and that from such a contemptible navy as that of America had always been held." The fact is that the restriction of our commerce had made it possible for our navy officers to take their pick of a remarkably fine body of native American seamen, naturally brave and intelligent, and thoroughly well trained in all sea- WAR ON THE CANADA FRONTIER. 149 manlike experiences. These men were in many instances filled with a spirit of resentment at British insolence, having either themselves been the victims of the aggressions which we have described, or having seen their friends compelled to submit to these insolent acts. The very smallness of our navy, too, was in a measure its strength ; the competition for active service among those bearingf commissions was great, and there was never any trouble in finding officers of proved sagacity and courage. At the outset, however, the policy determined on by the Administration was not one of naval aggression. It was decided to attack England from her Canadian colonies. This plan of campaign, however reasonable it might seem to a strategist, failed wretchedly in execution. The first year of the war, so far as regards the land campaigns, showed nothing but reverses and fiascoes. There was a long and thinly settled border country, in which our slender forces struggled to hold their own against the barbarous Indian onslaughts, making futile expeditions across the border into Canada and resisting with some success the similar expeditions by the Canadian troops. It was one of the complaints which led to the war that the Indian tribes had been incited against our settlers by the Canadian authorities and had been promised aid from Canada. It is certain that after war was declared English officers not only employed Indians as their allies, but in some instances, at least, paid bounties for the scalps of American settlers. The Indian war planned by Tecumseh had just been put down by General, afterward President, Harrison. No doubt Tecumseh was a man of more elevated ambition and more humane instincts than one often finds in an Indian chief. His hope to unite the tribes and to drive the whites out of his country has a certain nobility of purpose and breadth of view. But this scheme had failed, and the Indian warriors, still inflamed for war, were only too eager to assist the Canadian forces in a desultory but bloody border war. The strength of our campaign against Canada was dissipated in an attempt to hold Fort Wayne, Fort Harrison, and other garrisons against Indian attacks. Still more disappointing was the complete failure of the attempt, under the command of General Hull, to advance from Detroit as an outpost, into Canada. He was easily driven back to Detroit, and when the nation was confidently waiting to hear of a bold defense of that place it was startled by the news of Hull's surrender without firing a gun, and under circumstances which seemed to indicate either cowardice or treachery. Hull was, in fact, court-martialed, condemned to death, and only pardoned on account of his services in the war of 1776. The mortification that followed the land campaign of 18 12 was forgotten in joy at the splendid naval victories of that year. Pre-eminent among these was the famous sea-duel between the frigates 'Constitution" and " Guerriere." Every one knows of the glory of " Old Ironsides," and this, though the greatest, was only one of many victories by which the name of the "Constitution'* 15° STORY OF THE WAR OF i8u became the most famed and beloved of all that have been associated with Amer- ican ships. She was a fine frigate, carrying forty-four guns, and though English journals had ridiculed her as "a bunch of pine boards under a bit of striped bunting," it was not long before they were busily engaged in trying to prove that she was too large a vessel to be prop- erly called a frigate, and that she greatly out-classed her opponent in metal and BURNING OF WASHINGTON. men. It is true that the " Constitution " carried six more guns and a few more men than the " Guerriere," but, all allowances being made, her victory was yet a naval triumph of the first magnitude. Captain Isaac Hull, who commanded her, had just before the engage- ment proved his superior seamanship by escaping from a whole squadron of British vessels, out-sailing and out-manoeuvring them at every point. It was on August 19 when he OUR VICTORIES AT SEA. 151 descried the "Guerriere." Both vessels at once cleared for action and came together with the greatest eagerness on both sides for the engagement. Though the battle lasted but half an hour, it was one of the hottest in naval annals. At one time the " Constitution " was on fire, and both ships were soon seriously crippled by injury to their spars. Attempts to board each other were thwarted on both sides by the close fire of small arms. Here, as in later sea- fights of this war, the accuracy and skill of the American gunners were some- thing marvelous. At the end of half an hour the "Guerriere" had lost both mainmast and foremast and floated helplessly in the open sea. Her surrender was no discredit to her officers, as she was almost in a sinking condition. It was hopeless to attempt to tow her into port, and Captain Hull transferred his prisoners to his own vessel and set fire to his prize. In the fight the American frigate had only seven men killed and an equal number wounded, while the British vessel had as many as seventy-nine men killed or wounded. The con- duct of the American seamen was throughout gallant in the highest decree. Captain Hull put it on record that " From the smallest boy in the ship to the oldest seaman not a look of fear was seen. They all went into action givino- three cheers and requesting to be laid close alongside the enemy." The effect of this victory in both America and England was extraordinary. English papers long refused to believe in the possibility of the well-proved facts, while in America the whole country joined in a triumphal shout of joy, and loaded well-deserved honors on vessel, captain, officers, and men. The chagrin of the English public at the unexpected result of this sea battle was changed to amazement when one after another there followed no less than six combats of the same duel-like character, in which the American vessels were invariably victorious. The first was between our sloop, the "Wasp," and the English brig, the "Frolic," which was convoying a fleet of merchantmen. The fight was one of the most desperate in the war ; the two ships were brought so close together that their gunners could touch the sides of the opposing vessels with their rammers. Broadside after broadside was poured into the " Frolic " by the "Wasp," which obtained the superior position, but her sailors, unable to await the victory which was sure to come from the continued raking of the enemy's vessel, rushed upon her decks without orders and soon overpowered her. Again the British loss in killed and wounded was large ; that of the Ameri- cans very small. It in no wise detracted from the glory of this victory that both victor and prize were soon captured by a British man-of-war of immensely supe- rior strength. Following this action, Commodore Stephen Decatur, in our frigate, the " United States," attacked the " Macedonian," a British vessel of the same kind, and easily defeated her, bringing her into New York harbor on New Year's Day, 1 81 3, where he received an ovation equal to that offered Captain Hull. The same result followed the attack of the " Constitution," now under the command 152 STORY OF THE WAR OF 1S12. of Commodore Bain- "Java;" the latter had her about one hundred wound- that it was decided to blow tion" suffered so little that Ironsides," a name now been in every school-boy's resulted, in the great ma- jority of cases in the same way — in all unstinted praise was awarded by the bridge, upon the English captain and fifty men killed and ed, and was left such a wreck her up, while the " Constitu- she was in sport dubbed " Old ennobled by a poem which has mouth. Other naval combats STATUE OF COMMODORE TERRY. whole world, even including England herself, to the admira- ble seamanship, the wonderful gunnery, and the constant per- sonal intrepitude of our naval forces. When the second year of the war closed our little navy EXPLOITS OF PRIVATEERS. 153 had captured twenty-six war-ships, .armed with 560 guns, while it had lost only seven ships, carrying 1 19 guns. But, if the highest honors of the war were thus won by our navy, the most serious injury materially to Great Britain was in the devastation of her commerce by American privateers. No less than two hundred and fifty of these sea guerrillas were afloat, and in the first year of the war they captured over three hundred merchant vessels, sometimes even attacking and overcoming the smaller class of war-ships. The privateers were usually schooners armed with a few small guns, but carrying one long cannon mounted on a swivel so that it could be turned to any point of the horizon, and familiarly known as Long Tom. Of course, the crews were influenced by greed as well as by patriotism. Privateering is a somewhat doubtful mode of warfare at the best ; but international law permits it ; and though it is hard to dissociate from it a certain odor, as of legalized piracy, it is legitimate to this day. And surely if it were ever justifiable it was at that time. As Jefferson said, there were then tens of thousands of seamen forced by war from their natural means of support and useless to their country in any other way, while by " licensing private armed vessels the whole naval force of the nation was truly brought to bear on the foe." The havoc wrought on British trade was widespread indeed ; altogether between fifteen hundred and two thousand prizes were taken by the privateers. To compute the value of these prizes is impossible, but some idea may be gained from the single fact that one privateer, the " Yankee," in a cruise of less than two months captured five brigs and four schooners with cargoes valued at over half a million dollars. The men engaged in this form of warfare were bold to recklessness, and their exploits have furnished many a tale to Ameri- can writers of romance. The naval combats thus far mentioned were almost always of single vessels. For battles of fleets we must turn from the salt water to the fresh, from the ocean to the great lakes. The control of the waters of Lake Erie, Lake Onta- rio, and Lake Champlain was obviously of vast importance, in view of the con- tinued land-fighting in the West and of the attempted invasion of Canada and the threatened counter-invasions. The British had the great advantage of being able to reach the lakes by the St. Lawrence, while our lake navies had to be con- structed after the war began. One such little navy had been built at Presque Isle, now Erie, on Lake Erie. It comprised two brigs of twenty guns and sev- eral schooners and gunboats. It must be remembered that everything but the lumber needed for the vessels had to be brought through the forests by land from the eastern seaports, and the mere problem of transportation was a serious one. When finished, the fleet was put in command of Oliver Hazard Perry. Watching his time (and, it is said, taking advantage of the carelessness of the 154 STORY OF THE WAR OF 1812. British commander in going on shore to dinner one Sunday, when he should have been watching Perry's movements), the American commander drew his fleet over the bar which had protected it while in harbor from the onslaughts of the British fleet. To get the brigs over this bar was a work of time and great difficulty; an attack at that hour by the British would certainly have ended in the total destruction of the fleet. Once accomplished, Perry, in his flagship, the " Lawrence," headed a fleet often vessels, fifty-five guns, and four hundred men. Opposed to him was Captain Barclay with six ships, sixty-five guns, and also VIEW ON LAKE ONTARIO. about four hundred men. The British for several weeks avoided the conflict, but in the end were cornered and forced to fight. It was at the beginning of this battle that Perry displayed the flag bearing Lawrence's famous dying words, " Don't give up the ship ! " No less famous is his dispatch announcing the result in the words, " We have met the enemy and they are ours." The victory was indeed a complete and decisive one ; all six of the enemy's ships were captured, and their loss was nearly double that of Perry's forces. The complete control of Lake Erie was assured ; that of Lake Ontario had already been gained by Commodore Chauncey. BATTLE OF THE THAMES. 155 Perry's memorable victory opened the way for important land operations by General Harrison, who now marched from Detroit with the design of invading Canada. He engaged with Proctor's mingled body of British troops and Indians, and by the Battle of the Thames drove back the British from that part of Canada and restored matters to the position in which they stood before Hull's deplorable surrender of Detroit — and, indeed, of all Michigan — to the British. In this battle of the Thames the Indian chief, Tecumseh, fell, and about three hundred of the British and Indians were killed on the field. The hold of our enemies on the Indian tribes was greatly broken by this defeat. Previous to this the land cam- paigns had been marked by a succession of minor victories and defeats. In the West a force of Americans under General Winchester had been captured at the River Raisin ; and there took place an atrocious massacre of large numbers of prisoners by the Indians, who were quite beyond restraint from their white allies. On the other hand, the Americans had captured the city of York, now Toronto, though at the cost of their leader, General Pike, who, with two hundred of his men, was destroyed by the explosion of a magazine. Fort George had also been captured by the Americans and an attack on Sackett's Harbor had been gal- lantly repulsed. Following the battle of the Thames, extensive operations of an aggressive kind had been planned looking toward the capture of Montreal and the invasion of Canada by way of Lakes Ontario and Champlain. Un- happily, jealousy between the American Generals Wilkinson and Hampton resulted in a lack of concert in their military operations, and the expedition was a complete fiasco. One turns for consolation from the mortifying record of Wilkinson's ex- pedition to the story of the continuous successes which had accompanied the naval operations of 1813. Captain Lawrence, in the " Hornet," won a complete victory over the English brig " Peacock ;" our brig, the " Enterprise," captured the " Boxer," and other equally welcome victories were reported. One distinct defeat had marred the record — that of our fine brig, the " Chesapeake," com- manded by Captain Lawrence, which had been captured after one of the most hard-fought contests of the war by the British brig, the " Shannon." Lawrence himself fell mortally wounded, exclaiming as he was carried away, "Tell the men not to give up the ship but fight her till she sinks." It was a paraphrase of this exclamation which Perry used as a rallying signal in the battle on Lake Erie. Despite his one defeat, Captain Lawrence's fame as a gallant seaman and high- minded patriot was untarnished, and his death was more deplored throughout the country than was the loss of his ship. In the latter part of the war England was enabled to send' large reinforce- ments both to her army and navy engaged in the American campaigns. Events in Europe seemed in 1 814 to insure peace for at least a time. Napoleon's power was broken ; the Emperor himself was exiled at Elba ; and Great Britain at last i 5 6 STORY OF THE WAR OF 1812. had her hands free. But before the reinforcements reached this country, our army had won greater credit and had shown more military skill by far than were evinced in its earlier operations. Along the line of the Niagara River active WEATHERSFORD AND GENERAL JACKSON. fighting had been going on. In the battle of Chippewa, the capture of Fort Erie, the engagement at Lundy's Lane, and the defense of Fort Erie the troops, under the command of Winfield Scott and General Brown, had held their own, and more, against superior forces, and had won from British officers the admission that they THE BURNING OF WASHINGTON. 157 fought as well under fire as regular troops. More encouraging still was the total defeat of the plan of invasion from Canada undertaken by the now greatly strengthened British forces. These numbered twelve thousand men and were supported by a fleet on Lake Champlain. Their operations were directed against Plattsburg, and in the battle on the lake, usually called by the name of that town, the American flotilla under the command of Commodore Macdonough completely routed the British fleet. As a result the English army also beat a rapid and undignified retreat to Canada. This was the last important engagement to take place in the North. Meanwhile expeditions of considerable size were directed by the British against our principal Southern cities. One of these brought General Ross with five thousand men, chiefly the pick of the Duke of Wellington's army, into the Bay of Chesapeake. Nothing was more discreditable in the military strategy of our Administration than the fact that at this time Washington was left unprotected, though in evident danger. General Ross marched straight upon the Capital, easily defeated at Bladensburg an inferior force of raw militia — who yet fought with intrepidity for the most part — seized the city, and carried out his intention of destroying the public buildings and a great part of the town. Most of the public archives had been removed. Ross' conduct in the burning of Washington was probably within the limits of legitimate warfare but has been condemned as semi- barbarous by many writers. The achievement gave great joy to the English papers, but was really of less importance than was supposed. * Washington at that time was a straggling town of only eight thousand inhabitants ; its public buildings were not at all adequate to the demands of the future ; and an optimist might even consider, the destruction of the old city as a public benefit, for it enabled Congress to adopt the plans which have since led to the making of perhaps the most beautiful city of the country. A similar attempt upon Baltimore was less successful. The people of that city made a brave defense and hastily threw up extensive fortifications. In the end the British fleet, after a severe bombardment of Fort McFenry, were driven off. The British Admiral had boasted that Fort McHenry would yield in a few hours ; and two days after, when its flag was still flying, Francis S. Key was in- spired by its sight to compose the " Star Spangled Banner." A still larger expedition of British troops landed on the Louisiana coast and marched to the attack of New Orleans. Here General Andrew Jackson was in command. He had already distinguished himself in this war by putting down with a strong hand the hostile Creek Indians of the then Spanish territory of Florida, who had been incited by English envoys to warfare against our Southern settlers; and in April, 18 14, William Weathersford, the half-breed chief, had surrendered in person to Jackson (see illustration). General Packenham, who commanded the five thousand British soldiers sent against 1 58 STORY OF THE WAR OF 1S12. New Orleans, expected as easy a victory as that of General Ross at Washington. But Jackson had summoned to his aid the stalwart frontiersmen of Kentucky and Tennessee — men used from boyhood to the rifle, and who made up what was in effect a splendid force of sharp-shooters. Both armies threw up rough fortifications ; General Jackson made great use for that purpose of cotton bales, Packenham employing the still less solid material of sugar barrels. Oddly enough, the final battle, and really the most important of the war, took place after the treaty of peace between the two countries had already been signed. The British were repulsed again and again in persistent and gallant attacks on our fortifications. General Packenham himself was killed, together with many officers and seven hundred of his men. One British officer pushed to the top of our earthworks and demanded their surrender, whereupon he was smilingly asked to look behind him, and turning saw, as he afterward said, that the men he supposed to be supporting him " had vanished as if the earth had swallowed them up." The American losses were inconsiderable. The treaty of peace, signed at Ghent, December 24, 18 14, has been ridiculed because it contained no positive agreement as to many of the questions in dis- pute. Not a word did it say about the impressment of American sailors or the rights of neutral ships. Its chief stipulations were the mutual restoration of ter- ritory and the appointing of a commission to determine our northern boundary line. The truth is that both nations were tired of the war ; the circumstances that had led to England's aggressions no longer existed ; both countries were suffering enormous commercial loss to no avail ; and, above all, the United States had emphatically justified by its deeds its claim to an equal place in the council of nations. Politically and materially, further warfare was illogical. If the two nations had understood each other better in the first place ; if Great Britain had treated our demands with courtesy and justice instead of insolence ; if, in short, international comity had taken the place of international ill-temper, the war might have been avoided altogether. Its undoubted benefits to us were incidental rather than direct. But though not formally recognized by treaty, the rights of American seamen and of American ships were in fact no longer infringed upon by Great Britain. ~1 JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, THE ACCOMPLISHED PRESIDENT, AND GREAT DEFENDER OK THE RIGHT OF PETITION. 'M ERICA is the land of self-made men. Many of the greatest statesmen of this republic have been men who, from the deepest poverty and obscurity, rose step by step to the highest eminence. To such lives the career of John Ouincy Adams forms a curious contrast. He was the son of a great statesman, and trained in politics and diplomacy from earliest youth. He was educated in the best schools of America and Europe. So early were his abilities developed, that when he was a mere boy they attracted the attention of Washington ; and from that time until the day when, half a century later, death found him at his post, he was equal to every duty, prepared for every station. He went steadily on, up to the highest office in the nation's gift ; but his unique fame was won, not in his presidency, but in the humbler post which he afterward took in the House of Representatives. There, for seventeen years, through evil and good report, he stood, always at his post, maintaining the sacred right of petition, and plead- ing the cause of the poor and oppressed. Almost the whole life of John Ouincy Adams was passed amid the " storms 161 1 62 JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. of state." When but eight years of age he stood with his mother upon an eminence, listening to the booming of the great battle on Bunker's Hill, and gazing upon the smoke and flame billowing up from the conflagration of Charles- town. Often, during the siege of Boston, he watched the shells thrown day and night by the combatants. When but eleven years old he took a tearful adieu of his mother and was rowed out in a small boat to a ship anchored in the bay, to sail with his father for Europe through a fleet of hostile British cruisers. His father, John Adams, was associated with Franklin and Lee as minister plenipo- tentiary at Paris. The boy's intelligence attracted the notice of these distin- guished men, and he received from them flattering marks of attention. John Adams had scarcely returned to this country in 1779 ere he was again sent abroad, empowered to negotiate a treaty of peace with England whenever England should be disposed to end the war. Again John Ouincy Adams accom- panied his father. On this voyage he commenced a diary, noting down the remarkable events of each day ; which practice he continued, with but few inter- ruptions, until his death. At Paris he applied himself with great diligence, for six months, to study ; then accompanied his father to Holland, where he entered, first a school in Amsterdam, and then the University of Leyden. In 1 78 1, when but fourteen years of age, he was selected by Mr. Dana, our minis- ter to the Russian court, as his private secretary. In this school of incessant labor and culture he spent fourteen months, and then returned to Holland through Sweden, Denmark, Hamburg, and Bremen. This long journey he took alone, in the winter, when in his sixteenth year. Again he resumed his studies, under a private tutor, at the Hague. Thence, in the spring of 1782, he accompanied his father to Paris, traveling leisurely, and forming acquaintances with the most distinguished men on the continent. At Paris he again became the associate of the most illustrious men of all lands. After a short visit to England, he returned to Paris, and consecrated all his energies to study until May, 1785, when he returned to America, leaving his father our ambassador at the court of St. James. The advancement which he had already made in education was such that in 1786 he entered the junior class in Harvard University. His character, attainments, and devotion to study secured alike the respect of his classmates and the faculty, and he graduated with the second honor of his class. Upon leaving college, at the age of twenty, he studied law, and in 1790 opened an office in Boston. vVhen Great Britain commenced war against France, in 1793, to arrest the progress of the French Revolution, Mr. Adams wrote some articles urging entire neutrality on the part of the United States. The view was not a popular one. Many felt that as France had helped us, we were bound to help France. But President Washington coincided with Mr. Adams, and issued a proclamation MISSION TO EUROPE. 163 of neutrality. His writings at this time in the Boston journals attracted national attention, and gave him so high a reputation for talent and familiarity with our diplomatic relations, that in June, 1794, he, being then but twenty-seven years of age, was appointed by Washington resident minister at the Netherlands. In the agitated state oi Europe, swept by great armies struggling for and against " equal rights for all men," there was but little that a peaceful ambassa- dor could then accomplish; but being one of the most methodical and laborious of men, he devoted himself to official duties, the claims of society, reading the ancient classics, and familiarizing himself with the languages of modern Europe. Every hour had its assigned duty. Every night he reviewed what he had clone for the day ; and at the close of every month and every year he subjected his conduct to rigorous retrospection. In July, 1797, he left the Hague to go to Portugal as minister plenipoten- tiary. Washington at this time wrote to his father, John Adams : — "Without intending to compliment the father or the mother, or to censure any others, I give it as my decided opinion, that Mr. Adams is the most valuable character which we have abroad ; and there remains no doubt in my mind that he will prove himself the ablest of all our diplomatic corps." On his way to Portugal, upon his arrival in London, he met with despatches directing him to the court of Berlin, but requesting him to remain in London until he should receive his instructions. While waiting he was married to an American lady to whom he had been previously engaged, — Miss Louisa Catha- rine Johnson, daughter of the American consul in London ; a lady endowed with beauty and accomplishments which made her a worthy companion. He reached Berlin with his wife in November, 1797, where he remained until July, 1799, when, having fulfilled all the purposes of his mission, he solicited his recall. As soon as permission came for his return, he embarked, and reached the United States in September, 1801. SENATOR AND PROFESSOR. Soon after his return, in 1802, he was chosen to the Senate of Massachu- setts from Boston, and then was elected senator of the United States for six years from the 4th of March, 1804. His reputation, ability, and experience placed him immediately among the most prominent and influential members of that body. In every measure which his judgment approved, he cordially supported Mr. Jefferson's administration. Especially did he sustain the government in its measures of resistance to the encroachments of England, destroying our commerce and insulting our flag. There was no man in America more familiar with the arrogance of the British court upon these points, and no one more resolved to present a firm resistance. In 1S05 he was chosen professor of rhetoric in Harvard College ; and this 1 64 JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. indefatigable man, in addition to his senatorial duties, entered vigorously upon a course of preparatory studies, reviewing his classics, and searching the litera- ture of Europe for materials for his" lectures. The lectures he thus prepared were subsequently published, and constitute enduring memorials of his genius and his industry. In 1809 Madison succeeded Jefferson in the presidential chair; and he immediately nominated John Quincy Adams minister to St. Petersburg. Resigning his professorship, he embarked at Boston with Mrs. Adams and their youngest son in August, 1809, and, after a stormy passage, reached St. Peters- burg on the 23d of October. Twice their ship, which was a merchantman, was stopped and searched by British cruisers ; and, but for Mr. Adams' firmness and thorough acquaintance with the laws of nations, the ship would not have been permitted to continue to its port of destination. He was received by the Emperor Alexander alone in his cabinet, and a warm attachment immediately sprang up between those illustrious men ; and thus was laid the foundations of that friendship which binds the two nations together to the present day. The foreign ministers at the Russian court were generally living in the greatest magnificence ; but Mr. Adams received so small a salary that he was compelled to practice the most rigid economy. He was expected to attend the splendid entertainments of others, but could give none in return. One morning, as he was out walking, he met the emperor, who came cordially up to him, and, clasping his hand, said : — "Why, Mr. Adams, it is a hundred years since I have seen you !" After some common observations, he inquired, " Do you intend to take a house in the country this summer? " " No," Mr. Adams replied : " I had that intention for some time, but have given it up." "And why? " inquired the emperor. Then, observing a little hesitation in Mr. Adams' manner, he relieved him from 'his embarrassment by saying in perfect good humor, and with a smile, "Perhaps it is from considerations of finance." " Those considerations are often very important," Mr. Adams replied. "You are right," rejoined the emperor: "it is always necessary to pro- portion one's expenses to one's receipts." While in Russia Mr. Adams was an intense student. He devoted his attention to the language and history of Russia ; to the Chinese trade ; to the European system of weights, measures, and coins ; to the climate, and astro- nomical observations ; while he kept up a familiar acquaintance with the Greek and Latin classics. In all the universities of Europe a more accomplished scholar could scarcely be found. All through life the Bible constituted an THE TREATY OF GHENT. 1 6 5 important part of his studies. It was his rule every day to read five chapters. He also read with great attention the works of the most eminent theologians. With this eagerness in the pursuit of knowledge, it is not surprising that he should write to a friend : — "I feel nothing like the tediousness of time. I suffer nothing like ennui. Time is too short for me rather than too long. If the day was forty-eight hours, instead of twenty-four, I could employ them all, if I had but eyes and hands to read and write." As England had consented to treat for peace, Mr. Adams was appointed, with Mr. Gallatin and Mr. Bayard, to conduct the negotiations. The commis- THE WHITE HOUSE AT WASHINGTON. sioners met at Ghent, in 1815. Mr. Adams took the leading part. The Marquis of Wellesley, in commenting upon the treaty which was then entered into, said in the British House of Lords, — " In my opinion, the American commissioners have shown the most aston- ishing superiority over the English during the whole of the correspondence." From Ghent Mr. Adams went to Paris, where he chanced to be when the Emperor Napoleon returned from Elba. Mrs. Adams joined him here ; and they proceeded together to London, he having been appointed minister to the British court. On the 4th of March, 1S17, Mr. Monroe took the presidential chair, and 1 66 JOHN OUINCY ADAMS. immediately appointed Mr. Adams Secretary of State. Taking leave of his numerous friends in public and private life in Europe, he sailed, in June, 1S17, for the United States. After a short visit home, he repaired to Washington, and entered upon his new duties, as thoroughly prepared for them, in ability, education, and experience, as one could be. During the eight years of Mr. Monroe's administration, Mr. Adams continued Secretary of State. Few will now contradict the assertion, that the duties of that office were never more ably discharged. Probably the most important measure which Mr. Adams conducted was the purchase of Florida from Spain, for five million dollars. Some time before the close of Mr. Monroe's second term of office, new candidates began to be presented for the presidency. The friends of Mr. Adams, brought forward his name. It was an exciting campaign. Party spirit was never more bitter. Two hundred and sixty-one electoral votes were cast. Andrew Jackson received ninety-nine ; John Ouincy Adams, eighty-four ; Wil- liam H. Crawford, forty-one ; Henry Clay, thirty-seven. As there was no choice by the people, the question went to the House of Representatives. Mr. Clay gave the vote of Kentucky to Mr. Adams, and he was elected. The friends of the disappointed candidates now combined in a venomous and persistent assault .upon Mr. Adams. There are few things more disgrace- ful in the history of our country than the abuse which was poured upon this high minded, upright, patriotic man. There never was an administration more pure in principles, more conscientiously devoted to the best interests of the country, than that of John Ouincy Adams ; and never, perhaps, was there an administration more unscrupulously and outrageously assailed. It may, how- ever, help us to understand what would otherwise be unaccountable, if we remember what an immense influence is exerted by personal manners, and how deficient Adams was in this respect. ADAMS AND JACKSON IN CONTRAST. Mr. Adams, in his public manners, was cold and repulsive ; though it is said that with his personal friends he was at times very genial. In his public receptions and official intercourse he often appeared " with a formal coldness, that froze like the approach to an iceberg." The evening after the election Mr. Monroe held a presidential levee. All Washington crowded to the White House, eager to pay homage to the rising sun. Mr. S. G. Goodrich ("Peter Parley") happened to be present, and has described the scene: — "I shall pass over," he writes, "other individuals present, only noting an incident which respects the two persons in the assembly who, most of all others, engrossed the thoughts of the visitors.— Mr. Adams the elect. General Jackson the defeated. It chanced in the course of the evening that these two persons, involved in the throng, approached each other from opposite directions, MEETING WITH GENERAL JACKSON. 167 yet without knowing it. Suddenly, as they were almost together, the persons around, seeing what was to happen, by a sort of instinct stepped aside, and left OPENING OF THE ERIE CANAL, IN 1825. them face to face. Mr. Adams was by himself : General Jack- son had a large, handsome lady on his arm. They looked at each other for a moment ; and then General Jack- son moved forward, and, reaching out his long arm, said, ' How do you do, Mr. 1 68 JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. Adams ? I give you my left hand ; for the right, as you see, is devoted to the fair. I hope you are very well, sir.' All this was gallantly and heartily said and done. Mr. Adams took the general's hand, and said, with chilling cold- ness, ' Very well, sir ; 1 hope General Jackson is well.' " It was curious to see the Western planter, the Indian fighter, the stern soldier, who had written his country's glory in the blood of the enemy at New Orleans, genial and gracious in the midst of a court ; while the old courtier and diplomat was stiff, rigid, cold as a statue. It was all the more remarkable from the fact, that, four hours before, the former had been defeated, and the latter was the victor, in a struggle for one of the highest objects of human ambition. The personal character of these two individuals was, in fact, well expressed in that chance meeting, — the gallantry, the frankness, the heartiness, of the one, which captivated all ; the coldness, the distance, the self-concentration, of the other, which repelled all." Mr. Adams was, to a very remarkable degree, abstemious and temperate in his habits ; always rising early, and taking much exercise. When at his home in Ouincy, he has been known to walk seven miles to Boston before break- fast. In Washington, it was said that he was the first man up in the city, light- ing his own fire, and applying himself to work in his library often long before the dawn. He was an expert swimmer, and was exceedingly fond of bathing ; and was in the habit in the summer, every morning, of plunging into the Poto- mac with all the sportiveness of a boy. He sometimes made the journey from Ouincy to Washington on horseback, accompanied by a single attendant. The administration of Mr. Adams \vas one of the ablest and best which the country has ever seen ; although, perhaps for that very reason, it was un- eventful. It was notable for being the last one under which partisanship was not allowed to affect the public service. To Jackson's administration, which followed, belongs the distinction of introducing the "Spoils System," under which the government offices are used as a reward for political service in the election. Adams' administration was pure, because he himself was pure. Up- right, able, energetic, industrious, and thoroughly trained, he was probably better equipped for the presidency than any other man who has ever filled the chair. In 1829 he was succeeded by General Jackson, and retired to his Massa- chusetts home. Not long, however, was he left in retirement. In 1830 he was nominated and elected to the House of Representatives. It was supposed by many that, having held the office of president, he would refuse to accept the humbler post. There was no precedent where a chief magistrate had afterward sat in the House. All doubts, however, were soon set at rest by his prompt acceptance. Little did any one then realize how greatly his service in the lower house of Congress would outweigh all that he had hitherto done for his country, or how far its history would eclipse the fame of his earlier career. AN EXCITING CONTEST. 169 Upon taking his seat in the house, he announced that he should hold him- self bound to no party. Probably there was never a member of the house more devoted to his duties. He was usually the first in his place in the morning, and the last to leave his seat in the evening. Not a measure could be brought for- ward, and escape his scrutiny. The battle which Mr. Adams fought, almost singly, against the pro-slavery party in the government, was sublime in its moral daring and heroism. For persisting in presenting petitions for the abolition of slavery, he was threatened with indictment by the grand jury, with expulsion from the house, with assassination ; but no threats could intimidate him, and his final triumph was complete. Congress, yielding to the pro-slavery spirit of the South, passed a resolve in January, 1837, " that all petitions relating to slavery, without being printed or referred, shall be laid on the table, and no action shall be had thereon." Some of the pro-slavery party forged a petition, as if from slaves, to see if Mr. Adams would dare to present it. THE FORGED PETITION. On the 6th of February, 1837, Mr. Adams rose with this forged petition in his hand, and said : " I hold a paper purporting to come trom slaves. I wish to know if such a paper comes within the order of the house respecting petitions." The sensitiveness of the house upon this subject may be inferred from the fact that a storm of indignation was instantly roused. Waddy Thompson of South Carolina, Charles E. Haynes of Georgia, Dixon H. Lewis of Alabama, sprang to the floor, presenting resolutions, "that John Quincy Adams, by attempting to present a petition purporting to be from slaves, has been guilty of gross disrespect to the house, and that he be instantly brought to the bar to receive the severe censure of the speaker." Never were assailants more thoroughly discomfited. "Mr. Speaker," said Mr. Adams, " to prevent the consumption of time, I ask the gentlemen to modify their resolution a little, so that, when I come to the bar of the house. I may not, by a word, put an end to it. / did not present the petition. I said that I had a paper purporting to be a petition from slaves ; and I asked the speaker whether he considered such a paper as included in the general order of the house, that all petitions relating to slavery should be laid upon the table. I intended to take the decision of the speaker before I went one step toward presenting that petition. This is the fact. " I adhere to the right of petition. Where is your law which says the mean, the low, the degraded, shall be deprived of the right of petition ? Petition is supplication, entreaty, prayer. Where is the degree of vice or immorality which shall deprive the citizen of the right to supplicate for a boon, or to pray for mercy ? Where is such a law to be found ? It does not belong to the most abject despotism. There is no absolute monarch on earth who is not compelled, by i 7 o JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. the constitution of his country, to receive the petitions of his people, whosoever they may be. The Sultan of Constantinople cannot walk the streets, and refuse to receive petitions from the meanest and vilest in the land. The right of peti- tion belongs to all ; and, so far from refusing to present a petition because it might come from those low in the estimation of the world, it would be an addi- tional incentive, if such an incentive were wanting." After a debate of extreme bitterness, running through four days, only twenty votes could be found to cast any censure upon Mr. Adams. There was perhaps never a fiercer battle fought in legislative halls than Mr. Adams waged, for nearly a score of years, with the partisans of slavery in Congress. In every encounter he came off victor. At the age of seventy-four he appeared in the Supreme Court of the United States, after an absence from that court of thirty years, to plead the cause of a few friendless negroes, the Amistad captives, who, with their own strong' arms, had freed themselves from the man-stealers. His effort was crowned with complete success ; and the poor Africans, abundantly furnished with the implements of civilized life, were returned to the homes from which they had been so ruthlessly torn. "I WILL PUT THE QUESTION MYSELF ! " In 1839 Congress was for a time seriously disorganized in consequence of two delegations appearing from New Jersey, each claiming the election. By usage, the clerk of the preceding Congress, on the first assembling, acts as chairman until a speaker is chosen. When, in calling the roll, the clerk came to New Jersey, he stated that, as the five seats of the members from that State were contested, he should pass over those names. A violent debate ensued. For four days there was anarchy, and it was found impossible to organize the house. Mr. Adams, during all this scene of confusion, sat quietly engaged in writing, apparently taking no interest in the debate, but watching intently for the moment when he could effectually make a movement. On the morning of the fourth day, the clerk again commenced calling the roll. When he reached New Jersey, he again repeated, "as these seats are contested," when Mr. Adams sprang to the floor, and in clear, shrill tones, which penetrated every portion of the house, cried out, — ■ "I rise to interrupt fhe clerk." A multitude of voices shouted, " Hear him ! hear him ! — hear John Ouincy Adams ! " In an instant, there was profound silence. Every eye was riveted upon that venerable old man, whose years and honors, and purity of character, com- manded the respect of the bitterest of his foes. For a moment he paused : and there was such stillness that the fall of a pin might have been heard. Then, in those tones of intensity which ever arrested the attention of the house, he said, — ■ PUTTING THE QUESTION. 171 " It was not my intention to take any part in these extraordinary proceed- ings. I had hoped that this house would succeed in organizing itself. This is not the time nor place to discuss the merits of conflicting claimants : that subject belongs to the House of Representatives. What a spectacle we here present ! We do not and cannot organize ; and why ? Because the clerk of this house — the mere clerk, whom we create, whom we employ — usurps the throne, and sets us, the vicegerents of the whole American people, at defiance. And what is this clerk of yours? Is he to suspend, by his mere negative, the functions of government, and put an end to this Congress. He refuses to call the roll. It is in your power to compel him to call it, if he will not do it voluntarily." Here he was interrupted by a member, who stated that the clerk could not be compelled to call the roll, as he would resign rather than do so. "Well, sir, let him resign," continued Mr. Adams, "and we may possibly discover some way by which we can get along without the aid of his all-power- ful talent, learning, and genius. If we cannot organize in any other way, if this clerk of yours will not consent to our discharging the trust confided to us by our constituents, then let us imitate the example of the Virginia House of Burgesses, which, when the colonial Governor Dinwiddie ordered it to disperse, refused to obey the imperious and insulting mandate, and like men " Here there was such a burst of applause from the whole house, that, for a moment, his voice was drowned. Cheer upon cheer rose, shaking the walls of the Capitol. As soon as he could again be heard he submitted a motion, re- quiring the clerk to call the roll. " How shall the question be put?" The voice of Mr. Adams was heard rising above the tumult, as he cried out, "I in- tend to put the question myself! " Another burst of applause followed ; when Mr. Barnwell Rhett of South Carolina leaped upon one of the desks, and shouted, "I move that the Hon. John Ouincy Adams take the chair of the speaker of the house, and officiate as presiding officer till the house be organized by the election of its constitutional officers. As many as are agreed to this will say ' Aye ' ' ' One universal, thundering "Aye!" came back in response. Mr. Adams was conducted to the chair, and the house was organized. Mr. Wise of Vir- ginia, soon after, addressing him, said, — "Sir, I regard it as the proudest hour of your life ; and if, when you shall be gathered to your fathers, I were asked to select the words which, in my judg- ment, are best calculated to give at once the character of the man, I would inscribe upon your tomb this sentence, T will put the question myself.' " In January, 1842, Mr. Adams presented a petition from forty-five citizens of Haverhill, Mass., praying for the peaceable dissolution of the Union. The pro-slavery party in Congress, who where then plotting the destruction of the government, were roused to a degree of commotion such as even our stormy 172 JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. hall of legislation has rarely witnessed. They met in caucus, and, finding that they probably would not be able to expel Mr. Adams from the house, drew up a series of resolutions, which, if adopted, would inflict upon him disgrace equiva- lent to expulsion. Mr. Adams had presented the petition, which was most respectfully worded, and had moved that it be referred to a committee instructed to report an answer, showing the reasons why the prayer ought not to be granted. It was the 25th of January. The whole body of the pro-slavery party came crowding together into the house, prepared to crush Mr. Adams forever. One HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. of their number, Thomas F. Marshall of Kentucky, was appointed to read the resolutions, which accused Mr. Adams of high treason, of having insulted the government, and of meriting expulsion ; but for which deserved punishment, the house, in its great mercy, would substitute its severest censure. With the assumption of a very solemn and magisterial air, there being breathless silence in the imposing audience, Mr. Marshall hurled the carefully prepared anathemas at his victim. Mr. Adams stood alone, the whole pro-slavery party madly, against him. As soon as the resolutions were read, every eye being fixed upon him, up rose that bold old man, whose scattered locks were whitened by seventy-five A CHARGE OF TREASON. 173 years ; and casting a withering glance in the direction of his assailants, in a clear, shrill tone, tremulous with suppressed emotion, he said, — " In reply to this audacious, atrocious charge of high treason, I call for the reading of the first paragraph of the Declaration of Independence. Read it, read it ! and see what that says of the right of a people to reform, to change, and to dissolve their government." The attitude, the manner, the tone, the words ; the venerable old man, with flashing eye and flushed cheek, and whose very form seemed to expand under the inspiration of the occasion, — all presented a scene overawing in its sub- limity. There was breathless silence as that paragraph was read, in defense of whose principles our fathers had pledged " their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor." It was a proud hour to Mr. Adams, as they were all compelled to listen to the words, — " That, to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed ; and that, when- ever any form of government becomes destructive of those ends, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundations on such principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness." That one sentence baffled and routed the foe. The heroic old man looked around upon the audience, and thundered out, " Read that again ! " It was again read. Then, in a few fiery, logical words, he stated his defense in terms which even prejudiced minds could not resist. His discomfited assail- ants made sundry attempts to rally. After a conflict of eleven days they gave up vanquished, and their resolution was ignominiously laid upon the table. HONORS FROM THE PEOPLE. In the summer of 1843 Mr. Adams took a tour through western New York. His journey was a perfect ovation. In all the leading cities he was received with the highest marks of consideration. The whole mass ot the people rose to confer honor upon the man who had battled so nobly for human rights, and whose public and private character was without a stain. The greet- ing which he received at Buffalo was such as that city had never before conferred upon any man. The national flag was floating from every masthead. The streets were thronged with the multitude, who greeted with bursts of applause the renowned patriot and statesman as soon as he appeared. The Hon. Millard Fillmore, subsequently President of the United States, welcomed him in the following words : — " You see here assembled the people of our infant city, without distinction of party, sex, age, or condition, — all, all, anxiously vying with each other to show their respect and esteem for your public and private worth. Here are 1 74 JOHN Q I T INC\ ' ADAMS. gathered, in this vast multitude of what must appear to you strange faces, thousands whose hearts have vibrated to the chord of sympathy which your speeches have touched. Here is reflecting age, and ardent youth, and lisping childhood, to all of whom your venerated name is as dear as household words, — all anxious to feast their eyes by a sight of that extraordinary and venerable man, that old man eloquent, upon whose lips Wisdom has distilled her choicest nectar. Here you see them all, and read in their eager and joy-gladdened countenances and brightly beaming eyes, a welcome, a thrice-told, heartfelt, soul-stirring welcome, to the man whom they delight to honor." In January, 1846, when seventy-eight years of age, he took part in the great debate on the Oregon question, displaying intellectual vigor, and an extent and accuracy of acquaintance with the subject, which excited great admiration. At the close of the session, on the 17th of November, he had an attack ot paralysis while walking in the streets of Boston. He, however, so far recovered, that he soon resumed his official duties in Washington. As he entered the house on the 16th of February, 1847, * or the first time since his illness, every member instinctively rose in token of respect; and by two mem- bers he was formally conducted to his seat. After this, though constantly present, he took little part in the debates. It has been said of Mr. Adams, that when his body was bent and his hair silvered by the lapse of fourscore years, he was accustomed to repeat every night, before he slept, the prayer which his mother taught him in his infant years. There is great moral beauty in the aspect of the venerable, world-worn states- man, folding his hands and repeating, in the simplicity and sincerity of child- hood, the words : — " Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep : If I should die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take." On the 2 1 st of February, 184S, he rose on the floor of Congress, with a paper in his hand, to address the speaker. Suddenly he fell, again stricken by paralysis, and was caught in the arms of those around him. For a time he was senseless, as he was conveyed to a sofa in the rotunda. With reviving con- sciousness he opened his eyes, looked calmly around, and said, ''This is the last of earth;" then after a moment's pause, he added, " I am content." These were his last words. His family were summoned to his side ; and in the apart- ment of the speaker of the house, beneath the dome of the Capitol, — the theatre of his labors and his triumphs, — he soon breathed his last. The voices of denunciation were now hushed, and all parties united in tributes of honor to one of the purest patriots, and one of the most distinguished statesmen, America has produced. ^r< HENRY CLAY, POPULAR HERO, PATRIOT, AND STATESMAN. . //ITH the close of the great civil war in i86=; disap- • l\i, ,* : J0- peared from our politics the great problem which for 7s. half a century had absorbed the attention and tasked the abilities of American statesmen. A I $ ¥ w Throughout that period there was always one overshadowing subject. Whatever other ques- tions of domestic policy came up, — tariff, currency, internal improvements, State rights, — they were always subordinate to the main question, how to preserve the Union and slavery together. Some, Y like Calhoun, were ready to abandon the Union to save slavery ; others, like Garrison, were ready to abandon the Union to destroy slavery ; but between these extremes stood a great body of able and patriotic statesmen, who loved and prized the Union above all else, and who, to save it, would make any sacrifice, would join in any compromise. At the head of these, for more than fifty years, towered the great figure of Henry Clay. Not often does a man whose life is spent in purely civil affairs become such a popular hero and idol as did Clay — especially when it is his fate never to reach the highest place in the people's gift. " Was there ever," says Parton, " a public man, not at the head of a state, so beloved as he ? Who ever heard such cheers, so hearty, distinct and ringing, as those which his name evoked ? Men shed tears at his defeat, and women went to bed sick from pure sympathy with his disappointment. He could not travel during the last thirty years of his life, but only make progresses. When he left home the public seized him and bore him along over the land, the committee of one State passing him on to the committee of another, and the hurrahs of one town dying away as those of the next caught his ear." One evidence of his popularity is the great number of children named in his honor. An English woman traveling in America during the Presidential canvass of 1844 writes that at least three-fourths of all the boy babies born in that year must have been named for Henry Clay. " Even now, more than thirty years after his death," says Carl Schurz, writing in 1886, "we may hear old men, who knew him in the days of his strength, speak of him 177 i 7 8 HENRY Q.AY. with an enthusiasm and affection so warm and fresh as to convince us that the recollection of having followed his leadership is among the dearest treasures of their memory." Henry Clay was born in Hanover county, near Richmond, Virginia, in one of the darkest days of the Revolution, — the year of i 777 ; the year of the battles of Brandywine and Germantown, before yet the glad news of Burgoyne's sur- render had come to cheer the hearts of the struggling colonists. His father, a poor Baptist preacher, died when Henry was four years old, leaving a wife and seven children. There is a story that while his body was lying in the house, a party of British cavalry made a raid through the neighborhood, and left on Mrs. Clay's table a handful of silver to pay for some property they had taken ; but that as soon as they were gone, even in her poverty and grief the spirited woman swept the money from the table and threw it in the fireplace. Clay's boyhood was that of the typical "self-made man," — a time of hard labor, poverty, and small opportunities. "We catch our first glimpse of the boy when he sat in a little log school-house, without windows or floor, one of a humming score of shoeless boys, where a good-natured, irritable, drinking English schoolmaster taught him to read, write, and cipher as far as Practice. This was the only school he ever attended, and that was all he learned at it. His widowed mother with her seven young children, her little farm, and two or three slaves, could do no more for him. Next, we see him a tall, awkward, slender stripling of thirteen, still barefoot, clad in homespun butternut of his mother's making, tilling her fields, and going to mill with his bag of corn strapped upon the family pony." At fourteen, in the year 1791, a place was found for him in a Richmond drug store, where he served as errand boy and youngest clerk for one year. At this time occurred an event which decided his future. His mother hav- ing married again, her husband had influence enough to obtain for the youth a clerkship in the office of the Court of Chancery. The young gentlemen employed in that office long remembered the entrance among them of their new comrade. He was fifteen at the time, but very tall for his age, very slender, very awkward, and far from handsome. His good mother had arrayed him in a full suit of pepper-and-salt "figinny," an old Virginia fabric of silk and cotton. His shirt and shirt-collar were stiffly starched, and his coat-tail stood out boldly behind him. The dandy clerks of Richmond exchanged glances as this gawky figure entered and took his place at a desk to begin work. As he grew older, the raw and awkward stripling became a young man whose every movement had a winning or commanding grace. Handsome he never was ; but his ruddy face and abundant light hair, the grandeur of his fore- head, and the speaking intelligence of his countenance, more than atoned for the irregularity of his features. But of all the physical gifts bestowed by nature A RISING LAWYER. 179 upon this favored child, the most unique and admirable was his voice. There was a depth of tone in it, a volume, a compass, a rich and tender harmony, which invested all he said with majesty. Parton writes that he heard it last when Clay was an old man, past seventy ; and all he said was a few words of acknowl- edgment to a group of ladies in the largest hall in Philadelphia. " He spoke only in the ordinary tone of conversation ; but his voice filled the room as the organ fills a great cathedral, and the ladies stood spellbound as the swelling cadences rolled about the vast apartment. We have heard much of Whitefield's piercing voice and Patrick Henry's silvery tones, but we cannot believe that either of those natural orators possessed an organ superior to Clay's majestic bass. No one who ever heard him speak will find it difficult to believe what tradition reports, that he was the peer- less star of the Richmond Debating Society in 1795." But he soon discovered that these gifts would not get him a paying practice as an attorney in Richmond so quickly as he desired ; and as his mother and step-father had removed to Kentucky in 1792, he resolved to follow them to the western wilds, and there "grow up with the country." He was in his twenty- first year when he left Richmond, with his license to practice as an attorney, but with little else, in his pocket. A tall, plain, poor, friendless youth was young Henry Clay, when he set up in Lexington, and announced himself a candidate for practice as an attorney. an old Virginia mansion. He had not even the means of paying his board. "I remember," he said, in a speech in 1842, "how comfortable I thought I should be if I could make ^100, Virginia money, per year; and with what delight I received my first fifteen-shilling fee. My hopes were more than realized. I immediately rushed into a lucrative practice." Less than two years after his arrival at Lexington, in April, 1 799, Clay had achieved a position sufficiently secure to ask for and to obtain the hand of Lucretia Hart, the daughter of a man of high character and prominent standing in the State. She was a very estimable woman, and a most devoted wife to him. His prosperity increased rapidly ; so that soon he was able to purchase Ash- land, an estate of some six hundred acres, near Lexington, which afterward became famous as Henry Clay's home. HENRY CLAY. During the first thirteen years of Henry Clay's active life as a politician, he appears only as the eloquent champion of the policy of Mr. Jefferson, whom he esteemed the first and best of living men. After defending him on the stump and aiding him in the Kentucky Legislature, he was sent in 1806, when scarcely thirty, to fill for one term a seat in the Senate of the United States, made vacant by the resignation of one of the Kentucky Senators. Returning home at the end of the session, he re-entered the Kentucky Legislature. In support of President Jef- ferson's policy of non-inter- course with the warring nations of Europe, who were preying upon American com- merce, Mr. Clay proposed that members of the Legis- lature should bind them- selves to wear nothing that was not of American manu- facture. A Federalist mem- ber, ignorant of the fact that the refusal of the people to use foreign imports had caused the repeal of the Stamp Act, and would have postponed the Revolution but for the accident at Lexington, denounced Mr. Clay's proposition as the act of a demagogue. Clay chal- lenged this ill-informed gen- tleman, and a duel resulted, in which two shots were ex- changed, and both antagonists were slightly wounded. Elected again to the Senate for an unexpired term, he re-appeared in that body in 1809, and sat during two sessions. Mr. Clay's public life proper began in November, 181 1, as a member of the House of Representatives. He was immediately elected speaker by the war party, by the decisive majority of thirty-one. He was then thirty-four years of asje. AN OLD VIRGINIA MANSION — INTERIOR. CLA Y AS SPEAKER. 1 8 1 It is agreed that to Henry Clay, Speaker of the House of Representatives, more than to any other individual, we owe the war of 1812. When the House hesitated, it was he who, descending from the chair, spoke so as to re-assure it. When President Madison faltered, it was the stimulus of Clay's resistless pres- ence that put heart into him again. Clay it was whose clarion notes rang out over departing regiments, and kindled within them the martial fire ; and it was Clay's speeches which the soldiers loved to read by the camp-fire. When the war was going all wrong in the first year, President Madison wished to appoint Clay commander-in-chief of the land forces ; but, said Gallatin, " What shall we do without him in the House of Representatives ?" In 18 14, Clay was sent with four other commissioners to Ghent, in Belgium, to arrange the terms of a peace with England. A single anecdote will illustrate the impression he everywhere produced. An octogenarian British earl, who had retired from public life because of his years, but who still cherished a natural interest in public men and measures, being struck by the impression made in the aristocratic circles of London by the American commissioners, then on their way home from Ghent, requested a friend to bring them to see him at his house, to which his growing infirmities confined him. The visit was promptly and cheer- fully paid, and the obliging friend afterwards inquired of the old lord as to the impression the Americans had made upon him. "Ah !" said the veteran, with the " light of other days " gleaming from his eyes, " I liked them all, but I liked the Kentucky man best." It was so everywhere. From 1815, when he returned from Europe, until 1S25, when he became Secretary of State under John Ouincy Adams, Clay was Speaker of the House of Representatives. He was confessedly the best presiding officer that any deliberative body in America has ever known, and none was ever more severely tried. The intensity and bitterness of party feeling during the earlier portion of his speakership cannot now be realized except by the few who remember those days. On the floor of the house, Mr. Clay was often impetuous in discussion, and delighted to relieve the tedium of debate, and modify the bitterness of antag- onism, by a sportive jest or lively repartee. On one occasion, General Smythe of Virginia, who often afflicted the house by the dryness and verbosity of his harangues, had paused in the middle of a speech, which seemed likely to endure forever, to send to the library for a book from which he wished to note a pas- sage. Fixing his eye on Mr. Clay, he observed the Kentuckian writhing in his seat, as if his patience had already been exhausted. "You, sir," remarked Smythe, addressing him, " speak for the present generation ; but I speak for posterity." " Yes," said Clay, " and you seem resolved to speak until the arrival of your audience." Only once in the course of his long representative career was Clay obliged to canvass for his election, and he was never defeated, nor ever could be, before i8 2 HENRY CLAY. a public that he could personally meet and address. The one searching ordeal to which he was subjected, followed the passage of the " Compensation Act" of 1816, whereby Congress substituted for its per diem rate a fixed salary of $1500 to each member. This act excited great hostility especially in the West, then very poor. While canvassing the district, Mr. Clay encountered an old hunter, who had always before been his warm friend, but was now opposed to his re-election on account of the Compensation Bill. " Have you a good rifle, my friend?" asked Mr. Clay. "Yes." "Did it ever flash?" "Once only," he replied. " What did you do with it, — throw it away ? " " No ; I picked the flint, tried it again, and brought down the game." " Have I ever flashed, but upon the Com- pensation Bill?" "No!" "Will you throw me away?" "No, no!" ex- claimed the hunter with enthusiasm, nearly overpowered by his feelings; "I will pick the flint, and try you again ! " He was ever afterward a warm sup- porter of Mr. Clay. THE FAMOUS " MISSOURI COMPROMISE." In March, 181 8, a petition for the admission of Missouri into the Union was presented in Congress ; and then began that long and bitter struggle over slavery, which, after convulsing the country for nearly half a century, was finally ended on the banks of the Appomattox, in 1865. " No sooner had the debate begun," says Schurz, " than it became clear that the philosophical anti-slavery sentiment of the revolutionary period had entirely ceased to have any influence upon current thought in the South. The abolition of the foreign slave trade had not, as had been hoped, prepared the way for the abolition of slavery or weakened the slave interest in any sense. On the contrary, slavery had been immensely strengthened by an economic development making it more profitable than it ever had been before. The invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney, in 1793, had made the culture of cotton a very productive source of wealth. In 1800 the exportation of cotton from the United States was 19,000,000 pounds, valued at $5,700,000. In 1820 the value of the cotton export was nearly $20,- 000,000, almost all of it the product of slave labor. The value of slaves may be said to have at least trebled in twenty years. The breeding of slaves became a profitable industry. Under such circumstances the slaveholders arrived at the conclusion that slavery was by no means so wicked and hurtful an institution as their revolutionary fathers had thought it to be. The anti-slavery professions of the revolutionary time became to them an awkward reminiscence, which they would have been glad to wipe from their own and other people's memories. On the other hand, in the Northern States there was no such change of feeling. Slavery was still, in the nature of things, believed to be a wrong and a sore. The change of sentiment in the South had not yet produced -its reflex in the North. The slavery question had not become a subject of difference of opinion THE SLA VERY Q UESTION. 183 and of controversy among the Northern people. As they had abolished slavery in their States, ^o they took it for granted that it ought to disappear, and would disappear in time, everywhere else. Slavery had indeed, now and then, asserted itself in the discussions of Congress as a distinct interest, but not in such a way as to arouse much alarm in the free States. The amendment to the Missouri Bill, providing for a restriction with regard to slavery, came therefore in a per- fectly natural way from that Northern sentiment which remained still faithful to the traditions of the revolutionary period. And it was a great surprise to most Northern people that so natural a proposition should be so fiercely resisted on TUKNl'IKE IN THE bLUE GKAbb REGION OF KENTUCKY. the part of the South. It was the sudden revelation of a change of feeling in the South which the North had not observed in its progress. ' The discussion of this Missouri question has betrayed the secret of their souls,' wrote John Ouincy Adams. The slaveholders watched with apprehension the steady growth of the free States in population, wealth, and power. In 1 790 the popula- tion of the two sections had been nearly even. In 1820 there was a difference of over 600,000 in favor of the North in a total of less than ten millions. In 1790 the representation of the two sections in Congress had been about evenly balanced. In 1S20 the census promised to give the North a preponderance of i8 4 HENRY CLAY. more than thirty votes in the House of Representatives. As the slaveholders had no longer the ultimate extinction, but now the perpetuation, of slavery in view, the question of sectional power became one of first importance to them, and with it the necessity of having more slave States for the purpose of main- taining the political equilibrium, at least in the Senate. A struggle for more slave States was to them a struggle for life. This was the true significance of the Missouri question." The famous " Missouri Compromise," by which the ominous dispute of 1820 was at last settled, included the admission of one free State (Maine) and one slave State (Missouri) at the same time ; — a precedent which it was under- stood would be thereafter followed ; and it was enacted that no other slave State should be formed out of any of the Louisiana or " Northwest territory" north of latitude 36 30', which was the southern boundary line of Missouri. The assent of opposing parties to this arrangement was secured largely by the patriotic efforts of Clay, who, says Schurz, "did not confine himself to speeches, . . . but went from man to man, expostulating, beseeching, persuading, in his most winning way. . . . His success added greatly to his reputation and gave new strength to his influence." The result, says John Quincy Adams, was " to bring into full display the talents and resources and influence of Mr. Clay." He was praised as "the great pacificator,"- — a character which was confirmed by the deeds of his later life. During his long term in the House of Representatives, Clay had the misfortune to incur the hatred of General Jackson, — a hatred which, once roused, was implacable. The only ground for Jackson's ill-will was found in proper criticisms by Clay of his public acts ; but to Jackson no criticism was proper ; and from that time forward hatred of Clay became one of Jackson's leading motives, actually determining his course in many of the most important acts of his public life. In 1825 it led to an attack which profoundly affected the political history of the time, as well as the career of Henry Clay, The presidential election of 1824 gave no one of the candidates a majority of the electoral votes. Jackson had 99 votes, Adams 84, Crawford 41, and Clay 37. Under the Constitution this result made it necessary for the House of Representatives to choose the President from among the three candidates having the largest number of votes. Clay was Speaker of the House ; and as his influence at this time was very great, it was at once perceived that he had it practically within his power to decide the choice ; and the friends of both Jack- son and Crawford began to pay assiduous court to him. He however promptly declared his intention of using his influence to secure the choice of Adams; whereupon the Jackson party, a few days before the election, publicly accused him of having sold his influence to Adams under a "corrupt bargain," by which Clay was to be given the Secretaryship of State in payment for making Adams THE COMPROMISE TARIFF. 185 President. Adams was Clay's natural choice, and it was altogether fitting and proper that Clay should take the first place in the cabinet ; but the charge, with ingenious malice, was made be/ore the election ; and when the event proved as predicted, the confirmation of what seemed a prophecy was almost irresistible, and it had a tremendous and most damaging effect. For years the cry of "bar- gain and sale " was never allowed to drop. History has shown that no charge was ever more completely unfounded. It appears to have been a deliberately concocted slander ; yet, in spite of every defense, the injury to Clay's reputa- tion and subsequent career was very great. In 1829, Jackson succeeded to the Presidency, and for a short season Clay returned to private life in his beautiful Kentucky home ; but he was not long to remain there: in 1831 he was again elected to the Senate, where he remained until 1842. They were stormy years. In South Carolina the opposition to the protective tariff had led to the promulgation of the famous "nullification" theory, — the doctrine that any State had the power to declare a law of the United States null and void. Jackson, whose anger was thoroughly aroused, dealt with the revolt in summary fashion ; threatening that if any resistance to the government was attempted, he would instantly have the leaders arrested and brought to trial for treason. Nevertheless, to allay the discontent of the South, Clay devised his Compromise Tariff of 1833, under which the duties were gradually reduced, until they reached a minimum of twenty per cent. In 1832 he allowed himself, very unwisely, to be a candidate for the presidency, Jackson's re-election being a foregone conclusion. In 1836 he declined a nomi- nation, and Van Buren was elected. Then followed the panic of 1837, which insured the defeat of the party in power, and the election of the Whig candidate at the following presidential election ; but the popularity of General Jackson had convinced the party managers that success demanded a military hero as a candidate; and accordingly General Harrison, "the hero of Tippecanoe," was elected, after the famous "Log Cabin and Hard Cider campaign" of 1840. This slight was deeply mortifying to Clay, who had counted with confidence upon being the candidate of the party. " I am the most unfortunate man in the history of parties," he truly remarked: "always run by my friends when sure to be defeated, and now betrayed for a nomination when I, or any one else, would be sure of an election." THE CAMPAIGN OF 1 844. In 1844, however, Clay's opportunity came at last. He was so obviously the Whig candidate that there was no opposition. The convention met at Baltimore in May, and he was nominated by acclamation, with a shout that shook the building. Everything appeared to indicate success, and his supporters regarded his triumphant election as certain. 1 86 HENRY CLAY. But into the politics of the time had come a new factor — the " Liberty party." This had been hitherto considered unimportant ; but the proposed annexation of Texas, which had become a prominent question, was opposed by many in the North who had hitherto voted with the Whig party. Clay was a slaveholder ; and though he had opposed the extension of slavery, his record was not satis- factory to those who disapproved of the annexation of Texas. By letters and speeches he endeavored to conciliate them ; but he was between two fires ; he did not succeed in securing their adherence, while his efforts to do so lost him the support of many with whom annexation was popular. Then, too, his old enemy, Jackson, from his seclusion at the " Hermitage," wrote letters reviving the old " bargain and corrup- tion " story of 1825. By an audacious fraud, his opponents posed in Pennsylvania as the friends of protection, and the cry of " Polk, Dallas, and the tariff of 1842 ! " was made to do duty against him. As the campaign progressed, the more clear- sighted among his friends, in spite of his immense popularity, began to feel somewhat less cer- tain of the result. But while the managers noticed the adverse current, the masses of the Whig party firmly expected success to the very last. It seemed impos- sible to them that Henry Clay could be defeated by James K. Polk. Everything depended on jamis k. pot.k. New York. The returns from the interior of the State came in slowly. There seemed to be still a possibility that heavy Whig majorities in the western counties might overcome the large Democratic vote in the eastern. The suspense was painful. People did not go to bed, watching for the mails. When at last the decisive news went forth which left no doubt of the result, the Whigs broke out in a wail of agony all over the land. " It was," says Nathan Sargent, "as if the first-born of every family had been stricken down." The descriptions we have of the grief manifested are almost incredible. Tears flowed in abund- ance from the eyes of men and women. In the cities and villages the business places were almost deserted for a day or two, people gathering together in FINANCIAL TROUBLES. 187 groups to discuss in low tones what had happened. Neither did the victorious Democrats indulge in the usual demonstrations of triumph. There was a feeling as if a great wrong had been done. The Whigs were fairly stunned by their defeat. Many despaired of the republic, sincerely believing that the experiment of popular government had failed forever. Almost all agreed that the great statesmen of the country would thenceforth always remain excluded from the presidency, and that the highest office would be the prize only of second-rate politicians. During the autumn and early part of the winter of 1844-5 Clay remained at Ashland, receiving and answering a flood of letters from all parts of the United States, and even from Europe, which conveyed to him expressions of condolence and sympathy. Private cares had meanwhile gathered, in addi- tion to his public disappointments. He had for some time been laboring under great pecuniary embarrassment, owing partly to the drafts which are always made upon the purse of a prominent public man, partly to the business failure of one of his sons. Aside from other pressing debts, there was a heavy mortgage resting on Ashland, and, as an old man of sixty-seven. Clay found himself forced to consider whether, in order to satisfy his creditors, it would not be necessary to part with his beloved home. Relief came to him suddenly, and in an unexpected form. When offering a payment to the bank at Lexington, the president informed him that sums of money had arrived from different parts of the country to pay off Henry Clay's debts, and that all the notes and the mortgage were canceled. Clay was deeply moved. " Who did this ?" he asked the banker. All the answer he received was that the givers were unknown, but they were presumably "not his enemies." Clay doubted whether- he should accept the gift, and consulted some of his friends. They reminded him of the many persons of historic renown who had not refused tokens of admiration and gratitude from their countrymen ; and added that, as he could not discover the unknown givers, he could not return the gift ; and, as the gift appeared in the shape of a discharged obligation, he could not force the renewal of the debt. At last he consented to accept, and thus was Ashland saved to him. THE COMPROMISE OE 185O. The last and greatest public work of Clay's life was the famous Compromise of 1S50, which, as has often been said, postponed for ten years the great Civil War. In 1849 he was unanimously elected United States Senator by the Ken- tucky Legislature, in spite of the well-known fact that his views on the slavery question were distasteful to a large number of his constituents. The truth is that they saw that a storm was gathering, and relied on Clay's wisdom and patriotism to meet the emergency. The sentiment against slavery was increas- ing. The free States were outstripping the slave States in wealth and popula- 1 88 HENRY CLAY. tion. It was evident that slavery must have more territory or die. Shut out of the Northwest by the Missouri Compromise, it was supposed that a great field for its extension had been gained in Texas and the territory acquired from Mexico. But now California, a part of this territory which had been counted upon for slavery, was populated by a sudden rush of Northern immigration, at- tracted by the discovery of gold ; and a State government was organized, with a constitution excluding slavery. Thus, instead of adding to the area of slavery, the Mexican territory seemed likely to increase the strength of freedom. The South was both alarmed and exasperated. Threats of disunion were freely made. It was evident that prompt measures must be taken to allay the prevail- RESIDENCE OF A SOUTHERN PLANTER. ing excitement, if disruption were to be avoided. In such an emergency it was natural that all eyes should turn to the "great pacificator," Henry Clay. When, at the session of 1849-50, he appeared in the Senate, to assist, if possible, in removing the slavery question from politics, Clay was an infirm and serious, but not sad, old man of seventy-two. He never lost his cheerfulness or faith, but he felt deeply for his distracted country. During that memorable session of Congress he spoke seventy times. Often extremely sick and feeble, scarcely able, with the assistance of a friend's arm, to climb the steps of the Capitol, he was never absent on the days when the Compromise was to be debated. On the morning on which he began his great speech, he was accom- THE CRISIS OF 1850. 189 panied by a clerical friend, to whom he said, on reaching the long flight of steps leading to the Capitol, "Will you lend me your arm, my friend ? for I find my- self quite weak and exhausted this morning." Every few steps he was obliged to stop and take breath. " Had you not better defer your speech? " asked the clergyman. "My dear friend," said the dying orator, "I consider our country in danger ; and if I can be the means, in any measure, of averting that danger, my health or life is of little consequence." When he rose to speak, it was but too evident that he was unfit for the task he had undertaken. But as he kindled with his subject, his cough left him, and his bent form resumed all its wonted erectness and majesty. He may, in the prime of his strength, have spoken with more energy, but never with so much pathos or grandeur. His speech lasted two days ; and though he lived two years longer, he never recov- ered from the effects of the effort. The thermometer in the Senate chamber marked nearly ioo°. Toward the close of the second day, his friends repeat- edly proposed an adjournment ; but he would not desist until he had given complete utterance to his feelings. He said afterward that he was not sure, if he gave way to an adjournment, that he should ever be able to resume. Never was Clay's devotion to the Union displayed in such thrilling and pathetic forms as in the course of this long debate. On one occasion allusion was made to a South Carolina hot-head, who had publicly proposed to raise the flag of disunion. When Clay retorted by saying, that, if Mr. Rhett had really meant that proposition, and should follow it up by corresponding acts, he would be a traitor, and added, " and I hope he will meet a traitor's fate," thunders of applause broke from the crowded galleries. When the chairman succeeded in restoring silence, Mr. Clay made that celebrated declaration which was so fre- quently quoted in 1861 : "If Kentucky to-morrow shall unfurl the banner of resistance unjustly, I will never fight under that banner. I owe paramount alle- giance to the whole Union, a subordinate one to my own State." Again : "The Senator speaks of Virginia being my country. This Union, sir, is my country ; the thirty States are my country ; Kentucky is my country, and Virginia, no more than any State in the Union." And yet again : " There are those who think that the Union must be preserved by an exclusive reliance upon love and reason. That is not my opinion. I have some confidence in this instrumentality ; but, depend upon it, no human government can exist without the power of applying force, and the actual application of it in extreme cases." "Who can estimate," says Parton, "the influence of these clear and em- phatic utterances ten years after? The crowded galleries, the numberless newspaper reports, the quickly succeeding death of the great orator, all aided to give them currency and effect. We shall never know how many wavering minds they aided to decide in 1861. . Not that Mr. Clay really believed the con- flict would occur : he was mercifully permitted to die in the conviction that the 190 HENRY CLAY. Compromise of 1850 had removed all immediate danger, and greatly lessened that of the future. Far indeed was he from foreseeing that the ambition of Stephen A. Douglas, a man born in New England, calling himself a disciple of Andrew Jackson, would within five years destroy all compromises, and render all future compromise impossible, by procuring the repeal of the first, — the Missouri Compromise of 1821 ? " " Whatever Clay's weaknesses of character and errors in statesmanship may have been," says Schurz, "almost everything he said or did was illumined by a grand conception of the destinies of his country, a glowing national spirit, a lofty patriotism. Whether he thundered against British tyranny on the seas, or urged the recognition of the South American sister republics, or attacked the high-handed conduct of the military chieftain in the Florida war, or advo- cated protection and internal improvements, or assailed the one-man power and spoils politics in the person of Andrew Jackson, or entreated for compromise and conciliation regarding the tariff or slavery ; whether what he advocated was wise or unwise, right or wrong, — there was always ringing through his words a fervid plea for his country, a zealous appeal in behalf of the honor and the future greatness and glory of the Republic, or an anxious warning lest the Union, and with it the greatness and glory of the American people, be put in jeopardy. It was a just judgment which he pronounced upon himself when he wrote : "If any one desires to know the leading and paramount object of my public life, the preservation of the Union will furnish him the key." Henry Ferris. DANIEL WEBSTER, THE DEFENDER OE NATIONAL UNION. N THE hall of the United States Senate, on January 26, 1830, occurred one of the most memorable scenes in the annals of Congress. It was then that Daniel Webster made his famous "Reply to Hayne," — that renowned speech which has been declared the greatest oration ever made in Con- gress, and which, in its far-reaching effect upon the public mind, did so much to shape the future destiny of the American Union. That speech was Webster's crowning work, and the event of his life by which he will be best known to posterity. Nothing in our history is more striking than the con- trast between the Union of the time of Washington and the Union of the time of Lincoln. It was not merely that in the intervening seventy-two years the republic had grown great and powerful ; it was that the popular sentiment toward the Union was transformed. The old feeling of distrust and jealousy had given place to a passionate attachment. It was as though a puny, sickly, feeble child, not expected by its parents even to live, had come to be their strong defense and support, their joy and pride. A weak league of States had become a strong nation; and when in 1861 it was attacked, millions of men were ready to fight for its defense. What brought about this great change ? What was it that stirred this larger patriotism, that gave shape and purpose to the growing feeling of national pride and unity ? It was in a great degree the work of Daniel Webster. It was he who maintained and advocated the theory that the Federal Constitution created, not a league, but a nation, — that it welded the people into organic union, supreme and perpetual ; who set forth in splendid completeness the picture of a great nation, inseparably united, com- manding the first allegiance and loyalty of every citizen ; and who so fostered and strengthened the sentiment of union that when the great struggle came, it had grown too strong to be overthrown. Daniel Webster was born in the year 1782, — soon after the surrender of Cornwallis, but before the treaty of peace had formally ended the War of the 193 1 94 DANIEL WEBSTER. Revolution. His father was one of the brave men who fought at Lexington ; and like most of the patriots of that day, had a large family to support and educate on his rocky New Hampshire farm. Daniel was the youngest of ten children, and, like the rest, was early put to work. He was intensely fond of books. When at work in his father's saw-mill, he would set a log, and while the saw was croing through it, would devour a book. There was a small circu- lating library in the village, and Daniel read everything it contained, committing, most of the contents to memory. His talents as a reader were known in the neighborhood, and the passing teamsters, while they watered their horses, de- liohted to get "Webster's boy," with his delicate look and great dark eyes, to come out beneath the shade of the trees and read the Bible to them with all the force of. his childish eloquence. Daniel's abilities as a boy in many ways gave promise of hi? future great- ness. His powers of memory were, all through life, most extraordinary. His teacher used to tell of one of the facts of his schoolboy days. "On a Satur- day, I remember," says the ancient pedagogue, " I held up a handsome new jack-knife to the scholars, and said that the boy who would commit to memory the greatest number of verses in the Bible by Monday morning should have it. Many of the boys did well ; but when it came to Daniel's turn to recite, I found that he had committed so much, that, after hearing him repeat some sixty or seventy verses, I was obliged to give up, — he telling me that there were several chapters yet to recite, that he had learned. Daniel got that jack-knife." The story of the sacrifices made by the whole family in order that the boys might be educated, bears touching witness to the family affection and unity. When fourteen, Daniel was sent to Phillips Exeter Academy, and in the follow- ing year he entered Dartmouth College. By teaching school in vacation he made his way through college, and also managed to aid his brother Ezekiel. He was the foremost man in his class, maintaining this position throughout the whole course. In 1801 he began to study law in Salisbury, New Hampshire. In 1804, to perfect his legal knowledge, he went to Boston, and was admitted to the bar in 1805. webster's magnificent appearance. No sketch of Daniel Webster is complete or adequate which omits to describe his extraordinary personal appearance and presence. " We can but half understand his eloquence and its influence," says Mr. Lodge, " if we do not carefully study his physical attributes, his temperament and disposition. In face, form, and voice, nature did her utmost for Daniel Webster. He seemed to every one to be a giant ; that, at least, is the word we most commonly find applied to him ; and there is no better proof of his wonderful impressiveness than this fact, for he was not a man of extraordinary stature. He was five feet ten inches in height, and, in health, weighed a little less than two hundred pounds. These HIS PERSONAL MAGNETISM. 195 are the proportions of a large man, but there is nothing remarkable about them. We must look elsewhere than to mere size to discover why men spoke of Webster as a giant. He had a swarthy complexion and straight black hair. His head was very large ; at the same time it was of noble shape, with a broad and lofty brow, and his features were finely cut and full of massive strength. His eyes were extraordinary. They were very large and deep-set, and, when he began to rouse himself to action, shone with the deep light of a forge-fire, getting ever more glowing as excitement rose. His voice was in harmony with FANEUIL HALL, >Tn\, Willi II WI1M1.I; CALLED " HIE CRADLE OF LIBERTY. his appearance. It was low and musical in conversation ; in debate it was high but full, ringing out in moments of excitement like a clarion, and then sinking to deep notes with the solemn richness of organ-tones, while the words were accompanied by a manner in which grace and dignity mingled in complete accord." That indefinable quality which we call personal magnetism, the power of impressing by one's personality every human being who comes near, was at its height in Mr. Webster. He never, for instance, punished his children, but when they did wrong he would send for them and look at them silently. The look, I9 6 DANIEL WEBSTER. whether of sorrow or anger, was punishment and rebuke enough. It was the same with other children. Daniel Webster had surpassing abilities in three great spheres, — those of the lawyer, the orator, and the statesman. As a lawyer his most famous argu- ments are those in the Dartmouth College case, the White murder case, and the "steamboat case," as it was called. A part of his speech in the murder case is still printed in school readers, and declaimed on examination days. The Dart- mouth College case is one of the most famous in American litigation. While very intricate, it may be generally described as a suit to annul the charter of the col- lege on the ground that it had failed to carry out the purposes expressed in the will of its founder. After trial in the State courts, it was appealed to the United States Supreme Court, before which Mr. Webster made his great argument in 1 8 1 8. Mr. C. A. Goodrich, who was present, has given the following description of the scene : — The Supreme Court of the United States held its session, that winter, in a mean apartment of moderate size — the Capitol not having been built after its destruction in 1S14. The audience, when the case came on, was therefore small, consisting chiefly of legal men, the elite of the profession throughout the country. Mr. Webster entered upon his argument in the calm tone of easy and digni- fied conversation. His matter was so completely at his command that he scarcely looked at his brief, but went on for more than four hours with a statement so luminous and a chain of reasoning so easy to be understood, and yet approaching so nearly to absolute demonstration, that he seemed to carry with him every man in his audience, without the slightest effort or weariness on either side. It was hardly eloquence, in the strict sense of the term ; it was pure reason. Now and then, for a sentence or two, his eye flashed and his voice swelled into a bolder note, as he uttered some emphatic thought ; but he instantly fell back into the tone of earnest conversation, which ran throughout the great body of his speech. A single circumstance will show the clearness and absorbing power of his argument. I had observed that Judge Story, at the opening of the case, had prepared himself, pen in hand, as if to take copious minutes. Hour after hour I saw him fixed in the same attitude, but, so far as I could perceive, with not a note on his paper. The argument closed, and I could not discover that he had taken a single note. Others around me remarked the same thing ; and it was among the on dits of Washington, that a friend spoke to him of the fact with surprise, when the judge remarked : "Everything was so clear, and so easy to remember, that not a note seemed necessary, and, in faCt, I thought little or nothing about my notes." The argument ended. Mr. Webster stood for some moments silent before the court, while every eye was fixed intently upon him. At length, addressing the Chief Justice, Marshall, he proceeded thus : " This, sir. is my case ! It is the case, not merely of that humble institution, it is the case of every college in our land. It is more. It is the case of every eleemosynary institution through out our country ; of all those great charities founded by the piety of our ancestors to alleviate human misery, and scatter blessings along the pathway of life. It is more ! It is, in some sense, the 1 ase of every man among us who has property of which he may be stripped ; f< >r the question is simply this: Shall our State Legislatures be allowed to take that which is not their own, to turn it from its original use. and apply it to such ends and purposes as they, in their discretion, shall see fit. troy this little institution ; it is weak ; it is in your hands! I know it is one of the lesser lights in the literary horizon of our country. You may put it out. But if you do THE DARTMOUTH COLLEGE ARGUMENT. 197 so, you must carry through your work ! You must extinguish, one after another, all those great lights of science which, for more than a century, have thrown their radiance over our land. " It is, sir, as I have said, a small college. And yet, there are those who love it " Here the feelings which he had thus far succeeded in keeping down broke forth. His lips quivered ; his firm checks trembled with emotion ; his eyes were filled with tears ; his voice clinked, and he seemed struggling to the utmost simply to gain that mastery over himself which might save him from an unmanly burst of feeling. I will not attempt to give you the few broken words of tenderness in which he went on to speak of his attachment to the college. The whole seemed to be mingled throughout with the recollections of father, mother, brother, and all the trials and privations through which he had made his way into life. Every one saw that it was wholly unpre- meditated, a pressure on his heart which sought relief in words and tears. The court-room, during these two or three minutes, presented an extraordinary spectacle. Chief Justice Marshall, with his tall, gaunt figure bent over as if to catch the slightest whisper, the dee]) furrows of his cheeks expanded with emotion, and eyes suffused with tears; Mr. Justice Wash- ington at his side, with his small and emaciated frame, and countenance more like marble than I ever saw on any human being, leaning forward with an eager, troubled look; and the remainder of the court, at the two extremities, pressing, as it were, toward a single point, while the audience below were wrapping themselves round in closer folds beneath the bench to catch each look, and every movement of the speaker's face. If a painter could give us the scene on canvas — those forms and countenances, and Daniel Webster as he then stood in the midst, it would be one of the most touching pictures in the history of eloquence. One thing it taught me, that the pathetic depends not merely on the words uttered, but still more on the estimate we put upon him who utters them. There was not one among the strong-minded men of that assembly who could think it unmanly to weep, when he saw standing before him the man who had made such an argument, melted into the tenderness of a child. Mr. Webster had now recovered his composure, and fixing his eye on the Chief Justice, said, in that deep tone with which he sometimes thrilled the heart of an audience : — ••Sir, I know not how others may feel " (glancing at the opponents of the college before him), " but, for myself, when I see my Alma Mater surrounded, like Cassar in the Senate-house, by those who are reiterating stab upon stab, I would not, for this right hand, have her turn to me and say, '£/ tu quoque, mi Jilt .' And thou too, my son !' " He sat down. There was a death-like stillness throughout the room for some moments ; every one seemed to be slowly recovering himself, and coming gradually back to his ordinary range of thought and feeling. As an orator, Mr. Webster's most famous speeches are the Plymouth Rock address, in 1820, on the two hundredth anniversary of the Landing of the Pil- grims ; the Bunker Hill Monument address, in 1825 ; and his speeches in the Senate on January 30th, 1830, in reply to Hayne, and March 7th, 1850, on Clay's Compromise Bill. Of the Plymouth Rock oration a glimpse is given in a letter written at the time to a friend by Mr. George Ticknor. He writes : — "Friday Evening. I have run away from a great levee there is down-stairs, thronging in admiration round Mr. Webster, to tell you a little word about his oration. Yet I do not dare to trust myself about it, and I warn you beforehand that I have not the least confidence in my own opinion. His manner carried me away completely ; not, I think, that I could have been so carried away if it had been a poor oration, for of that, I apprehend, there can be no fear. It must have i 9 8 DANIEL WEBSTER. been a great, a very great performance; but whether it was so absolutely unrivaled as I imagined when I was under the immediate influence of his presence, of his tones, of his looks, I canno.t be sure till I have read it, for it seems to me incredible. " I was never so excited by public speaking before in my life. Three or four times I thought rny temples would burst with the gush of blood ; for, after all, you must know that I am aware it is no connected and compacted whole, but a collection of wonderful fragments of burning eloquence, to which his whole manner gave tenfold force. When I came out I was almost afraid to come near to him. It seemed to me that he was like the mount that might not be touched, and that burned with fire. I was beside myself, and am so still. "The passage at the end, where, spreading his arms as if to embrace them, he welcomed future generations to the great inheritance which we have enjoyed, was spoken with the most attrac- tive sweetness, and that peculiar smile which in him was always so charming. The effect of the whole was very great. As soon as he got home to our lodgings, all the principal people then in Plymouth crowded about him. He was full of animation, and radiant with happiness. But there was something about him very grand and imposing at the same time. I never saw him at any time when he seemed to me to be more conscious of his own powers, or to have a more true and natural enjoyment from their possession." THE MEMORABLE "REPLY TO IIAVNE." Beyond all doubt, Mr. Webster's greatest and most renowned oratorical effort was his speech in reply to Robert Y. Hayne of South Carolina, delivered in the Senate on the 26th of January, 1830. "There was," says Edward Everett, "a very great excitement in Washington, growing out of the contro- versies of the day, and the action of the South ; and party spirit ran uncom- monly high. There seemed to be a preconcerted action on the part of the Southern members to break down the Northern men, and to destroy their force and influence by a premeditated onslaught. " Mr. Hayne's speech was an eloquent one, as all know who ever read it. 1 [e was considered the foremost Southerner in debate, except Calhoun, who was Vice-President and could not enter the arena. Mr. Hayne was the champion ol the Southern side. Those who heard his speech felt much alarm, for two reasons ; first on account of its eloquence and power, and second, because of its many personalities. It was thought by many who heard it, and by some of Mr. Webster's personal friends, that it was impossible for him to answer the speech. "I shared a little myself in that fear and apprehension," said Mr. Everett. " 1 knew from what I heard concerning General Hayne's speech that it was a very masterly effort, and delivered with a great deal of power and with an air of triumph. I was engaged on that day in a committee of which I was chair- man, and could not be present in the Senate. But immediately after the adjournment, I hastened to Mr. Webster's house, with, I admit, some little trepidation, not knowing how I should find him. But I was quite re-assured in a moment after seeing Mr. Webster, and observing his entire calmness. He seemed to be as much at his ease and as unmoved as I ever saw him. Indeed, THE REPLY TO HAYNE. i 99 at first I was a little afraid from this that he was not quite aware of the magni- tude of the contest. I said at once : — "'Mr. Hayne has made a speech?' " ' Yes, he has made a speech.' " ' You reply in the morning ?' " ' Yes,' said Mr. Webster, ' I do not propose to let the case go by default, and without saying a word.' " ' Did you take notes, Mr. Webster, of Mr. Hayne's speech.' " Mr. Webster took from his vest pocket a piece of paper about as big as the palm of his hand, and replied, ' I have it all : that is his speech.' "I immediately arose," said Mr. Everett, "and remarked to him that I would not disturb him longer ; Mr. Webster desired me not to hasten, as he had no desire to be alone : but I left." "On the morning of the memorable day," writes Mr. Lodge, "the Senate chamber was packed by an eager and excited crowd. Every seat on the floor and in the galleries was occupied, and all the available standing-room was filled. The protracted debate, conducted with so much ability on both sides, had ex- cited the attention of the whole country, and had given time for the arrival of hundreds of interested spectators from all parts of the Union, and especially from New England. " In the midst of the hush of expectation, in that dead silence which is so peculiarly oppressive because it is possible only when many human beings are gathered together, Mr. Webster arose. His personal grandeur and his majes- tic calm thrilled all who looked upon him. With perfect quietness, unaffected apparently by the atmosphere of intense feeling about him, he said, in a low, even tone : — " ' Mr. President : When the mariner has been tossed for many days in thick weather and on an unknown sea, he naturally avails himself of the first pause in the storm, the earliest glance of the sun, to take his latitude and ascertain how far the elements have driven him from his true course. Let us imitate this prudence ; and, before we float farther on the waves of this debate, refer to the point from which we departed, that we may, at least, be able to conjecture where we are now. I ask for the reading of the resolution before the Senate.' "This opening sentence was a piece of consummate art. The simple and appropriate image, the low voice, the calm manner, relieved the strained excite- ment of the audience, which might have ended by disconcerting the speaker if it had been maintained. Every one was now at his ease ; and when the monoto- nous reading of the resolution ceased, Mr. Webster was master of the situation, and had his listeners in complete control." With breathless attention they followed him as he proceeded. The strong, masculine sentences, the sarcasm, the pathos, the reasoning, the burning appeals to love of State and country, flowed on unbroken. As his feelings warmed the DANIEL WEBSTER. fire came into his eyes ; there was a glow in his swarthy cheek ; his strong right arm seemed to sweep away resistlessly the whole phalanx of his opponents, and the deep and melodious cadences of his voice sounded like harmonious organ tones as they filled the chamber with their music. Who that ever read or heard it can forget the closing passage of that glorious speech ? " When my eyes shall be turned to behold for the last time the sun in heaven, may I not see him shining on the broken and dishonored fragments of a once glorious Union ; on States dis- severed, discordant, belligerent ; on a land rent with civil feuds, or drenched, it may be, in fraternal blood ! Let their last feeble and lingering glance behold rather the glorious ensign of the republic, now known and honored throughout the earth, still full high advanced, its arms V3J anc ' trophies streaming in their original lustre, not a stripe erased or polluted, not I a single star obscured ; bearing for its motto no such miserable interrogatory as, What is all this worth ? or those other words of delusion and folly, Liberty first, ami Union afterwards ; but everywhere, spread all over in characters of living light, blazing on all its ample folds, as they float over the sea and over the land, that other sentiment, dear to every true American heart, — Liberty and Union, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPAR- ABLE ! " As the last words died away into silence, those who had lis- tened looked wonderingly at each other, dimly conscious that they, had heard one of the grand speeches which are landmarks in the history of eloquence ; and the men of the North and of New England went forth full of the pride of victory, for their champion had triumphed, and no assurance was needed to prove to the world that this time no answer could be made. During all the years of Jackson's and Van Buren's administrations, Mr. Webster continued in the United States Senate. He opposed the innovations and usurpations of Jackson's reign ; he was dignified, prudent, conservative. " Amid the flighty politics of the time," says Parton, " there seemed one solid thing in America as long as he sat in the arm-chair of the Senate Chamber." Upon Harrison's inauguration in 1841, Mr. Webster became Secretary of State, which office he held under President Tyler until 1843. During this time JOHN TYLER. THE SEVENTH OE MARCH SPEECH. 201 he negotiated the famous treaty with Lord Ashburton, which settled a dispute •of long standing with England over the Maine boundary. In 1843 he resigned this position. He supported Clay for the Presidency in 1844, opposing the annexation of Texas, because it would involve the extension of slavery. In 1845 ne was again elected to the Senate, and opposed the prosecution of the Mexican war, the real purpose of which was the increase of slave territory. THE CRISIS OF 185O. In 1850 the contest over slavery had become so fierce that it threatened to break up the Union. The advocates of slavery were bent upon its extension, while its opponents wished to restrict it to the States where it already existed. Webster was always opposed to slavery ; but in the crisis of 1850, he thought that all other measures should be subordinate to the preservation of the Union. No one had done more than he to strengthen and perpetuate the Union ; but it was his conviction that it would be destroyed if the struggle over slavery came to an issue at that time. Every year the attachment of the people to the Union was growing stronger. Every year the free States were gaining upon the slave States in strength, population, and power. If the contest over slavery could be averted, or even postponed, slavery would decline and ultimately die out, and the Union be preserved ; while if the conflict were precipitated, the Union would be destroyed, and slavery perpetuated. ' Accordingly, he gave his support to the Compromise measures ; and on the 7th of March, 1S50, he made in advocacy of them the most famous speech of his life, before a great audience, hushed to deatlvlike stillness, in the Senate chamber. " Mr. President," Mr. Webster began, " I wish to speak to-day, not as a Massachusetts man, nor as a Northern man, but as an American, and a member of the Senate of the United States, — a tody to which the country looks, with confidence, for wise, moderate, patriotic, and healing counsels. It is not to be denied that we live in the midst of strong agitations, and are surrounded by very considerable dangers to our institutions of government. The imprisoned winds are let loose. The East, the West, the North, and the stormy South, all combine to throw the whole ocean into commotion, to toss its billows to the skies, and disclose its profoundest depths. ... I have a part to act, not for my own security or safety, for I am looking out for no fragment upon which to float away from the wreck, if wreck there must be, but for the good of the whole, and the preservation of the whole ; and there is that which will keep me to my duty during this struggle, whether the sun and the stars shall appear, or shall not appear, for many days. I speak to-day for the preservation of the Union. ' Hear me for my cause.' I speak to-day out of a solicitous and anxious heart, for the restoration to the country of that quiet and that harmony which make the blessings of this Union so rich and so dear to us all." The Compromise measures before the Senate included two provisions which were particularly odious to the North, — one for the extension of slavery to the territory purchased from Mexico ; the other for a more stringent law for the capture and return of fugitive slaves. Webster in his speech advocated the DANIEL WEBSTER. acceptance of these provisions as part of the Compromise, and in doing so gave great offence to many supporters in the North, who had looked upon him as a steady opponent of slavery, who would never yield an inch to its exactions. In his speech Webster maintained that the constitution recognized the right of the master to the return of his escaped slave, and that its obligations could not be evaded without a violation of good faith. As to the territories, he argued that slavery was already by nature excluded from New Mexico, which was not adapted to the products of slave labor, and that to "re-enact a law of God," by formally excluding it, was a needless irritation to the South. Although he supported his position with great force, his speech was nevertheless regarded by anti-slavery men in the North as a surrender to the slave power, made with a view to securing support in the South as a candidate for the Presidency. He was denounced as recreant to the cause of freedom, and ac- cused of having sold himself to the South. These charges did much to embitter the last years of his life ; but he firmly adhered to his course, supported the Com- promise measure in Congress, and made a number of speeches in its favor throughout the North. After his death there was a grad- ual reaction, and many who had condemned him came to admit that his course, whether wise or MILLARD F.LLMORE. ^ ^ ^ J^^ ^J^J by pure and patriotic motives. In July, 1850, while the great Compromise was still before Congress, Webster was appointed by President Fillmore Secretary of State, which office he held until his death. His summer home was an immense farm at Marshfield, near Plymouth, Massachusetts, and for many years he had taken the keenest in- terest in all the operations of the farm. A friend who was often with him tells how he enjoyed his cattle, and how, on one occasion, after each animal was secured in his place, Mr. Webster amused himself by feeding them with ears of corn from an unhusked pile lying on the barn floor. As his son was trying to keep warm by playing with the dog, he said : — HIS LAST HOURS. 203 " You do not seem, my son, to take much interest in this ; but, for my part " (and here he broke an ear and fed the pieces to the oxen on his right and left, and watched them as they crunched it), "I like it. I would rather be here than in the Senate," adding, with a smile which showed all his white teeth, "I think it better company." In May, 1852, while driving near his Marshfield home, Mr. Webster was thrown from the carriage and seriously injured. Although he recovered suffi- ciently to visit Washington afterward, he never regained his health, and a few months later, in the autumn of 1852, he died at Marshfield. His death and burial were scenes of sublime pathos. In his last hours he manifested a strong desire to be conscious of the actual approach of death, and his last words were, " I still live." An immense concourse gathered at his funeral. It was a clear, beautiful autumn day, and his body was brought from the house and placed on the lawn, under the blue sky, where; for several hours a stream of people of every class moved past, to gaze for the last time upon his majestic features. One, a plain farmer, was heard to say in a low voice, as he turned away, "Daniel Webster, without you the world will seem lonesome." The spot where Webster reposes is upon elevated land, and overlooks the sea, his mammoth farm, the First Parish Church, and most of the town of Marshfield, wide spreading marshes, forests remote and near, the tranquil river, and glistening brooks. On a pleasant day the sands of Cape Cod can be descried from it, thirty miles directly to the east, where the Pilgrims first moored their ship. The spot is perfectly retired and quiet, nothing being usually heard but the solemn dirge of the ocean and the answering sighs of the winds. It is the spot of all others for his resting-place. All in a temperate air, a golden light, Rich with October, sad with afternoon, Fitly his frame was laid, with rustic rite, To rest amid the ripened harvest boon. He loved the ocean's mighty murmur deep, And this shall lull him through his dreamless sleep. OLD GATES AT ST. AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA. JOHN C. CALHOUN, THE GREAT ADVOCATE OF STATES RIGHTS. FEW years ago an elderly man, who had fought in the Union army through the great civil war of 1861, Was listen- ing to some schoolboys rehearsing their history lesson. "When was the first blow struck at the Union?" asked one. "On April 13th, 1 861, when Fort Sumter was fired " upon by batteries in Charleston harbor," was* the answer. " No !" thundered the old soldier, breaking in ; " the first blow at the Union was struck in 1832, by John C. Cal- houn; and if Andrew Jackson had been President in i860, instead of James Buchanan, there would have been no gun fired on Fort Sumter, I can tell you ! Don't forget that bit of history, boys !" John Caldwell Calhoun is an absolutely unique figure in American His political life was devoted to the establishment and perpetuation of He believed that institution beneficial alike to white and black, to North and South, — in a word, that slavery was morally and politically right, and that the welfare of the country was bound up with its continuance. That he was sincere in this conviction cannot be doubted. He was one of the most honest and up- right of men ; there was no concealment or pretence in him. As a consequence of his purity and ability, his influence was immense. His own State accepted 207 history, slavery. 208 JOHN C. CALHOUN. his doctrines and followed his lead with unquestioning faith ; and it is not too much to say that the great conflict over slavery and disunion was in great measure due to the doctrines which for a quarter of a century he unceasingly advocated. Calhoun was born in Abbeville, South Carolina, in 1782, — the same year as his great adversary, Daniel Webster. It was just at the close of the Revo- lution. The South, which had borne the brunt of the war in its last years, was worn out and impoverished. Calhoun's father, Patrick Calhoun, who had immi- grated from the north of Ireland, died when his son was thirteen. Neverthe- less, Calhoun managed to work his way through Yale College, where he won distinguished hon- ors. He used to relate that in his senior year, when he was one of the very few in his class who maintained democratic opinions. President Dwight asked him, "What is the legitimate source of power?" "The people," an- swered Calhoun. Dr. Dwight combated this opinion ; Calhoun replied ; and the whole hour of recitation was consumed in the debate. Dr. Dwight was so much struck with the ability dis- played by the student that he remarked to a friend that Cal- houn had talent enough to be a President of the United States. He did not foresee that Cal- houn would imbibe ideas which, logically carried out, would leave no United States in existence to require a President. After two years in the South Carolina Legislature, Calhoun was elected to Congress in 18 10, where he served until 181 7, when he became Secretary of War under President Monroe. In 1824 he was elected Vice-President, under John Ouincy Adams, and again in 1828, when Andrew Jackson was elected President. In 1832 he resigned the Vice-Presidency to become Senator from South Carolina, and remained in the Senate during nearly all the remainder of his life. In 1828 Congress passed a tariff bill by which the protective duties were JAMES MONROE. THE NULLIFICATION DEBATE. 209 considerably increased. This bill was bitterly opposed in the South, where it was styled the " Tariff of Abominations; " and on its passage Calhoun prepared a most remarkable paper, called the "South Carolina Exposition," in which he maintained that the Constitution authorized Congress to levy tariff taxes only for revenue ; that protective taxes were therefore unconstitutional ; and that $. State had the right and power to declare an unconstitutional law null and void, and to forbid its execution in that State. It was the purpose of the people of South Carolina to agitate for the repeal of the obnoxious law ; and, in case their efforts should fail, to resort to the remedy of " nullification." "This Ex- position," says Partem, "was the beginning of our woe, — the baleful egg from which were hatched nullification, treason, civil war, and the desolation of the Southern States." It was issued in December, 1828. In March, 1829, the new government, Jackson at its head, came into power. Calhoun, being re-elected Vice-President, still held his chair as President of the Senate. In 1829 the long debate over the question, Does the Constitution make us one sovereign nation, or only a league of sovereign States ? was at its height. That debate had begun as soon as the Constitution was ratified, in 1788, and it continued until the outbreak of the war in 1S61. For many years the theory of a "compact," from which a State might withdraw at will, was maintained by various advocates, of whom Calhoun was the foremost. He supported his view with great ability and ingenuity, and with industry and devotion which never flagged or wavered. In his own State his doctrines were accepted with almost complete unanimity; and the Senators and Representatives in Congress from South Carolina were all disciples of the Calhoun school. In the Senate, as he was the presiding officer, he could not take an active part in debate ; but he had an able supporter in General Robert Y. Hayne, who was a strong and eloquent speaker. In January, 1S30, the agitation in Congress culminated in the famous encounter of Hayne with Daniel Webster, who in his great speech on Foot's Resolution utterly demolished the theory of nullification as a constitutional right, and made his never-to-be-forgotten plea for indissoluble union. Hayne had maintained that nullification was a constitutional remedy, — a " reserved right." Webster tore this theory into shreds and scattered it to the winds. With a power of satire under which Hayne writhed in his seat, he drew a picture of practical nullification ; he showed that an attempt to nullify the laws of the nation was treason, — that it led directly and necessarily to armed force, and was nothing else than revolution. And to revolution South Carolina now proceeded. The tariff of 1828 was not repealed ; and after the presidential election of 1S32, under the direction of Calhoun, who had resigned the Vice-Presidency, a convention of the people of the State was called, which passed the famous Ordinance of Nullification, declaring the tariff law of 1828 null and void in South Carolina. General JOHN C. CALHOUN. Hayne, who had been United States Senator, was made Governor of South Carolina ; and Calhoun was elected to the Senate of the United States. On the passage of the famous Ordinance of Nullification by the people of South Carolina, the excitement throughout the Union became intense. The apprehen- sion of civil war, and of the dissolution of the Union, prevailed everywhere. On the ioth of December, 1832, General Jackson issued his memorable proclamation against nullification. This was followed by Governor Hayne's counter - proclamation, de- fending the position as- sumed by the State, and calling out twelve thousand volunteers. The crisis evi- dently approached. The United States troops were concentrated, in some force, at Augusta and Charleston, seemingly for the purpose of repressing any insurrection- ary or rebellious movement in the State ; while on the other side equal preparation was made. The militia in certain sections of the State were called out and drilled, muskets were put in order, swords cleaned and sharp- ened, and depots of provi- sions and supplies estab- lished. Officers, natives of the State, in the United States army and navy, con- templated resigning their commissions, and taking up arms in defense of the State ; and some foreign officers, then in the country, actually tendered their services to the governor, against the forces of the general government. On the 4th of January, 1833, Mr. Calhoun took his seat in the Senate of the Union, as the great champion of nullification. This was the most import- ant period in his political life — a period when the whole resources of his intellect were put forth in defense of his favorite doctrine. His most powerful oratorical effort was made on the 15th and 16th of February, 1832, against a bill "further ENTRANCE TO A OUT in YARD, NEW SPEECH ON THE FORCE BILL. 211 to provide for the collection of duties on imports." This was the celebrated " Force Bill," the object of which was to enable the Federal executive to enforce the collection of the revenue in South Carolina. On the 15th of February, Mr. Calhoun addressed the Senate, beginning as follows : " Mr. President, I know not which is most objectionable, the provisions of the bill, or the temper in which its adoption has been urged. If the extra- ordinary powers with which the bill proposes to clothe the Executive, to the utter prostration of the Constitution and the rights of the States, be calculated to impress our minds with alarm at the rapid progress of despotism in our country, the zeal with which every circumstance calculated to misrepresent or exaggerate the conduct of Carolina in the controversy is seized on, with a view to excite hostility against her, but too plainly indicates the deep decay of that brotherly feeling which once existed between these States, and to which we are indebted for our beautiful Federal system. . . . " It has been said by the senator from Tennessee (Mr. Grundy) to be a measure of peace ! Yes, such peace as the wolf gives to the lamb — the kite to the dove. Such peace as Russia gives to Poland, or death to its victim ! A peace, by extinguishing the political existence of the State, by awing her into an abandonment of the exercise of every power which constitutes her a sovereign community. It is to South Carolina a question of self-preservation ; and I pro- claim it, that should this bill pass, and an attempt be made to enforce it, it will be resisted at every hazard — even that of death itself. Death is not the greatest calamity : there are others still more terrible to the free and brave, and among them may be placed the loss of liberty and honor. There are thousands of her brave sons who, if need be, are prepared cheerfully to lay down their lives in defense of the State, and the great principles of constitutional liberty for which she is contending. God forbid that this should become necessary ! It never can be, unless this government is resolved to bring the question to extremity, when her gallant sons will stand prepared to perform the last duty — to die nobly. " In the same spirit, we are told that the Union must be preserved, without regard to the means. And how is it proposed to preserve the Union ? force ! Does any man in his senses believe that 1 this beautiful structure — this harmonious aggregate of States, produced by the joint consent of all — can lie preserved by force? Its very introduction will be the certain destruction ot this Federal Union. No, no. You cannot keep the States united in their constitu- tional and Federal bonds by force. Force may, indeed, hold the parts together, but such union would be the bond between master and slave : a union of exac- tion on one side,. and of unqualified obedience on the other." In spite of Mr. Calhoun's efforts, the " Force Bill " was passed ; and it is said that President Jackson privately warned him that the moment news was 2i2 JOHN C. CALHOUN. received of resistance to the Government in South Carolina, he (Calhoun) would be arrested on a charge of treason. At the same time, however, important concessions, were made to South Carolina, by which the threatened conflict was avoided. In February, Henry Clay introduced in Congress a compromise tariff bill, by which the existing duties were to be decreased each year until they reached a minimum of twenty per cent, in 1842. Accordingly, each party in the controversy claimed to have triumphed ; and the crisis passed, without finally and formally settling the question of nullification. THE SLAVERY AGITATION. During Jackson's administration slavery became the chief question of poli- tics. Texas achieved her independence, and the question of her annexation to the United States as a slave State caused an excitingand angry contest. In the House of Representatives, John Ouincy Adams began his famous crusade for the right of petition, and the contest over petitions for the abolition of slavery convulsed the House. In all these years of stormy debate, Calhoun was always the defender of slavery. He made no apologies, but proclaimed it a righteous, just, and beneficial institution ; and he regarded all efforts to abolish or restrict it, or to prevent the catching and return of fugitives, as an interference with the rights of the slave States which would justify their secession from the Union. MISS MAR TINEA U ' S SKETCH, 2 1 3 M ; ss Harriet Martineau, who visited the United States at this time, has re- corded in her " Retrospect of Western Travel " her impressions of Mr. Calhoun. She writes : — "Mr. Calhoun followed, and impressed me very strongly. While he kept to the question, what he said was close, good, and moderate, though delivered in rapid speech, and with a voice not sufficiently modulated. But when he began to reply to a taunt of Colonel Benton's, that he wanted to be President, the force of his speaking became painful. He made protestations which it seemed to strangers had better have been spared, ' that he would not turn on his heel to be Presi- dent,' and that 'he had given up all for his own brave, magnanimous little State of South Carolina.' While thus protesting, his eyes flashed, his brow seemed charged with thunder, his voice became almost a bark, and his sentences were abrupt, intense, producing in the auditory a sort of laugh which is squeezed out of people by an application of a very sudden mental force. " Mr. Calhoun's countenance first fixed my attention ; the splendid eye, the straight forehead, surmounted by a load of stiff, upright, dark hair, the stern brow, the inflexible mouth, — it is one of the most remarkable heads in the country." Miss Martineau's sketch ofj the three great statesmen of the time is espe- cially interesting : — " Mr. Clay sitting upright on the sofa, with his snuff-box ever in his hand, would discourse for many an hour in his even, soft, deliberate tone, on any one of the great subjects of American policy which we might happen to start, always amazing us with the moderation of estimate and speech which so impetuous a nature has been able to attain. Mr. Webster, leaning back at his ease, telling stories, cracking jokes, shaking the sofa with burst after burst of laughter, or smoothly discoursing to the perfect felicity of the logical part of one's constitution, would illuminate an evening now and then. Mr. Calhoun, the cast-iron man, who looks as if he had never been born and could never be extinguished, would come in sometimes to keep our understanding on a painful stretch for a short while, and leave us to take to pieces his close, rapid, theoretical, illustrated talk, and see what we could make of it. We found it usually more worth retaining as a curiosity, than as either very just or useful. " I know of no man who lives in such utter intellectual solitude. He meets men and harangues by the fireside as in the Senate; he is wrought like a piece of machinery, set going vehemently by a weight, and stops while you answer ; he either passes by what you say, or twists it into a suitability with what is in his head, and begins to lecture again." Miss Martineau also saw Calhoun in South Carolina, where he was the political teacher and guide, and the acknowledged chief : — " During my stay in Charleston, Mr. Calhoun and his family arrived from Congress, and there was something very striking in the welcome he received, like that of a chief returned to the bosom of his clan. He stalked about like a monarch of the little domain, and there was certainly an air of mysterious understanding between him and his followers." The agitation of the slavery question, from 1835 to 1S50, was chiefly the work of this one man. " The labors of Mr. Garrison and Mr. Wendell Phillips," says Parton. "might have borne no fruit during their lifetime, if Calhoun had not made it his business to supply them with material, ' I mean to force the issue upon the North,' he once wrote ; and he did force it. The denial of the right 214 JOHN C. CALHOUN. of petition, the annexation of Texas, the forcing of slavery into the Territories,. — these were among the issues upon which he hoped to unite the South in his favor, while retaining enough strength at the North to secure his election to the Presidency. Failing in all his schemes of personal advancement, he died in 1850, still protesting that slavery is divine, and that it must rule this country or ruin it." Calhoun's life came to an end in March, 1850, before the Compromise Bill of that year had once more postponed the "irrepressible conflict." On the 4th COLONIA] M WMos RESIDENCE OF THE LATE WILLIAM BULL l'RINGLE, ESQ., CHARLESTON, S. C. of March his last speech was read in the Senate by a friend, he then being too weak to deliver it. Three days afterward, when Webster delivered his famous " 7th of March speech," Calhoun literally rose from his dying bed that he might be present, and sat for the last time in his accustomed seat, his rigid face and intense gaze giving him a weird and unearthly aspect. On the 24th of the same month he died ; and his ashes were taken to Charleston, there to mingle with the soil of the State to which he had given a life's devotion, and which had re- warded him with unfailing love and honor. mim £r ,'*':i> ; SAMUEL HOUSTON, AND THE STORY OK TEXAN INDEPENDENCE. F THE thirty-one States of the Union which have been added to the original thirteen, Texas is distin- guished as the only one which previously had a separate and independent national existence ; and no more picturesque or unique character is found among American public men than he whose name is inseparably associated with that of Texas, — her leader, her defender, her President, her Governor, — Samuel Houston. In the latter part of the eighteenth century the rich but wild regions of Kentucky and Tennessee were the para- dise of hunters and pioneers ; and here grew up a race of statesmen of a new and distinct type, — men like Jackson, Clay, and Benton, — strong, brave, and hardy, original and ready of resource, but with little educa- tion, and having, as the French say, " the defects of their qualities." Houston was of this class. He was born in Rockbridge county, Virginia, in 1793. When only thirteen, his father died ; and with his mother and eight other chil- dren he crossed the mountains into Tennessee, where they settled on the banks of the Tennessee River, at what was then the limit of emigration. Beyond the river lay the country of the Cherokees ; and during a large part of Houston's boyhood he actually lived among the Indians, learning their ways and acquiring their language. He always was looked up to by the Indians as a leader. A story is told that in 1846, when he was in Congress, a party of forty wild Indians was brought to Washington from Texas by General Moorhead ; and when they met Houston, they one and all ran to him, greeted him with delight, hugged him like bears in their brawny arms, and called him " father." Houston fought under Jackson in the war of 181 2, and was desperately wounded in battle with the Creek Indians. When the famous battle of New Orleans put an end to the war, he studied law, and soon began to practice. He rose rapidly in his profession, was chosen district attorney, elected to Congress in 1823 and 1825, and in 1827, when thirty-four years old, was elected Governor 217 2l8 SAMUEL HOUSTON. of Tennessee. His progress had been wonderfully rapid ; he was one of die most popular men of his State ; he might aspire to the highest positions, with every prospect of success. But in 1829 an event occurred which completely changed the course of his life. In January, 1829, he married Miss Eliza Allen, a young lady of excellent family, and of the highest character. The union seems to have been as unhappy as it was short. In less than three months a separation took place, which filled society with excitement. Various reports flew through the State, which divided the people into two hostile parties, and inflamed popular feeling to the last point A SCENE on TkXAS PLAINS — DISPUTE OVER A BRAND of excitement. The friends of the lady loaded the name of Governor Houston with odium. He was charged with every degree of crime. The very ignorance of the community about the affair, by increasing the mystery which hung over it, only made it seem the more terrible. In the meantime, Houston did not offer a single denial of a single calumny — would neither vindicate himself before the public, nor allow his friends to do it for him. Not a word ever fell from his lips that cast a shade upon her charac- ter, nor did he ever allow an unkind breath against her in his presence. In consequence of this unhappy affair, Houston determined to forsake TEXAS AND MEXICO. 219 civilized life. He resigned the office of governor, turned his back upon the haunts of white men, and took refuge in the forests among his old friends, the Indians. While roving in his youth among the Cherokees, he had found a friend in their chief, Oolooteka, who adopted him as his son, and gave him a corner in his wigwam. The chief with his tribe afterward removed to Arkansas. During their separation of more than ten years, he and Houston had continually inter- changed tokens of their kind feeling ; and Houston now turned his face to his Indian home, knowing that he would be greeted there with the old chief's blessing. For three years he lived among the Indians, and as one of them ; and from his retreat in the southwest he watched with keen interest the progress of events in the fertile country across the Mexican frontier. In the year 182 1, Mexico, which had up to that time belonged to Spain, declared herself independent, and took vigorous measures to induce the settlement and cultivation of her unoccu- pied territory. Texas soon be- gan to be popu- lated by immi- gration, a large part of which was from the United States. By the year 1S30 there were about twenty thousand Ameri- can settlers there, who were unanimous in their detestation of Mexican government, and in a state of chronic revolt. In 1S32 they rose against the Mexicans, and, after several battles, drove all the troops out of the country. Houston saw what was going on, and determined to cast in his lot with the Texans. There can be little doubt that there was an understanding between Houston and President Jackson, and that the former had the aid and countenance of the President in his effort to help achieve Texan independence. More territory was needed in the United States for the extension of slavery. It must be sought on the South ; for slavery was shut out of the northern territory by the Mis- souri Compromise. {See Henry Clay.) The inhabitants of Texas were mainly immigrants from the United States. If the country were detached from Mexico, the people would undoubtedly seek to be annexed to the Union. They wanted AN OLD SPANISH HOUSE. 220 SAMUEL HOUSTON. a leader. Houston resolved to be their leader ; and with this view he left the wigwam of the Cherokee chief, and set out for Texas in December, 1832. For two years after Houston joined fortunes with Texas there was com- parative quiet ; but immigration went on in a steadily increasing stream, and the sentiment for independence grew stronger every day. The Mexican govern- ment, in fear of the growing strength of Texas, ordered that the people should be disarmed, — a decree which aroused instant rebellion. A company of Mexi- can soldiers sent to the little town of Gonzales, on the Guadalupe, to remove a small brass six-pounder, was met a few miles from the town by one hundred and eighty Texans, who fell upon them with such vigor that they turned and fled, losing several men. No Texan was killed. This battle was called "the Lexington of Texas." Then war broke out again more furiously than ever. The Mexican soldiers, who were under weak and incompetent commanders, were again dispersed and driven out of the country. But now Santa Anna himself, the Mexican Dictator, an able general, but false and cruel, took the field. With an army of several thousand men, he crossed the Rio Grande, and marched against the Texans. The town of Bexar, on the San Antonio River, was defended by a garrison of about one hundred and seventy-five men. Among them were two whose names are still famous, — David Crockett, the renowned pioneer, and Colonel James Bowie, noted for his murderous "bowie-knife," his duels, and his deeds of valor and shame. The company was commanded by Colonel W. Barrett Travis, a brave young Texan. On the approach of Santa Anna, they took refuge in the Alamo, about half a mile to the north of the town. The Alamo was an ancient Franciscan mission of the eighteenth century. It covered an area of about three acres, surrounded by walls three feet thick and eight feet high. Within the walls were a stone church and several other build- ings. For two weeks it withstood Santa Anna's assaults. A shower of bombs and cannon-balls fell incessantly within the walls. At last, after a brave defense by the little garrison, the fortress was captured, in the early morning of Sunday, March 6th, 1836. After the surrender, Travis, Bowie, and Crockett, with all their companions, were by Santa Anna's especial command massacred in cold blood. But this was not the worst ; a few days afterward a company of over four hundred Texans, under Colonel Fannin, besieged at Goliad, were induced to surrender, under Santa Anna's solemn promises of protection. After the sur- render they were divided into several companies, marched in different directions a short distance out of the town, and shot down like dogs by the Mexican soldiers. Not a man escaped. While these horrible events were taking place, Houston was at Gonzales, with a force of less than four hundred men. Meetings were held in the differ- FALL OF THE ALAMO. SAMUEL- HOUSTON. ent settlements to raise an army to resist the Mexican invasion ; and a conven- tion of the people issued a proclamation declaring Texas a free and independent republic. It was two weeks before General Houston received intelligence of the atrocious massacres at Bexar and Goliad, and of Santa Anna's advance. The country was in a state of panic. Settlers were everywhere abandoning I 111 ' ,'il I ALP MASSACRE. their homes, and fleeing in terror at the approach of the Mexican soldiers. Houston's force ot a few hundred men was the only defense of Texas ; and even this was diminished by frequent desertion from the ranks. The cause of Texan freedom seemed utterly hopeless. In order to gain time, while watching his opportunity for attack, Houston TRIUMPH OF SAN JACINTO. 223 slowly retreated before the Mexican army. After waiting two weeks for rein- forcements, he moved toward Buffalo Bayou, a deep, narrow stream connectino- with the San Jacinto River, about twenty miles southeast of the present city of Houston. Here he expected to meet the Mexican army. The lines being formed, General Houston made one of his most impassioned and eloquent appeals to his troops, firing every breast by giving as a watchword, " Remember the Alamo." Soon the Mexican bugles rang out over the prairie, announcing the advance guard of the enemy, almost eighteen hundred strong. The rank and file of the patriots was less than seven hundred and fifty men. Their disadvantages but served to increase the enthusiasm of the soldiers ; and when their general said, "Men, there is the enemy; do you wish to fight?" the universal shout was, " We do ! " " Well, then," he said, " remember it is for liberty or death ; remem- ber the Alamo ! ' ' At the moment of attack, a lieutenant came galloping up, his horse cov- ered with foam, and shouted along the lines, " I've cut down Vince's bridge." Each army had used this bridge in coming to the battle-field, and General Houston had ordered its destruction, thus preventing all hope of escape to the vanquished. Santa Anna's forces were in perfect order, awaiting the attack, and reserved their fire until the patriots were within sixty paces of their works. Then they poured forth a volley, which went over the heads of the attackers, though a ball struck General Houston's ankle, inflicting a very painful wound. Though suf- fering and bleeding, General Houston kept his saddle during the entire action. The patriots held their fire until it was given to the enemy almost in their very bosoms, and then, having no time to reload, made a general rush upon the foe, who were altogether unprepared for the furious charge. The patriots not hav- ing bayonets, clubbed their rifles. About half-past four the Mexican rout began, and closed only with the night. Seven of the patriots were killed and twenty-three were wounded, while the Mexicans had six hundred and thirty-two killed and wounded ; and seven hundred and thirty, among whom was Santa Anna, were made prisoners. The victory of San Jacinto struck the fetters forever off the hands of Texas, and drove back the standard of Mexico beyond the Rio Grande, never to return except in predatory and transient incursions. General Houston became at once the leading man in Texas, almost universal applause following him. As soon as quiet and order were restored, he was made the first President of the new republic, under the Constitution adopted November, 1835. General Houston's first term as President of Texas closed in December, 1838. During the term of his successor, General Houston served two years in the Congress of the young republic. He did much good to the country, on one 224 SAMUEL HOUSTON. occasion preventing an actual dissolution of the Texan government by the magic of his great speech in Congress, when that body was just on the point of adjourning sine die. On May 9, 1840, he married his second wife, Miss Margaret M. Lea, of Alabama, a most worthy woman, who had a great influence for good over her husband. He often said that to her he owed his chief honor and happiness. He was deeply attached to her, and, when a Senator at Washing- ton, invariably spent his Sunday after- noons in writing to her and his family. One of the ques- tions presented by our Presidential elec- tion of 1844 was the annexation of Texas, which took place in 1845 ; and ex-Presi- dent Houston and his fast friend and com- patriot, General Thomas J. Rusk, were made her first Senators, taking their seats in January, 1846. These men of commanding mien produced something of a sensation, com- ing to sit in the na- tion's council-house as the representatives of a people who had, of their own free will, given up their national existence to become merely an integral part of our Union. Houston's course in the Senate was conservative. He voted for the A LUCKING liKOM'Ho. GOVERNOR OF TEXAS. 225 Oregon boundary compromise, and, if he could, would have averted the war with Mexico. After the passage of the compromise measures of 1850, there was no more popular man in the South than General Houston, and, in 1852, he was a prominent candidate for the Presidency before the Democratic convention. He had placed himself in strong opposition to the secession spirit shown in 1850, thus losing some of his most influential Southern supporters. In 1859 he was made the Union candidate for governor. With patriotic zeal he declared, "'The Constitution and the Union ' is my only platform," and made but one speech, which was the best of his life. He was elected by more than 2000 majority. Almost the first act of the new governor was to send in a sterling message in reply to the proposition made by South Carolina in i860 for a convention of slaveholding States, with a view to secession. Houston's every effort and sentiment were for the preservation of the Union ; and his conduct as gover- nor, in standing almost alone against the tide of secession, was not less glorious than when, a quarter of a century before, he had led his little army against the forces of Santa Anna at San Jacinto. He made a speech at Galveston, in which, with prophetic power, he warned the people of the disastrous conse- quences of secession. While he was speaking, one horse of a team standing near became restive, and attempted to kick out of the harness. Houston paused in his speech : " He is trying a little practical secession," he remarked, to the amusement of his audience. The horse finally choked himself down, and the teamster began beating him. " You see how it works," said Houston. After his beating, the horse was got upon his feet, and the teamster fastened the broken harness. " See in what a fix he is brought back into the Union !" said the ready orator, amid applause and laughter. ■ But all would not do. The secession sentiment was too strong for even Houston to combat. A popular vote was taken, and the State voted out of the Union. The State officials were required to take an oath of allegiance to the Confederate government. This Houston peremptorily refused to do, and was accordingly deposed, being succeeded by the lieutenant-governor. He retired to his prairie home, saying, with pathetic dignity, "It is perhaps meet that my career should close thus. I have seen the statesmen and patriots of my youth gathered to their fathers, and the government which they had reared rent in twain, and none like them are now left to re-unite it again. I stand almost the last of a race who learned from them the lessons of human freedom." On the 26th of July, 1863, three weeks after the fall of Vicksburg, Houston died. " During the forenoon," writes his daughter, "we heard his voice in a tone of entreaty, and listening to the feeble sound, we caught the words, ' Texas ! Texas ! ' Soon afterward, my mother was sitting by the bedside with his hand in hers, and his lips moved once again ; ' Margaret ! ' he said ; and the voice we loved was silent forever." ABRAHAM LINCOLN, THE PRESERVER. OR THE UNION. BY PROF. W. \V. BIRDSALI./ N our gallery of famous Americans there is one figure which stands peculiarly alone. Before the halo of martyrdom had made his memory sacred, even before his divine insight had perceived the time when he should set the bondman free, it was declared that there was for Abraham Lincoln "a niche in the temple of fame, a niche near Washington." Rut our feeling for Lincoln is very different from the veneration with which we regard the Father of his country. Washington was a stately figure, too digni- fied for near approach. He commanded respect, admira- tion, loyalty ; but our feeling for Lincoln includes all these, and with them a peculiar affection as for one very near and dear. It is not only that he is nearer to us in point of time ; his was a nature so large, an experience so comprehensive, that the minds and hearts of all our people find in his a chord to which their own responds ; and within the breast of every American there is something which claims Lincoln as his own. The fame of Lincoln is increasing as the inner history of the great struggle for the life of the nation becomes known. For almost two decades after that struggle had settled the permanence of our government, our vision was ob- scured by the near view of the pygmy giants who " strutted their brief hour upon the stage ;" our ears were filled with the loud claims of those who would magnify their own little part, and, knowing the facts concerning some one frac- tion of the contest, assumed from that knowledge to proclaim the principles which should have governed the whole. Time is dissipating the mist, and we are coming better to know the great man who had no pride of opinion, who was * Prof. Birdsall, who is principal of one of the largest and best known private schools in Phila- delphia, has for years been a student of Lincoln's life. 229 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. willing to let Seward or Sumner or McClellan imagine that he himself was the guiding, dominating spirit of the government, if so that government might have the service of which each was capable ; we see more clearly the real greatness of the leader who was too slow for one great section of his people, and too fast for another, too conservative for those, too radical for these ; who refused to make the contest merely a war for the negro, yet who saw the end from the beginning, and so led, not a section of his people, but the whole people, away from the Egyptian plagues of slavery and disunion, united in sentiment and feeling and capable of united action, to the borders of the promised land. We are coming to appreciate that the "Father Abraham " who in that Red Sea passage of fraternal strife was ready to listen to every tale of sorrow, and who wanted it said that he " always plucked a thistle and planted a flower when he thought a flower would grow," was not only in this sense the father of his people, but that he was a truly great statesman, who, within the limits of human knowledge and human strength, guided the affairs of state with a wisdom, a patience, a courage, which belittle all praise, and make him seem indeed a man divinely raised up, not only to set the captive free, but in order that "government of the people, by the people, and for the peo- ple, shall not perish from the earth." Abraham Lincoln came into the world in 1809, in a miserable His family were of that peculiar people, the shiftless, im- provident, "poor whites" of the South. The father, Thomas Lincoln, was a typical specimen of his class, — lazy, trifling, spending his life in the search of some place in Kentucky, Indiana, or Illinois, where the rich soil would kindly yield its fruits without the painful price of labor. Some three generations back, he traced his ancestry to a Quaker origin in Pennsylvania ; but the thrift of that peaceful people was not entailed in the family, and if the energy and ability of the Vir- ginian grandfather who came with Boone into Kentucky was transmitted to the future President, certainly his father had it not. The mother's ancestry is un- known ; by courtesy she took her mother's name of Hanks. In youth she was both bright and handsome, and possessed of considerable intellectual force. LINCOLN S BOYHOOD HOME IN KENTUCKY. hovel in Kentucky. BOYHOOD DAYS. 231 She taught her husband to read, and it is fair to imagine that had her lot been less sordid, her life not ground down by labor and squalor and the vice about her, she would have been fitted to adorn a higher sphere of life. Her son, though she died when he was in his tenth year, and though another woman filled her place and deserved the love and devotion with which he repaid her goodness, cherished the memory of his "angel mother," testifying that to her he owed " all that he was or hoped to be." The story of Lincoln's boyhood belongs to a stage of civilization which our people have almost forgotten, or which they never knew. The removal to Spencer County, Indiana ; the "half-faced camp" in which the family lived ; the pride with which, a year later, they moved to a log cabin with dirt floor, and without doors or windows in the openings made for them ; the death of the mother ; the boy's first letter, begging a Kentucky preacher to come and preach a sermon over the grave in the wilderness ; the loneliness, suffering, and depri- vation that followed, complete a chapter whose pathos must touch all hearts. Relief came on the marriage of Thomas Lincoln to a thrifty Kentucky widow, whose advent necessitated a floor and doors and windows, who actually brought a stock of spare clothing and a clothes-press for its preservation, at which the boy, as he afterward said, " began to feel like a human being." This was typical frontier life. The hardship, the toil, the deprivation, killed the mothers ; myste- rious pestilence found, in the exposure and the filth, opportunity to sweep away whole families ; vice abounded ; ignorance and vulgarity were everywhere ; but, somehow, out of their midst came sometimes a strong character and a great man. From this soil grew Lincoln. Schools were few, irregular, and poor, in the backwoods ; but the young Lincoln took advantage of every such opportu- nity, and we find him at seventeen walking over four miles for .the purpose. Reading, writing, and elementary arithmetic, with some irregular exercises in composition and declaiming, formed the whole of the course of study, except that his last teacher, one Crawford, astonished the natives by undertaking to teach manners. He would require one pupil to go outside and enter the room as a lady or gentleman would enter a parlor. Another, acting the part of host, would receive the in-comer, and politely introduce him to the company. When, in after years, the President's arm was wearied by the vigorous greetings of the thousands who filed through the stately East Room of the White House, if he ever thought of those early mock receptions, the contrast must have afforded him rich amusement. At seventeen, Lincoln had grown to his full height ; he weighed one hun- dred and sixty pounds, and was wiry, strong, and vigorous. He wore low shoes or moccasins. His trousers were of buckskin, and usually bagged unnecessarily in one region, while, by reason of their brevity, they left several inches of shin bone exposed. A linsey-woolsey shirt and coon-skin cap, the tail hanging 232 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. down his back, completed this backwoods outfit. It is doubtful whether he ever owned an arithmetic ; but leaves exist, taken from a book made and bound by him, in which he copied problems illustrating the various principles of arith- metic. One page is devoted to subtraction of Long Measure, Land Measure, and Dry Measure, the headings being written in a bold hand, and each subject illustrated by two or three problems. About the edges are some extra flour- ishes and ciphering, and at the bottom the touching lines : — "Abraham Lincoln his hand and pen he will be good but god knows When." His penmanship came to be regular in form, and better than that of any of his mates ; the samples which we see of his handwriting as a man are far above the average. He kept a copy book, in which he entered everything that pleased his fancy. When paper failed, he wrote his selections with chalk or charcoal upon a plank or a shingle. He wrote the first drafts of compositions upon a smooth wooden shovel, which he planed off for each new effort. He devoured such books as he could borrow, and the Bible and ^Esop's Fables were for a long time the only ones he owned. Beside these, " Robinson Cru- soe," Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress," a History of the United States, and Weems' " Life of Washington," formed the bulk of his early reading. A copy of the Statutes of Indiana was borrowed from the constable, and studied with a care which possibly indicated his future career as a lawyer. His passion for reading was such as to cause remark among his neighbors, who wondered to see the great awkward boy, after a day of labor, crouch in a corner of the log cabin, or spread his ungainly body under a tree outside, and bury himself in a book, while he devoured the corn bread which formed his supper. He delighted in " speechi- fying," as he called it, and upon the slightest encouragement would mount a stump and practice upon his fellow-laborers. He helped to support the family by working in his father's clearing, or by hiring to neighbors to plow, dig ditches, chop wood, or split rails, and for a time was employed as clerk in the cross-roads store. A journey to New Orleans as deck-hand on a flat-boat, widened his experience of mankind, and gave him his first glimpse of slavery. Early in 1 830, he went, with the family, a fifteen days' journey to Illinois, where, in Macon County, five miles from Decatur, a new settlement was made. On a bluff overlooking the Sangamon River another log cabin was built ; land was fenced with the historic rails, some of which, thirty years later, were to play a prominent part in the presidential campaign ; and Lincoln, being now of age, left his father's family in these new quarters, to earn his living for himself. The tenderness of heart which characterized him through life was well illustrated by his turning back, while on the journey to Illinois, and wading an icy river to REMOVAL TO ILLINOIS., 233 rescue a worthless pet dog which had fallen behind, and could not get across, and which " Abe " could not bear to leave whimpering and whining on the oppo- site shore. This same disposition had led him at all times to protest against the cruelty to animals practiced by his mates, and is only one of the traits which marked him as of a different mould. Another journey to New Orleans was his first employment after leaving home. Here he witnessed a slave auction. The scene impressed itself upon his heart and memory, and he is said to have declared to his cousin and com- panion, " If I ever get a chance to hit that institution, /'// hit it hard? For several years he lived at New Salem, Illinois, serving as steamboat 5F LINCOLN AT GENTRYV1LLE, INDIANA. pilot, and as clerk in a store and mill. At the time of the " Black Hawk War," being out of employment, he volunteered for service, and was elected captain. Returning at the close of the expedition, he bought an interest in a store, for which he went in debt, and, presently selling it on credit and his debtor abscond- ing, he found himself burdened with claims which it took many years to dis- charge. He now began in earnest to study law, walking to Springfield to borrow books and return them ; and, as a means of living in the meantime, he entered the employ of the county surveyor and laboriously studied the principles of land measurement. Presently he began to practice law a little, representing friends 14 234 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. before a justice of the peace, and, in 1834, he was elected to the Legislature, and served his county as a representative for four consecutive terms. Some elements of his popularity were his acknowledged honesty and fairness, his wonderful gift as a story-teller, his prowess as a wrestler, and, when actual necessity arose, as a fighter, and his reputation for knowledge. This latter had been acquired by his habit of studying to the bottom whatever subject he had in hand, and, although his range of information was not wide, when he under- took the discussion of any topic he soon demonstrated that he thoroughly understood it. His service in the Legislature was not remarkable. The country in which AND MICHIGAN CANAL. he lived was just then wild upon the importance of public improvements, par- ticularly in the form of interior waterways, and it is not surprising that Lincoln should declare an ambition to become " the De Witt Clinton of Illinois ;" but the net result of the enterprise was a gigantic State debt. He was popular in the Legislature, and was twice the nominee of his party for Speaker, a nominal honor only, as the State was at that time Democratic. His most notable act during this time was his joining with a single colleague, in a written protest against the passage of pro-slavery resolutions. This protest appears on the records, and bases the opposition of the two signers upon their belief "that the A PECULIAR LAWYER. 235 institution ot slavery is founded on both injustice and bad policy," a declaration of faith which required some moral courage in 1837, and in a community largely of Southern origin. One other transaction which deserves mention was the carrying through the Legislature of a bill removing the capital from Vandalia to Springfield. This was accomplished after much political "wire-working," in which Lincoln was the leader, the adverse claims of a number of other towns being strenuously urged by their representatives. In the meantime Lincoln had been admitted to the bar, and, in 1837, removed to Springfield, where he had formed a partnership with an attorney of established reputation. He became a successful lawyer, not so much by his knowledge of the law, for this was never great, as by his ability as an advocate, and by reason of his sterling integrity. He would not be a party to misrepre- sentation, and, after endeavoring to dissuade the parties from litigation, refused to take cases which involved such action. He even was known to abandon a case which brought him unexpectedly into this attitude. In his first case before the United States Circuit Court he said that he had not been able to find any authorities supporting his side of the case, but had found several favoring the opposite, which he proceeded to quote. The very appearance of such an attorney in any case must have gone far to win the jury ; and, when deeply stirred, the power of his oratory, and the invincible logic of his argument, made him a most formidable advocate. " Yes," he was overheard to say to a would-be client, " we can doubtless gain your case for you ; we can set a whole neighbor- hood at loggerheads ; we can distress a widowed mother and her six fatherless children, and thereby get for you six hundred dollars to which you seem to have a legal claim, but which rightfully belongs, it appears to me, as much to the woman and her children as it does to you. You must remember that some things legally right are not morally right. We shall not take your case, but will give you a little advice for which we will charge you nothing. You seem to be a sprightly, energetic man ; we would advise you to try your hand at making six hundred dollars in some other way." HIS PECULIAR HONESTY. His absolute honesty and care for that which was not his own is illustrated by his conduct as a postmaster. He had served in that capacity at New Salem, and when that office was discontinued, found himself indebted to the govern- ment to the amount of sixteen or eighteen dollars. For some reason this money was not demanded for several years, and in the meantime he was in debt, and very poor, frequently being compelled to borrow money to supply his pressing needs ; but an agent of the department calling one day and presenting the account, he produced an old blue sock, from which he poured the identical silver and copper coins with which his New Salem neighbors had purchased stamps, and to the exact amount required. 23' ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Early in life Lincoln became attached to an attractive and estimable girl, and they were to have been married when his law studies were completed. Her sudden death was such a shock to him, and threw him into such a condition of melancholy, that it was feared by his friends that his reason would be perma- nently dethroned. Some years later he married Miss Mary Todd, a young lady of Kentucky parentage and of good family. She was possessed of some culture and a vigorous and sprightly mind. Her temper, however, was erratic, and those who knew the family life intimately represent it as full of trials. Some of the incidents reported seem intensely amusing at this distance of time, but must have been painful in the extreme as actual occurrences. Such trials continued throughout Mr. Lincoln's life, and were the occasion of continual petty annoyance, and frequent embarrassment in the discharge of his public duties. He continued to " ride the circuit," being a great portion of the time absent from home in attendance at court, with the exception of his single term in Con- gress, until his election to the presidency. He was acquiring a very great influ- ence in his district and in the State, was one of the leading managers of the Whig party, and was usually a candidate for presidential elector. When in 1846, according to the peculiar system of rotation adopted by the Illinois politi- cians, it was his turn to go to Congress, he did not distinguish himself, though he seems to have made a favorable impression upon the party leaders, and the acquaintance thus formed was of great use to him later. Going back to Illinois, he again settled to the practice of law. It was in 1853 that he received his largest fee. It was a case in which he defended the Illinois Central Railroad in a suit brought to collect taxes alleged to be due, and in which he was successful. He presented a bill for two thousand dollars, which the company refused to allow, when, after consultation with other lawyers, he brought suit for five thousand, which he received. It was not until the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, in 1854, that Lincoln was really aroused. He had always opposed the extension of slavery, holding opinions well indicated by his protest in the Legislature, already mentioned, and by the acute remark that it was " singular that the courts would hold that a man never lost his right to his property that had been stolen from him, but that he " instantly lost his right to himself if he was stolen." The great question now absorbed his interest. He was constantly more bold in his position, and more powerful in his denunciation of the encroachments of the slave power. He became, therefore, the natural champion of his party in the campaigns in which Senator Douglas undertook to defend before the people of his State his advocacy of " Squatter Sovereignty," or the right of the people of each Terri- tory to decide whether it should be admitted as a slave or a free State, and of the Kansas-Nebraska bill, by which the " Missouri Compromise" was repealed. THE LINCOLN-DOUGLAS DEBATES. 237 (See Henry Clay.) The first great battle between these two giants of debate took place at the State Fair at Springfield, in October of 1854. Douglas made, on Tuesday, a great speech to an unprecedented concourse of people, and was the lion of the hour. The next day Lincoln replied, and his effort was such as to surprise both his friends and his opponents. It was probably the first occasion on which he reached his full power. In the words of a friendly editor : " The Nebraska bill was shivered, and like a tree of the forest was torn and rent asunder by the hot bolts of truth. ... At the conclusion of this speech every man and child felt that it was unanswerable." It was arranged that Lincoln was to follow Douglas and reply to his speeches, and the two met in joint debate at Peoria, after which Douglas proposed that they should both abandon the debate, agreeing to cancel his appointments and make no more speeches during that campaign, if Lincoln would do the same. Lincoln somewhat weakly agreed to this proposition, and the next day, when Douglas pleaded hoarseness as an excuse, he gallantly refused to take advan- tage of " Judge Douglas's indisposition." He faithfully kept to the agreement, though Douglas allowed himself, on one occasion, to be tempted into violating it. THE DEBATES WITH DOUGLAS. But it was the campaign of 1S58 which made Lincoln famous, which fully demonstrated his powers, and which prepared him for the presidency. Douglas was immensely popular. His advocacy of territorial expansion appealed to the patriotism of the young and ardent; his doctrine of "Popular Sovereignty" was well calculated to mislead the shallow thinker ; and his power in debate had given him the name of " the Little Giant." True, the " Dred Scott decision " had made it difficult to hold his Northern constituency to the toleration of any atti- tude which could be construed as favoring the South,* but his opposition to the Lecompton pro-slavery constitution, on the ground that it had never been fairly voted upon by the people of Kansas, not only maintained the loyalty of his par- * The " Dred Scott decision" was delivered by Chief Justice Taney, of the United States Supreme Court, on March 6, 1857, immediately after the inauguration of President Buchanan. Dred Scott was a slave who had been taken by his master from Missouri to Illinois and Wisconsin, where slavery was illegal, and had lived there for some years. He was then taken back to Missouri, and having been whipped, he brought suit against his master for assault, pleading that he was made free by being taken into a free State, where slavery was illegal. The Missouri Circuit Court de- cided i"n his favor ; but the case was appealed to the United States Supreme Court, which decided that the Missouri Compromise, limiting the area of slavery, was unconstitutional, and that therefore slaveholders could enter any free State with slaves and hold them there as property ; that negroes, be- ing incapable of becoming citizens, had no standing in court, and could not maintain a suit for any purpose. As this decision overthrew all barriers against the extension of slavery, even to the free States, and declared that the negro had no rights which the courts would protect, it caused great excitement in the North, and aroused intense hostility to the aggressive demands of the slave power. 238 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. tisans, but led Horace Greeley and some other leaders of the new Republican party to favor his re-election to the Senate, hoping to separate him from the pro- slavery interest, and thus introduce a split in the Democratic party. But Lin- coln and those who advised with him were firmly of opinion that the anti-slavery cause was safe only in the hands of those who had consistently been its advo- cates, and took high and strong ground in favor of an aggressive campaign. Lincoln had come to be a really great political manager. He cared little for temporary success, if only he could foster the growth of a right public opinion, and thus make possible a future victory which would be permanent. So, in this campaign, when he proposed to press upon his opponent the question whether there were lawful means by which slavery could be excluded from a Territory before its admission as a state, his friends suggested that Douglas would reply that slavery could not exist unless it was desired by the people, and unless pro- tected by territorial legislation, and that this answer would be sufficiently satis- factory to insure his re-election. But Lincoln replied, " I am after larger game. If Douglas so answers, he can never be President, and the battle of i860 is worth a hundred of this." Both predictions were verified. The people of the South might have forgiven Douglas his opposition to the Lecompton Constitution, but they could not forgive the promulgation of a doctrine which, in spite of the Dred Scott decision, would keep slavery out of a Territory ; and so, although Douglas was elected and Lincoln defeated, the Democracy was divided, and it was impossible for Douglas to command Southern votes for the Presidency. The campaign had been opened by a speech of Lincoln which startled the country by its boldness and its power. It was delivered at the Republican con- vention which nominated him for Senator, and had been previously submitted to his confidential advisers. They strenuously opposed the introduction of its opening sentences. He was warned that they would be fatal to his election, and, in the existing state of public feeling, might permanently destroy his politi- cal prospects. Lincoln could not be moved. "It is true," said he, "and I will deliver it as written. I would rather be defeated with these expressions in my speech held up and discussed before the people than be victorious without them." The paragraph gave to the country a statement of the problem as terse and vigorous and even more complete than Seward's "irrepressible conflict," and as startling as Sumner's proposition that "freedom was national, slavery sectional." "A house divided against itself," said Lincoln, "cannot stand. I believe this government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved ; I do not expect the house to fall ; but I expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or all the other. Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the farther spread of it, and place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction, or its advocates will push it forward till it shall become alike lawful HIS VIEW OF THE SLAVERY QUESTION. 239 in all the States, — old as well as new, North as well as South." It seems small wonder that Douglas should interpret this as a threat of sectional strife, should magnify it and distort it, and that it should thus be the means of driving many timid voters to the support of the more politic candidate. Never had the issues of a political campaign seemed more momentous ; never was one more ably contested. The triumph of the doctrine of "popular sovereignty," in the Kansas-Nebraska bill, had opened the Territories to slavery, while it professed to leave the question to be decided by the people. To the question whether the people of a Territory could exclude slavery Douglas had answered, "That is a question for the courts to decide," but the Dred Scott decision, practically holding that the Federal Constitution guaranteed the right to hold slaves in the Territories, seemed to make the pro-slavery cause tri- umphant. The course of Douglas regarding the Lecompton Constitution, however, had made it possible for his friends to describe him as " the true champion of freedom," while Lincoln continually exposed, with merciless force, the illogical position ot his adversary, and his complete lack of political morality. Douglas claimed that the doctrine of popular sovereignty " originated when God made man and placed good and evil before him, allowing him to choose upon his own responsibility." But Lincoln declared with great solemnity: " No ; God did not place good and evil before man, telling him to make his choice. On the contrary, God did tell him there was one tree of the fruit of which he should not eat, upon pain of death." The question was to him one of right, a high question of morality, and only upon such a question could he ever be fully roused. " Slavery is wrong," was the keynote of his speeches. But he did not take the position of the abolitionists. He even admitted that the South was entitled, under the Constitution, to a national fugitive slave law, though •his soul revolted at the law which was then in force. His position, as already cited, was that of the Republican party. He would limit the extension of slavery, and place it in such a position as would insure its ultimate extinction. It was a moderate course, viewed from this distance of time, but in the face of a dominant, arrogant, irascible pro-slavery sentiment it seemed radical in the extreme, calculated, indeed, to fulfill a threat he had made to the Governor ot the State. He had been attempting to secure the release of a young negro from Springfield who was wrongfully detained in New Orleans, and who was in danger of being sold for prison expenses. Moved to the depths of his being by the refusal of the official to interfere, Lincoln exclaimed : " By God, Governor, I'll make the ground of this country too hotfnr the foot of a slave." Douglas was re-elected. Lincoln had hardly anticipated a different result, and he had nothing of the feeling of defeat. On the contrary, he felt that the •corner-stone of victory had been laid. He had said of his opening speech : " It LINCOLN AND HIS SON " TA FAME IN A WIDER FIELD. 241 I had to draw a pen across my record, and erase my whole life from sight, and I had one poor gift or choice left as to what I should save from the wreck, I should choose that speech, and leave it to the world unerased;" and now, he wrote : "The fight must go on. The cause of liberty must not be surrendered at the end of one or even one hundred defeats. Douglas had the ingenuity to be supported in the late contest both as the best means to break down and to uphold the slave interest. No ingenuity can keep these antagonistic elements in harmony long. Another explosion will soon come." And the explosion was only two years in coming. Neither was he in doubt about the effect of his own labors. "I believe I have made some marks," said he, "which will tell for the cause of liberty long after I am gone." He had bidden his countrymen "Re- turn to the fountain whose waters spring close by the blood of the Revolution. Think nothing of me ; take no thought for the political fate of any man whom- soever, but come back to the truths that are in the Declaration of Indepen- dence;" and defeat, which he foresaw must be temporary, was as nothing to him. But his great contest had made him famous. It is often said that Lincoln in i860 was practically unknown outside of Illinois. But this cannot be main- tained. In Illinois his name was a household word. "Come to our place," wrote a political manager in 1852, "people place more confidence in you than in any other man. Men who do not read want the story told as only you can tell it. Others may make fine speeches, but it would not be, ' Lincoln said so in his speech.' " And now his name was on the lips of every earnest advocate of freedom the country over. At the East there was deep and widespread interest in him. The people who looked up to Seward and Sumner and Wendell Phillips as the exponents of the gospel of freedom rejoiced at hearing of this new prophet, albeit he came from the wilderness. HIS COOPER INSTITUTE SPEECH. So, when in i860 Lincoln appeared by invitation to deliver an address at the Cooper Institute in New York, Horace Greeley declared that " No man has been welcomed by such an audience of the intellect and mental culture of our city since the days of Clay and Webster." No audience was ever more sur- prised. The scholarly people who thronged the immense audience-room had not really believed that any genuine good could come out of the Nazareth of Illinois, and the awkward, uncouth appearance of the speaker did not reassure them. They expected to hear a ranting, shallow stump speech, which might be adapted to persuade the ignorant people of a prairie State, but the hearing of which would rather be an ordeal to their cultured ears. But the effort was dignified, calm, clear, luminous. If it was not the speech of a scholar, it was that of a man full of his great subject, and with a scholar's command of all that bore upon it. It is said that those who afterward performed the work of publishing the 242 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. speech as a campaign document were three weeks in verifying the statements and finding the historical records referred to. He had taken the East by storm. He was invited to speak in many places in New England, and everywhere met with the most flattering reception, which surprised almost as much as it delighted him. It astonished him to hear that the Professor of Rhetoric of Yale College took notes of his speech and lectured upon them to his class, and followed him to Meriden the next evening to hear him again for the same purpose. An intelligent hearer described as remarkable " the clearness of your statements, the unanswerable style of your reasoning, and especially your illustrations, which were romance and pathos, fun and logic, all welded together." Perhaps his style could not be better described. He him- self said that it used to anger him, when a child, to hear statements which he could not understand, and he was thus led to form the habit of turning over a thought until it was in language any boy could comprehend. Lincoln had in 1856 been somewhat talked of by his Illinois friends for Vice-President, and even for President ; but he had felt that other men, of wider reputation, would better lead the party. Now, however, he thought himself a proper candidate, and freely consulted with his friends in furtherance of his canvass. When the convention met in Chicago, the candidacy of Seward was so prominent, and his managers had such a reputation for political finesse, that it was with a surprise amounting to disgust that they saw themselves out-shouted and out-generaled by their Western competitors. Lincoln was nominated on the third ballot, amid such enthusiasm as had never been equaled. As had been predicted, the Democrats had not been able to hold together, the pro-slavery wing refusing to endorse the nomination of Douglas, and putting Breckinridge in the field. The campaign was conducted with great enthusiasm on the part of the Republicans, all the candidates for the nomination uniting in working for the success of Lincoln and Hamlin, and the result was a majority of fifty-seven in the electoral colleges. From this time, the life of Abraham Lincoln is the History of the Rebellion. It cannot be adequately written here. Every day was crowded with events which seem unimportant only because overshadowed by others whose world-wide influence commands attention. Hardly was the election over when active steps were taken in the South looking toward disunion. By February, seven State Legislatures had passed ordinances of secession, and the Southern Confederacy was practically organized. Few upon either side expected war, but the air was full of trouble, and the future looked very dark. On the nth of February, Lincoln took leave of his old friends and neigh- bors in a little speech of most pathetic beauty, and journeyed to Washington by way of all the principal cities of the North. Everywhere he was received with acclamation, and at every stop he made speeches full of tact, and largely de- OUTBREAK OF THE WAR. 243 voted to an attempt to quiet the general apprehension and to demonstrate to the people of the South that they had no just cause of complaint. There was intense excitement throughout the country, and especially in Washington, where threats were freely made that Lincoln should never be inaugurated. The veteran General Scott, however, who was in command, was thoroughly loyal, and determined to prevent violence. He quietly organized a small but efficient force of well-armed men, in citizen's dress, who guarded the Capitol and streets until after the inauguration. Threatened violence in Baltimore caused a change of Lincoln's route from Harrisburg, by which he arrived in Washing- ton unexpectedly, and the re- maining time until March 4th was spent in preparing his Inau- gural. When Chief-Justice Taney had administered the oath of office, the new President deliv- ered the Inaugural, which, while it was largely addressed to the Southern people, must have been really intended to strengthen the hearts of the friends of the Union. It foreshadowed fully and faith- fully the course of his administra- tion, and left no slightest excuse for secession or rebellion. He pointed out in the kindest possi- ble manner the inevitable results of disunion, and, while sacrificing no principle, and declaring his purpose to fulfill his oath and to preserve the Union, the tone of the address has been likened to that of a sorrowing father to his wayward children. THE GREAT CIVIL WAR. His task was such as no man ever faced before. The great republic, the only great and promising experiment in self-government that the world had ever seen, seemed about to end, after all, in failure. It was to be determined whether the Constitution contained the germs of its own destruction, or whether the government established under its provisions possessed the necessary strength to hold itself toeether. 1,"" ; ' "' ' '"'''"'rtf'^te'^lfesi''.'- ■ . '■- / PP 1 ^j*f ' S ; ' 1, "4--.' £''$$iffif£5t . ;eneral winfield scott. 244 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Mr. Lincoln called to his cabinet the ablest men of his party, two of whom, Seward and Chase, had been his competitors for the nomination, and the new administration devoted itself to the work of saving the Union. Every means was tried to prevent the secession of the border States, and the Presi- dent delayed until Fort Sumter was fired upon before he began active measures for the suppression of the Rebellion and called for seventy-five thousand volunteers. The great question, from the start, was the treatment of the negro. The advanced anti-slavery men demanded decisive action, and could not understand that success depended absolutely upon the administration commanding the support of the whole people. And so Mr. Lincoln incurred the displeasure and lost the confidence of some of those who had been his heartiest supporters by keeping the negro in the background and making the preservation of the "■^■■'••Xy., " LIBBY PRISON IN RICHMOND. Union the great end for which he strove. "I am naturally anti-slavery," said he at a later time. "If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. I cannot remember the time when I did not so think and feel. And yet I have never understood that the Presidency conferred upon me an unrestricted right to act upon that judgment and feeling. It was in the oath I took that I would, to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States. . . . This oath even forbade me practically to indulge my private abstract judgment on the moral question of slavery." And, although he repeatedly declared that, if he could do so, he would preserve the Union with slavery, he continued, " I could not feel that, to the best of my ability, I had even tried to preserve the Constitution, if, to save slavery or any minor matter, I should permit the wreck of government, country, and Constitution, all together," and so, when it became evident that the salvation of the Union HIS POLICY IN THE WAR. 245 demanded the destruction of that accursed system, the President was ready to strike the blow, and he found almost the whole people ready to support him. It is true that he could never count upon the absolute loyalty of all those who should have been his support. Radical men could not understand his pro- gressive conservatism. When he refusetd, early in the war, to allow a self-confi- dent general to emancipate negroes, the abolitionists were shocked and grieved. When he retained in command, month after month, a general whom he, far better than his critics, knew to be a failure, the smaller men accused him of lack of energy and with trifling. He could not silence them all with the lesson which he administered to the members of his cabinet when they protested against replacing McClellan in command of the forces in Washington after the failure of his campaign upon the James, and the crushing defeat. of Pope. He showed them that he saw all that they did ; that he knew the weakness of that general even better than they ; nay, more, that in the light of all the facts the reinstatement was in the nature of a personal humiliation' to himself. But when he asked them to name the man who could better be relied upon to reorganize the army, when he offered freely to appoint the better man if they would name him, they had no nomination to make. He had showed them anew the difference between the irresponsible critic and the responsible head of affairs. But upon what Lincoln called "the plain people," the mass of his country- men, he could always depend, because he, more than any other political leader in our history, understood them. Sumner, matchless advocate of liberty as he was, distrusted the President, and was desirous of getting the power out of his hands into stronger and safer ones. But suddenly the great Massachusetts Senator awoke to the fact that he could not command the support of his own constituency, and found it necessary to issue an interview declaring himself not- an opponent, but a supporter of Lincoln. In the dark days of 1862, when the reverses of the Union arms cast a gloom over the North, and European governments were seriously considering the pro- priety of recognizing the Confederacy, it seemed to Mr. Lincoln that his time had come, that the North was prepared to support a radical measure, and that emancipation would not only weaken the South at home, but would make it impossible for any European government to take the attitude toward slavery which would be involved in recognizing the Confederacy. Action was de- layed until a favorable moment, and after the battle of Antietam the Presi- dent called his cabinet together and announced that he was about to issue 'the Proclamation of Emancipation. It was a solemn moment. The President had made a vow — "I promised my God," were his words — that if the tide of invasion should be mercifully arrested, he would set the negro free. The final proclamation, issued three months later, fitly closes with an appeal 246 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. which indicates the devout spirit in which the deed was done : " And upon this act, sincerely believed to be an act of justice, warranted by the Con- stitution upon military necessity, I invoke the considerate judgment of mankind, and the gracious favor of Almighty God." HIS GREATNESS AS A STATESMAN. But the negro question, though a constant, underlying difficulty, was by no means the whole of Lincoln's problem. Questions of foreign policy, of the BIRDS-EVE VIEW OF ANDERSON VI I.LE PRISON. conduct of the war, the ever present necessity of providing money, which flowed out of the treasury in a thousand streams under the stress of daily growing and expanding public expenditure, the jealousy of politicians and the bickerings of generals, all these, and a thousand wearing, perplexing details, filled his days and nights with labor and anxiety. And, through it all, the oreat man, bearing his burden from day to day, grew in the love of his people as they came to know him better. It is of the human side of Lincoln that we think HIS GREAT ABILITIES. 247 most, of his homely speech, his kindliness, of the way he persisted, all through the war, in seeing and conversing with the thousands of all classes who thronged the doors of the White House, of the tears that came to his eyes at each story of distress, of his readiness to pardon, his unwillingness to punish, — THE CAPTURE OF BOOTH, THE SLAYER OF LINCOLN. but this is only part of Lincoln. His grasp of questions of State policy was superior to that of any of his advisers. ( The important dispatch to our minister to England in May, 1861, outlining the course to be pursued toward that power, has been published in its original draft, showing the work of the Secre- 248 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. tary of State and the President's alterations. Of this publication the editor of the North American Review says: " Many military men, who have had access to Mr. Lincoln's papers, have classed him as the best general of the war. This paper will go far toward establishing his reputation as its ablest diplomatist." It would be impossible for any intelligent person to study the paper thus published, the omissions, the alterations, the substitutions, without acknowledg- ing that they were the work of a master mind, and that the raw backwoodsman, not three months in office, was the peer of any statesman with whom he might find it necessary to cope. He was entirely willing to grant to his secretaries and to his generals the greatest liberty of action ; he was ready to listen to any one, and to accept advice even from hostile critics ; and this readiness made , them think, sometimes, that he had little mind of his own, and brought upon him the charge of weakness ; but, as the facts have become more fully known, it has grown more and more evident that he was not only the " best general " and the "ablest diplomatist," but the greatest man among all the great men whom that era of trial brought to the rescue of our country. And when the end came, after four years of conflict, when the triumph seemed complete and the work of saving the Union appeared to be accomplished, it needed only the martyr's crown to add depth of pathos to our memory of Lincoln, and insure him that fame which had been prophesied for him, should he make himself the " emancipator, the liberator. That is a fame worth living for ; ay, more, that is a fame worth dying for, though that death led through the blood of Gethsemane and the agony of the accursed tree. That is a fame which has glory and honor and immortality, and eternal life." The story of the end need hardly be told. On the evening of April 14, 1865, Abraham Lincoln was shot by a half-crazed sympathizer with the South, John Wilkes Booth. The President had gone, by special invitation, to witness a play at Ford's Theatre, and the assassin had no difficulty in gaining entrance to the box, committing the dreadful deed, and leaping to the stage to make his escape. The story of his pursuit and death while resisting arrest is familiar to us all. Mr. Lincoln lingered till the morning, when the little group of friends and relatives, with members of the cabinet, stood with breaking hearts about the death-bed. Sorrow more deep and universal cannot be imagined than enveloped our land on that 15th of April. Throughout the country every household felt the loss as of one of themselves. The honored remains lay for a few days in state at Washington, and then began the funeral journey, taking in backward course almost the route which had been followed four years before, when the newly elected President came to assume his burdens and to lay down his life. Such a pilgrimage of sorrow had never been witnessed by our people. It was followed by the sympathy of the whole world until the loved remains were laid in the APPEARANCE AND CHARACTER. 249 tomb at Springfield. Over the door of the State House, in the city of his home, where his old neighbors took their last farewell, were the lines : — " He left us borne up by our prayers ; He returns embalmed in our tears." "Cities and States," said the great Beecher, "are his pall-bearers, and the cannon speaks the hours with solemn progression. Dead, dead, dead, he yet speaketh. Is Washington dead? Is Hampden dead ! Is any man, that ever was fit to live, dead? Disenthralled of flesh, risen to the unobstructed sphere where passion never comes, he begins his illimitable work. His life is now grafted upon the infinite, and will be fruitful as no earthly life can be. Pass on, thou that hast overcome. Ye people, behold the martyr whose blood, as so many articulate words, pleads for fidelity, for law, for liberty." TRAITS OF HIS CHARACTER. Abraham Lincoln was in every way a remarkable man. Towering above his fellows, six feet four inches in height, his gaunt figure, somewhat stooping, would of itself attract attention. Possessed of gigantic strength, he was diffi- dent and modest in the extreme. The habits of youth, and a natural indifference to such things, made him through life careless of dress. When he came upon the stage at Cooper Institute, in i860, he probably was for the first time discon- certed by his clothing. He had donned a new suit, which seemed not to fit his great limbs, and showed the creases made by close packing in a valise. He imagined that his audience noticed the contrast between his dress and that of William Cullen Bryant and other gentlemen on the stage, and he was well into his address before he could forget it. The expression of his face was sad ; and as the war dragged its slow length along, that sadness deepened. His mind was always tinged with a settled melancholy, an inherited trait, and it is doubtful whether he was ever entirely free from the mental depression which on two occasions almost overwhelmed him. Notwithstanding this, he was the greatest inventor and gatherer of amusing stories known to our public life. He used these stories on every occasion, whether to amuse a chance listener, to enforce a point in a speech, or to divert the mind of an unwelcome questioner. Digni- fied statesmen and ambassadors were astounded when the President interrupted their stilted talk with a story of "a man out in Sangamon County." He opened that meeting of the Cabinet at which he announced his solemn purpose to issue the Emancipation Proclamation by reading aloud a chapter from Artemus Ward. But the joke was always for a purpose. He settled many a weighty question, which hours of argument could not have done so well, by the keen, incisive wit of one of these homely "yarns." His- great Secretary of State, gravely discussing questions of state policy, felt the ground give way '5 250 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. under his feet when the President was "reminded" of a story of a negro preacher. He settled the question of a change of commanding generals by remarking that it was a " bad plan to swap horses in the middle of a stream ; " and continually he lightened his labors and relieved his care by the native wit which could fit to the question of the hour, great or small, a homely illustration which exactly covered the ground. His gift of expression was only equaled by the clearness and firmness of his grasp upon the truths which he desired to convey ; and the beauty of his words, upon many occasions, is only matched by the goodness and purity of the soul from which they sprung. His Gettysburg speech will be remembered as long as the story of the battle for freedom shall be told ; and of his second Inaugu- ral it has been said: "This was like a sacred poem. No Ameri- can President had ever spoken words like these to the American people. America never had a President who found such words in the depth of his heart." These were its closing words, and with them we may fitly close this im- perfect sketch : — " Fondly do we hope, fer- vently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn by the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, 'The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.' With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan ; to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations." ANDRF.W JOHNSON. WILLIAM H. SEWARD, THE STATESMAN AND DIPLOMATIST. HEN we k>ok back over the time of our great Civil War and the decade which preceded it, those years seem prolific of great men. Great questions appealed to our citizens for discussion and settle- ment ; great emergencies arose, fraught with extremest danger to our national life ; but with them arose men divinely endowed with minds and hearts equal to the great demands. Of these "men who saved the nation," none filled at the time a larger place in the public mind, and per- haps none save Lincoln have more fully deserved their fame, thin William H. Seward. There is a sort of fascination about the story of the boy who begins life by running away from his parents' control. When Seward was seventeen years old he found himself at variance with his father about tailors' bills and other vital matters, and leaving Union College, at Schenectady, without the knowledge of his parents, journeyed to Georgia, where he engaged to take charge of a certain Union Academy, at the salary of eight hundred dollars per year. The future statesman was so affected, however, by a letter from his father, depicting the distress of his mother, that he trans- ferred the engagement to a friend and returned to college. William H. Seward was the fourth of a family of six children, and, being born in 1801, at a time when slavery was in process of gradual abolition in New York, his life covered, almost exactly, the period of our country's struggle with that question. In that struggle he was himself to take a leading part. His father, Samuel S. Seward, was a man of some culture, who added to the practice of medicine the varied occupations of farmer, merchant, magistrate, and politician. His mother was in every way a worthy help-meet to her energetic husband, while possessing that softer nature which engaged the affection of her children, as that of their sterner father failed to do. Graduating from college, young Seward determined to enter the law, and 253 254 WILLIAM H. SEWARD. pursued the study, which he had already begun, in a law office in Goshen, and in the city of New York, and again in Goshen. He was admitted to practice in 1822, and immediately formed a partnership for the practice of his profession in the town of Auburn, which continued to be his home. His choice of a location had been influenced by the fact that it was the home of a certain Miss Frances A. Miller, who, when the law had sufficiently smiled upon her young devotee, became Mrs. Seward. The young lawyer readily made a place for himself not only in his profes- sion, but in the social life of the community, and in the local politics. He had OLD NEW YORK MANSION NEAR SEWARD S HOME. been brought up in the political school of Jefferson, but found his opinions so altered by his own study of principles, of men, and of events, that he never cast a vote for the candidates of that party, identifying himself at once with the "National Republicans," and later with the "Anti-Masons," the "Whigs," and so, by natural process, becoming a leading Republican. The reception to Lafayette, in 1825, was a notable event in Auburn, and in this, as in all transac- tions of local importance, Seward took a prominent part. His influence in local politics caused him to be one of a caucus held in 1830, in Albany, to consider measures for widening the field of the influence of the Anti-Masonic party, POLITICS IN NEW YORK. 255 and his tact and ability so impressed his coadjutors as to make him one of the leaders of the party. Here, for the first time, he was brought into that close association with Thurlow Weed which became really a political partnership, and which, for a generation, was to dominate the politics of the State, and to be counted as one of the greatest forces in the nation at large. Under the influence of this coalition, he was, in 1830, elected as the candi- date of the Anti-Masonic party, a member of the State Senate, in which position he acquitted himself with honor, though the collapse of his party prevented a re-election. The organization of the Whig party, however, gave the political firm of Weed & Seward abundant opportunity for the exercise of their talents, and to Seward it brought the nomination for Governor. This so surprised his neighbors in Auburn that some of them of his own party declared that " the State must be in a strange condition if Seward is among its greatest men," — a surprise which may have been quieted by the remark of one of the delegates to the convention : " Gentlemen, I have learned one thing by going to Utica, and that is, that a great man never lives at home." His failure of election brought no real discouragement to Mr. Seward, as the campaign had organized and solidified the new party, and he now devoted himself to building up his law practice, and could write to Weed, declining to be used in the building of any more "political cob-houses." IMPRESSIONS of SLAVERY. In 1835 he drove with Mrs. Seward to the Natural Bridge in Virginia, and we find reflected in his letters the painful impressions of slavery, which confirmed his previous sentiments, and helped to make him the wise, consistent opponent of its extension which he afterward became. A single scene will illustrate this : A cloud of dust comes slowly up the road, from which proceeds a confusion of moaning, weeping, and shouting. Presently it is seen to be caused by ten little naked boys, from six to twelve years old, tied together, two and two, by their wrists, and fastened to a rope, while a tall white man drives the procession by aid of a long whip, watering its hungry members at the horse-trough, and then leaving them to sob themselves to sleep in a shed. These children had been purchased at different plantations, and were being driven to Richmond, to be sold at auction and taken South. Mr. Seward spent the greater part of the years 1836 and 1837 at Westfield, Chautauqua Co., N. Y., in adjusting the difficulties between the Holland Land Company and the settlers in that part of the State, a service in which he was eminently successful and which resulted greatly to his financial benefit. The Whig victory of 1836 brought a revival of Seward's political aspirations, and in 1838 he was elected Governor. The most notable features of his administration were his refusal to deliver to the Virginia authorities three sailors who were charged with secreting an escaping slave, a subsequent dispute with Georgia 256 WILLIAM H. SEWARD. over a similar matter, the abolishing of imprisonment for debt in New York, and the fostering of general education, internal improvements, and foreign immigration. A pleasant anecdote of Governor Seward is to the effect that one Sunday in New York he started out to find an Episcopal church. He entered one near Broadway, to which he had frequently been invited, but no one offered him a seat. Followed by the members of his staff, he traversed the entire length of the church, when, finding a door in the rear wall, he passed quietly out into the churchyard. Some of the, church officers followed the party out, with assur- ances that no offense had been intended, that had the members known who it was seats would have been plenty, and invited their return. The reply was to the effect that Mr. Seward had no desire to visit a church which had a seat for a governor, but none for a stranger. Governor Seward also demonstrated, in a way which will appeal very strongly to the sympathies of this generation, his willingness to depart from time-honored precedent when he was convinced that the precedent was not founded in right principle. In his preparation for the New Year's celebration of 1842 he substituted cold water and lemonade for the punch and wine which had previously been provided ; and this he did not in accordance with his own tastes so much as because he believed that the growing temperance sentiment was entitled to recognition, and that those in authority should set a proper example in such matters. At the close of the year 1842 the Governor retired to private life, having declined to be a candidate for a third term. One feature of his administration is still worthy of notice : he was exceptionally firm in the refusal of pardons to convicted criminals. Listening patiently to every applicant, weighing carefully all the evidence, and devoting days and nights of anxious labor to the study of important cases, he absolutely refused to yield to the pressure of influence, or even to popular opinion, and where no errors were manifest and he could not be convinced that humanity would be the gainer by interfering, he insisted that the course of justice must not be interrupted, and that the judgment of the courts must be fulfilled. In cases, however, where he felt that mercy could be safely extended, it was done, without regard to the previous social standing of the beneficiary or the political influence of his friends. He now devoted himself again to the law, his wide reputation bringing to him important cases in all the higher courts. Entering with much hesitation and distrust of his powers upon cases under the patent laws, he was surprised to find himself unusually successful, and this branch of his practice became not only important but lucrative. The Whig party was torn by dissensions. The war of opinion among its members, together with the conflict of opposing 'ambition among its leaders. UNITED STATES SENATOR. 257 prevented any permanent success, but a season of defeat, with a term out of office, brought its members again to see the necessity of harmony, and the impossibility of success while its prominent men were willing to sacrifice not only the hopes of their fellow-partisans, but the principles of their party, for their own personal and temporary triumph. So the Whigs elected Harrison in 1840, were defeated with Clay in 1844, victorious with Taylor in 1848, and were ready to disappear with Scott in 1852, leaving all that was vital in their organization or principles, to rally to the support of the new party which nominated Fremont in 1856 and elected Lincoln in i860. SEAL CATCIIINC IN ALASKA ELECTION TO THE UNITED STATES SENATE. The success of the Whigs in 1848 made possible the election of Mr. Seward to the Senate, which body he entered two years before Sumner, with whom and Chase and Hale he was to oppose the forces of slavery. Senator Seward is described as a slender, hook-nosed, gray-eyed, homely man, having red hair, a voice harsh and unpleasant, and a manner decidedly awkward, but his speeches were graceful and smooth as well as strong, their style was pure and clear, and it was early noticed that when the Senator from New York arose to speak, the Senate was ready to listen. His speeches are said to have done more than any other one thing to outline a declaration of faith upon which the various groups of anti-slavery men the country over could agree. 258 WILLIAM H. SEWARD. If this be true, it has been too much overlooked in recounting Mr. Seward's claims to greatness. His services as Lincoln's Secretary of State and his suc- cess in steering the country through the stormy times when a mistake would have brought on foreign war, or a wrongly phrased dispatch precipitated a recognition of the Southern Confederacy, have overshadowed what certainly was no less great, the bringing together into a single party, disciplined and united, the widely-differing factions, largely composed of hot-headed fanatics, which in 1850 could hardly be said to be united in anything, so far asunder were they, even in their opposition to slavery. Seward used quotations with great felicity, for his memory was exact and capacious, and his reading had been wide. He never descended to coarse jokes or mere buffoonery, but his speeches as well as his autobiography abound in a keen, dry, delightful humor, which added much to their force, and which makes them still agreeable reading. His invitation to the Southern Senators to come and argue their case openly before the people of the North, and the contrast which he made evident between the freedom with which they might do so, and the rancor and persecution which followed even the mildest expression of anti-slavery sentiments at the South, demonstrated Sumner's proposition that " freedom was national and slavery sec- tional ; " and the way in which the New York Senator laid bare the vicious nature of a cause which thus stifled free speech and hunted an opponent to death could not be more effective. Two phrases of his used in the debates of this period have become historic, his declaration that there was "a higher law than the Con- stitution which regulated the authority of Congress over the national domain, — the law of God and the interests of humanity," and his reference to the "irre- pressible conflict" which could only end in the country becoming all free or en- tirely a slaveholding nation. In all the heated political warfare between 1850 and i860, Mr. Seward bore a prominent part, and so evidently was he the leader of the Republican forces that it was thought that he must necessarily be the party candidate for the presidency. When the convention assembled at Chicago this seemed to the party managers a foregone conclusion, but a variety of causes, personal hostility, local prejudices, and that peculiar qualification, "availability," gave the nomination to Lincoln. Mr. Seward must have been profoundly disappointed, but he made no sign. He cheerfully set to work to promote the success of his party, and made, in the campaign which followed, a series of speeches, which, together with those delivered four years before, form a complete presentation of the anti-slavery case. The South was crying out that the election of Lincoln meant the destruc- tion of the rights and property of that section ; but Seward's speeches proved, if proof were necessary, that this was merely an excuse, put forward by those in favor of secession. GREATNESS AS A DIPLOMAT/ST. 259 Between Lincoln's election and inauguration, Seward was largely instru- mental in checking treason in Buchanan's cabinet, and in securing die country against its dangers. He considered the battle against slavery won by Lincoln's election, and felt convinced that the Republican policy of forbidding its exten- sion would end in its final death ; and in that belief he was willing to wait, to turn his back, for a time, to the all-absorbing question, and to devote all his present energies to conciliation, and to the work of saving the Union. Lincoln's secretary of state. Mr. Seward had early formed a resolution never to accept an office by appointment unless it should seem to him that such a course was absolutely demanded by the welfare of the country. It is easy to believe that it was this reason which induced him to become Lincoln's Secretary of State. He proba- bly came to the office with something of contempt for the awkward, uncultured President, and with the idea that he was to be the real force of the administra- tion, — a sort of " power behind the throne," in whose hands the inexperienced, would-be statesman from the West would be easily controlled and prevented from doing harm. He early found himself mistaken, however, and gladly took the real position to which he had been chosen, that of a faithful counsellor to the great President. Wisely allowed a large liberty in the conduct of his department, the secretary brought to his gigantic task resources as unexpected as was the demand for them. It may be too much to say, as has been said, that during the four years of strife "his brain was pitted against all Europe, and always won," but the questions with which he had to deal had no precedent in their magnitude or their urgency, and frequently none as to the circumstances with which they dealt. Three instances may be mentioned : the Trent affair, the demand for com- pensation on account of damages by privateers fitted out in England, and the French occupation of Mexico. The weeks succeeding the seizure of the Con- federate commissioners who had embarked from the West Indies for England upon an English passenger steamer, the Trent, have been referred to as the darkest period of the war. The country was aflame with patriotic exultation at the intrepidity of Captain Wilkes, and to refuse to surrender the captives at the demand of England seemed certain to involve the distracted country in a war with Great Britain. The clear-headed wisdom of Lincoln, the acuteness of Seward, and the wide knowledge and great influence of Sumner, all were needed to wring victory from the jaws of this apparently certain defeat. The country submitted unwillingly at first, but gradually came to recognize the strength and wisdom of a policy which acknowledged the error that had been made, and in acknowledging it shrewdly called the attention of the British ministry to the fact that it was out of just such violations of international law 260 WILLIAM H. SEWARD. that the War of 1812 arose, and that England had never acknowledged herself in the wrong. Our government could not afford to commit, in 1861, the crimes against which it had protested a half cen- tury before, and Eng- land was left in the attitude of threaten- ing a war to resent the acts of which she had herself been guilty. Mr. Seward lived in Washington in the house occupied in later years by Secre- tary Blaine, and in which the latter died. He surrounded him- self with the degree of luxury which his moderate wealth jus- tified, and filled the place in society which belonged to his posi- tion in the govern- ment and to his com- manding abilities and great intellectual re- sources. When Lin- coln was assassin- ated, the plot included the murder of the Secretary of State. Mr. Seward was ill and confined to his bed, and the assassin seems to have had no difficulty in gain- ing access to his chamber. He was stabbed in several places, particularly in the face, but the bravery of his male nurse prevented his being killed. For days it was questionable whether he would recover, and his face was so injured IDOLS TOTEM, OF ALASKA. THE FREEMAN CASE. 261 that it was difficult to feed him. It was thought best to keep him in ignorance of the fate of Lincoln, but when, with his first returning strength, he saw throucrh his window the White House flag at half-mast, he instantly divined the truth, and, with tears coursing down his scarred cheeks, exclaimed, "The President is dead ! " THE PURCHASE OF ALASKA. Mr. Seward continued to occupy the office of Secretary of State during the presidency of Andrew Johnson, rather leaning to the side of the President in his heated controversy with Congress. The most notable event of this time, aside from the reconstruction of the Southern States, was the purchase from Russia of the territory of Alaska. Secretary Seward was quick to see the value to us of this vast and still little-known territory, and it was almost altogether through his efforts that it became a part of the United States. The great leader had now completed his public service. He spent a year in a journey around the world, being everywhere received with the honor due to his eminence as a man and a statesman. Returning to Auburn, he began to write his autobiography, which he had completed as far as the year 1834, when his death occurred in October, 1872. Opinion will always differ as to the comparative standing and services of great men, but it can never deny to William H. Seward a place among the fore- most. He possessed in a high degree that peculiar faculty of grasping the thought of the average man, which enabled him to organize men into parties and to lead the parties so formed. He was great as a diplomatist, as a states- man, a politician, a lawyer, but he possessed some qualities which constrain us to tender to him our greatest admiration as a man in his relations to his fellows. His love of right, his hatred of injustice in any form, made him the willing servant of the poor and helpless, and his legal learning and skill as an advocate were heartily given in behalf of the suffering poor, from whom he could hope for no reward, and could not be bought at any price for the furtherance of oppres- sion or wrong. In 1846 Mr. Seward had interested himself to secure a fair trial for a negro convict who had murdered a fellow-prisoner. While the case was pending, a whole family was murdered near Auburn, and the murderer, another negro, narrowly escaped lynching. Mr. Seward's course in defending the first guilty man became at once very unpopular, and excitement rose to the highest pitch when, in the absence of any other counsel, he volunteered to serve the second. The accounts of the trial would seem to demonstrate that the man was not responsible for his deeds ; but the mob spirit was aroused, and the demand for his conviction and execution was so universal as to make the part of his volun- teer attorney not only unpleasant in the extreme, but positively dangerous. Mr. Seward felt that he was, in all probability, sacrificing his popularity and 262 WILLIAM H. SEWARD. his influence by the course he was taking, and these were, justly, very dear to him, but he did not hesitate. It is related that Mr. Gladstone, speaking to Charles Sumner of this trial, said that " Mr. Sew- ard's argument in the Free- man case is the greatest forensic effort in the English language." "The greatest?" exclaimed an- other gentleman ; " Mr. Glad- stone, you forget Erskine." " No," was the reply, " I do not forget Erskine ; Mr. Seward's argument is the greatest forensic effort in the language." In the preliminary trial he had referred to the feeling against him, saying that it might very possibly con- tinue throughout his life and make his grave " unhonored, neglected, spurned," but expres- sing a hope that even then some one might be found who would erect over his remains an humble stone, and thereon this epitaph, "He ivas faithful." The wave of madness quickly passed, and Governor Seward found that he had been only at the beginning of his fame, his popularity, and his useful- ness, but the simple epitaph for which he that day expressed a desire is fitly inscribed upon his monument in the cemetery at Auburn. • CHARLES SUMNER. 264 CHARLES SUMNER, THE GREAT ADVOCATE OK FREEDOM, AY, in lofty madness, that you own the sun, the stars, the moon ; but do not say that you own a man, en- dowed with soul to live immortal, when sun and moon ■ and stars have passed away." Such words are now only remarkable for their beauty ; the truth they convey has come to be axiom- atic ; slavery has ceased to be a debatable question ; but when they were uttered they were almost treason, and were sufficient to bring down upon the speaker the concentrated hatred of a whole section of our country, and expression of such sentiments cut him off from sympathy with those who regarded themselves as the best people of his native city, and closed to him social circles of which he had been a proud and honored member. We Americans hold in especial honor those of our great men who, like Lincoln, Grant, Garfield, and a host of others, have attained their eminence with- out the assistance of inherited wealth or culture, and by their own unaided exer- tions. We almost come to think that in our country such " self-made men " possess a monopoly of greatness. To this idea there are many contradictions, but none more complete or more striking than is to be found in the life and works of Charles Sumner. His ancestors, indeed, were farmers, and his mother was a tailoress ; but the Sumners had for generations taken a more or less promi- nent part in public affairs, holding a high place in the esteem of the community. They shared the New England respect for culture, father and son for at least three generations pursuing their studies at Harvard ; and this typical represen- tative of Massachusetts grew to manhood, and took his place among the famous men of his time, without that pinch of poverty which we are rather prone to think a necessary spur. He was the eldest of nine children, received his preliminary education at the famous Boston Latin School, and entered Harvard at the age of fifteen, and 16 26s 266 CHARLES SUMNER. his mother could well boast that " Charles, when a boy, was a good scholar and always diligent in his studies." At college, his habits were quiet, and his time almost entirely devoted to study, though the range of his interest was so wide as to interfere to some extent with the required work, and he never took very high rank in his class. He had few intimate friends, though he enjoyed social life ; and it is typical of the man that in college discussions and literary work he always took the serious, the earnest point of view. The boy was father to the man ; and impurity of speech or conduct was impossible to him then as always. After leaving college he spent a year in further reading and study, slowly making up his mind to enter the profession of law. In his professional studies Sumner distinguished himself by the thoroughness of his reading and the accuracy and wide range of the knowledge thus acquired, though his devotion was rather to the principles and philosophy of the law than to the knowledge necessary for its practice. His association with the famous Judge Story at this period did much to develop this tendency, and he planned for himself a career much like that of his beloved friend and instructor, which, as is so frequently true of youthful programs, the force of circumstances compelled him to abandon for a course which led, by other paths, to honors even higher than those he coveted. He began the practice of law in Boston, and devoted himself earnestly to it. Many of its phases were not congenial to him, but he accepted any honor- able work in the line of his profession, drawing up papers, taking testimony as commissioner, assisting as junior counsel in some important cases, and, as he once laughingly told a friend, even found it within the line of his professional duty to write a love letter for an illiterate client, — a letter so tenderly expressed as to draw tears from the eyes of the lovelorn swain, though we are not informed . of its effect upon the fair object of his affections. He early began to draw around him a circle of closely-attached friends, — those who already filled places of large usefulness, and many of whose names have since become household words. He was intimately associated with Judge Story and Professor Greenleaf, reporting the judicial decisions of the former, assisting both in the preparation of their books, and taking their places in the conduct of the Harvard Law School. He was one of the editors of the 'jurist, to which he contributed many articles on legal topics of importance, and articles by him were occasionally found in the pages of the North Ameri- can Review and other leading periodicals. He greatly enjoyed social inter- course, and for many years " The Five of Clubs," an informal organization composed of Sumner, his partner, Hillard, Longfellow, Felton, afterward president of Harvard, and Henry R. Cleveland, used to meet almost weekly for discussion and the enjoyment of their close and unusual fellowship. He HIS VISIT TO EUROPE. 267 counted among his friends Francis Lieber, Chancellor Kent, Chief Justice Marshall, Choate, Clay, Calhoun, Webster; every one acknowledged his learning, his ability, every one prophesied great things of him and for him ; but his law practice was not large and the occasion seemed lacking which should arouse his enthusiasm and call forth his energies. DISTINGUISHED RECEPTION IN EUROPE. He had long desired to visit Europe, and in December, 1837, he sailed tor Havre. He spent three years in France, Germany, Italy, and Great Britain, borrowing the five thousand dollars which he expended in this time. In France, Italy, and Germany he applied himself with enthusiasm, first, to the study of the language and literature, and then of society, and especially of the law and its administration. In England he was accorded a reception the like of which no other American, previously unknown abroad, has probably enjoyed. Letters from fudge Story and other distinguished Americans opened the way, and his great and extensive learning, personal dignity, and high character, with his intense interest in all the phases of English life, and particularly in the adminis- tration of English law, attracted first the notice, and then the friendship of the most eminent men, who vied with each other in showing" him attention and in opening to him opportunities for seeing and knowing everybody and everything worth seeing and knowing. The ten months that he spent in England were filled with calls and visits, receptions, breakfasts, dinners, and balls. He visited at their country seats Brougham, Sydney Smith, Jeffrey ; saw Wordsworth and Carlyle at their own residences ; constantly met Macaulay, Hallam, Harriet Martineau, Lockhart, " Barry Cornwall ; " spent a day at Windsor Castle, the guest of the household, and partook of the Lord Mayor's banquet at Guildhall, owing his invitation to Lord Denman, and being conveyed thither by Sir Frederick Pollock in his carriage. He writes, December 5, 1838: "To-night my invitations were to dinner at Brougham's, Sir Robert Inglis's, Mr. Justice Littledale's, and Mr. Kenyon's ; at the latter place to meet Rogers and Southey. I dined with Brougham, as his invitation came first. To-morrow I dine with the Political Economy Club, where I shall meet Senior, John Mill, McCulloch, Spring Rice, Lord Lansdowne, etc. On the next day I commence my pilgrim- age to Oxford, where I pass four days, and those four days are engaged : first, to Sir Charles Vaughan, at All Souls ; second, to my friend Ingham, M. P., at Oriel ; third, to Dr. Hampden, at Christ Church ; fourth, to Wortley, at Merton. I then go to Cambridge, where my first day is engaged to Whewell, etc." He heard the Queen's speech at the opening of Parliament, having " perhaps the best place occupied by a person not in court dress," and standing immediately in front of Prince Louis Bonaparte ; and in the evening, in the House of Lords, where Lord Holland had placed him on the steps of the throne,. he listened 268 CHARLES SUMNER. while the Lord Chancellor read the speech to the House, and for two hours and a half to Brougham's masterly and eloquent speech, "the brimful house inter- rupting him with vociferous applause, and old Wellington nodding his head and adding his cheer." He wrote to Judge Story sketches based upon personal acquaintance of all the leading barristers in England, and of the judges of the different courts, having known them intimately not only in London, but upon the different circuits. He was frequently invited to sit with the judges, usually preferring to be in the front row of barristers ; and one reason for this remarkable courtesy may be traced in the wonderful knowledge he displayed of English as well as American jurisprudence. This may be illustrated by an incident : On one occa- sion, in Westminster Hall, during the progress of a trial, a point arose for which no precedent occurred to the Lord Chief Justice, who asked Sumner whether it was covered by any American decisions. " No, your lordship," he replied, "but this point has been decided in your lordship's own court," men- tioning the case. Sumner returned to America in 1840, not yet thirty years of age, but possessed of an acquaintance with leading men in England, France, Germany, and Italy, with an intimate knowledge of the social life and political condition of those countries, which has probably never been acquired by any other American in the same length of time or at his time of life, and which was no small part of his preparation for the work he was to do. During the next five years he devoted himself to the law, without succeeding in building up an extensive practice, but taking a leading part in every public movement in behalf of educa- tion, prison reform, etc., occasionally writing for the North American Review and frequently for professional journals, and becoming more and more deeply interested in the great warfare against slavery. ORATIONS AGAINST WAR AND SLAVERY.' Early in 1845 he was invited to deliver the annual Fourth of July oration in Boston. This was the first occasion on which he spoke to a large popular audience, and he prepared for it his address upon " The True Grandeur of Nations." It marked him at once as a public man, and is more widely known than any of his other writings. Its denunciation of the war spirit was exceed- ingly offensive to a large portion of his audience, and to most men in official life ; but its publication brought him a shower of admiring and congratulatory letters from many parts of the country and from England. Although all cannot agree entirely with its conclusions, many thousands of copies have been sold, and it still holds its place as an American classic. During the following five years he became more deeply absorbed in the slavery question, and in 1850 addressed the meeting in Faneuil Hall, called to ELECTION TO THE SENATE. 269 protest against the Fugitive Slave Law, introducing in his speech an allusion to a painting, by a famous Venetian artist, of "Saint Mark descending from the skies in headlong fury " and breaking " the manacles of a slave in the very pres- ence of the judge who decreed his fate." " Should Massachusetts," exclaimed the orator, "hereafter in an evil hour be desecrated by any such decree, may the good Evangelist once more descend with valiant arm to break the manacles of the slave." A copy of the painting used afterward to hang in Mr. Sumner's dining-room, and he was accustomed to say, "That picture made me senator." Just at this juncture it became possible for the anti-slavery men of Massachu- setts to form a coalition which sent Sumner to the United States Senate, a result due in part to the felicity of this address, but in far greater measure to the untir- ing energy, political foresight, and diplomatic skill of Henry Wilson. Sumner had never taken an active part in political matters, and had never filled a public office ; and he entered the Senate at a time when many leaders of thought would have agreed with Senator Benton, who said to him, "You come upon the stage too late, sir ; the great issues are all settled." Three other senators, Seward, Chase, and Hale, were united in purpose with Sumner, and were destined to take a large part in proving that the "great issue " of slavery had not been " settled " by the dishonest compromises of the previous decades. Sumner's attitude is well indicated by Theodore Parker's remark in congratulating him upon his election : " You once told me you were not in politics, but in morals ; now I hope you will show morals in politics." His impatient constituents were disappointed and dissatisfied that he did not find an early opportunity to make in the Senate a great speech on the slavery question. The session was almost closing when he finally secured the opportunity, and then he spoke for nearly four hours in support of the doctrine, entirely new in Congress, that freedom was national, and slavery "in every WKIIN 111 I; 1 I 270 CHARLES SUMNER. respect sectional." "This is the first time in the course of my life," was the remark of a prominent senator, " that I have listened to the whole of an aboli- tion speech. I did not know it was possible that I could endure a speech for over three hours upon the subject of the abolition of slavery. But this oration of the senator from Massachusetts has been so handsomely embellished with poetry, both Latin and English, so full of classical allusions and rhetorical flourishes, as to make it much more palatable than I supposed it could have been made." At the next session of Congress began the great parliamentary struggle over the Kansas-Nebraska question, which was to end only by merging into the war of the rebellion. The turmoil in Congress and throughout the country was of a character almost inconceivable in these quieter times. The enforcement of the Fugitive Slave law was exasperating the North, and resistance to it drove the pro-slavery men fairly mad. "THE CRIME AGAINST KANSAS." For a considerable time Sumner held no place on any committee of the Senate, that body having taken the extraordinary course of voting that he " was outside any healthy political organization," and was not, therefore, entitled to share in its councils. This was due to his fearless attitude, his persistence, and the unassailable logic of his many speeches upon the great topic of the day. He was probably the first great Northerner who could successfully oppose the hot, abusive speech of the Southern advocates of slavery. His coolness, his great learning, his sense of superiority, and his knowledge of his own high purpose, enabled him to throw into his words and into his manner an overwhelming con- tempt and scorn which heated the furnace of Southern hatred seven times hotter even than it was wont to be heated. In this sort of excited discussion the time went on, bringing the crisis in 1856. In May of that year Sumner spoke for two days upon "The Crime against Kansas." The speech has been called "the most signal combination of oratorical splendor that has ever been wit- nessed in that hall," while an opponent declared it "the most un-American and unpatriotic that ever grated on the ears of the Senate." The speech was in large part devoted to a castigation of Senator Butler of South Carolina, whose argu- ments it refuted, and whom the speaker scornfully alluded to in many offensive figures and illustrations. The Southerners were driven to desperation. They had put Sumner outside the pale of gentlemen, and therefore could not chal- lenge him, and it was left for Preston Brooks, a relative of Senator Butler and a member of the House of Representatives, to devise a plan for chastising him. Accompanied by a number of friends, he entered the Senate chamber, approached Sumner, who was writing at his desk, and, with a gutta-percha cane, struck him blow after blow upon the head. His position at his desk prevented resistance or escape, and Brooks was able to safely walk away, leav- RETURN AFTER THE BROOKS ASSAULT. 271 ing his victim lying senseless and bloody upon the floor. The deed aroused universal horror in the North, and it is one of the astonishing facts of the time that it seemed to excite universal commendation in the South. Brooks became a social lion, and his praise filled the Southern newspapers. His injuries necessitated Sumner's absence from the Senate for four years, during which time the Massachusetts Legislature allowed his seat in the Senate to remain unfilled. He visited Europe twice, gradually recovering his strength after heroic treatment at the hands of Dr. Brown-Sequard. During the second of these European journeys he began the collection of bric-a-brac, which became a passion with him, and which converted his Washington residence into a veri- table museum of the fine arts. Mr. Sumner's return to the Senate was marked by a great speech upon the same general subject as that which resulted in his prolonged ab- sence, the admission of Kansas, though the proposition now was to admit her as a free State. He took an ac- tive part in the Lincoln and Hamlin campaign, but was greatly disap- pointed that the new administration did not assume a more radical position upon the sub- ject of slavery, though he took a large share in perfecting every great measure not only then, but throughout the war. " It was his part to discover constitutional authority and legal or political precedent, and his mission to keep the popular heart fired with such, enthusiasm as would fur- nish a strong support to the government." He was made chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, a position for which his knowledge of European matters and his extraordinary familiarity with constitutional history peculiarly fitted him, and in which he rendered distinguished service, being in constant consultation with Lincoln and Seward, and frequently making use of his per- sonal friendship with English and French statesmen. Throughout the war Lincoln was too slow and Seward too cautious for the enthusiastic senator, who could not see any expediency or propriety in any course except that outlined by what he believed absolute right. He was con- IIIE VACANT SEAT IN' THE SENATE, DRAPED IN BLACK. 272 CHARLES SUMNER. tinually opposed to the measures adopted concerning the negro and reconstruc- tion, and frequently to the foreign policy ; but, fortunately for the nation, the President and his great minister knew how to deal with the no less great chairman, and they constantly succeeded in making use of his vast resources without antagonizing him, — in fact, allowing him to believe, in many cases,, that they were adopting his policy and were governed by his advice. He was, indeed, consulted at every step, but he was so sensitive of temper, and so impatient of opposition, or even of a difference of opinion, that it required the greatest tact for those who were responsible in the conduct of affairs to keep him loyally working with them. " Don't I get along well with Sumner? " asked Lincoln ; " he thinks he manages me." So poor an opinion did Sumner have of the great man whom he so thoroughly misunderstood that he joined in the intrigue to make Chase the Republican candidate for President in 1864, and is even said to have wished that the ticket, Lincoln and Johnson, might have been reversed, and Johnson made President. How grievous was his mistake he was to learn. Lincoln and Sumner differed very radically as to proper measures for the reconstruction of the Southern States. So wide was this difference, that Sumner was willing to defeat in the last days of the session, by the objectionable method of resolutely talking on until it was withdrawn, a bill for re-organizing the Louisiana government in which Lincoln was much interested. It was generally reported that this action had caused a breach of friendly relations between them, something which Sumner's touchy nature would have rendered unavoidable had he been dealing with one less willing to sink all considerations of self in labor for the general good. The stories of the estrangement were definitely contradicted by their appearing together at the inaugural ball, Sumner going at the personal invitation of the President. AFTER THE WAR. After the assassination of the President, Sumner's confidence in Johnson soon gave way to suspicion and distrust, and so fully was this feeling recipro- cated that the President described Davis, Toombs, Slidell, Thaddeus Stevens, Wendell Phillips, and Sumner as equally their country's enemies. The quarrel between Congress and the Executive hastened to its culmination. Secretary Stanton was suspended by the President and reinstated by the Senate, again ordered to vacate, and refused to obey. Sumner's attitude in this matter, as well as the terse style of his informal correspondence, is well illustrated by his note : — My Dear Stanton, — Stick ! Ever sincerely yours, C. S. HIS COURSE IN OPPOSITION. 27$ He actively favored the impeachment of Johnson, and in the Senate, sitting as a high court of judgment, labored earnestly for a verdict of "guilty," and hotly resented the action of those Republicans who prevented, by a single vote, such a conclusion. But his relations with Grant were hardly more satisfactory than with Johnson. Few men have, as Lincoln had, the power of understanding and sympathizing with a very wide range of differing characters, and Grant and Sumner utterly failed to comprehend each other's singleness of mind and right- ness of purpose. So complete did this misunderstanding become that, by the time our relations with England were adjusted and the High Joint Commission began its sittings in Washington, there was no longer any inter- course between the President or Secretary Fish and Mr. Sumner, and the deposing of the latter from his position as chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs seemed, at the opening of the next Congress, a necessity. In perfecting the measures concerning reconstruction and the altered position of the negro Mr. Sumner took a leading part. He was strongly opposed to the thirteenth and fourteenth amend- ments to the Constitution, upon the ground that they were un- necessary, though he finally changed his position sufficiently to give them a lukewarm sup- port. The fifteenth amendment, guaranteeing equal rights to all men without distinction, might seem to be the consummation of his life's work, but he opposed it upon the same ground as the others, and finally voted against it. After the close of the war, Mr. Sumner turned his attention to the securing of civil rights to the freed and recently enfranchised negroes. Measures for this purpose he advocated on all occasions, keeping the subject in mind until the very last, when almost his dying speech was addressed to Judge Hoar : " Do not let the Civil Rights Bill fail." Upon the opening of the Forty-second Con- gress, he offered a resolution directing " that the names of battles with fellow- citizens shall not be continued in the Army Register or placed on the regimental JAMES BUCHANAN. 274 CHARLES SUMNER. colors of the United States." This proposition greatly offended a large number of his friends, and called forth the formal censure of the Massachusetts Legis- lature, much to his mortification. The resolution was doubtless instigated, as was suggested in the preamble, mainly by a desire to efface the memory of past differences and to remove every occasion for harsh feeling. The action of the Legislature was, two years later, "rescinded and annulled," and information of this fact reached Mr. Sumner just in time to soothe the last days of his life. He died in Washington, of heart disease, March n, 1874. It remains to add a few words as to some personal facts. Charles Sumner • united to those qualities of mind and heart which made him so intensely loved by his friends and so conspicuously useful as a public servant, a personal appear- ance and carriage which added materially to his attractiveness and gave additional force to his public appearances. He was over six feet in height, and of commanding presence, dignified, grandly courteous, uniformly kind in his address. With this he combined a transparent and simple-minded vanity and a peculiar lack of humor, described by Dana in saying : " Poor Sumner, he can't take a joke of any kind ; he is as literal as a Scotch guideboard." There was also in his constitution a peculiar inability to recognize some of his own failings. He always regarded himself as the most forgiving and the most moderate of men, and used in later years to ask what there was in his speech of 1856 to excite the hostility of Senator Butler's friends, — a speech whose bitter sarcasm and excoriating language could not but cut to the quick, however it might be justified by the facts. No man was ever better loved, and it was those who knew him most intimately who were most closely attached ; but his married life, which began only in 1866, when he was rapidly approaching threescore years, endured less than a year, though a formal divorce was not obtained until six years later. But matters purely personal concern us little. Sumner will live in the public mind as the great American who astounded a pro-slavery Congress by the declaration that freedom was national, slavery sectional ; as one who, not so much counting the cost as absolutely oblivious to it, threw into his advocacy of the cause of the oppressed an erudition which laid under tribute the litera- tures of all ages and all civilized peoples, a knowledge of history, and an acquaintance with men unequaled among his contemporaries, and a personal force and commanding presence which made him " the finest specimen of a man seen in Congress since Daniel Webster." His remains were escorted to Boston by the customary Congressional committee, and laid in the beautiful cemetery of Mount Auburn. " His undy- ing fame the Muse of History had already taken into her keeping." >~^ MAIN BUILDING OF THE CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION, OPENED BY PRESIDENT GRANT IN 1S76. ULYSSES S. GRANT, THE HERO OE THE CIVIL WAR. HE history of the War for the Union ought to forever set at rest the idea that the day of heroes is past — that there are no longer great men to be found in occasions of su- JHL ¥'$*, ■ preme nerd. Never was a great nation seemingly mure F~~* l |^./ '' helpless than the United States when Lincoln was inaugu- rated. Without army or navy, a government honeycombed with treason and apparently falling to pieces, a weak and nerveless administration giving place to one made up of new and untried men, a people without unity of mind or pur- pose, and not knowing whom to trust, — this was the situa- tion which loyal men faced with sinki'ng hearts. Yet only ten days later, when the boom of guns in Charleston harbor echoed over the North, all was changed as in the twinkling of an eye. At the call of the new President for aid, it seemed as though armed men sprang from the ground. And among them were not only soldiers, but commanders, — the men who were needed to organize and drill these hosts, to convert them into a great army, and lead them on to victory. When the war broke out, Ulysses S. Grant was working for his father and brother, who carried on a leather and saddlery business in Galena, Illinois. His life had been, up to that time, a failure. Educated at West Point, he had gradu- ated with a record not quite up to the average of his class, and' was distin- guished only as a fine horseman. He had, indeed, won credit and promotion in 278 ULYSSES S. GRANT. the Mexican War; but in 1854 he resigned from the army, with a record not entirely blameless, and went with his wife and two children to her former home at St. Louis. He was absolutely penniless, and without trade or profession. His wife had received from her father a farm of seventy acres and three slaves. To this farm Grant went with his little family. He worked hard. He raised wheat and potatoes, and cut up trees into cordwood, and tried to make a living selling the produce of the farm in St. Louis. In this he was not success- ful. He then tried auctioneering and collecting bills, and made an effort in the real estate business. Finally he went to Galena, where he entered his father's store, his record up to that time being one of vain struggle, failure, and poverty. Such was the man who was suddenly to become the greatest of the Union com- manders, and to be regarded by the American people as one of the chief instru- ments in saving the life of the nation. But occasion does not form a man's character anew ; it simply calls out the qualities which are in him, perhaps unknown or unperceived. It is not hard now to see in the acts of Grant's youth how the boy was " father of the man." When only twelve years old he was one day sent with a team into the woods for a load of logs, which were to be loaded on the trucks by the lumbermen. No men were to be found ; nevertheless, by using the strength of the horses, he succeeded in loading the logs himself. When he returned, his father asked where the men were. "I don't know, and I don't care," said the plucky boy; "I got the load without them." In such acts we get a glimpse of the boldness, the readiness of resource, and especially the dogged determination, which afterward made him such a power in the war. " Wherever Grant is, I have noticed that things move" said President Lincoln. When, before leaving Missouri for the Mexican frontier, Grant rode to the home of Miss Julia Dent, four miles from where he was stationed, to ask her hand in marriage, he had to cross a swollen stream, in which his uniform was thoroughly soaked. Bound on such an errand, most men would have turned back ; but Grant rode on, borrowed a dry suit from his future brother-in-law, and accomplished the business in hand. Well might his wife say, in her quaint fashion, " Mr. Grant is a very obstinate man." BREAKING OUT OF THE WAR. On April 1 5, 1 860, the telegraph flashed over the country President Lincoln's call for seventy-five thousand volunteers. That evening the court-house in Galena was packed with an excited crowd, women as well as men. Grant, being known as a West Pointer, was called upon to preside. This was not the kind of duty for which he was prepared, but, he says, "With much embarrass- ment and some prompting, I made out to announce the object of the meeting." Volunteers were called for, a company was raised upon the spot, and the CAPTURE OF FORT DONELSON. 279 officers voted for. Before the balloting began Grant declined the captaincy, but promised to help all he could, and to be found in the service, in some position. In August, 1 86 1, Grant was made a brigadier-general, and put in command of the district of Southeast Missouri, including Western Kentucky and Cairo, Illinois, a point of great importance at the junction of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers. His first battle was at Belmont, Missouri, about twenty miles below Cairo, which he won after four hours' hard fighting. After the battle the Con- federates received reinforcements, and there was danger that Grant's troops would be cut off from the boats by which they had come. The men perceived the situation, and exclaimed, " We are surrounded ! " "Well," was Grant's characteristic reply, "we must cut our way out, then, as we cut our way in." And they did. The autumn and winter of 1861-62 was a time of weary waiting, which severely tried the spirit of the nation, impatient for action. Attention was chiefly concentrated upon the Potomac, where McClellan was organizing and drilling that splendid army which another and a greater commander was to lead to final victory. While the only response to the people's urgent call, " On to Rich- mond ! " was the daily report, "All quiet on the Potomac," Grant, an obscure and almost unknown soldier, was pushing forward against Forts Henry and Donelson, eleven miles apart, on the Tennessee and the Cumberland, near where these rivers cross the line dividing Kentucky and Tennessee. He had obtained from his commander, Halleck, a reluctant consent to his plan for attacking these important posts by a land force, co-operating at the same time with a fleet of gunboats under Commodore Foote. It was bitter cold. Amid sleet and snow the men pushed along the muddy roads, arriving at Fort Henry just as it was captured, after a severe bombardment, by the gunboats. Grant immediately turned his attention to Fort Donelson, which had been reinforced by a large part of the garrison which had escaped from Fort Henry. It was held by Generals Buckner, Floyd, and Pillow, with 20,000 men. For three days a fierce attack was kept up ; and Buckner, who, having been at West Point with Grant, doubtless knew that he was "a very obstinate man," sent on the morning of the fourth day, under a flag of truce, to ask what terms of sur- render would be granted. In reply Grant sent that brief, stern message which thrilled throughout the North, stirring the blood in every loyal heart : — " No TERMS BUT UNCONDITIONAL AND IMMEDIATE SURRENDER CAN BE ACCEPTED. I PROPOSE TO MOVE IMMEDIATELY UPON YOUR WORKS." Buckner protested against the terms ; but he wisely accepted them, and surrendered unconditionally. With Fort Donelson were surrendered 15,000 men, 3000 horses, sixty-five cannon, and a great quantity of small arms and DECORATION DAY. DARK DAYS OF 1862-63. 281 military stores. It was the first great victory for the North, and the whole country was electrified. Grant's reply to Buckner became a household word, and the people of the North delighted to call him "Unconditional Surrender Grant." He was made a major-general, his commission bearing date of Feb- ruary 16, 1862, the day of the surrender of Fort Donelson. THE BATTLE OF SHILOH. The next great battle fought by Grant was that of Shiloh, in Mississippi, — " the Waterloo of the Western campaign," as it has been called. In this battle Sherman was Grant's chief lieutenant, and the two men tested each other's qualities in the greatest trial to which either had been exposed. The battle was one of the turning-points of the war. The Confederates, under Albert Sidney Johnston, one of their best generals, attacked the Union forces at Shiloh Church. All day Sunday the battle raged. The brave Johnston was killed ; but the Union forces were driven back, and at night their lines were a mile in the rear of their position in the morning. Grant came into his headquarters tent that evening, when, to any but the bravest and most sanguine, the battle seemed lost, and said : "Well, it was tough work to-day, but we will beat them out of their boots to-morrow." "When his staff and the generals present heard this," writes one of his officers, " they were as fully persuaded of the result of the morrow's battle as when the victory had actually been achieved." The next day, after dreadful fighting, the tide turned in favor of the Union forces. In the afternoon, Grant himself led a charge against the Confederate lines, under which they broke and were driven back. Night found the Union army in possession of the field, after one of the severest battles of the war. "The path to glory," says a wise Frenchman, "is not a way of flowers." After the battle of Shiloh, Grant was bitterly assailed as a "butcher," as "incom- petent," and as being a " drunkard," — a charge which was utterly false. When President Lincoln was told that Grant "drank too much whiskey," he replied, with characteristic humor, that he wished he knew what brand General Grant used, as he would like to send some to the other Union generals. The abuse of which he was the object did not seem to trouble Grant. The more other people's tongues wagged about him, the more he held his own. The winter of 1862-63, the second year of the war, was full of gloom for the North. The Confederate cause was farther advanced than at the beginning of the war. Many loyal people despaired of ever saving the Union. Although President Lincoln himself never lost faith in the final triumph of the national cause, the cabinet and Congress were uneasy and anxious. The fall elections went against the party which advocated the carrying on of the war. Voluntary enlistments had ceased, and it became necessary to resort to the draft. Unless a great success came to restore the spirit of the North, it seemed probable that 282 ULYSSES S. GRANT. the draft would be resisted, that men would begin to desert, and that the power to capture and punish deserters would be lost. In a word, it seemed that a great success was absolutely necessary to prevent the Union army and the Union cause from going to pieces. It was Grant's conviction that the army must at all hazards " go forward to a decisive victory." THE VICKSBURG CAMPAIGN. On a high bluff on the east bank of the Mississippi river, which pursues a winding course through its fertile valley, stood the town of Vicksburg. From this point a railroad ran to the eastward, and from the opposite shore another ran westward through the rich, level country of Louisiana. The town was strongly fortified, and from its elevation it commanded the river in both directions. So long as it was held by the Confederate armies, the Mississippi could not be opened to navigation ; and the line of railroad running east and west kept com- munication open between the western and eastern parts of the Confederacy. How to capture Vicksburg was a great problem ; but it was one which General Grant determined should be solved. For eight months Grant worked at this problem. He formed plan after plan, only to be forced to give them up. Sherman made a direct attack at the only place where it was practicable to make a landing, and failed. Weeks were spent in cutting a canal across the neck of a peninsula formed by a great bend in the river opposite Vicksburg, so as to bring the gunboats through without undergoing the fire of the batteries ; but a flood destroyed the work. Mean- while great numbers of the troops were ill with malaria or other diseases, and many died. There was much clamor at Washington to have Grant removed, but the President refused. He had faith in Grant, and determined to give him time to work out the great problem, — how to get below and in the rear of Vicks- burg, on the Mississippi river. This was at last accomplished. On a dark night the gunboats were suc- cessfully run past the batteries, although every one of them was more or less damaged by the guns. The troops were marched across the peninsula, and then taken over the river ; and on April 30th his whole force was landed on the Mississippi side, on high ground, and at a point where he could reach the enemy. The railroad running east from Vicksburg connected it with Jackson, the State capital, which was an important railway centre, and from which Vicksburg was supplied. Grant made his movements with great rapidity. He fought in quick succession a series of battles by which Jackson and several other towns were captured ; then, turning westward, he attacked the forces of Pemberton, drove him back into Vicksburg, cut off his supplies, and laid siege to the place. The eyes of the whole nation were now centred on Vicksburg. Over two hundred guns were brought to bear upon the place, besides the batteries of the SURRENDER OF VICKSBURG. 283 gunboats. In default of mortars, guns were improvised by boring out tough logs, strongly bound with iron bands, which did good service. The people of Vicksburg lived in cellars and caves to escape the shot and shell. Food of all kinds became very scarce; Hour was sold at five dollars a pound, molasses at twelve dollars a gallon. The endurance and devotion of the inhabitants were wonderful. But the siege was so rigidly and relentlessly maintained that there could be but one end. On July 3d, at ten o'clock, flags of truce were displayed on the works, and General Pemberton sent a message to Grant asking for an armistice, and proposing that commissioners be appointed to arrange terms of capitulation. ( )n the afternoon of the same day, Grant and Pemberton met under an oak between the lines of the two armies and arranged the terms of surrender. It took three hours for the Confederate army to march out and stack their arms. There were surrendered 31,000 men, 250 cannon, and a great quantity of arms and munitions of war. But the moral advantage to the Union cause was far beyond any material gain. The fall of Vicksburg carried with it Port Hudson, a few miles below, which surrendered to Banks a few days later, and at last the great river was open from St. Louis to the sea. The news of this great victory came to the North on the same clay with that •of Gettysburg, July 4, 1863. The rejoicing over the great triumph is indescri- bable. A heavy load was lifted from the minds of the President and cabinet. The North took heart, and resolved again to prosecute the war with energy. The name of Grant was on every tongue. It was everywhere felt that he was the foremost man of the campaign. He was at once made a major-general in the regular army, and a gold medal was awarded him by Congress. Early in September, 1863, General Grant paid a visit to General Banks, in New Orleans, and while there had a narrow escape from death. Riding one day in the suburbs, his horse took fright at a locomotive, and came in collision with a carriage, throwing himself down and falling on his rider. From this severe fall Grant was confined to his bed for several weeks. On his return to Vicksburg, he was allowed but a brief period to rest and recover from his accident. He was invested with the command of the consolidated Departments of the South and West, as the Military Division ot the Mississippi, and at once moved to Eastern Tennessee. LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN AND MISSIONARY RIDGE. The town of Chattanooga, an important railway centre, lies in the beauti- ful valley of the Tennessee river, near where it crosses the line into Alabama. Directly south the front of Lookout Mountain rises abruptly to a height of two thousand feet above the sea level, affording a magnificent view which extends into six different States, and of the Tennessee river for thirty miles of its wind- ing course. Two miles to the east, running from north to south, is the crest of 17 284 ULYSSES S. GRANT. Missionary Ridge, five hundred feet high, — the site of schools and churches established long ago by Catholic missionaries among the Cherokee Indians. Both Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge were occupied by the army of General Bragg, and his commanding position, strengthened by fortifications, was cpnsidered impregnable. The disastrous battle of Chickamauga, in September, 1863, had left the Union armies in East Tennessee in a perilous situation. General Thomas, in Chattanooga, was hemmed in by the Confederate forces, and his men and horses were almost starving. The army was on quarter rations. Ammunition was almost exhausted, and the troops were short of clothing. Thousands of army mules, worn out and starved, lay dead along the miry roads. Chattanooga, UNITED STATES MINT, NEW ORLEANS occupied by the Union army, was too strongly fortified for Bragg to take it by storm, but every day shells from his batteries upon the heights were thrown into the town. This was the situation when Grant, stiff and sore from his accident, arrived at Nashville, on his way to direct the campaign in East Ten- nessee. " Hold Chattanooga at all hazards. I will be there as soon as possible," he telegraphed from Nashville to General Thomas. " We will hold the town until we starve," was the brave reply. Grant's movements were rapid and decisive. He ordered the troops con- centrated at Chattanooga ; he fought a battle at Wauhatchie, in Lookout Valley, COMMANDER OF ALL THE ARMIES. 285 which broke Bragg's hold on the river below Chattanooga and shortened the Union line of supplies ; and by his prompt and vigorous preparation for effec- tive action he soon had his troops lifted out of the demoralized condition in which they had sunk after the defeat of Chickamauga. One month after his arrival were fought the memorable battles of Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge, by which the Confederate troops were driven out of Tennessee, their hold on the country broken up, and a large number of prisoners and guns captured. Nothing in the history of war is more inspiring than the impetuous bravery with which the Union troops fought their way up the steep mountain sides, bristling with cannon, and drove the Confederate troops out of their works at the point of the bayonet. An officer of General Bragg's staff afterward declared that they considered their position perfectly impregnable, and that when they saw the Union troops, after capturing their rifle-pits at the base, coming up the craggy mountain toward their headquarters, they could scarcely credit their eyes, and thought that every man of them must be drunk. History has no parallel for sublimity and picturesqueness of effect, while the conse- quences, which were the division of the Confederacy in the East, were inesti- mable. After Grant's success in Tennessee, the popular demand that he should be put at the head of all the armies became irresistible. In Virginia the magnifi- cent Army of the Potomac, after two years of fighting, had been barely able to turn back from the North the tide of Confederate invasion, and was apparently as far as ever from capturing Richmond. In the West, on the other hand, Grant's campaigns had won victory after victory, had driven the opposing forces out of Missouri, Arkansas, Kentucky, and Tennessee, had taken Vicksburg, opened up the Mississippi, and divided the Confederacy in both the West and the East. In response to the call for Grant, Congress revived the grade of lieutenant-general, which had been held by only one commander, Scott, since the time of Washington ; and the hero of Fort Donelson, Yicksbure, and Chatta- nooga was nominated by the President, confirmed by the Senate, and placed in command of all the armies of the nation. The relief of President Lincoln at having such a man in command was very great. "Grant is the first general I've, had," he remarked to a friend. "You know how it has been with all the rest. As soon as I put a man in command of the army, he would come to me with a plan, and about as much as say, ' Now, I don't believe I can do it, but if you say so I'll try it on,' and so put the responsibility of success or failure upon me. They all wanted me to be the general. Now, it isn't so with Grant. He hasn't told me what his plans are. I don't know, and I don't want to know. I am glad to find a man who can go ahead without me. "When any of the rest set out on a campaign," added the President, "they 286 ULYSSES S. GRANT. would look over matters and pick out some one thing they were short of, and which they knew I couldn't give them, and tell me they couldn't hope to win unless they had it ; and it was most generally cavalry. Now, when Grant took hold, I was waiting to see what his pet impossibility would be, and I reckoned it would be cavalry, of course, for we hadn't enough horses to mount what men we had. There were fifteen thousand men up near Harp- er's Ferry, and no horses to put them on. Well, the other day Grant sends to me about those very men, just as I ex- i pected : but what he wanted to know was whether he could make infantry of them or disband them. He doesn't ask impossibilities of me, and he's the first general I've had that didn't." With the army thoroughly reorganized, Grant crossed the Rapidan on the 4th of May ; on the 5th and 6th crippled the prin- cipal Confederate army, com- manded by Lee, in the terrible battles of the Wilderness; flanked him on the left ; fought at Spott- sylvania Court House on the 7th, again on the 10th, and still again on the 12th, on which last occasion he captured a whole division of the Confederate army. Thus during the summer of 1864 he kept up an unceasing warfare, ever pursu- ing the offensive, and daily drawing nearer to the rebel capital, until at last he drove the enemy within the defenses of Richmond. MOIST WEATHER AT THE FRONT. THE VIRGINIA CAMPAIGN. 2S7 Never was the persistent courage, the determined purpose which was the foundation of Grant's character, more clearly brought out than in the Virginia campaign of 1864 ; and never was it more needed. Well did he know that no single triumph, however brilliant, would win. He saw plainly that nothing but "hammering away" would avail. The stone wall of the Confederacy had too broad and firm a base to be suddenly overturned ; it had to be slowly reduced to powder. During the anxious days which followed the battle of the Wilderness, Frank B. Carpenter, the artist, relates that he asked President Lincoln, " How does Grant impress you. as compared with other generals ? " " The great thing about him," said the President, "is cool persistency of purpose. 'He is not easily excited, and he has the grip of a bull-dog. When he once gets his teeth in, nothing can shake him off." His great opponent, Lee, saw and felt that same quality. When, after days of indecisive battle, the fighting in the Wilderness came to a pause, it was believed in the Confederate lines that the Union troops were falling back. General Gordon said to Lee, — ■ " I think there is no doubt that Grant is retreating." The Confederate chief knew better. He shook his head. " You are mistaken," he replied, earnestly, — " quite mistaken. Grant is not retreating ; he is not a retreating man." Spottsylvania followed, then North Anna, Cold Harbor, and Chickahominy. Then Grant changed his base to the fames river, and attacked Petersburg. Slowly but surely the Union lines closed in. " Falling back " on the Union side had gone out of fashion. South or North, all could see that now a steady, re- sistless force was back of the Union armies, pushing them ever on toward Rich- mond. Grant's losses in the final campaign were heavy, but Lee's slender resources were wrecked in a much more serious proportion ; and for the Confederates no recruiting was possible. Their dead, who lay so thickly beneath the fields, were the children of the soil, and there were none to replace them. Sometimes whole families had been destroyed ; but the survivors still fought on. In the Confede- rate lines around Petersburg there was often absolute destitution. An officer who was there testified, shortly after the end of the struggle, that every cat and dog for miles around had been caught and eaten. Grant was pressing onward ; Sherman's march through Georgia and the Carolinas had proved that the Con- federacy was an egg-shell ; Sheridan's splendid cavalry was ever hovering round the last defenders of the bars and stripes. Grant saw that all was over, and on April 7, 1865, he wrote that memorable letter calling upon Lee to surrender, and bring the war to an end. The Virginia hamlet dignified by the name of Appomattox Court House LEE'S SURRENDER. 289 comprised, in the spring of 1S65, five houses, the largest of which, a brick dwell- ing, was the home of Wilmer McLean. In front was a pleasant yard, smiling with the sweet flowers of early spring. In this house, in the afternoon of the 9th of April, General Lee and General Grant met to arrange for the surrender of Lee's army, which was in effect the end "of the Southern Confederacy. "When I had left camp that morning," writes Grant, "I had not expected so soon the result that was then taking place, and consequently was in rough garb. I was without a sword, as I usually was when on horseback in the field, and wore a soldier's blouse for .a coat, with shoulder-straps of my rank to indicate to the army who I was. When I went into the house I found General Lee. We greeted each other, and after shaking hands took our seats. " General Lee was dressed in a full uniform which was entirely new, and was wearing a sword of considerable value, very likely the sword which had been presented by the State of Virginia ; at all events, it was an entirely differ- ent one from the sword that would ordinarily be worn in the field. In my rough traveling-suit, the uniform of a private with the straps of a lieutenant-general, I must have contrasted very strangely with a man so handsomely dressed, six feet high, and of faultless form ; but this is not a matter that I thought of until afterward." The terms of surrender allowed by Grant were most generous. Officers and men were to be paroled. The officers were allowed to retain their side- arms, their baggage, and their horses ; and, with humane consideration for the men who had lost everything, the men were allowed to keep their horses. " I took it," says Grant, "that most of the men were small farmers. The whole country had been so raided by the two armies that it was doubtful whether they would be able to put in a crop to carry themselves and their families through the next winter without the aid of the horses they were then riding. The United States did not want them ; and I would therefore instruct the officers ... to let every man . . . who claimed to own a horse or mule take the animal to his home. Lee remarked again that this would have a happy effect." Grant also supplied rations from his own stores to Lee's starving army. For some days they had been living on parched corn. He gave them forage for their horses ; and when the Union soldiers began firing a salute of one hun- dred guns to celebrate the surrender, Grant ordered the firing stopped. " The Confederates," he wrote, "were now our prisoners, and we did not want to exult over their downfall." Reading of such actions toward a conquered foe, it is not hard to understand why, twenty years later, the South and the North together read with tears the bulletins from Grant's bedside, and why the soldiers who fought against him joined at his grave in the last tribute of love and honor. The rejoicing throughout the North over the surrender of Lee's army and the restoration of the Union was checked by the sudden blow of the assassin 290 ULYSSES S. GRANT. of the President, which changed that rejoicing to mourning. The death of Lincoln left Grant the foremost American in the hearts of the people. In the political turmoil which followed the accession of Johnson to the Presidency, and in the period of "reconstruction," while much of the South was under martial law, Grant, as head of the army, necessarily held a prominent place. His popularity increased, and his nomination for the presidency in 1868 was a fore- ffone conclusion. In 1872 he was re-elected, this time over Horace Greeley. His popularity was so general that the opposition to him was insignificant GENERAL GRANT AND LI HUNG CHANG, VICEROY OF CHINA. At the close of his second term he was succeeded by Rutherford B. Hayes, who was declared elected by the famous Electoral Commission, after the disputed election of 1876. Grant was by nature and training a soldier, not a civil administrator ; and while there was much to admire in his career as President, there is also much that has been severely criticised. Accustomed to repose absolute confidence in his friends, he was deceived and made use of by adroit and unscrupulous men, HONORS FRO M ALL NATIONS. 291 against whom he was powerless to defend himself. The unsettled state of the country after the civil war, the political and race prejudices which disturbed the South, the ignorance and helplessness of the freedmen, and the denial of their rights, all combined to make the task of government a most difficult and delicate one. But whether Grant's civil career be considered successful or not, it soon became evident that he had not lost his hold on the affectionate admiration of the people, and that his fame abroad was as great as at home. After the close of his second term, in May, 1877, he sailed from Philadelphia for a tour around the world, which for over two years was made one long-continued ovation, more like the triumphal progress of a great monarch than the journey of a private citi- zen. By all the great nations of Europe and Asia he was received with every mark of the highest honor. He was the guest of emperors, kings, and municipal- ities, and welcomed with tokens of good-will equally by the proudest and the humblest of the people. Throughout Europe, Turkey, Persia, India, China, and Japan he journeyed, and when at last he landed at San Francisco, the demon- stration in his honor surpassed anything before seen on the Pacific coast. It is perhaps not too much to say that until their eyes were opened by his reception abroad, the American people did not themselves appreciate Grant's real great- ness and the extent of his fame. grant's troubles and how he met them. But nothing in all his career did so much to fix Grant in the affection of the country as the events of the last year of his life. . After his return from abroad he had, at the solicitation of his son, joined the firm of Ward & Fish, in New York, and put all his savings into it. The business seemed to go on prosper- ously, — so prosperously that Grant believed himself worth a million dollars. He himself gave no attention to the business, confiding entirely in the active part- ners. A sudden and appalling exposure followed in May, 1884. One morning Grant went down to the office in Wall Street, and found that Ward had absconded, and that he and his children were utterly ruined. Only a few days before, Ward had induced him to borrow one hundred thousand dollars, under the pretence that this sum would enable him to discharge some pressing claims upon a bank in which the firm had large deposits. Grant went to W. H. Van- derbilt and asked for the money as a loan. Vanderbilt sat down and drew a check for it, and handed it to his visitor. Grant had no idea that the firm with which his name had been identified existed upon sheer roguery. But all the papers were soon full of the shameful story. The famous soldier saw but too clearly that he had been used as a decoy by an abominable swindler. House, money, books, furniture, his swords, and other presents — the money of his chil- dren and many of his friends — everything was gone, including, as he thought, his honor. It was afterward clearly seen that he had no complicity whatever in IIA A \ ^ •- < 8 5 \\V MOUNTAIN — DEATH GENERAL POLK. THE GEORGIA CAMPAIGN. 321 of Johnston's army, whose commander was one of the ablest generals in the Confederate service. It was a hazardous game ; but at a critical point Jeffer- son Davis gave him most important aid. Just on the eve of the battle of Atlanta Davis relieved Johnston, and in his place put the more dashing and reckless Hood. "It isn't a good plan," President Lincoln used to say, "to swap horses in the middle of a,creek ; " and Davis's action proved the truth of Lincoln's saying. Hood strove to carry out Johnston's plans, but without success. Fighting and flanking, Sherman drove Hood into Atlanta, and cut off all his sources of supply. There was nothing left but to abandon the city, which he did, burning great quantities of cotton and stores, and on September 1st Sherman entered and took possession. Again the North was wild with delight. A salute of one hundred guns was fired in Sherman's honor at all the chief military posts. He was the hero of the hour. He had won the first great success of 1864. That success turned the tide of public feeling, and assured the re-election of Lincoln and the prosecution of the war. But greater things were still to come. Georgia was the great centre and source of supply of the Confederacy, — " the workshop and corn-crib of the South." If Sherman could make his way through Georgia to the sea, it would undermine and honeycomb the rebellion in the seat of its strength. He determined to march from Atlanta straight upon Savannah, nearly three hundred miles distant. Leaving Thomas with a strong force in Atlanta, he abandoned his base of supplies, cut his connections with the North, and started on his march to the sea. "MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA." The great leader knew what he was about ; but no one else did. Friends and foes, North and South, alike were ignorant of his plans. Had the Confed- erate generals known whither he was marching, they could have concentrated against him ; not knowing, they scattered their forces at different points, thus putting no formidable obstacle in his way. Hood started for Nashville, hoping to draw Sherman after him into the mountains of Tennessee. This suited Sher- man exactly. " If Hood will go to Tennessee," he said, with a chuckle, " I will furnish him with rations for the trip." The idea of Sherman actually cutting loose from his base of supplies, and marching hundreds of miles through the heart of an enemy's country, was so bold that it did not occur to the Confeder- ate generals as possible ; and so, instead of meeting their armies, Sherman left all serious opposition behind him. , For a month Sherman and his army disappeared from view, like a swimmer who dives under the surface of the water. No one knew where he would re- appear. When President Lincoln was appealed to, he said, " I know which hole he went in at, but I don't know which hole he will come out at." He felt the 322 WILLIAM T. SHERMAN. utmost confidence in Sherman ; but there was intense anxiety in the North about his fate. It was feared that he had walked into a trap, and that his army had been annihilated. In the meantime Sherman was "marching through Georgia." His army, stretched out in a great line thirty miles from wing to wingr swept an . , immense path through the heart ot / /* the State. There was almost no re- sistance ; his troops had left behind the armies SWAMP ANGFX" BATTERY BOMBARDING CHARLESTON. **. that had opposed them before Atlanta, and their march was like a holiday Their source of supplies was the country through which they passed ; and it was the business of the hour to make it incapable of furnishing further supplies for the Confederate armies. To the slaves the approach of the soldiers was the " day of jubilee ; " and thousands parade rather than serious war. TRIUMPH AT SA VANNAH. 323 of them followed the army on its progress. Railroads were destroyed and bridges burned as the army moved forward. At Macon, the capital of the State, the soldiers took possession of the deserted halls of legislature, and General Sherman slept on the floor of the Governor's mansion. At last, a month after leaving Atlanta, the army reached Fort McAllister, at the mouth of the Ogeechee river, a few miles below Savannah. After a desperate assault by Hazen's division, the fort was captured ; and the arrival of the army was signaled to one of the vessels of the Union fleet, lying outside, and thus the first news of Sherman's whereabouts was communicated to the government at Washington. A few days afterward Savannah surrendered, and on December 23d Sher- man sent to the President that famous despatch, which sent such gladness to the hearts of loyal men throughout the Union : — " I beg to present you as a Christmas gift the city of Savannah, with one hundred and fifty guns and plenty of ammunition, and about twenty-five thou- sand bales of cotton." It is hardly possible for a generation born since the war to imagine the feeling with which the news of Sherman's great march was received in the North. For four long years the cause of the Union had been in suspense. Victories had been followed by new disasters, until the hearts of Union men almost died within them. Sherman's march was the first indication of final triumph, the first gleam of dawn which seemed to give sure promise of return- ing day. Never were such glad and thankful hearts as in the breasts of those who read in Sherman's Christmas message the prophecy of the end of the long struggle. After reaching Savannah, the army rested for awhile, and Sherman did all that he could to re-organize civil affairs in that city and provide for its proper government. Then, on January 16, 1865, he turned his face northward, and set out on his final march through South and North Carolina, to meet Grant's army and bring the war to an end. A letter from General Sherman to his daughter Minnie, then a little girl, dated at Goldsboro, North Carolina, March 24, 1865, gives a graphic account of the northward march : — My Dear Minnie : — I got here from the battlefield at Bentonville, twenty miles northwest of this place, yesterday, but all the army did not get in until to-day. We have been marching for two months in a low, swampy country, with very bad roads, and had to bridge many large rivers, so that we had a hard time besides the fighting, which seemed the easiest part. Take your geography and look at South Carolina. We started from Savannah, crossed the river, and occupied the country from Roberts- ville to Pocotaligo. We then marched up toward Barnwell, crossed the Salkehatchie, and got on the railroad from Midway to Aiken. Then we marched to Columbia, crossing the Edisto, then .Saluda and Broad Rivers, then Winnsboro, and turned east to Cheraw, crossing the Catawba. At 324 WILLIAM T. SHERMAN. Cheraw we crossed the Pedee and marched through Lancaster to Fayetteville, North Carolina. Then we crossed Cape Fear River and marched up about twenty miles near Averysboro', where we had a pretty smart battle; then toward Goldsboro', and at Bentonville we had a real battle, which we won, of course. Here we have two railroads, one going down to Wilmington and one to New- berne. Ships come to these places, and have in them clothing, food, and horse feed. It will take us some days to get the railroad fixed up so as to bring us what we need, so that we may be here some time. No doubt the newspapers will publish many letters, which you will read, telling you all about our adventures. You may not understand how we took Charleston and Wilmington without going near them ; but these cities are on the seashore, where the country is poor, and all the people had to eat came from the interior by railroad. Now, when my army was in the interior, we broke up the railroads and ate the provisions, so the rebel army had to leave or starve. I knew this be- forehand, and had small armies on ships ready to take possession when they left. Our soldiers have been fighting for Charleston nearly four years, but they didn't go about it right ; so you see what power is knowledge. I took Charleston, fortified with over four hundred guns, without fighting at all. I get a great many letters, some of which I answer, and some of which Majors Dayton and Hitchcock answer for me. It is now nearly midnight, and I have written nearly thirty long letters, but have a great many more to write. . . . You and Lizzie must write more frequently now, for I suppose, hereafter, I will be near the sea, and will not again be so far from our ships, so that I will be able to write and receive letters more frequently. I am in good health ; so is Uncle Char- ley. I sent Lizzie a pretty piece of poetry from Fayetteville, and now send you a picture which some man from New York sent me. It is a good picture ; you can tell better than I if it be a good likeness. . . . My best love to all. At Raleigh Sherman heard the glad tidings of Lee's surrender, and, a few days later, the news of the President's assassination. On April 26th Johnston's army wa.s surrendered, and the long war was brought to an end. THE GRAND REVIEW. On the 22d and 23d of May, 1865, the city of Washington saw one of the grandest sights of history. This was the final review of the Union armies, before the disbandment. During those two days the long ranks of soldiers, with the easy swing and perfect drill of veterans, moved up the grand avenue leading from the Capitol to the White House, in what seemed an endless procession. On the reviewing stand, with the chief officers of the government and the gen- erals of the army, stood the hero of the "march through Georgia ; " and there passed before him the men who had faced with him the deadly hail at Shiloh, who at his word swept up the heights of Kenesaw Mountain, who shared his triumph at Savannah and Atlanta. What thoughts must have stirred the great commander's heart as he received the salutes of the devoted men whom he had so often led to victory ! What memories must have risen of the brave ones missing from those ranks, who, with the Great President, had given their lives for that of the nation ! Sherman's last campaign, through South and North Carolina, excited great interest and admiration in military circles in Europe. A public meeting of the Horse Guards, one of the " crack " regiments of the English army, was held r REVIEW OF UNION ARMIES AT WASHINGTON, AT THE CI OSE OF THE WAR. 326 WILLIAM T. SHERMAN. at which the Duke of Cambridge, the commander-in-chief, presided, to study the campaign, and hear its military movements explained. In spite of the affinity of the English "upper classes" for the cause of the South, Sherman's latest achievements suddenly made him the hero of the war. In 1866, when Grant was promoted, Sherman was made lieutenant-general ; and when Grant became President, Sherman took the place of "General" and commander-in-chief of the army, which Grant vacated. This position he held for several years, when he retired, and was succeeded by General Sheridan. General Sherman was one of the most interesting and picturesque characters of his time. He was the last survivor of the great "war heroes," and his popularity grew steadily greater until the end of his life. His pen was as mighty as his sword, and in his " Memoirs," which he wrote in the years after the war, he achieved a literary reputation as unique as his military fame. In his later years he was in great request at army reunions and military and civil occa- sions of every sort, and he became a most interesting and impressive speaker. His utterances were so generally striking and important that Chauncey M. Depew declared that he " never ought to be permitted to go anywhere without being accompanied by a stenographer." He did not, however, love notoriety, and attained great skill in evading the reporters, who were constantly seeking to " interview " him. " No, no," he would say ; "you're a good fellow, and I like your paper ; but you mustn't print anything about me. I haven't anything to say for publication, — nothing at all. I have had too much publicity already." In politics and religion General Sherman was not a strong partisan. When in one of the presidential campaigns an effort was made to learn which of the candidates he favored, he wrote a humorously non-committal reply, saying, " So far as I have been able to learn, General Sherman can hardly be said to belong to either of the great political parties," and added that he had no doubt that either of the candidates would fill the position with credit to himself and the country. In religion he was born a Presbyterian and educated a Roman Catholic. On one occasion, in the Georgia campaign, some members of the Christian Commission applied to him for permission to pass within the lines. It was a time when it was especially necessary that knowledge of his movements should not get abroad, and he replied, in brief fashion : — " Certainly not. Crackers and oats are more necessary for the army than any moral or religious agency ; and every regiment has its chaplain." His real religious belief was probably never better expressed than when he said, " If men will only act half as well as they know how, God will forgive the balance." General Sherman died at his residence in New York, on February 14, 1 89 1, universally beloved and lamented. ^ GEORGE B. McCLELLAN, FIRST COMMANDER OK THE ARMY OK THE POTOMAC. HE first commander of the army of the Potomac has been the occasion of more controversy than any other man in the recent history of the Republic. He has had most able defenders, — for probably no general who ever lived had such a power of inspiring those around him with love and admiration ; and even if the verdict of history be that he lacked some of the qualities essential to the highest success, it must still be admitted that one of the greatest commanders of the civil war was George B. McClellan. General McClellan was a thoroughly trained and equipped soldier. He was born in Philadelphia in 1826. He was the son of a distinguished physician, and had every advantage of edu- cation. He spent two years in the University of Pennsylvania, where he shared the honors of his class. In 1846 he graduated from West Point as second lieu- tenant of engineers, and served in the Mexican War, securing promotion for gallant conduct at Contreras and Churubusco. Between this time and the breaking out of the civil war Captain McClellan was sent to Europe as a member of the military commission to inspect and study the organization of European armies. He resigned from the army in 1857, and when Fort Sumter fell was President of the Eastern Division of the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad. In April, 1861, McClellan offered his services to the Government, and was ap- pointed major general of Ohio volunteers. His operations in West Virginia were so brilliantly successful that after the first battle of Bull Run he was placed in command of the Army of the Potomac, and then of all the armies of the United States, to the great satisfaction of the whole country, which looked upon him as the greatest military genius within its borders. McClellan's transcendent power to organize great armies, and inspire them with confidence and enthusiasm, were splendidly proved on two occasions, — first, after the disastrous battle of Bull Run. in July, 1861, when out of the chaos of defeat and disorder he created, equipped, and disciplined the great Army of the Potomac ; and again, after the second and worse Bull Run disaster, in 3^9 33Q GEORGE B. McCLELLAN. August, 1862, when, at the President's urgent request, he nobly resumed the command of which he had been deprived, reorganized his beaten and demoral- ized army with marvelous skill and celerity, and defeated Lee at the memorable battle of Antietam. Unfortunately, from the beginning there was discord between him and the War Department, which increased the enormous difficulty of his task. The forces at Washington were dispirited, raw, and frightened. McClellan had to bring order out of chaos, to create an army, and to defend the capital. His enforced delay was looked on with suspicion by the Govern- ment, and Secretary Stanton greatly embarrassed him by constantly urging a forward movement. "Give McClellan a million men," said Stanton, contemp- tuously, "and he will swear the enemy has two million, and sit down in the mud and yell for three million ! " The plans of the campaign, too, were the cause of differences between the general and the Secretary of War. Then came the Peninsula campaign, with the advance on Richmond, the battles of Fair Oaks and Gaines's Mill, and the great conflict at Malvern Hill, where Lee was defeated, and the confusion and disorder in the Confederate ranks were so great that Richmond could have been captured had the Union forces been in condition to advance. In the meantime, General McClellan had lost the confidence of the admin- istration. His requests for continued reinforcements were disregarded ; he was ordered to evacuate the Peninsula, and was relieved of command until after the Second Bull Run. In that terrible emergency, when Pope resigned the com- mand of the Army of Virginia, the Government turned to McClellan as the only man who could inspire confidence and restore order. When the soldiers knew that "Little Mac" was again in command, their joy and renewed hope were unbounded. Flushed with his recent victories, Lee was marching into Maryland, and McClellan had to cover Washington and at the same time stop the invasion. Antietam was the great battle-ground of this movement. While it is often called a drawn battle, the forcing back of the Confederate line and the retreat of Lee across the Potomac stamp Antietam as really a great victory. It was asserted that if General McClellan had attacked the Confederate forces with all the power at his disposal after the battle of Antietam, and pur- sued Lee into Virginia, the Confederate army could have been crushed. Still, General McClellan needed supplies of all kinds, his army was used up, and he did what was best in his judgment. Moreover, it is now known that the only order given to McClellan was one which gave him command only of "the forces for the defense of the capital," and which could not by any stretch of construction be taken to authorize an offensive movement into Virginia. McClellan himself declared that he fought the battle of Antietam " with a rope around his neck," and with the certainty that if he had lost the battle he would have been handed for exceeding his orders. As soon as he received orders HIS VINDICATION. 33i and supplies he marched against Lee, and was on the eve of battle, in a most favorable position, when he was suddenly relieved of his command, which was conferred on Burnside. General McClellan, though set aside by the Government, never lost his hold upon the people. The army idolized him, and his popularity followed him. The most substantial proof of his popularity was his nomination at Chicago as the Democratic candidate for the Presidency in 1864. Although the time was ill chosen, and McClellan himself never sought the nomination, he received a popular vote of 1,800,000 against 2,200,000 for Lin- coln. For a decade after the war Gen- eral McClellan was severely criti- cised and vigor- ously assailed for over cautiousness, alleged hesitancy, and failure to grasp the oppor- tunities which his enemy placed in his way. With later years his reputation has been to a large extent cleared of blame for results | which were often beyond his con- trol, and he is now given his deserved place among the great leaders of the war. The opinions of the Confederate commanders as to McClellan's abilities as a general are naturally of especial weight. It is related that after the second battle of Bull Run, when the Confederate armies, elated by their victories, were pouring across the Potomac for the invasion of the North, Lee one day received a dispatch which seemed to be of great importance. One of his sub- ordinates, seeing him read it, was anxious to know its contents, "What is the news?" he inquired of Lee. STATUE OF MCCLELLAN IN CITY HALL SQUARE, PHILADELPHIA. 332 GEORGE B. McCLELLAN. "The worst news possible," replied the Confederate commander, gravely; "McClellan is in command again." Until his death at Orange, N. J., in 1885, General McClellan lived an active life. He was Engineer-in-Chief of the Department of Docks in New York in 1872, was elected Governor of New Jersey in 1877, and in 1881 was appointed by Congress a member of the Board of Managers of the National Home for Disabled Soldiers. He declined many tempting business offers and invitations from colleges to accept their presidency. General McClellan was about five feet eight inches in height, finely built, with broad shoulders. He was very solid and muscular, and an excellent horse- man. Modest and retiring, he had withal a great self-respect, a gracious dignity. His personal magnetism was unparalleled in military history, except by that of the first Napoleon : he was literally the idol of his officers and men. They would obey him when all other control failed. As a student of military history he had no superior in his systematic knowledge of war, battles, and tactics. He was a man of irreproachable character, — a model Christian gentleman in every situation of life- , :,, fi^k v : - ^ : ': ;v ;;^ , ^jjtA P*tedH ^*- iKB^il 1&5 InaP $L ! 1 ^ l'HILIP H. SHERIDAN. iwnnmaminiifflMi[mF»HitcuiainiEiuiranrrLT/^' :Ti 'J^ Sl ^lWn«MI^ a, «al«™' J * F ■' l °° I, ™'" ^ "" ^! ' , ' 1 ' S» ii i iii u ii n ii n» i ' ii i ' "»" " * " UNITED STATES 12-INCH l:K l-.hc 1 1 -LOADING MuRIAR, OR HOWITZER. PHILIP H. SHERIDAN, THE HERO OK THE "VALLEY CAMPAIGN." victory of the Union armies in the civil war was more inspiring than that won by General Sheridan at Win- ^ chester, in October, 1864, — and inspiring victories I .j, were at that time very much needed. An account of that battle is also a picture of Sheridan's character, for it was the simple force of his presence and per- sonality which transformed demoralized fugitives into determined fighters, each feeling as though 'twere he On whose sole arm hung victory. Sheridan was a poor Irish lad, born in Somerset, Ohio, in 1 83 1. He managed to get from the Congressman of his district an appointment to West Point, where his hot temper was perpetually introducing premature war. He barely succeeded in graduating in 1853. In the early part of the civil war he was in Missouri, and he distinguished himself at the battles of Murfreesboro and Chickamauga. But it was in the latter- part of the war that he won his highest fame. One of the most glorious victories of the war was won by Grant's armies 20 11c 336 PHILIP H. SHERIDAN. at the battle of Chattanooga, when the Union troops stormed the heights of Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge. Sheridan was in command of one of the four divisions. Emerging from the timber in which the lines were formed, the troops charged at double-quick across an open plain, against the first line of rifle-pits, at the foot of the ridge. The Confederates were driven out of the works, some killed, and many captured. The Union troops did not stop for further orders, but rushed on up the ascent, against the second line, half-way to the summit. At this moment a messenger came from Grant with word that only the first line of works was to be attacked. But it was too late ; already the men were pressing on up the hill in the face of a storm of bullets. To order them back was out of the question. They rushed on with a cheer, carried the second line of rifle-pits, and met the enemy in a desperate hand-to-hand fight on the summit. The Confederates were driven from their guns and sent flying down the oppo- site slope, pursued by a shower of stones from the Union forces, who had not time to reload. Before all of Sheridan's men had reached the crest, the demor- alized troops of Bragg were seen, with a large train of wagons, flying along the valley, half a mile below. It was Sheridan's conduct in this brilliant assault which gave Grant the implicit confidence in him which he always afterward felt ; and when, a few months afterward, Grant was made general-in-chief, he at once desired to have Sheridan's assistance in Virginia. Thus it was that the great cavalry leader came to win his brilliant victories in the Shenandoah Valley and before Rich- mond. In 1864, the Confederate general Early made his famous movement through the Shenandoah Valley and into Maryland, threatening Washington and Baltimore, and even Philadelphia. Disaster seemed imminent. A part of the army before Richmond was detached and sent north to protect Washington ; and then Grant dispatched Sheridan with his cavalry to the Valley. Some weeks passed in waiting and maneuvering, Sheridan being determined not to attack until he could get the enemy at a disadvantage. Meantime the country was impatient. Grant visited Sheridan, expecting to suggest a plan of opera- tions ; but he found Sheridan ready for battle, and only waiting the proper moment to strike, so he wisely decided to leave him to his own judgment. At last Early unwisely divided his command, and his watchful antagonist attacked him, flanked him right and left, and broke his lines in every direction, and sent his defeated troops, as Sheridan said in his famous despatch, "whirling through Winchester," with a loss of 4500 men. "The results," said Grant, with his quiet humor, "were such that I have never since deemed it necessary to visit General Sheridan before giving him orders." Sheridan was not content with a partial victory — he never was. He pur- BATTLE OF CEDAR CREEK. 337 sued Early for nearly thirty miles, and just when he thought himself safe and beyond reach, attacked him at once in front and on the flank, routed him completely, and captured 1 100 prisoners and sixteen guns. Again he pursued his antagonist, and drove him completely out of the Valley and into the gaps of the Blue Ridge. " Keep on," said Grant, "and your work will cause the fall of Richmond." This double victory had a startling effect both at the North and South. The Northern people were jubilant ; the troops of Early were thor- oughly beaten and disheartened. The mob in Richmond, disgusted at Early's repeated defeats, sarcastically labeled the fresh cannon destined for his use, To General Sheridan, Care of General Early. Sheridan, however, had so devastated the Valley that it would not furnish him support, and he retired to Cedar Creek. From this point he was called to Washington for consultation ; and while absent, the enemy attacked his forces in camp, drove them back in disorder, and captured eighteen guns and nearly a thousand prisoners. Sheridan, returning from Washington, stopped over night at Winchester. At nine o'clock in the morning, while riding forward to join his army, he heard the sound of heavy firing, and knew at once that a battle was in progress. Soon he began to meet fugitives from the scene of battle. He took in the situation at a glance, and rode forward at a gallop, swinging his hat, and shouting, " Face the other way, boys, face the other way. We're going back to lick them out of their boots ! " His presence and words were electrical. The scattered soldiers faced about, and took up the general's cry, " Face the other way ! " They followed him to the front, met the enemy's forces, and quickly brought them to a stand. As soon as it was known that Sheridan was again in command, it became impossible to rally the Confederate forces. A terror of the Union general had seized them. The captured guns were all retaken, and twenty-four pieces besides. Of the Confederates 1800 were killed and wounded and 1600 taken prisoners. Early himself escaped with difficulty. This famous battle, celebrated in song and story, was one of the most important successes in the campaign of 1864. During the winter Sheridan remained near Winchester, and early in 1865 joined the forces in front of Richmond. On the way he met Early at Waynes- boro ; and there he fought his final battle with the Confederate commander. His attack was impetuous and irresistible. The troops charged over the breast- works and forced their way straight through Early's lines to the rear, where they turned and held the approach to the Shenandoah, with the Confederates sur- rounded front and rear. Early's entire force laid down their arms and surren dered. Sheridan had destroyed both Early's army and his reputation. Lee relieved him of all command, and he retired in disgrace. 338 PHILIP H. SHERIDAN. Proceeding on his way to Richmond, Sheridan destroyed forty-six canal locks, forty bridges, twenty-three railroad bridges, and forty-one miles of railroad, besides mills, warehouses, and stores, which would afford support to the enemy. On the 25th of March he joined Grant's forces on the James river, and took a most important part in the final campaign which ended in Lee's surrender. GENERAL SHERIDAN TURNING DEFEAT INTO VICTORY AT CEDAR CREEK. Lee evacuated Richmond, and was proceeding to the southwest, intending to join the army of Johnston in North Carolina. That this intention was frustrated is largely due to the skill and activity of Sheridan, who with his cavalry inter- cepted Lee's forces at Five Forks, cut off his supplies of food, and made it impossible to longer maintain the contest. On April 9th the great Confederate CUSTER'S ENTHUSIASM. 339 commander surrendered, and the important part which Sheridan took in the campaign passed into history. Sheridan was one of the most original and striking characters developed by the war. He was a tireless soldier, always on the alert, always eager for battle, and determined to win it. His enthusiasm and daring were infectious, and he was idolized by the men who served under him. After one of his victories, when the enemy was retreating, General Custer, then a young and romantic soldier, was so filled with admiration for his chief that he threw his UNITED STATES MILITARY TELEGRAPH WAGON. arms around him and kissed him. Sheridan understood and appreciated the tribute ; but he was anxious to start in pursuit of the enemy, "and Custer lost time, you know," he said, — "he lost time." Courage and dash always won Sheridan's heart. After a bold movement the words of praise came like a hot torrent from his lips, causing the cheek of their recipient to flush and glow. The influence of his personal presence was extraordinary. It was a grand sight to see him ride swiftly along the lines just before a charge, and raise the enthusiasm of the troops to fever heat. At the battle of Winchester, when the "old Sixth Corps " rode across the field in 340 PHILIP H. SHERIDAN. splendid array to attack Early's centre, Sheridan rode along their flanks and cried out, — " Men of the Sixth, our victory to-day depends upon you !" These electric words passed from lip to lip, and, animated by the confidence of their commander, the veteran troops carried their tattered colors forward and clean through the Confederate centre. Then the forces of Early were com- pletely routed, and sent "whirling through Winchester," as Sheridan expressed it in his famous dispatch. After the war and during the " reconstruction period " Sheridan was placed in command in Louisiana. In the conflict of President Johnson with Congress he supported the latter, for which he was removed by the President. Grant protested against this injustice, and when he was elected President, Sheridan was made lieutenant-general. Upon Sherman's retirement from the chief com- mand of the regular army, Sheridan took his place, and remained until his death. He died at Nonquitt, Massachusetts, August 5, 1888. ■: ' :<'."■''"■ ~ GEORGE G. MEADE. GEORGE G. MEADE, THE VICTORIOUS COMMANDER AT GETTYSBURG. < ) day in the history of the United States is more memor- able than July 4, 1863. That anniversary of the birth ^^ of the nation marked the turning of the tide in the - ^j great civil war. The army of Lee, pouring into ' Pennsylvania for the invasion of the North, was met 4 m> <^jg ^ '^ ijft flji P P^ by the Union .forces on the field of Gettysburg, and after a three-days battle was defeated and driven back into Virginia, never again to cross the Potomac. For those three days the fate of the nation hung in the , f S balance ; and only those who remember that fearful time I ft ^SSfiuf can fully appreciate what is due to the brave commander of the Union armies, General George G. Meade. The battle culminated on the third day, beginning with one of the most terrific cannonades of the war. It was Lee's supreme effort. After two days of dreadful but indecisive battle, he sent forth the flower of his army, under General Pickett, to make that attack on Cemetery Hill which has passed into history as one of the greatest charges on record. Five thousand veterans of the Confederate army, tried in the fire of many a desperate battle, formed on Seminary Ridge, and moved with the precision of a machine across the valley which lay between the two armies. As the terrible cannonade from the Union guns made gaps in their ranks, they were quickly closed up, and the column moved forward with swifter steps, but still in perfect order, toward the Union centre on Cemetery Hill. The infantry defending the hill reserved their fire until the charging column was within short range ; and then burst forth an awful storm of bullets, before which the advance line of the Confederates withered. The second line, undismayed, rushed forward over the bodies of their comrades, and were close upon the Union gunners at their pieces. For a time the force of the charge seemed- irresistible ; but now the attacking column became the centre of a converging fire from front and both flanks, which was rapidly anni- hilating them. The divisions of Wilcox and Pettigrew, which were supporting Pickett, had fallen back, and his column was left to meet the deadly storm alone. 343 344 GEORGE G. MEADE. It was clearly impossible to hold their position, and the order was given to with- draw. Of the five thousand men who had advanced in such perfect order, thirty-five hundred were killed, wounded, or prisoners in the hands of the Union army. The remainder of the division fell back, shattered and broken, to the Confederate lines. The tide was turned. Meade had successfully defeated Lee's attack, and the Confederate army, after terrible losses, commenced its retreat through Maryland and across the Potomac, never again to invade the North. " They fell, who lifted up a hand And bade the sun in heaven to stand; They smote and fell, who set the bars Against the progress of the stars, And stayed the inarch of Motherland. " They stood, who saw the future come On through the fight's delirium ; They smote and stood, who held the hope Of nations on that slippery slope, Amid the cheers of Christendom. "God lives; he forged the iron will That clutched and held that trembling hill. God lives and reigns ; he built and lent The heights for Freedom's battlement, Where floats her flag in triumph still." In the campaigns before Richmond in 1864, Meade continued in command of the Army of the Potomac, and Grant testified that he always found him " the right man in the right place." In 1866 he received the thanks of Congress for the skill and heroic valor with which, at Gettysburg, he repulsed, defeated, and drove back, dispirited, the veteran army of the rebellion." " The country," says Colonel A. K. McClure, writing of " Our Unrewarded Heroes," "has never done justice to General Meade as a military commander. . . . The man who fought and won the battle of Gettysburg should have been the commander-in-chief of the armies of the Union, and held that position during life. It was the great battle of the war ; it was the Waterloo of the Confeder- acy, and the victory then achieved was won by the skill of the commanding general and the heroism of his army. . . . That army was the single hope of the nation, for had it been defeated in a great battle, Washington and the wealth of our Eastern cities would have been at the mercy of the insurgents. It was an occasion for the most skillful and prudent generalship; united with the great courage essential to command successfully in such an emergency. All these high requirements General Meade fully met, and the most critical examination of the record he made in the Gettysburg campaign develops nothing but 346 GEORGE G. MEADE. what heightens his qualities for the peculiarly grave emergency that confronted him." General Meade did not receive the promotion to which many thought that his great services at the battle of Gettysburg entitled him ; " and he went down to his grave," says Colonel McClure, "one of the sorrowing and unrewarded heroes of the war." He died in Philadelphia in November, 1872, in a house which had been presented to his wife by his countrymen. A fund of one hun- dred thousand dollars was, after his death, subscribed for his family. LATEST Mi 'DLL OF CATLING FIELD GUN. 7.EORGE H. THOMAS. 348 GEORGE H. THOMAS, THE GREAT UNION GENERAL. AME," says Horace Greeley, " is a vapor ; popularity an accident." No one of the great commanders whose skill and courage won victory for the nation in the great civil war better exemplifies the truth of Greeley's saying than General Thomas. His abilities were of the very highest order. " He was," says a most competent critic, " one of the very few commanders who never committed a serious military error, who never sacrificed a command, and who never lost a battle." His private character was without a — r»jr' BfT- ' stain. He was the ideal of a soldier and a gentleman. -■■ f \ Yet, as he was too modest to seek promotion or conspicuous position, his fame is small indeed in comparison with the value of the services he rendered to the country. George Henry Thomas was born in Southampton county, Virginia, on July 31, 181 6. He was graduated from West Point in 1840, and won promo- tion for bravery in the Mexican war. At the outbreak of the civil war he was in Texas, but reported at once for duty, and was placed in command of a brigade in Northern Virginia. General Thomas especially distinguished himself during the war in three great battles, — the first in Kentucky, where, in January, 1862, he defeated the Confederate general, Zollikoffer, at Mill Spring, on the Cumberland river. This was the first real victory of the war ; and for it General Thomas received the thanks of the Legislature, but no promotion. The chivalrous generosity witn which he refused promotion when it was offered at the expense of others, stood in his way throughout the whole war, and he at no time held the rank to which he was justly entitled. The second of Thomas's great battles was that of Chickamauga, in Septem- ber, 1863. In this battle it was Thomas alone who saved the Union army from utter ruin. The scene of the conflict was in the mountains of East Tennessee, when Bragg attempted to capture Chattanooga and the roads leading to it. Again and again the Confederate troops assaulted Thomas's position, behind a rude 349 35o GEORGE H. THOMAS. breastwork of logs and rails ; but their most desperate attacks failed to dis- lodge him, and his firmness saved the army from disastrous defeat. This battle gave him the name of "The Rock of Chickamauga." The third of his great campaigns was that of Nashville, which was the only one where he was in full command ; and this has been pronounced the most completely successful battle of the war. Hood marched north from Atlanta into Tennessee, leaving Sherman behind him to make the great "march to the sea," and moved against Thomas, who fortified himself in Nashville. His superiors, Sherman, Grant, and Stanton, were impatient for him to attack Hood ; but A RUI.RfiAn BATTERY. Thomas said he was not yet ready, and refused. Grant called him "slow;" Sherman, writing to Grant, complained of his " provoking, obstinate delay :" Stanton wrote to Grant that "This looks like the McClellan and Rosecrans policy of do nothing, and let the enemy raid the country." But Thomas would not be hurried into action before he was ready, insisting that he ought to know when it was best to fight. An order was actually issued for his removal, but, for- tunately, was revoked. When at last he was ready to attack Hood, a storm of rain and sleet covered the ground with a coating of ice, which made it impos- sible to move. But finally, in January, 1865, he made the attack, and in a two- BATTLE OF NASHVILLE. 351 days battle won the most complete victory of the war. The army of Hood was not merely defeated, but dispersed and annihilated. Thomas captured over fifty guns, large quantities of stores, and eight thousand prisoners, including one major-general, three brigadier-generals, and more than two hundred commissioned officers. The stroke administered at Nashville so effectually finished the enemy that little remained to be done in that section. The troops of Thomas participated in the closing scenes of the war, and from June, 1865, to March, 1867, he was in command of the Department of the Tennessee. In 1868 he was placed over the Fourth Military Division, which included Alaska and the territory on the Pacific slope. He declined accepting the rank of lieutenant-general, on theground that he had done nothing since the war to entitle him to promotion. General Thomas was a most interesting character. He was a man of method and regularity in everything. He hated to change his habits or his clothes, and to give up an old coat was a severe trial to him. In the early part of the war, when promotion was rapid, he passed quickly through the different stages from colonel to major-general ; and it is told of him that long after he became a brigadier-general he was still wearing his colonel's uniform. He was made a major-general in June, 1862, but he did not 'arrive at the uniform of his rank until January, 1863, — and even then the change was accomplished only by a trick of his aids, carried out by the help of his body-servant. "they're fighting without any system." His devotion to method had a ludicrous illustration at the battle of Chicka- mauga. The Confederate forces made a tremendous assault on his position, — an assault which was met with the most admirable skill and bravery. At a critical moment a messenger arrived with word that reinforcements were being sent, and asking at what point they were most needed. " I can't tell," responded Thomas, — " I can't tell ; the d scoundrels are fighting without nay system ! " The unsystematic Confederates were repulsed, and the army saved, and General Thomas accepted an invitation from General Scribner to take a cup of coffee at his camp-fire. Thomas sipped his coffee, turned the conversation to indifferent matters, and appeared entirely unconscious of the fact that he had fought one of the most important battles of the war, and saved Rosecrans's army from ruin. General Thomas wa§ courteous and dignified in manner, and his heavy form and deliberate motions went well with the caution and deliberation which were so prominent in his character. His soldiers had the greatest confidence in and affection for him, which appeared in the various nicknames which they bestowed on him, — "Pap Thomas," "Old Reliable," "Old Pap Safety," " Old Slow-Trot," and " Uncle George." He never joked with them, however, 352 GEORGE H. THOMAS. nor permitted any familiarity, yet few of the commanders in the Union army were so popular with the men who served under them. " No man in the army," says Colonel McClure, "more perfectly completed the circle of soldier and gentleman. . . . He was one of the most lovable characters I have ever known, but it required exhaustive ingenuity to induce him to speak about any military movements in which he was a prominent par- ticipant. Any one might have been in daily intercourse with him for years and never learned from him that he had won great victories in the field." General Thomas died in San Francisco on March 28, 1870. FROZEN NIAGARA. ROBERT E. LEE, THE GREAT COMMANDER OK THE CONFEDERATE ARMIES. F ALL the men whose character and ability were devel- oped in the great civil war, there was perhaps not one in either the Union or the Confederate army whose greatness is more generally acknowledged than that of Robert E. Lee. His ability as a soldier and his character as a man are alike appreciated ; and while it is natural that men of the North should be unable to understand his taking up arms against the ..*'** ' . Government, yet that has not prevented their doing full justice to his greatness. It is not too much to say that General Lee is recognized, both North and South, as one of the greatest soldiers, and one of the ablest and purest men, that America has produced. Robert Edward Lee was born in Westmoreland County, Virginia, January 19, 1807. He was the son of the famous Revolutionary general, " Light Horse Harry Lee." He was graduated at West Point in 1829, and won high honor in the Mexican war. General Scott attributed the capture of Vera Cruz to his skill. For three years he was in command at the West Point Military Academy, where he made great improvements, and did much to raise its stand- ing and improve its efficiency. When John Brown made his famous raid at Harper's Ferry, in 1859, Lee was hastily dispatched thither with a body of United States troops. When they arrived, Brown had entrenched himself in the arsenal engine-house, which Lee attacked, battered down the door, captured the raiders, and turned them over to the civil authorities. At the breaking out of the war Lee was much in doubt as to the right course. He disapproved of secession, but was thoroughly pervaded with the idea of loyalty to his State, — an idea which was almost universal in the South, but incomprehensible to the people of the North. He had great difficulty in arriving at a decision ; but when at last Virginia adopted an ordinance of seces- sion, he resigned his commission in the United States army. Writing to his 355 356 ROBERT E. LEE. sister, he said, "Though I recognize no necessity for this state of things, and would have forborne and pleaded to the end for redress of grievances, yet in my own person I had to meet the question whether I should take part against my native State. With all my devotion to the Union, and the feeling of loyalty and duty as an American citizen, I have not been able to make up my mind to raise my hand against my relatives, my children, my home. I have therefore resigned my commission in the army, and, save in defense of my native State, ... I hope I may never be called upon to draw my sword." lee's clear foresight. He was quickly called upon to "defend his native State." None real- ized better than he that a long and bloody war was coming, and that Virginia would be the chief battle-ground. General Imboden has given an interesting account of an interview with Lee in May, 1861, just after he was put in com- mand of the armies of Virginia. General Imboden had gone to Richmond to urge the sending of troops to Harper's Ferry. " It was Sunday," he writes, " and I found the General entirely alone, in a small room on Bank street, near the Capitol. It was the first time I had met him, and I am sure he was the handsomest man I had ever seen. His hair and moustache — he wore no beard — were only slightly silvered with gray, just enough to harmonize freely with his rich, ruddy complexion, a little bronzed, and to give perfect dignity to the expression of his grand and massive features. His manner was grave, but frank and cordial. He wore a simple undress military suit, without badge or ornament of any kind, and there was nothing in his surroundings to indicate high military rank. . . . " I rose to take my leave, when he asked me to resume my seat, remarking that he wished to talk with me about the condition of the country, and the ter- rible storm which was so soon to burst upon it in all its fury. . . . He said he desired to impress me . . . with the gravity and danger of our situation, and the imperative necessity for immediate and thorough preparation for defense. Growing warm and earnest, he said, ' I fear our people do not yet realize the magnitude of the struggle they have entered upon, nor its probable dura- tion, and the sacrifices it will impose upon them. The United States Govern- ment,' he said, 'is one of the most powerful upon earth. I know the people and the government we have to contend with. In a little while they will be even more united than we are. Their resources are almost without limit. They have a thoroughly organized government, commanding the respect, and, to some extent, the fears of the world. Their army is complete in all its details and appointments, and it will be commanded by the foremost soldier of the country, General Scott, whose devotion to the Union cause is attested by his drawing his sword against his native State. They have also a navy that in a little while 353 ROBERT E. LEE. will blockade our ports and cut us off from all the world. They have nearly all the workshops and skilled artisans of the country, and will draw upon the resources of other nations to supply any deficiency they may feel. And above all, we shall have to fight the prejudices of the world, because of the existence of slavery in our country. Our enemies will have the ear of other powers, while we cannot be heard, and they will be shrewd enough to make the war appear to be merely a struggle on our part for the maintenance of slavery ; and we shall thus be without sympathy, and most certainly without material aid from THE JAMES RIVER AND COUNTRY NEAR RICHMOND. other powers. To meet all this we have a government to form, an army to raise, organize, and equip, as best we may. We are without a treasury, and without credit. We have no ships, few arms, and few manufacturers. Our people are brave and enthusiastic, and will be united in defense of a just cause. I believe we can succeed in establishing our independence, if the people can be made to comprehend at the outset that to do so they must endure a longer war and far greater privations than our fathers did in the Revolution of 1776. We will not succeed until the financial power of the North is completely broken, HIS CLEAR FORESIGHT. 3S9 and this can occur only at the end of a long and bloody war. Many of our people think it will soon be over, that perhaps a single campaign and one great battle will end it. This is a fatal error, and must be corrected, or we are doomed. Above all, Virginians must prepare for the worst. Our country is of wide extent and great natural resources, but the conflict will be mainly in Vir- ginia. She will become the Flanders of America before this war is over, and her people must be prepared for this. If they resolve at once to dedicate their lives and all they possess to the cause of constitutional government and South- ern independence, and to suffer without yielding as no other people have been called upon to suffer in modern times, we shall, with the blessing of God, suc- ceed in the end ; but when it will all end no man can foretell. I wish I could talk to every man, woman, and child in the State now, and impress them with these views.' "The prophetic forecast of General Lee became widely known, and as sub- sequent events verified his judgment, it aided materially in giving him that con- trol over the public mind of the South that enabled him often by a simple expression of his wishes to procure larger supplies and aid for his army than the most stringent acts of Congress and merciless impressment orders could obtain. The people came to regard him as the only man who could possibly carry us through the struggle successfully. The love of his troops for him knew no bounds, because they had implicit faith in his ability, and knew he was a sym- pathizing friend in all their trials. . . . THE CONFEDERATE COMMANDER'S DINNER. " The great simplicity of his habits was another ground of popularity. He fared no better than his troops. Their rough, scant rations were his as well. There were times when for weeks our army had nothing but bread and meat to live on, and not enough of that. When the two armies were on the opposite banks of the Rappahannock, in the winter of 1863-64, meat was sometimes very scarce in ours. Even the usual half-pound per diem ration could not always be issued. During one of these periods of scarcity, on a very stormy day, several corps and division generals were at headquarters, and were waiting for the rain to abate before riding to their camps, when General Lee's negro cook announced dinner. The General invited his visitors to dine with him. On repairing to the table a tray of hot corn-bread, a boiled head of cabbage seasoned with a very small piece of bacon, and a bucket of water constituted the repast. The piece of meat was so small that all politely declined taking any, expressing themselves as ' very fond of boiled cabbage and corn-bread,' on which they dined. Of course, the General was too polite to eat meat in the presence of guests who had de- clined it. But later in the afternoon, when they had all gone, feeling very hungry, he called his servant and asked him to bring him a piece of bread and 360 ROBERT E. LEE. meat. The darkey looked perplexed and embarrassed, and after scratching his head some time said in a deprecating tone, ' Lord, Mas' Robert, dat meat what I sot before you at dinner warn't ours. I had jest borrowed dat piece of mid- dlin' from one of de couriers to season de cabbage in de pot, and seein' as you was gwine to have company at dinner, I put on de dish wid de cabbage for looks. But when I seed you an' none of de genelmen toche it I 'eluded you all knowed it was borrowed, and so after dinner I sont it back to de boy what it belong to. I's mighty sorry, Mas' Robert, I didn't know you wanted some, for den I would 'a' tuck a piece off' n it anyhow 'fore I sont it home.' " In the latter part of 1861, General Lee was sent to the coast of South BEFORE ITS REMOVAL TO CHICAGO. Carolina, where he planned the defenses which so long proved impregnable to all attacks of the Union forces, and which were held until the northward march of Sherman's army in 1865 compelled the evacuation of Charleston. Lee then returned to Virginia, and in June, 1862, he took command of the Confederate forces defending Richmond. On June 26th, he met McClellan at Mechanicsville and Gaines's Mill ; and then began that long and terrible series of battles between his forces and the Army of the Potomac, which so splendidly displayed his magnificent abilities as a commander. In defensive warfare he was almost invincible. He defeated McClellan on the Peninsula, Burnside at Fredericks- burg, and Hooker at Chancellorsville. Not until Grant took command in 1864 had a general been found who could successfully cope with Lee ; and even GETTYSBURG AND AFTER. 361 Grant accomplished Lee's final defeat not so much by superior generalship as by steadily taking advantage of his own superior resources. After the great conflict at Gettysburg, in July, 1863, the great resources of the North, so far superior to those of the South, began to tell against the Confederacy. It became almost impossible to recruit the Southern armies, or to properly supply the men who were already in the field. Henceforth Lee's operations were confined to the defense of Virginia ; and it is hard to overrate the masterly ability with which this was done, under almost insuperable diffi- culties and discouragements. It was love and devotion to their commander which held together the armies of the Confederacy; and this, coupled with their confidence in his skill, long made his ragged and half-starved soldiers more than a match for the superior armies of McClellan and Grant. General Grant perceived this, and saw that it was really a question of endurance, — that the Confederacy could be overcome only when the resources of the South were so far exhausted that the war could no longer be carried on ; and it was with this idea in his mind that he took command of the Union armies in 1864. • The battle of the Wilderness, on May 5th, was the beginning of the end. Spottsylvania followed, and then Cold Harbor, where the frightful losses of the Union armies gave terrible proof of Lee's ability to take swift advantage of the least mistake of his antagonist. Then came the siege of Petersburg, and after a spring and summer of persistent fighting, Lee seemed as able as ever to keep the Union armies at bay. But, as Grant had foreseen, the struggle had told heavily upon his resources ; and when the triumphant march of Sherman through Georgia had exposed the hopelessly exhausted condition of the South, the end of the struggle was seen to be approaching. The deprivation and poverty in Virginia in the last year .of the war were extreme. The railroad communications of Richmond being often destroyed by the Union cavalry, it was impossible to keep the city supplied, and many of the people were on the verge of starvation. Pea soup and bread were the food of large numbers. Confederate money had so depreciated that it was often said that it took a basketful to go to market. A barrel of flour cost several hundred dollars. Boots were four and five hundred dollars a pair. Still Lee held out, and in the spring of 1865 maintained with persistent skill and courage the hopeless defense of Richmond ; but his army was melting away ; it was impossible to supply them even with food ; the men themselves saw that further conflict was a useless sacrifice, and were ready to accept the result which came at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865. The universal affection and respect which the people of the South felt for General Lee was, if possible, increased after the close of the war. The confis- cation of his property had rendered him homeless. The people of Virginia offered him homes almost without number, and relatives also who lived in Eng- 362 ROBERT E. LEE. y. - " ' land were desirous that he should take up his abode there ; but General Lee would not consent to be separated from the country he loved. He was deeply attached to the people of the South, as they to him ; and of the many homes offered him, he chos«s one in Powhatan County, a small and simple countryplace, where he gathered his wife and children around him, expect- ing to lead a retired and quiet life. He was also offered many positions, in which he would re- ceive a liberal salary for little or no labor ; but these his pride would not permit him to accept. Final- ly a proposition was made by the trustees of Washington Col- lege that he should become president of that institution. This offer, much to the gratification of his friends, he concluded to accept, believing, as he said, that he could be of influence and use in that posi- tion. This expecta- tion was not disap- pointed. The Univer- sity quickly became one of the most popular educational institutions of the South, which was no doubt largely in consequence of the fact that he was at the head of it. The number of students increased ten-fold within a comparatively short time after General Lee became its president. His wisdom and skill in managing the ilEMRAL LEE TO THE REAR AFFECTION OF THE PEOPLE. 363 students of the University was remarkable. His appeal to the higher sentiments of the young men seemed never to fail of a response. They were ashamed to do anything less than their best when feeling that General Lee's eye was upon them. He was ac- customed to remind them on entering the college of the loving solicitude with which their course would be watched by their mothers ; and this appeal to their high- est feelings seldom failed to have great effect upon their con- duct and character. One conse- quence of the filial feeling which the people of the South entertained for Gen- eral Lee was that he was flooded with let- ters upon every con- ceivable subject, from all parts of the coun- try. At a time when he had in charge five hundred young men, with a corps of twenty five instruct- ors under him, he was receiving daily almost innumerable letters from old sol- diers, their widows or children, and from those who had not even this claim upon him ; many asking for money, and nearly all appealing for advice or assistance in some form. A friend once said to him, "You surely do not feel obliged to answer all of these letters?' "Indeed I do," he replied. "Think of the trouble that many of these poor LEE AND THE FERRYMAN. 3<54 ROBERT E. LEE. people have taken to write me. Why should I not be willing to take the trouble to reply? That is all I can give, and that I give ungrudgingly." In 1867, in company with his daughter Mildred, he rode on horseback to the Peaks of Otter, fifty miles from Lex- ington. At a ferry on the route the boatman chanced to be an old soldier. When the usual charge was ten- dered, the rough mountaineer's eyes filled with tears, and he shook his head, saying, " I could not take pay from you, Master Robert : I have followed you in many a battle." Bitterness or re- sentment seemed to have no place in General Lee's na- ture. When the fate of war went against him, he accepted its result in good faith, and thenceforward did his best to re- store good feeling between the North and the South. Even toward men who ex- hibited the most in- tense bitterness against him he seemed to have no other feeling than kindness and good-will. This was the case even with those who sought to have him tried and punished for treason. During the war it was noticeable that he never spoke of the Union soldiers as "Yankees," the common expression in the Southern army. They LEE AND THE UNION SOLDIER. SCENE AFTER GETTYSBURG. 365 were always mentioned as " Federals," or " the enemy." He regretted and condemned the harsh and bitter language which characterized the Southern newspapers. " Is it any wonder," he said, " that Northern journals should retort as they do, when those in the South employ such language against them? " LEE AND THE UNION SOLDIER. A touching story, illustrating this noble trait of General Lee's character, was told years after the war by a Union veteran who was viewing the great, panorama, "The Battle of Gettysburg." He said, "I was at the battle of Gettysburg myself. I had been a most bitter anti-South man, and fought and cursed the Confederates desperately. I could see nothing good in any of them. The last day of the fight I was badly wounded. A ball shattered my left leg. 1 lay on the ground not far from Cemetery Ridge, and as General Lee ordered his retreat, he and his officers rode near me. As they came along I recognized him, and, though faint from exposure and loss of blood, I raised up my hands, looked Lee in the face, and shouted as loud as I could, ' Hurrah for the Union!' The general heard me, looked, stopped his horse, 'dismounted, and came toward me. I confess that I at first thought he meant to kill me. But as he came up he looked down at me with such a sad expression upon his face that all fear left me, and I wondered what he was about. He extended his hand to me, and grasping mine firmly and looking right into my eyes, said, ' My son, I hope you will soon be well.' " If I live a thousand years I shall never forget the expression on General Lee's face. There he was, defeated, retiring from a field that had cost him and his cause almost their last hope, and yet he stopped to say words like those to a wounded soldier of the opposition who had taunted him as he passed by ! As soon as the general had left me I cried myself to sleep there upon the bloody ground." The value of General Lee's example in restoring good feeling between the North and South can hardly be overestimated. He was so universally looked up to by the Southern people that his opinions and example could not fail to have the greatest effect. It is no small part of his title to fame that his great influence should have been used as it was toward reuniting the country after the war, rather than in perpetuating strife and hatred. General Lee's domestic life was an almost ideal one. During his last years, his wife was an invalid, suffering from rheumatic gout, and his devotion to her was unfailing. Her health rendered it necessary for her to travel to the medi- cinal springs in different parts of Virginia, and he used often to precede her on the journey, in order to have everything in readiness on her arrival. He con- trived an apparatus whereby she could be lowered into the baths in her chair, in order to avoid ascending and descending the steps. His love for his children *66 ROBERT E. LEE. manifested itself in a tender and delicate courtesy which was beautiful to see, and which was repaid on their part by the strongest attachment. General Lee died at Lexington, Virginia, October 12, 1870. After his death the name of the college over which he had presided was changed, in his honor, to "Washington and Lee University," and stands a worthy monument of the great soldier, whose noble qualities were shown as conspicuously in peace as in war. The issues which divided our country into hostile sections have happily passed away ; and North and South can join in cherishing his memory and doing honor to his spotless fame. Henry Ferris. MONUMENT TO GENERAL LEE, AT RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. 3 6S THOMAS JONATHAN JACKSON, THE GREAT CONFEDERATE GENERAL. 1847 ANY remarkable characters were developed on both sides in the great civil war of 1861. The war brought out in men qualities and powers which had never before been known or suspected. One of the most striking of such characters was the brave and able but eccentric man known as Stonewall Jackson, who fell in the battle of Chancellorsville, in May, 1863. Thomas Jonathan Jackson was born in Clarks- burg, Virginia, January 21, 1824. At the age of eighteen he was appointed to the West Point Mili- tary Academy. Owing to the fact that he was poorly prepared to enter that institution, he never took a high standing in his classes. He was graduated in and ordered to Mexico. He took part in Scott's campaign from Vera Cruz to the city of Mexico, and was twice brevetted for gallant conduct, at Churubusco and Chapultepec, finally attaining the rank of first lieutenant pf artillery. After the Mexican war he was on duty at Fort Hamilton, New York harbor, and subsequently at Fort Meade, Fla., but in 1851 ill health caused him to resign his commission in the army and return to his native State, where he was elected professor of natural sciences and artillery tactics in the Virginia Military Institute. Of Jackson's life at the Institute many stories are told, illustrating the pecu- liarities of his character. He was commonly called " Old Jack," and sometimes "Fool Tom Jackson," by the students, who were better able to perceive his eccentricities than his merits. His extreme conscientiousness is illustrated by his walking a long distance through snow and sleet one winter night to apologize to a cadet whom he had sent to his seat in class for a mistake in reci- tation. It proved that there was an error in the text-book, and that the student was correct. Most men would have thought it sufficient to rectify the error on the following day. Not so Jackson. As soon as he discovered that he was 369 37 o THOMAS JON A THAN J A CKSON. wrong, his conscience would not permit him to rest a moment until he had sought the student's room and set himself right. Jackson was above all things a religious man. At all times and places, in every act of his life, religion was his first thought. A friend was once convers- ing with him about the difficulty of the Scripture injunction, " Pray without ceasing," and Jackson insisted that we could so accustom ourselves to it that it could be easily obeyed. "When we take our meals, there is grace. When I take a drink of water I always pause, as my palate receives the refreshment, to lift up my heart in thanks to God for the water of life. Whenever I drop a letter in the box at the post-office, I send a petition along with it for God's blessing upon its mission and upon the person to whom it is sent. When I break the seal of a letter just received, I stop to pray to God that he may pre- pare me for its contents and make it a messenger of good. When I go to my class-room and await the arrangement of the cadets in their places, that is my time to intercede with God for them. And so with every other familiar act of the day." " But," said his friend, "do you not often forget these seasons, coming so frequently ? " " No," said he ; "I have made the practice habitual, and I can no more for- get it than forget to drink when I am thirsty." Upon the secession of Virginia Jackson was among the first to answer the call to arms, and wrote to Governor Letcher, offering to serve in any position to which he might be assigned. The Governor immediately commissioned him a colonel of Virginia volunteers. He was placed in command of the troops at Harper's Ferry, and upon the formation of the Army of the Shenandoah he was placed in charge of the famous "Stonewall Brigade," with which his name was thenceforth identified. That singular appellation of a body of troops origin- ated in this wise : — In the early part of the battle of Bull Run the Confederates had decidedly the worst of it. Bartow's and Bee's brigades were terribly cut up and driven from the field for a time, and all seemed lost, when Jackson suddenly appeared upon the scene with his splendid brigade. With magical rapidity he took in the situation, and formed his lines to resist the advance of the enemy. Bee and Bartow had succeeded in rallying fragments of their brigades. To re-assure his soldiers, Bee addressed them briefly, and, pointing to Jackson's men as a worthy example of courage and coolness, he exclaimed, " Look at those Virginians ! They stand like a stone wall." The next day Bee's compliment was repeated all over the camp, and the name stuck to the brigade and its commander ever after. One of Jackson's peculiarities was a passion for exact justice. He would not permit his rank to give him the smallest advantage over the common sol- WAITING FOR "HIS TURX. 37i diers of his command. When at Bull Run he made die celebrated charge which turned the fortunes of the day, he raised his left hand above his head to encour- age the troops, and while in this position a ball struck a finger, broke it, and carried off a piece of the bone. He remained upon the field, wounded as he was, till the fight was over, and then wanted to take part in the pursuit, but was peremptorily ordered back to the hospital by the general commanding. The chief surgeon was busily engaged with the wounded, but left them and asked Jackson if he was seriously hurt. " No," he answered, " not half as badly m harper's ferry. as many here, and I will wait." And he forthwith sat down on the bank of a little stream near by, and positively declined any assistance until "his turn came." In October, 1861, Jackson was commissioned a major-general, and sent to take command in the Shenandoah Valley. In the course of the winter he drove the Federal troops from the district, and early in the following March was there when Banks was sent against him. He fell back before Banks some forty miles, then suddenly turned, "and with only thirty-five hundred men attacked him so fiercely that he retreated with all his troops. His campaign in April, 1862, BATTI.K OF CHANCELLORSVILLE. JACKSON'S ATTACK ON THE RIGHT WING. HIS DEATH AT CHANCELLORSVILLE. 373 when he whipped Milroy, Banks, Shields, and Fremont, one after another, and then suddenly descended upon McClellan at Gaines's Mill, when the Union generals thought he was still in the Valley, constitutes one of the most brilliant chapters in modern warfare. He took part in the operations against McClellan, and in July he was again detached and sent to Gordonsville to look after his old enemies in the Valley, who were gathering under Pope. On August 9th he crossed the Rapidan and struck Banks another crushing blow at Cedar Run. On August 25th he passed around Pope's right flank and forced him to let go his hold upon the Rappahannock. By stubborn fighting he kept him on the ground until Longstreet could get up, and routed Pope at the second battle of Bull Run, in August, 1862. Two weeks later, in the beginning of the Maryland campaign, Jackson in- vested and captured Harper's Ferry with eleven thousand prisoners, many stands of arms, and seventy-two guns, and by a terrible night march reached Sharpsburg on September 1 6th. The next morning he commanded the left wing of the Confederate army, repulsing with his thin line the corps of Hooker, Mansfield, and Sumner, which were in succession hurled against him. At Fred- ericksburg, December 13, 1862, Jackson commanded the Confederate right wing, and in May, 1863, made his Chancellorsville movement, which resulted in his death. On May 3d he received a severe wound in the arm, which rendered am- putation necessary. Pneumonia supervened, and he died on the 10th of May. In person Jackson is described by an intimate friend as "a tall man, six feet high, angular, strong, with rather large feet and hands." He rather strode along than walked. There was something firm and decided even in his gait. His eyes were dark blue, large, and piercing. He looked straight at you, and through you almost, as he talked. He spoke in terse, short sentences, always to the point. There was never any circumlocution about what he had to say. His hair was inclined to auburn. His beard was brown. He was as gentle and kind as a woman to those he loved. There was sometimes a softness and ten- derness about him that was very striking. Jackson was exceedingly fond of children, and seldom failed to win their love in return. A story is told of him that illustrates both his love of children and his distaste for pomp and show. When encamped at Fredericksburg, he received a gift of a fine new cap, resplendent in a band of dazzling gold braid. This was one day greatly admired by a child of whom he was fond, whereupon Jackson took her on his knee, ripped the gold band off of his cap, bound it around the little one's curls, and sent her away delighted. Jackson was carefully temperate in his habits. On one occasion, when he was wet and fatigued, his physician gave him some whiskey. He made a wry face in swallowing it, and the doctor inquired if it was not good whiskey. " Oh, yes," he replied, "it's good. I like liquor'; (hat's why I don't drink if." 374 THOMAS JON A THAN J A CKSON. One of the most curious peculiarities of Jackson was a fashion he had of raising his right hand aloft, and then letting it fall suddenly to his side. He often held his hand, sometimes both hands, thus aloft in battle, and his lips were seen to move, evidently in prayer. Not once, but many times, has the singular spectacle been presented of a commander sitting on his horse silently as his column moved before him, his hands raised to heaven, his eyes closed, his lips moving in prayer. At Chancellorsville, as he recognized the corpse of any of his veterans, he would check his horse, raise his hands to heaven, and utter a prayer over the dead body. HOUSE IN WHICH STONEWALL JACKSON PIED, RICHMOND, VA. Jackson was a great hero and favorite throughout the South among both soldiers and people. They had the most implicit faith in his abilities, and the greatest love and reverence for his character. Their sentiments were well expressed in the prayer of old "Father Hubert," of Hays' Louisiana Brigade, who, in his prayer at the unveiling of the Jackson monument in New Orleans, said as his climax : "And Thou knowest, O Lord! that when Thou didst decide that the Confederacy should not succeed, Thou hadst first to remove Thy ser- vant, Stonewall Jackson." 376 JOHN PAUL JONES, AND THE GIANTS OK THE AMERICAN NAVY. HE origin of the American navy dates from the commencement of the struggle for national independence. Up to that time the colonies had looked to the mother country for protection on the seas. So the outbreak of the Revolution found them entirely without a navy. Their maritime interests were great, and their f fishing craft and merchant vessels were numerous and were manned by singularly able and daring mariners. But fighting ships they had none, while their opponent was not only the greatest naval power of the world, but was doubtless, at sea, stronger than all others put together. England was therefore able not only to command the American coasts with her fleet, but also largely to thwart whatever feeble efforts toward the construction of a navy were made by the haggling and incompetent Continental Congress. Nevertheless the American navy did then come into existence, and wrought at least one deed as immortal in the history of the sea, as Bunker Hill in that of the war upon the land. In the fall of 1775, the building of thirteen war-cruisers was begun ; but only six of them ever got to sea. Only one ship-of-the-line was built, the "America," and she was given to France before she was launched. During the whole war, a total of twenty small frigates and twenty-one sloops flew the American flag ; and fifteen of the former and ten of the latter were either captured or destroyed. What cockle-shells they were, and how slight in armament, compared with the floating fortresses of to-day, may be reckoned from the fact that twelve-pounders were their heaviest guns. Beside these, of course, there were many privateers, sent out to prey upon the enemy's commerce. These swift fishing craft ventured even to cruise along the very coast of England, and down to the time of the French alliance captured more than six hundred English vessels. In the annals of the regular navy, there are but three great captains' names : Wickes, Conyngham, and Jones. It was Lambert Wickes who, on his little sixteen gun " Reprisal," first bore the American war-flag to the shores of Europe, 377 378 GIANTS OF THE NAVY. and made it a terror to the great power that claimed to "rule the waves." After a brilliant cruise the " Reprisal " went down, with all hands, in the summer of 1 777, on the treacherous banks of Newfoundland. Then Gustavus Conyngham took up the work, with his "Surprise" and "Revenge," and that very summer so scourged the might of England in the North Sea and in the British Channel itself, that the ports were crowded with ships that dared not venture out, and the rates of marine insurance rose to fabulous figures. But the one splendid name of that era was that of a canny young Scotch- man, John Paul Jones. Eighteenth he stood on the list of captains commissioned by the Congress, but on the scroll of fame, for those times, first — and there is no second. Coming to Virginia in boyhood, he entered the mercantile marine. When the war broke out he offered his services to the Congress, and was made a captain. And in 1778 he was sent with the "Ranger," of eighteen guns, to follow where Wickes and Conyngham had led. He swept with his tiny craft up and down the Irish Channel, entered Whitehaven and burned the shipping at the docks ; captured off Carrickfergus the British war-sloop " Drake," larger than his own ship, and then made his way to Brest with all his prizes in tow. Next year he set out on his immortal cruise, with a squadron of five ships. His flagship was an old merchantman, the "Duras," fitted up for fighting and renamed the "Bon Homme Richard," in honor of Franklin and his " Poor Richard's Almanac." She was a clumsy affair, armed with thirty-two twelve- pounders and six old eighteen-pounders not fit for use, and manned by 380 men of every race, from New Englanders to Malays. The "Pallas" was also a merchantman transformed into a. thirty-two gun frigate. The " Vengeance " and the "Cerf" were much smaller; quite insignificant. The "Alliance" was a new ship, built in Massachusetts for the navy, but unhappily commanded by a Frenchman named Landais, half fool, half knave. Indeed, all the vessels save the flagship were commanded by Frenchmen, who were openly insubordinate, refusing half the time to recognize the commodore's authority, and often leaving him to cruise and fight alone. Yet the motley squadron did much execution along the shores of Britain. It all but captured the city of Leith, and entered H umber and destroyed much shipping. But the crowning glory came on September 23, 1779. On that immortal date Jones espied, off Flamborough Head, a fleet of forty British merchantmen, guarded by two frigates, bound for the Baltic. At once he gave chase. He had, besides his own ship, only the " Pallas " and the " Alliance," but they would be sufficient to capture the whole fleet. But the miserable Landais refused to obey the signal, and kept out of the action. So the fight began, two and two. Jones, with the " Bon Homme Richard," attacked the "Serapis," Captain Pear- son, and the " Pallas" engaged the " Countess of Scarborough." The "Sera- pis " had fifty guns and was much faster and stronger than Jones's ship. The JOHN PAUL JONES AND HIS FAMOUS VICTORY. 379 "Countess of Scarborough," on the other hand, was much inferior to the "Pallas" and proved an early victim. It was growing dark, on a cloudy evening, and the sea was smooth as a mill-pond, when the "Bon Homme Richard" and the " Serapis " began their awful duel. Both fired full broadsides at the same instant. Two of Jones's old eighteen-pounders burst, killing twelve men, and the others were at once aban- doned. So all through the fight, after that first volley, he had only his thirty-two twelve-pounders against the fifty guns — twenty of them eighteen-pounders, twenty nine-pounders, and ten six- pounders — of the "Serapis." For an hour they fought and manoeuvred, then came to- gether with a crash. An instant, the firing ceased. " Have you struck your colors?" demanded Pearson. " I have not yet begun to fight ! " replied Jones. Then with his own hands Jones lashed the two ships together, and inseparably joined, their sides actually touching, they battled on. Solid shot and canister swept through both ships like hail, while musket- men on the decks and in the rigging exchanged storms of bullets. For an hour and a half the conflict raged. Then Landais came up with the r FAUL JONES. "Alliance" and began firing equally on both. Jones ordered him to go to the other side of the " Serapis " and board, and his answer was to turn helm and go out of the fight altogether. Now the fighting ships were both afire, and both leaking and sinking. Most of the guns were disabled, and three-fourths of the men were killed or wounded. The gallant Pearson stood almost alone on the deck of the doomed "Serapis," not one of his men able to fight longer. Jones was as solitary on the "Bon Homme Richard," all his men still able-bodied being at the pumps, striving to keep the ship afloat. With his own hands he trained a gun upon 380 GIANTS OF THE NA VY. the mainmast of the "Serapis," and cut it down; and then Pearson surren- dered. The "Pallas" and "Alliance" came up and took off the men, and in a few hours the two ships sank, still bound together in the clasp of death. This was not only one of the most desperate and deadly naval battles in history. Its moral effect was epoch-making. John Paul Jones was the hero of the day, and Europe showered honors upon him. The American flag was hailed as a rival to that of England on the seas, and all Europe was encouraged to unite against England and force her to abate her arrogant pre- tensions, and to accede to a more just and liberal code of international maritime law than had before prevailed. In view of this latter fact, this battle must be ranked among the three or four most important in the naval history of the world. It was this battle that inspired Catharine of Russia to enunciate the doctrine of the rights of neutrals in maritime affairs ; and the tardy acquiescence of England, eighty years later, in that now universal principle, was brought about by the blow struck by John Paul Jones off Flamborough Head. There were no other naval operations of importance during the Revolution, save those of the French fleet at Yorktown. But soon after the declaration of peace, new complications arose, threatening a war at sea. England and France were fighting each other, and commerce was therefore diverted to the shipping of other nations. A very large share of Europe's carrying trade was done by American vessels. But these were between two fires. England insisted that she had a right to stop and search American ships and take from them all sailors of English birth ; actually taking whom she pleased ; and France made free to seize any American ships she pleased, under the pretext that there were English goods aboard ; and when she captured an English ship and found on board an American seaman who had been impressed, instead of treating him as a prisoner of war, like the others, she hanged him as a pirate. Naturally indignation rose high, and preparations were made for war with France. In July, i 798, the three famous frigates, the "Constellation," the "United States," and the " Constitution," best known as "Old Ironsides," were sent to sea, and Congress authorized the navy to be increased to include six frigates, twelve sloops, and six smaller craft. Among the officers commissioned, were the illus- trious Bainbridge, Hull, Decatur, Rodgers, and Stewart. Actual hostilities soon began. French piratical cruisers were captured, and an American squadron sailed for the West Indies to deal with the French privateers that abounded there, in which work it was generally successful. In January, 1799, Congress voted a million dollars, for building six ships of the line and six sloops. Soon after, on February 9, occurred the first engagement between vessels of the American and French navies. The " Constellation," Captain Truxton, over- hauled " L'Insurgente," at St. Kitts, in the West Indies, and after a fight of an hour and a quarter forced her to surrender. The "Constellation" had three SUPPRESSING THE BARBARY PIRATES. 381 men killed and one wounded ; " L'Insurgente " twenty killed and forty-six wounded. Again, on February 1, 1800, Truxton with the " Constellation " came up, at Guadeloupe, with the French Frigate " La Vengeance." After chasing her two days he brought on an action. The two ships fought all night. In the morning, "La Vengeance," completely silenced and shattered, drew away and escaped to Curacoa, where she was condemned as unfit for further service. The "Constellation "was little injured save in her rigging. For his gallantry, Truxton received a gold medal from Congress. Later in that year there were some minor engagements, in which Americans were successful. By the spring of 1801, friendly, relations with France were restored. The President was accordingly authorized to dispose of all the navy, save thirteen ships, six of which were to be kept constantly in commission, and to dismiss , from the service all officers save nine captains, thirty-six lieutenants, and one hundred and fifty midshipmen. At about this time ground was purchased and navy-yards established at Portsmouth, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Wash- ington and Norfolk, and half a million dollars was appropriated for the completion of six seventy-four gun ships. Now came on real war. For many years the pirate ships of the Barbary States, Algeria and Tripoli, had been the scourge of the Mediterranean. The commerce of every land had suffered. European powers did not venture to suppress the evil, but some of them basely purchased immunity by paying tribute to the pirates. America, too, at first followed this humiliating course, actually thus paying millions of dollars. In September, 1800, Captain Bainbridge went with the frigate " George Washington " to bear to the Dey of Algeria the annual tribute. The Dey took the money, and then impressed Bainbridge and his ship into his own service for a time, to go on an errand to Constantinople. Bainbridge reported this to Congress, adding, " I hope I shall never again be sent with tribute, unless to deliver it from the mouth of our cannon." However, Bainbridge was received courteously at Constantinople, and his ship was the first to display the American flag there. Captain Dale was sent with a squadron to the Mediterranean in 1801, to repress the pirates of Tripoli. One of his ships, the schooner " Experiment," captured a Tripolitan cruiser, and this checked for a time the ardor of the pirates. But open war was soon declared between the two countries, and Congress authorized the sending of a larger fleet to the Mediterranean. The gallant Truxton was offered the command of it, but declined because the cheese-paring Administration was too parsimonious to allow him a proper staff of subordinates. Thereupon he was dismissed from the service, and Captain Morris sent in his place. But false economy had so enfeebled the navy that the fleet was able to do little. One Tripolitan ship was captured, however, and another destroyed. 382 GIANTS OF THE NA FY. Then the Government woke up, and began building new ships, and sent another squadron over, led by Preble with the " Constitution." He went first to Morocco, whose Sultan at once sued for peate ; and then proceeded to Tripoli. Here he found that the frigate "Philadelphia," with Bainbridge and three hundred men aboard, had been captured and was being refitted by the Tripolitans for their own use. Decatur, commanding the " Enterprise," under Preble, determined upon a bold counter-stroke. Taking a small vessel, the "Intrepid," which he had captured from Tripoli, he sailed boldly into the harbor, flying the Tripolitan flag and pretending to be a merchant of that country. Running alongside the " Philadelphia," he boarded her, set her afire, and sailed away in safety, though amid a storm of shot and shell. The " Phila- delphia" was burned to the water's edge. Nothing more was done at the time, however, save to keep up a blockade, and Bainbridge and his men remained in captivity. In August, 1804, Preble and Decatur made a vigorous attack upon the harbor, and destroyed two and captured three vessels. A few days later other attacks were made. Then a new squadron under Commodore Barron came to the scene, and Preble was superseded. No other naval operations of importance occurred, and peace was finally concluded in 1805. Troubles with England now grew more serious. That country persisted in searching American ships and taking from them all whom she chose to call deserters from the British service. And so the two powers drifted into the war of 181 2. In that struggle, the Americans were badly worsted on land, but won victories of the first magnitude on the lakes and ocean. America had only nine frigates and a score of smaller craft, while England had a hundred ships of the line. Yet the honors of the war on the sea rested with the former. Her triumphs startled the world. The destruction of the "Guerriere" by the "Constitution," Captain Hull, marked an epoch in naval history. Then the "United States," Captain Decatur, vanquished the "Macedonian;" the "Wasp," Captain Jones, the "Frolic ;" the "Constitution," Captain Bainbridge, the "Java;" and the "Hornet" the "Peacock." On Lake Erie, Commodore Perry won a great victory, which he announced in the famous message, " We have met the enemy, and they are ours." Equally brilliant was the victory of MacDonough on Lake Champlain. The most deplorable reverse was the destruction of the "Chesapeake" by the British ship " Shannon," the "Chesa- peake's" commander, Lawrence, losing his life, but winning fame through his dying words, " Don't give up the ship !" The conflicts of this war are more fully detailed elsewhere in this volume. It is needful here only to mention them briefly, as we have done. The cause of the surprising successes of the Americans may well be explained, however. It was due to that very inventive ingenuity that has made the history of the ^; ! ffl m 384 GIANTS OF THE NAVY. world's industrial progress so largely a mere chronicle of "Yankee notions." The Americans had invented and were using sights on their cannon. That was all. But the result was that their aim was far more accurate and their fire far more effective than that of their opponents. This advantage, added to courage and skill in seamanship equal to any the world had known, gave them their victory. This war was ended in February, 181 5, and a month later another was begun. This was against the Dey of Algeria, who had 'broken the peace and seized an American ship, despite the fact that America had continued down to this time to pay tribute to him. It was now determined to make an end of the business ; so Bainbridge was sent, as he had requested, to deliver the final tribute from his cannons' mouths. Before he got there, however, Decatur, did the work. He captured an Algerine vessel ; sailed into port and dictated an honorable peace ; and then imposed like terms on Tripoli and Tunis, thus ending the tyranny of the Barbary States over the commerce of the world. Thereafter for many years the navy had not much to do. Some vessels were used for purposes of exploration and research, and much was thereby added to the scientific knowledge of the world. During the Mexican war, naval opera tions were unimportant. But in 1846 complications with Japan were begun. In that year two ships were sent to the Island empire, on an errand of peaceful negotiation, which proved fruitless. Three years later another went, on a sterner errand, and rescued at the cannon's mouth a number of shipwrecked American sailors who had been thrown into captivity. Finally the task of "opening Japan " to intercourse with the rest of the world, a task no other power had ventured to assume, was undertaken by America. On November 24, 1852, Commodore Perry set sail thither, with a powerful fleet. His commission was to "open Japan"; by peaceful diplomacy if he could, by force of arms if he must. The simp 1 ^ show of force was sufficient, and in 1854, he returned in triumph, bearing a treaty with Japan. The most extended and important services of the United States navy were performed during the War of the Rebellion At the outbreak of that conflict, in 1 86 1, the whole navy comprised only forty -two vessels in commission. Nearly all of these were scattered in distant parts of the world, where they had been purposely sent by the conspirators at Washington. Most of those that remained were destroyed in port, so that there was actually for a time only one serviceable war-ship on the North Atlantic coast. But building- and purchase soon increased the navy, so that before the end of the year it numbered two hundred and sixty-four, and was able to blockade all the ports of the Southern Confederacy. They were a motley set, vessels of every imaginable type, ferry- boats and freight steamers, even, being pressed into use ; but they served. The first important naval action was that at Hatteras Inlet, in August, 1861. PASSING THE FORTS. 385 There Commodore Stringham, with a fleet of steam and sailing craft, bombarded a series of powerful forts and forced them to surrender, without the loss of a single man aboard the ships. Next came the storming of Port Royal. At the end of October Commodore Dupont and Commander Rodgers went thither with a strong squadron. They entered the harbor, and formed with their ships an ellipse, which kept constantly revolving, opposite the forts, and constantly pouring in a murderous fire. It was earthworks on land against old-fashioned wooden ships on the water ; but the ships won, and the forts surrendered. A small flotilla of rebel gunboats came to the assistance of the forts, but were quickly repulsed by the heavy fire from the ships. The next year saw much naval activity in many quarters. The blockade of all Southern ports was rigorously maintained, and there were some exciting engagements between the national ships and blockade runners. On the Cumberland, Ohio, Tennessee and Mississippi Rivers the gunboats of Foote" and Porter greatly aided the land forces, in the campaigns against Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, at Island No. 10, and Vicksburg. Roanoke Island and New Berne, on the Carolina coast, were taken by a combined naval and military expedition. One of the most striking events of the war was the entrance of the Mississippi and capture of New Orleans by Admiral Farragut. He had a fleet of forty vessels, all told. Opposed to him were two great and strong land forts, Jackson and St. Philip, one on each side of the river, mounting two hundred and twenty- five guns. From one to the other stretched a ponderous iron chain, completely barring the passage, and beyond this was a fleet of iron-clad gun-boats, fire- ships, etc. Military and naval authorities scouted the idea that Farragut's wooden ships could ever fight their way through. But Farragut quietly scouted the authorities. Making his way up to within range of the forts he began a bombardment. On the first day his guns threw 2000 shells at the enemy. A huge fire-raft was sent against him, but his ships avoided it and it passed harmlessly by. Another was sent down that night, a floating mountain of flame. But one of Farragut's captains deliberately ran his ship into it, turned a hose upon it, and towed it out of the way ! For a week the tremendous bombardment was kept up, 16,800 shells being thrown at the forts. Then Farragut cut the chain, and started to run the fiery gauntlet of the forts with his fleet. Before daylight one morning the mortar- boats 'opened a furious fire, under cover of which the ships steamed straight up the river. The forts opened on them with every gun, a perfect storm of shot and shell, and the ships replied with full broadsides. Five hundred cannon were thundering. One ship was disabled and dropped back. The rest swept on in a cloud of flame. Before they were past the forts, fire-ships came down upon them, and iron-clad gunboats attacked them. The "Varuna," Captain 386 GTANTS OF THE NA VY. Boggs, was surrounded by five rebel gunboats, and sank them all. As the last of them sank, a sixth, a huge iron-clad ram, came rushing upon the "Varuna." Boggs saw he could not escape it, so he turned the " Varuna " so as to receive the blow squarely amidships. The ram crushed her like an egg-shell, and in a few minutes she sank. But her fearful broadsides, at such close range, riddled the ram, and the two went down together. In an hour and a half, eleven rebel gunboats were sent to the bottom, and the fleet was past the forts. Next SINKING i >F THE ALABAMA. morning Farragut raised the national flag above the captured city of New Orleans. This tremendous conflict was not, however, the most significant of that year. There was another which, in a single hour, revolutionized the art of naval warfare. When, at the outbreak of the war, the Norfolk Navy-yard had been destroyed to keep it from falling into rebel hands, one ship partially escaped the flames. This was the great frigate " Merrimac," probably the finest ship in THE "MONITOR" AND "MERRIMAC" 387 the whole navy. The Confederates took her hull, which remained uninjured, and covered it completely with a sloping roof of iron plates four inches thick, backed with heavy timbers, put a great iron ram at her bow, and fitted her with large guns and powerful engines. Then, to protect her further, she was coated thickly with tallow and plumbago. She was regarded as entirely invulnerable to cannon-shot, and her builders believed she would easily destroy all ships sent against her and place New York and all Northern seaports at the mercy of her guns. At the same time a curious little craft was built, hurriedly enough, in New York. It was designed by John Ericsson, and was called the " Monitor." It consisted of a hull nearly all submerged, its flat iron deck only a few inches above the water, and upon this a circular iron tower, which was turned round and round by machinery and which carried two large guns. Naval experts laughed at the "cheese-box on a plank," as they called it, and thought it unworthy of serious consideration. A REVOLUTION IN NAVAL WARFARE. At noon of Saturday, March 8, the mighty " Merrimac," a floating fortress of iron, came down the Elizabeth River to where the National fleet lay in Hampton Roads. The frigate " Congress " fired upon her, but she paid no attention to it, but moved on to the sloop-of-war " Cumberland," crushed her side in with a blow of her ram, riddled her with cannon-balls, and sent her to the bottom. The solid shot from the "Cumberland's" ten-inch guns glanced from the " Merrimac's " armor, harmless as so many peas. Then the monster turned back to the " Congress " and destroyed her. Next she attacked the frigate " Minnesota " and drove her aground, and then retired for the night, intending the next day to return, destroy the entire fleet, and proceed northward to bombard New York. That night the "Monitor" arrived. She had been hurriedly completed. She had come down from New York in a storm, and was leaking and her machinery was out of order. She was not in condition for service. But she was all that lay between the "Merrimac" and the boundless destruction at which she aimed. So she anchored at the side of the " Minnesota " and waited for daylight. It came, a beautiful Sunday morning ; and down came the huge " Merrimac" to continue her deadly work. Out steamed the tiny " Monitor" to meet her. The " Merrimac " sought to ignore her, and attacked the " Minne- sota." But the "Monitor" would not be ignored. Captain Worden ran her alongside the "Merrimac," so that they almost touched, and hurled his 160-lb. shot at the iron monster as rapidly as the two guns could be worked. Those shots, at that range, told, as all the broadsides of the frigates had not. The "Merrimac's" armor began to yield, while her own firing had no effect upon the " Monitor." It was seldom she could hit the little craft at all, and when she did the shots glanced off without harm. Five times she tried to 388 GIANTS OF THE NA VY. ram the "Monitor," but the latter eluded her. A sixth time she tried it, and the "Monitor" stood still and let her come on. The great iron beak that had crushed in the side of the "Cumberland " merely glanced on the "Moni- tor's " armor and glided upon her deck. The " Merrimac " was so lifted and tilted as to expose the unarmored part of her hull to the "Monitor's" deadly fire, while the "Monitor" quickly slid out from under her, uninjured. Then the " Merrimac " retreated up the river, and her career was ended. She was a mere wreck. But the " Monitor," though struck by twenty-two heavy shots, was practically uninjured. The only man hurt on the "Monitor" was the gallant Captain Worden. He was looking through the peep-hole when one of the " Merrimac's" last shots struck squarely just outside. He was stunned by the shock and half-blinded by splinters ; but his first words on regaining consciousness were, " Have we saved the ' Minnesota ' ? " The "Monitor" had saved the "Minnesota," and all the rest of the fleet, and probably many Northern cities. But, more than that, she had, in that grim duel, revolutionized naval warfare. In that hour England saw her great ships of the line condemned. The splendid frigates, with their tiers of guns, were thenceforth out of date and worthless. The "cheese-box on a plank" in a single day had vanquished all the navies of the world. The success of Farragut in passing the Mississippi forts led Dupont, in April, 1863, to attempt in like manner to enter Charleston harbor ; but in vain. The fire from the forts was too fierce, and his fleet was forced to fall back with heavy losses. But in August, 1864, Farragut repeated his former exploit at Mobile. Forming his ships in line of battle, he stood in the rigging of the " Hartford," glass in hand, and directed their movements. As Dupont had done at Port Royal, he swept round and round in a fiery ellipse. At a critical point in the battle the lookout reported, " Torpedoes ahead !" A cry arose to stop the ship. "Go ahead! Damn the torpedoes!" roared the great Admiral, and the ship went on. Then the huge iron ram "Tennessee" came forward, to crush them as the "Merrimac" had crushed the "Cumberland." But Farragut, with sublime audacity, turned the bow of his wooden ship upon her and ran her down. Thus the Mobile forts were silenced and the harbor cleared. Nor must the storming of Fort Fisher be forgotten. The first attack was made in December, 1864. Admiral Porter bombarded the place furiously, and then General Butler attempted to take it with land forces. He failed, and returned to Fortress Monroe, saying the place could not be taken. But Porter thought otherwise, and remained at his post with his fleet. General Terry then went down with an army, Porter renewed the bombardment, the fort was captured, and the last port of the Confederacy was closed. While the National navy was thus carrying all before it along the coast, the Confederates were active elsewhere. Their swift, armed cruisers, fitted out SINKING OF THE ALABAMA. 389 in English ports, scoured the seas and preyed upon American commerce eveiy- where, until the American merchant flag' was almost banished from the ocean. The most famous of all these cruisers was the "Alabama," commanded by Raphael Semmes. During her career she destroyed more than ten million dollars' worth of American shipping. For a long time her speed and the skill and daring of her commander kept her out of the hands of the American navy. But at last, in June, 1864, Captain Winslow, with the ship " Kearsarge," came up with her in the neutral harbor of Cherbourg, France. Determined to make an end of her, he waited, just outside the harbor, for her to come out. Semmes soon accepted the challenge, and the duel occurred on Sunday, June 19. The shore was crowded with spectators, and many yachts and other craft came out, bearing hundreds anxious to see the battle. The vessels were not far from equal in strength. But the " Kearsarge" had two huge eleven-inch pivot guns, that made awful havoc on the "Alabama." The "Alabama," on the other hand, had more guns than the " Kearsarge." But the famous cruiser's time had come. As the two ships slowly circled round and round, keeping up a constant fire, every shot from the " Kearsarge " seemed to find its mark, while those of the "Alabama." went wide. And soon the "Alabama" sank, leaving the "Kearsarge " scarcely injured. A volume might be filled with accounts of notable exploits of the navy which there is not room even to mention here. But one more must be named, so daring and so novel was it. In April, 1864, the great iron-clad ram,- "Albe- marle," was completed by the Confederates and sent forth to drive the National vessels from the sounds and harbors of the North Carolina coast. She came down the Roanoke River and boldly attacked the fleet, destroying one ship at the first onset and damaging others, while showing herself almost invulnerable. It was feared that she would actually succeed in raising the blockade, and extraordinary efforts were made to destroy her, but without avail. At last the job was undertaken by a young officer, Lieutenant Cushing, who had already distinguished himself by his daring. He took a small steam launch, manned by himself and fifteen others, armed with a howitzer, and carrying a large torpedo. The "Albemarle" was at her dock at Plymouth, some miles up the river, and both banks of the narrow stream were closely lined with pickets and batteries. On a dark, stormy night the launch steamed boldly up the river and got within a short distance of the "Albemarle " before it was seen by the pickets. Instantly the alarm was given, and a hail of bullets fell upon the launch, doing, however, little harm. Cushing headed straight for the huge iron-clad, shouting at the top of his voice, in bravado, " Get off the ram ! We're going to blow you up ! " Running the launch up till its bow touched the side of the "Albemarle," he thrust the torpedo, at the end of a pole, under the latter and fired it. The explosion wrecked the "Albemarle" 39° GIANTS OF THE NA VY. and sank her. The launch was also wrecked, and the sixteen men took to the water and sought to escape by swimming. All were, however, captured by the Confederates, save four. Of these, two were drowned, and the other two — one of them being Cushing himself — reached the other shore 'and got safely back to the fleet. We have said that in the spring of 1861 there were only 42 vessels in com- mission in the navy. There were also 27 serviceable ships not in commission, and 21 unserviceable, or 90 in all. During the four years of the war there were built and added to the navy 125 unarmored and 68 armored vessels, most of the latter being of the " Monitor " type. A few figures regarding some of the en- gagements will give a vivid idea of the manner in which the ships fought. In the futile attack of the iron-clads on the forts in Charleston harbor, April 7, 1863, nine vessels took part, using 23 guns and firing 139 times, at from 500 to 2100 yards range. They hit Fort Wagner twice, Fort Moultrie 12 times, and Fort Sumter 55 times, doing little damage. Against them the forts used "jj guns, firing 2229 times, and hitting the vessels 520 times, but doing little damage except to one monitor, which was sunk. In the second bombardment of Fort Fisher 21,716 projectiles, solid shot and shell, were thrown by the fleet. But the most important thing achieved was the entire transformation effected in naval science. Hitherto the war-ship had been simply an armed merchant- ship, propelled by sails or, latterly, by steam, carrying a large number of small guns. American inventiveness made it, after the duel of the "Monitor" and " Merrimac," a floating fortress of iron or steel, carrying a few enormously heavy guns. The glory of the old line-of-battle ship, with three or four tiers of guns on each side and a big cloud of canvas overhead, firing rattling broadsides, and manoeuvring to get and hold the weather-gauge of the enemy — all that was relegated to the past forever. In its place came the engine of war, with little pomp and circumstance, but with all the resources of science shut within its ugly, black iron hull. John Paul Jones, with his "Bon Homme Richard," struck the blow that made universal the law of neutrals' rights. Hull, with the " Constitution," send- ing a British frigate to the bottom, showed what Yankee ingenuity in sighting guns could do. Ericsson and Worden, with the " Monitor," sent wooden navies to the hulk-yard and ushered in the era of iron and steel fighting-engines. These are the three great naval events of a century. One of the most thrilling events in naval history occurred in a time of peace. It was in the harbor of Apia, Samoa, in March, 1889. A great storm struck the shipping and destroyed nearly every vessel there. Three German war-ships were wrecked. One English war-ship, by herculean efforts, was saved. Two American war-ships were wrecked, and one was saved after being run on the beach. This was the " Nipsic." The wrecked vessels were the THE STORM IN APIA HARBOR. 39' "Trenton" and the " Vandalia." The combined strength of their engines and anchors was not enough to keep them from being driven upon the fateful reefs. The "Vandalia" was already stranded and pounding to pieces, and the "Trenton" was drifting down upon her. "Suddenly," says a witness of the scene, "the Stars and Stripes were seen flying from the gaff of the 'Trenton.' Previous to this no vessel in the harbor bad raised a flag, as the storm was raging so furiously at sunrise that that ceremony was neglected. It seemed now as if the gallant ship knew she was doomed, and had determined to go down with the flag of her country floating above the storm. Presently the last faint ray of daylight faded away, and night came down upon the awful scene. The storm was still raging with as much fury as at any time during the day. The poor creatures who had been clinging for hours to the rigging of the ' Vandalia ' were bruised and bleeding, but they held on with the desperation of men who hang by a thread between life and death. The ropes had cut the flesh of their arms and legs, and their eyes were blinded by the salt spray which swept over them. Weak and exhausted as they were, they would be unable to stand the terrible strain much longer. They looked down upon the angry water below them, and knew that they had no strength left to battle with the waves. Their final hour seemed to be upon them. The great black hull of the ' Trenton ' could be seen through the darkness, almost ready to crush into the stranded ' Vandalia ' and grind her to atoms. Suddenly a shout was borne across the waters. The 'Trenton' was cheering the 'Vandalia.' The sound of 450 voices broke upon the air and was heard above the roar of the tempest. ' Three cheers for the " Vandalia ! " ' was the cry that warmed the hearts of the dying men in the rigging. The shout died away upon the storm, and there arose from the quivering masts of the sunken ship a response so feeble that it was scarcely heard on shore. The men who felt that they were looking death in the face aroused themselves to the effort and united in a faint cheer to the flagship. Those who were standing on shore listened in silence, for that feeble cry was the saddest they had ever heard. Every heart was melted to pity. ' God help them ! ' was passed from one man to another. The sound of music next came across the water. The ' Trenton's ' band was playing ' The Star Spangled Banner.' The thousand men on sea and shore had never before heard strains of music at such a time as this." And so the good ships went to wreck, and many a life was lost ; but a standard of endurance and of valor was there set up that shall command the reverence and wonder of the world as long as time shall endure. During fifteen years of peace, following the War of the Rebellion, the navy was much neglected. No new ships were built, and the old ones fell into decay. In 1SS1, however, William H. Hunt, Secretary of the Navy appointed an Advisory Board to plan the building of a new navy adequate to the needs of the THE NEW NAVY. 393 nation. From the deliberations of this Board and its successor, appointed by Secretary Chandler, sprang the splendid new fleet. The Board recom- mended the construction of four steel vessels : the " Chicago," of 4500 tons displacement; the "Boston" and "Atlanta," of 3189 tons displacement each, and the "Dolphin," of 1485 tons displacement. The dates of the acts author- izing these vessels were August 5, 1882, and March 3, 1883, and the contracts were taken for all four vessels by John Roach & Sons in July, 1883. The pioneer of the new steel navy was the " Dolphin." Although classed as a " dispatch boat " in the Navy Register, she has well earned the title of a first-class cruiser, and would be so classed if she had the tonnage displacement, since she made a most successful cruise around the world, traversing 52,000 miles of sea without a single mishap. The " Dolphin " was launched April 21, and she was finished in November, 1884, and although no material changes were made in her she was kept in continuous service for nearly six years. After her trip around Cape Horn, and after ten months hard cruising, she was thoroughly surveyed, and there was not a plate displaced, nor a rivet loosened, nor a timber strained, nor a spar out of gear. At the end of her cruise around the world she was pronounced "the stanchest dispatch-boat in any navy of the world." The " Dolphin " is a single-screw vessel of the following dimensions : Length over all, 265^ feet; breadth of beam, 32 feet; mean draught, 14^ feet; displacement, 1485 tons. Her armament consists of two four-inch rapid- firing guns ; two six-pounder rapid-firing guns ; four forty-seven-millimeter Hotchkiss revolving cannon, and two Gatling guns. She is also fitted with torpedo tubes. Her cost, exclusive of her guns, was $315,000. Her comple- ment of crew consists of 10 officers and 98 enlisted men. The first four vessels were called the "A, B, C, and D of the New Navy," because of the first letters of their names — the " Atlanta," " Boston," " Chicago," and " Dolphin." The " Atlanta " and " Boston " are sister ships — that is, they were built from the same designs and their plates, etc., were- moulded from the same patterns and they carry the same armament — hence a description of one is a description of the other. They followed the "Dolphin" in service, the "Atlanta " being launched on October 9, 1884, and the " Boston " on December 4, 1884. The "Atlanta" cost $619,000 and the "Boston" $617,000. The official description of these vessels is that they "are central superstructure, single-deck, steel cruisers." Their dimensions are : Length over all, 283 feet ; breadth of beam, 42 feet; mean draught, 17 feet; displacement, 3189 tons; sail area, 10,400 square feet. The armament of each consists of two eight-inch and six six-inch breech-loading rifles ; two six-pounder, two two-pounder, and two one-pounder rapid-firing guns ; two 47-millimeter and two 37-millimeter Hotch- kiss revolving cannon, two Gatling guns, and a set of torpedo-firing tubes. 394 GIANTS OF THE NAVY. Larger and finer still is the " Chicago," the flagship of the fleet, which was launched on December 5, 1885. She was the first vessel of the navy to have heavy guns mounted in half turrets, her four eight-inch cannon being carried on the spar-deck in half turrets built out from the ship's side, the guns being twenty-four and a-half feet above the water and together commanding the entire horizon. There are six six-inch guns in the broadside ports of the gun-deck and a six-inch gun on each bow. There are also two five-inch guns aft in the after portion of the cabin. Her secondary battery is two Catlings, two six- pounders, two one-pounders, two 47-millimeter revolving cannon, and two 37-millimeter revolving cannon. This auspicious start being made, the work of building the new navy went steadily on. Next came the protected cruisers "Baltimore," "Charleston," " Newark," " San Francisco," and " Philadelphia," big steel ships, costing from a million to nearly a million and a half dollars each. Much smaller cruisers, or gunboats, were the "Yorktown," "Concord," and "Bennington," and, smallest of all, the " Petrel." All these ships, though varying in size, are of the same general type. They are not heavily armored, and are not regarded as regular battle-ships, yet could doubtless give a good account of themselves in any conflict. They are chiefly intended, however, as auxiliaries to the real fighters, and as cruisers, commerce destroyers, etc. The "Vesuvius," launched in April, 1888, is a "dynamite cruiser," a small, swift vessel, carrying three huge guns, each of fifteen inches bore, pointing directly forward and upward. From these, charges of dynamite are to be fired by compressed air. The " dishing " is a swift torpedo boat, with three tubes for discharging the deadly missiles. It was launched in 1890, and named after the intrepid destroyer of the "Albemarle," whose feat has already been described. The "Stiletto" is a very small, wooden torpedo boat, of very great speed. The new navy also contains a number of vessels intended for coast-defense, heavily armored for hard fighting. The "Monterey" is a vessel of the "Monitor" type invented by Ericsson. It has two turrets, or barbettes, each carrying two twelve-inch 'guns, and protected by from eleven to thirteen inches of armor. The bow is provided with a ram. The " Puritan is a vessel of similar design, with fourteen inches of armor. Besides the four big guns there is a secondary battery of twelve rapid-firing guns, four Hotchkiss revolving cannon, and four Gatling guns. The " Miantonomah " is another double- turreted monitor. Her four ten-inch rifles have an effective range of thirteen miles, and she has a powerful secondary battery. Her big guns can send a five hundred-pound bolt of metal through twenty inches of armor, and she is herself heavily armored. This is a singularly powerful battle-ship, and would probably GREAT ARMORED WAR SHIPS. 395 prove a match for any war-ship in the world. Several similar vessels are now under construction. The " Maine " is a heavily-armored cruiser, and while intended for sea- going, is really a battle-ship. It has eleven inches of armor and carries four ten-inch rifles, besides numerous smaller guns. The "Texas " is a similar ship. The "Detroit," "Montgomery," and " Marblehead," not yet completed, are small, partially armored cruisers. The "New York" is a mighty armored cruiser, believed to surpass any other ship ever built in the combination of offen- ' CHICAGO," U. S N., ONE OF THE NEW "WHITE SQUADRON" WAR SHIPS. sive and defensive power, coal endurance, and speed. She is 380 feet 6% inches long; steams 20 knots per hour; can go 13,000 miles without coaling; has from six to eight inches of armor, and carries six eight-inch and twelve four-inch rifles, and numerous smaller guns. The " Raleigh " and " Cincinnati " are protected cruisers of medium size. There are several other cruisers, not yet named, especially designed as com- merce-destroyers, having great speed, and being made to look as much like merchant-ships as possible. Other gunboats and battle-ships are also being built; one practice cruiser, intended for a school-ship, and a harbor-defense 396 GIANTS OF THE NA VY. ram, carrying no guns, but provided with a particularly ugly beak at the bow. Altogether, the new navy, built or building, down to the present date comprises thirteen armored battle-ships, seventeen unarmored but " protected " cruisers, and six gunboats, all of them fully equal to any ships of their class in the world. In scarcely any department of human industry are the changes produced by the progress of civilization more strikingly seen than in the navy. When America was discovered, the galleon and the caravel were the standard war- ships of the world — clumsy wooden tubs, towering high in air, propelled by sails and even oars, with a large number of small cannons, and men armed with muskets and cross-bows. Such was the famed Armada, "that great fleet invincible," that was vanquished by the smaller, lighter crafts of Britain. Four hundred years have passed, and what is the war-ship of to-day ? A low-lying hulk of iron and steel ; armed with a few big guns, one of which throws a heavier shot than a galleon's whole broadside ; driven resistlessly through the water by mighty steam engines ; lighted and steered by electric apparatus, and using an electric search-light that makes midnight as bright as day. All the triumphs of science and mechanic arts have contributed to the perfection of these dreadful sea monsters, a single one of which could have destroyed the whole Armada in an hour, and laughed to scorn the might of Nelson inTrafalgar Bay. What the locomotive is to the stage-coach, that is the " Miantonomah " or the " New York " to the " San Philip " or the " Revenge." OLIVER H. PERRY, THE HERO OE THE BATTLE OE LAKE ERIE. iMONG the "Giants of the American Navy" there are few more remarkable than the commander who fought the sin- ImSK' Bffii §&5) gular but glorious battle of Lake Erie, in September, 1813. Oliver Hazard Perry was a Rhode Island boy, born in 1785. His mother, Sarah Alexander, was noted for her strength of character and intellect, and her children were trained with rare ability. She taught him how and what to read, told him stories of the deeds of her military ances- tors, and " fitted him to command others by teaching him early to obey." After the battle on Lake Erie, when the country was ringing with Perry's praises, some Rhode Island farmers, who knew his mother well, insisted that it was " Mrs. Perry's victory." Perry entered the navy as a midshipman when only fourteen. He gave the details of his profession the most thorough study, and by incessant training of his crews, and practicing his ships in the various evolutions, he brought them up to a wonderful degree of efficiency. In the years preceding the War of 181 2 he was in command of the Newport flotilla of gunboats ; and he practiced sham fights by dividing his fleet into two squadrons, manceuvering them as if in battle, and thus acquired the ability to take advantage of critical moments and situations. When war against England was at last declared, Perry applied repeatedly for a sea command, but, being disappointed, finally offered his services to Com- modore Chauncey, on the lakes. There he had to begin by building his ships. The shores of Lake Erie were a wilderness. The squadron was to be built from the trees standing in the forest. Traveling to Lake Erie in sleighs, he met there a party of ship carpenters from Philadelphia, and after months of the rrtost incessant toil, they constructed the little fleet of nine vessels with which Perry was to meet the enemy. He had to create not only his ships but the force to man them. While the vessels were being built he was drilling his men, a collection of some five hundred, many of whom had never seen salt water. 397 398 OLIVER H. PERRY. Five months of his excellent training converted them into thoroughly drilled artillerists. While Perry was building his ships, the English commander. Commodore Barclay, was likewise building the fleet which was to encounter them. By August both were ready, and after some manceuvering they met in battle on September ioth, near the western end of the lake. The fight was hardly begun when Perry's ship, the Lawrence, became separated from the rest, and was so furiously attacked by Barclay's flag-ship, the Detroit, that in a short time she was in a sinking condition. Leaving her in charge of a lieutenant, Perry embarked in a small boat, and passing under his enemy's guns, boarded the Niagara, where he hoisted his flag, and renewed the attack with such vigor that by four o'clock in the afternoon every one of the British vessels had surrendered. Few naval victories in history are more notable than that of Lake Erie, won by the genius and heroism of a young man of only twenty-seven. The letter which he sent to General Harrison, commander of the army, from the deck of his triumphant ship, has become immortal : — We have met the enemy, and they are ours, — two ships, two brigs, one schooner, and one sloop. Yours with very great respect and esteem, O. H. Perry. Perry won great honors by his victory, Congress voting him thanks, a medal, and the rank of captain. He afterward took an important part in military operations at Detroit, in the battle of the Thames, Canada, and in defense of Baltimore. While in command of a squadron in the West Indies, he was attacked by yellow fever, and died suddenly at Trinidad, in August, 1819. EIGHT-INCH GUN AND CARRIAGE OF THE " BALTIMORE.' {Built at the Washington Navy- Yard, of American Steel.) DAVID G. FARRAGUT, THE GREAT UNION NAVAL COMMANDER. ONE of the naval heroes of the great civil war is better remembered than David G. Farragut. The figure of the brave admiral, in the fight in Mobile Bay, stand- ing in the rigging of the Hartford, with his glass in his hand, directing the movements of the fleet, is one of the most familiar pictures of the war ; and no braver man or better sailor than Farragut ever took the deck of a vessel. The naval career of Farragut began in the War 1812, when he was a boy only eleven years old. He was in that famous battle in the harbor of Valparaiso between the Essex and the British war-vessels Phcbe and Cherub, when the two British vessels attacked the Essex while disabled by a sudden squall, and after she had taken refuge in neutral waters. The Essex, her sails blown away and crippled by the storm, was unable to change her position, and lay helpless at the mercy of her enemies' guns. After a bloody battle of two hours and a half, under such fearful odds, the flag was lowered. In such desperate battles as this, which gave to the American navy lasting renown, the naval career of Farragut began. In January, 1862, the government fitted out an expedition for the capture of New Orleans, and put it under Farragut's command. His fleet comprised forty-eight vessels, large and small, and all of wood, as the iron-clad vessels of later date were not yet developed. The river was defended by Forts Jackson 2 4 401 402 DAVID G. FARRAGUT. and St. Philip, lying on opposite sides of the Mississippi, about seventy miles below the city ; and many gunboats and rams lay near the forts. Before attempting to pass the forts, Farragut determined to bombard them from his fleet ; and careful preparations were made on all the vessels. It was a grand spectacle when, on the 16th of March, this formidable fleet at last opened fire. The low banks of the river on both sides seemed lined with flame. All day long the earth trembled under the heavy explosions, and by night two thousand shells had been hurled against the forts. The rebels had not been idle during the delays of the previous weeks, but had contrived and constructed every possible instrument of destruction and defense. On the first morning of the bombardment they set adrift a fire-ship made of a huge flatboat piled with lighted pitch-pine cordwood. The blazing mass, however, kept in the middle of the stream, and so passed the fleet with- out inflicting any damage. At night another was sent adrift. Small boats were sent to meet it, and, in spite of the intense heat, grappling irons were fastened in it, and the mass was towed to the shore and left to burn harmlessly away. Having at last made all the preparations that he could with the means allowed him, and the mortar-boats having accomplished all that was in their power to do for the present, the 26th day of April was fixed for the passage of the forts. The chain across the channel had been cut a few nights before. It was determined to start at two o'clock in the morning, and the evening before Farragut visited his ships for a last interview with the commanders. THE PASSAGE OF THE FORTS. At length, at two o'clock, two lanterns were seen to rise slowly to the mizzen peak of the Hartford. The boatswain's shrill call rung over the water, and the drums beat to quarters. The enemy was on the lookout, and the vessels had scarcely got under way when signal-lights flashed along the batteries. Then a belt of fire gleamed through the darkness, and the next moment the heavy shot came shrieking over the bosom of the stream. All eyes were now turned on the Hartford, as she silently steamed on,- — the signal "close action" blazing from her rigging. In the meantime the mortar-boats below opened fire, and the hissing shells, rising in graceful curves over the advancing fleet, dropped with a thunderous sound into the forts above. In a few minutes the advanced vessels opened, firing at the flashes from the forts. The fleet, with full steam on, was soon abreast of the forts, and its rapid broadsides, mingling with the deafening explosions on shore, turned night into fiery day. While the bombardment was in progress, a fire-raft, pushed by the ram Manassas, loomed through the smoke, and bore straight down on the Hartford. Farragut sheered off to avoid the collision, and in doing so ran aground, when the fire-ship came full against him. In a moment the flames leaped up the rig- THE ATTACK ON THE FORTS. 403 ging and along the sides. There was no panic ; every man was in his place, and soon the hose was manned and a stream of water turned on the flames. The fire was at length got under, and Farragut again moved forward at the head of his column. And now came down the rebel fleet of thirteen gunboats and two iron-clad rams to mingle in the combat. Broadside to broadside, hull crashing against hull, it quickly became at once a gladiatorial combat of ships. The Varuna, Captain Boggs, sent five of the Confederate vessels to the bottom one after another, and finally was herself sunk. When the sun rose through the morning DAM ON" THE RID RIVER. mist, he looked down on a scene never to be forgotten while naval deeds are honored by the nation. There lay the forts, with the Confederate flags still fly- ing. But their doom was sealed. And there, too, driven ashore, wrecked, or captured, were thirteen of the enemy's gunboats, out of the seventeen brought down to assist the forts in resisting the Union fleet. New Orleans was now at Farragut's mercy. Lovell, commanding the Confederate troops in the city, evacuated the place and left it under the control of the mayor, Monroe. Farragut took possession of the city, and raised the national flag on the City Hall. Mint, and Custom House, which were the 4°4 DAVID G. FARRAGUT. property of the United States. He then turned it over to General Butler, and proceeded with his fleet up the river. THE BATTLE IN MOBILE BAY. In January, 1864, Farragut sailed for Mobile Bay. Morgan and Gaines were the chief forts barring it. Fort Morgan mounted some thirty guns, and Fort Gaines twenty-one. There were three steamers and four rams inside, waiting to receive any vessels that might succeed in passing the forts. Batteries lined the shore, and torpedoes paved the bed of the channel. On the 1st of March, also, before his preparations for the attack were complete, he saw the Confederate iron-clad raxnTennessee ' steam up the channel and anchor near the forts. This complicated the situation very much. The contest between wooden vessels on one side, and an iron-clad and strong forts on the other, was so unequal that it was almost foolhardy to enter it. After weeks of waiting, however, the Union iron-clad Tecumseh at last arrived, and on August 5, 1864, Farragut proceeded to attack the forts. The vessels were arranged two by two, and lashed strongly to- gether. The fleet, with the Brook- slowly on, and at a quarter to seven the Tecumseh Twenty minutes later the forts opened fire, when the Brooklyn replied with two 100-pounder Parrott rifles, and the battle fairly commenced. Farragut had lashed himself near the maintop of the Hartford, so as to be able to overlook the whole scene. While watching with absorbing anxiety the progress of the fleet through the tremendous fire now concentrated upon it, sud- denly, to his utter amazement, he saw the Brooklyn stop and begin to back. The order to reverse engines passed down through the whole fleet, bringing it to a sudden halt just as it was entering the fiery vortex. "What does this mean ? " had hardly passed the lips of Farragut, when he heard the cry, "Tor- pedoes ! The Tecumseh is going down ! " Glancing toward the spot where she lay, he saw only the top of her turrets, which were rapidly sinking beneath, the water. Right ahead were the buoys which had turned the Brooklyn back, indi- lyn ahead, steamed fired the first gain. THE FIGHT IN MOBILE BAY. 405 eating where torpedoes were supposed to be sunk, ready to lift his ship into the air as they had the Tcaimscli. But now Farragut' s sailor blood was up. "D the torpedoes!" he shouted ; "go ahead ! " Pointing between the threatening buoys, the order was given to move on, and with the foam dashing from the bows of his vessel, he swept forward, "determined," he said, "to take the chances." Wheeling to the northwest as he kept the channel, he brought his whole broadside to bear on the fort, with tremendous effect. The other vessels following in the wake of the flag-ship one after another swept past the batteries, the crews loudly cheering, and were signaled by Far- ragut to come to anchor. But the officers had scarcely commenced clearing decks, when the Tennessee was seen boldly standing out into the bay, and steer- ing straight for the fleet, with the purpose of attacking it. RAMMING AN IRONCLAD RAM. It was a thrilling moment. There was a fleet of frail wooden vessels, at- tacked by a ram clad in armor impervious to their guns. The moment Farra- gut discovered it, he signaled the vessels to run her down, and, hoisting his own anchor, ordered the pilot to drive the Hartford full on the iron-clad. The Monongahela, under the command of the intrepid Strong, being near the rear of the line, was still moving up the bay when he saw the ram heading for the line. He instantly sheered out, and, ordering on a full head of steam, drove his vessel with tremendous force straight on the iron-clad structure. Wheeling, he again struck her, though he had carried away his own iron prow and cutwater. The Lackawanna came next, and, striking the ram while under full headway, rolled her over on her side. The next moment, down came Farragut in the Hartford, but just before the vessel struck, the ram sheered, so that the blow was a glancing one, and the former rasped along her iron-plated hull and fell alongside. Recoiling for some ten or twelve feet, the Hartford poured in at that short distance a whole broadside of nine-inch solid shot, hurled with charges of thirteen pounds of powder. The heavy metal, though sent with such awful force, and in such close proximity, made no impression, but broke into fragments on the mailed sides or dropped back into the water. The shot and shell from the Tennessee, on the other hand, went crashing through the wooden sides of the Hartford, strewing her deck with the dead. Farragut now stood off, and began to make a circuit in order to come down again, when the Lackawanna, which was driving the second time on the mon- ster, by accident struck the Hartford a little forward of the mizzen-mast, and cut her down to within two feet of the water. She was at first thought to be sink- ing, and "The Admiral! the Admiral! Save the Admiral!" rang over the shattered deck. But Farragut, seeing that the vessel would still float, shouted 406 DAVID G. FARRAGUT. out to put on steam, determined to send her, crushed and broken as she was, full on the ram. By this time the monitors had crawled up and were pouring in their heavy shot. The Chickasaw got under the stern and knocked away the smokestack, while the Manhattan sent one shot clean through the vessel, and disabled her stern port shutter with a shell, so that the gun could not be used, while a third carried away the steering gear. Thus, with her steering-chains gone, her smoke- stack shot away, many of her port shutters jammed, the Tennessee stood amid the crowding gunboats like a stag at bay among the hounds. The Ossipee was driving toward her under full headway ; and a little farther off, bearing down on the same errand, were coming the Hartford, Monongahela, and Lackawanna. I>NE OF THE FOUR TEN-INCH I1REECH -LOADING RIFLES. The fate of the iron-clad was sealed, and her commander hoisted the white flag, but not until the Ossipee was so near that her commander could not prevent a collision, and hi« vessel rasped heavily along the iron sides of the ram. He re- ceived her surrender from Commander Johnson — the admiral, Buchanan, having been previously wounded in the leg. This ended the morning's work, and at ten minutes past ten Farragut brought his fleet to anchor within four miles of Fort Morgan. The loss of the Union iron-clad Tecumseh, with her commander and crew, tempered the exultation over this splendid victory. A torpedo was exploded directly under the vessel, almost lifting her out of the water, and blowing a hole in her bottom so large that she sank before her crew could reach the deck. Farragut's impetuous bravery, however, and the picturesque novelty of wooden HIS WELCOME IN NEW YORK. 407 vessels ramming an iron-clad, made this one of the most famous naval battles of the war, and gave to the brave admiral a wide and lasting renown. Officers and men, too, seemed to catch the spirit of the commander, and fought with the most splendid bravery. Several of the wounded refused to leave the deck, but continued to fight their guns ; others retired and had their wounds dressed, and then returned to their posts. A few days later, after a severe bombardment from the Union fleet, both MONUMENT I" ADMIRAL KARRAGUT, AT WASHINGTON. the Confederate forts were surrendered. This completed the Union victory, and put the harbor and city of Mobile again under the control of the govern- ment. Soon after this, his health demanding some relaxation, Farragut ob- tained leave of absence, and sailed for New York in his flagship, the now famous Hartford. At New York he was welcomed with impressive ceremonies, and received the highest testimonials of appreciation of his services to the nation, a number of wealthy men of New York presenting a gift of $50,000 as a token of their esteem. The rank of vice-admiral was created for him by 4o8 DAVID G. FARRAGUT. Congress. His services were not again required during the war, and he returned to his home at Hastings, on the Hudson. Farragut had just the qualities for a popular hero. Brave almost to the point of recklessness, he was simple and unassuming in appearance and deportment, and kind and genial in manner. A story is told of him that once when traveling in the White Mountains, a man brought his little daughter, at her own urgent request, some fifteen miles to see him, for she would not be content till she had looked on the great admiral. Farragut took the child in his arms, kissed her, and talked playfully with her. He wasdressed in citizen's costume, and looked in her eyes very much like any other man, and totally unlike the hero whose praises had been so long ringing over the land. In her innocent surprise, she said, "Why, you do not look like a great general. I saw one the other day, and he was covered all over with gold." The admiral laughed, and, to please her, actually took her to his room, and put on his uni- form, when she went away satisfied. a«fc"'"'- i •y^ODEL Of US Han op War •BuiLt- roR-E/hiBiy- at- Worlds- Fair JAMES A. GARFIELD, CITIZEN, STATESMAN, PRESIDENT. URING the long, sultry days of the summer of 1881, at almost every newspaper and telegraph office stood a group of people, which sometimes swelled into a great crowd, watching eagerly for the slips of paper which from time to time were posted in a conspicuous place on the front of the building. In the intervals they would gather in little knots and talk together in low tones. To one who did not know what had happened on July 2d, it would have been hard to guess what gathered these waiting crowds, day after day, throughout the land. With intense, foreboding suspense fifty millions of people were watching for the news from the bedside of the President of the United States, who had been stricken down by the bullet of an assassin. Who that lived through that long summer can forget those anxious days and nights ? And when at last the brave struggle for life was ended, and the silent form was borne from the seaside to rest on the shores of Lake Erie, who can forget the solemn hush which seemed to prevail everywhere as the tomb opened to receive all that was mortal of the beloved President, James A. Garfield ? To some not well acquainted with Garfield's history, it may seem that the tragic and pathetic circumstances of his illness and death were the chief cause of the universal love and grief which were manifested for him ; but a study of his life will correct this impression. Few public men of our time have had a career which was so gradual and steady a growth ; and few indeed attain to the full, ripe, well-rounded completeness which made him a really great statesman. Steadily, inch by inch, he had worked his way up, never falling back, until the topmost round of the ladder was reached ; and never was success more fully deserved or more bravely won. James Abram Garfield was born in Cuyahoga county, Ohio, on November 19, 1 83 1. He was but two years old when his father died suddenly, leaving his mother with four children, and her only source of support a small farm, encumbered by debt, in the half-cleared forests of northern Ohio. She worked 411 412 JAMES A. GARFIELD. early and late, the children helping her. James had " not a lazy bone in his body." When hardly more than a baby, he picked cherries, planted corn, gathered vegetables, and helped in a hundred ways. He early developed a great aptitude for the use of tools, and as he grew up made an excellent car- penter. There was hardly a barn, shed, or building of any kind put up in the neighborhood but bore the marks of his skill. The money earned by the use of his tools in summer helped to pay for his schooling in the winter. James early developed a great love for books. Stories of battle, tales of adventure, the lives of great men, all such were irresistibly fascinating to him. Two books, Weems's "Life of Marion" and Grimshaw's "Napoleon," stirred THE HOME OF GARFIELD S CHILDHOOD, in him a great desire for the military career on which he entered with so much promise in later life ; and stories of the sea at last aroused an irresistible long- ing for a sailor's life. He went to Cleveland and tried to secure employment on one of the lake vessels, but was unsuccessful. The only opening in the line of maritime commerce was on the Ohio and Pennsylvania canal, and James accepted the position of driver, at twelve dollars a month. Such was his capacity and attention to duty that in the first round trip he had learned all there was to be learned on the tow-path. He was promptly promoted from driver to bowsman, and accorded the proud privilege of steering the boat instead of steerino- the mules. LIFE ON THE CANAL. 413 During his first trip he fell overboard fourteen times, by actual count. In this way he contracted malaria, which long remained with him. He could not swim a stroke. One dark, rainy night he again fell into the canal, when no help was at hand, and was saved as by a miracle, the rope at which he caught "kink- ing" and holding fast while he drew himself on deck. Believing that he was providentially saved for something better than steering a canal-boat, he returned home, resolved to obtain an education and make a man of himself. EARNING AN EDUCATION. In the winter of 1849 he attended Geauga Seminary, where he and three other young men " boarded themselves," living on about fifty cents a week each. GARFIELD ON THE TOW-PATH. Here he met a quiet, studious girl, Lucretia Rudolph, the daughter of a Mary- land farmer, who afterward became his wife. He was an intense student. He had an insatiable appetite for knowledge, and would make any sacrifice to obtain it. At the close of the session he worked through the vacation, and also taught a country school, to earn money for the following winter. He was a capital teacher. He stirred a new life and ambition in his scholars, and roused in them an enthusiasm almost equal to his own. In August, 1 85 1, Garfield entered a new school established at Hiram, Portage county, by the religious society to which he belonged, the Disciples of Christ, or " Campbellites." Here he resolved to prepare himself for college. He lived in a room with four other pupils, and studied harder than ever. When 4H JAMES A. GARFIELD. he went to Hiram he had studied Latin only six weeks, and just begun Greek ; and was, therefore, just in a condition to fairly begin the four years' preparatory course ordinarily taken by students to enter college in the freshman class. Yet in three years' time he fitted himself to enter the junior class, and at the same time earned his own living, thus crowding six years' study into three, and teaching for support at the same time. After some debate he resolved to go to Williams College, in Berkshire, Massachusetts, and entered there in 1854. Study at Williams' was easy for Garfield. He had been used to much harder work at Hiram. His lessons were always perfectly learned. One of the professors called him "the boy who never flunked," and he did much extra reading and studying. In the summer of 1856, after only two years of study, Garfield graduated at Williams College, and returned to his Ohio home. In the autumn he entered Hiram College as a teacher of ancient languages and literature. The next year, at the age of twenty-six, he was made president of the institution. This office he held for five years. Under his management the attendance was doubled ; he raised the standard of scholarship, strengthened its faculty, and inspired everybody connected with it with something of his own zeal and enthusiasm. In 1858 he married his old schoolmate, Miss Rudolph, and they began life in a little cottage fronting on the grounds of the college. Garfield's political career may be said to have fairly begun in the campaign of 1857-58, when he made a number of political speeches. In 1859 he was elected to the State Senate of Ohio, and became a noted member of that body. When the war broke out in 1861, and President Lincoln issued his call for 75,000 men, Garfield moved in the Ohio Senate to make 20,000 troops and $3,000,000 the quota of the State. In August Governor Dennison, the famous "war governor" of Ohio, offered him the lieutenant-colonelcy of the 42d Ohio Regiment, which was then being organized. Most of the regiment were old students of Hiram College, so that he would be surrounded in the field by the same faces among whom he had taught. He soon decided to accept the GARFIELD AT THE ACE OF SIXTEEN. THE KENTUCKY CAMPAIGN. 415 commission. His way of proceeding to drill his company was characteristic of the teacher as well as the soldier. He made soldiers of wooden blocks, fash- ioned in different forms to represent the officers, and with these blocks he car- ried on with his subordinates games of military tactics, until, when the regiment was ready to go into service, it was pronounced one of the most thoroughly drilled in the whole army. FIGHTING IN KENTUCKY. In December of 1861 Garfield's regiment was "ordered into service in Kentucky and West Virginia. At that time the destiny of Kentucky was still in doubt. Though much attached to the Union, it was a slave State, and strong influences were at work to draw it within the vortex of secession. Two Confed- erate armies were marching northward through the State, one under Zolli- koffer and the other under Humphrey Marshall. Garfield was dispatched against Marshall's forces. He met them on the banks of Middle Creek, a narrow and rapid stream, flowing into the Big Sandy, through the sharp spurs of the Cumberland Mountains. His force amounted to only 1 100 men ; they met at least 5000, and defeated them. Marshall's force was driven from Kentucky, and made no further attempt to occupy the Sandy Valley. This campaign was conducted under the greatest possible difficulties, and it has received the highest praise from military critics. After his success in Kentucky, Garfield was sent with his regiment to join 4 i6 JAMES A. GARFIELD. Grant in Mississippi. He arrived, with the other forces under Buell, just in time to help in the second day's battle at Shiloh, and to turn the tide in favor of the Union army. After this battle he was for some time employed in rebuilding railroads and bridges. In midsummer, however, he was obliged to return home on sick-leave. As soon as he recovered, he was ordered to join General Rose- crans, then in command of the Army of the Cumberland. He was made the commander's chief-of-staft, and acted in this position during the following year. On September 19, 1863, was fought the great battle of Chickamauga, which but for the bravery and steadiness of General Thomas would probably have resulted in the destruction of the Union army. Rosecrans, accompanied by his chief-of-staff, had left the battle-field, and gone hastily to Chattanooga, to provide for the retreat which he then thought inevitable. On reaching Chattanooga, Garfield, at his urgent request, was permitted to return to the battle-field, where he found Thomas still engaged in resisting the attack of the Confederate forces. Immediately after his arrival a fresh assault was made, lasting half an hour, when the Confederates finally broke, and abandoned the attack. Garfield remained on the field with General Thomas until night, and accompanied him in his retreat to Chattanooga. Soon after the battle of Chickamauga Garfield was nominated for Congress from the Northern District of Ohio. Almost at the same time he received his promotion to the grade of major-general for his gallant services in the Chatta- nooga campaign. His salary as major-general would be more than double that which he would receive as Congressman ; but he was convinced that he could do the country more service in the latter position, and accordingly took his place in Congress, where he remained until, sixteen years later, he was nominated for President. Garfield's career in Congress was one of steady advancement. At its beginning he was noted as an efficient and original public man. He was exceedingly industrious and attentive to legislative business, and the measures which he originated and advocated in Congress gave him a wide and lasting reputation. In his second term, during the latter part of the war, his financial ability had become so apparent that the Secretary of the Treasury requested the Speaker to make him a member of the Ways and Means Committee, that the country might have the benefit of his ability and experience. Throughout his whole term of service, his influence steadily increased, and when in 1877 Mr. Blaine was transferred from the House to the Senate, Garfield was by common consent made the leader of the Republican party in the House. In 1880 Garfield was nominated and elected United States Senator by the Ohio Legislature, and on June 10th of the same year he was nominated at Chicago for the Presidency. The meeting of the Republican National Convention in Chicago, in June, THE CHICAGO CONVENTION. V7 1880, was one of the most memorable in the history of the party. The popu- larity of General Grant had been immensely increased by the honors showered upon him by all nations in his trip around the world, from which he had recently returned ; and his powerful supporters, Conkling of New York, Cameron of Pennsylvania, and Logan of Illinois, were bent upon nominating him for a third term. His great rival was James G. Blaine, whose popularity was almost as great as that of Grant ; and Senators Sherman and Edmunds were also strongly supported, especially by those who disliked the "third term" idea. Garfield was himself a delegate from Ohio. Sherman was the man of his choice, and he worked with all his might to secure his nomination. For a full week the convention continued in session. Thirty-five ballots were cast without a majority for any one of the candidates. On the morning of the last day the thirtieth ballot resulted in 306 votes for Grant ; 279 for Blaine ; 120 for Sherman ; 3$ for Washburne ; 1 1 for Edmunds ; 4 for Windom ; and 2 for Garfield. Nothing could change the vote of Grant's famous " 306 ; " but neither could the best efforts of his friends in- crease the ranks of that faithful band ; and 378 was the number required for a nomi- nation. It became evident also that Blaine could not be nominated, although his sup- porters were almost as steady as those of Grant. His vote, which on the first ballot was 284, remained nearly the same until the last day. Evidently the vote of those opposed to Grant must be massed upon some other candidate. Who that candidate was did not appear until the thirty-fourth ballot, when 1 7 votes were cast for Garfield. As soon as this result was announced, the end of the long struggle was foreseen. On the next ballot his vote increased to 50, and on the thirty-sixth and last, nearly all the delegates except Grant's immovable 306 came over to Garfield with a rush. He received 399 votes, which made him the choice of the convention for President. Garfield's opponent in the canvass was General Winfield S. Hancock, one of the bravest soldiers of the civil war, who had been wounded at the great battle of Gettysburg. The tariff question was the chief issue of the campaign ; and on this and similar questions of national policy Garfield was admiral >ly equipped and perfectly at Home ; while to General Hancock, whose training HON. JOHN SHERMAN. 4i8 JAMES A. GARFIELD. was altogether that of a soldier, they were new and unfamiliar. After an active and ably-fought contest, Garfield was elected by a vote of 214, to 155 for his competitor. Garfield's administration began with war, — political war, — war with the elements in his own party which had supported Grant at the Chicago conven- tion, and which now transferred the contest to the Senate. So peculiar was this well-remembered struggle, and so far-reaching in its effects, that the story de- serves to be briefly told. The very first question that met Garfield on his accession was that of appointments. Mr. Conkling, the senior senator from New York, had been the chief and most determined advocate of Grant's nomination. By the practice known as the "courtesy of the Senate," it was customary for that body to decline to confirm nominations made by the Presi- dent to offices in any State which were distasteful to the senators from that State. In making nominations for New York offices the President had in most cases named men unobjec- tionable to Senator Conkling ; but following these was one of William H. Robertson to be col- lector of customs at New York, which was especially obnoxious to him. Judge Robertson had been one of the New York dele- gates to the Chicago convention, and had led in organizing the final "bolt" to Garfield. An effort .was made to get the President to withdraw this nomina- tion ; but he declined. Mr. Conkling then brought about an arrangement with the Democratic senators by which all nominations opposed by a senator from the nominee's State should "lie over" without action, but others should be confirmed. The effect of this was to force Mr. Robertson's nomination to go' over until the following December. With this result Mr. Conkling was highly pleased, for he had succeeded in driving the senators into a support of him without making an open rupture between them and the President. Mr. Conk- ling, it seemed that night, had the best of it. CHESTER ALAN ARTHUR, GARFIELD'S SUCCESSOR. THE ASSASSINATION. 419 The President, however, was not yet beaten. With magnificent pluck, that was hailed by the people everywhere with applause, he dealt Mr. Conkling a fatal blow. The next morning, May 5th, all the nominations that were pleasing to Mr. Conkling were withdrawn ; that of Judge Robertson was not. This defined the issue sharply, and obliged senators to choose between the President and the New York senator. They declined to follow Mr. Conkling, and Rob- ertson's nomination was confirmed. Then Mr. Conkling and his colleague, Mr. Piatt, in the most sensational manner resigned their seats in the Senate, evidently believing that they would be promptly re-elected, and thus secure a " vindication " of their course from their own State. But they reckoned without their host. The fight was now transferred to Albany ; but Mr. Conkling' s power over the New York Legislature was gone. Public opinion sustained the 'President. The two senators resorted to every expedient known to politics to secure their re-election, but their efforts were in vain ; Messrs. Miller and Lapham were chosen to fill the vacant seats, and the two ex-senators were allowed to remain in private life. But before this result was reached, and while the ignoble struggle was still going on in the New York Legislature, the great tragedy occurred which plunged the whole country into deep sorrow. THE TRAGEDY OF 1 88 1. Saturday, July 2, 1881, was a fair, hot midsummer day. The inmates of the White House were astir early. The President was going to Massachusetts to attend the commencement exercises at his old college at Williamstown, and afterward to take a holiday jaunt through New England, accompanied by several members of the Cabinet and other friends. His wife, who was at Long Branch, New Jersey, just recovering from a severe attack of malarial fever, was to join him at New York. He had looked forward with almost boyish delight to his trip, and was in high spirits as he and Secretary Blaine drove off to the railway station. There was no crowd about. Most of those who were to take the train had already gone on board. Among the few persons in the waiting-room was a slender, middle-aged man, who walked up and down rather nervously, occasion- ally looking out of the door as if expecting some one. There was nothing about him to attract special notice, and no one paid much attention to him. When President Garfield and Mr. Blaine entered, he drew back, took a heavy revolver from his pocket, and, taking deliberate aim, fired. The ball struck the President on the shoulder. He turned, surprised, to see who had shot him. The assassin recocked his revolver and fired again, and then turned to flee. The President fell to the floor, the blood gushing from a wound in his side. In a moment all was confusion and horror. Secretary Blaine sprang after the assassin, but, seeing that he was caught, turned again to the President. 25 420 JAMES A. GARFIELD. The shock had been great, and he was very pale. A mattress was brought, his tall form was lifted tenderly into an ambulance, and he was swiftly borne to the Executive Mansion. His first thought was for his wife, — the beloved wife of his youth, just recovering from sickness, expecting in a few hours to meet him. How would she bear the tidings of this blow ? " Rockwell," he said, faintly, to a friend, " I want you to send a message to ' Crete ' " (his pet name for his wife, Lucretia). " Tell her I am seriously hurt, ISMRWSP,"^ 1 1' 5 '" '■"■" >_i if* illiiltlW^O wmwmwimm . \ ■ GARFIELD S ASSASSINATION'. how seriously I cannot yet say. I am myself, and hope she will come to me soon. I send my love to her." A swift train brought Mrs. Garfield to her husband's side that evening ; and then began the long struggle for life, with its fluctuations between hope and dread, which lasted for almost three months. Just after Mrs. Garfield's arrival there was a sudden collapse which seemed to be the end, and the family of the President were hastily summoned to his bedside ; but, to the surprise of every one, the crisis passed, and for three weeks he seemed to improve. Then came a turn for the worse, and from that time the President lost ground. The hot summer days, hard to bear even for those in full health, wasted and weakened THE FUNERAL TRAIN. 421 him terribly. He sank steadily ; and it was seen that unless relief from the intense heat could be had, he would inevitably die within a few days. It was decided to remove him to Elberon, on the ocean shore, near Long Branch, New jersey ; and on September 7th, accompanied by his family and the members of the cabinet, he was borne by a swift special train northward to the seaside. A summer cottage had been offered for his use, and there for two anxious weeks lay the man who, it may be truly said, had become The pillar of a people's hope, The centre of a world's desire. The cooling breezes of the seaside brought some relief, and the change no doubt prolonged his life ; but it could not be saved. In the night of September 19th, almost without warning, the end came ; the feeble flame of life, so anxiously watched and cherished, flickered a moment, and then went out in the darkness. The President's body was borne back to Washington, where it lay in state, viewed by great throngs of mourning people ; then it was taken westward to Cleveland, and laid in the tomb by the shores of Lake Erie, almost in sight of his old home. The journey was one long funeral pageant. For almost the entire distance the railway tracks were lined with crowds of people, who, with uncovered heads, stood in reverent silence as the train passed. Not since the ' day when that other dead President, the great Lincoln, was borne to his last resting-place, had such an assembly been gathered ; and the love and grief which followed Garfield to his grave are the best tribute to the worth of his character. Five months later, in the hall of the House of Representatives at Washing- ton, amid such a throng as that chamber has seldom seen, Secretary Blaine delivered his eulogy of the dead President ; and from that splendid and pathetic address we take the concluding words, which will fitly close this brief sketch : — Great in life, he was surpassingly great, in death. . . Through days of deadly languor, through weeks of agony that was not less agony because silently borne, with clear sight and calm courage, he looked into his open grave. What blight and ruin met his anguished eyes, whose lips may tell ! — what brilliant broken plans, what baffled high ambitions, what sundering of strong, warm manhood's friendships, what bitter rending of sweet household ties ! Behind him a proud, expect- ant nation, a great host of sustaining friends, a cherished and happy mother, wearing the full, rich honors of her early toils and tears; the wife of his youth, whose whole life lay in his; the little boys, not yet emerged from childhood's day of frolic ; the fair young daughter ; the sturdy sons just springing into closest companionship, claiming every day and every day rewarding a father's love and care ; and in his heart the eager, rejoicing power to meet all demand. Before him, desolation and great darkness ! And his soul was not shaken. His countrymen were thrilled with instant, profound, and universal sympathy. Masterful in his mortal weakness, he became the centre of a nation's love, enshrined in the prayers of a world. But all the love and all the sympathy could not share with him his suffering. He trod the wine-press alone. With unfaltering front he faced death. 422 JAMES A. GARFIELD. With unfailing tenderness he took leave of life. Above the demoniac hiss of the assassin's bullet he heard the voice of God. With simple resignation he bowed to the Divine decree. As the end drew near, his early craving for the sea returned. The stately mansion of power had been to him the wearisome hospital of pain, and he begged to be taken from its prison walls, from its oppressive, stifling air, from its homelessness and hopelessness. Gently, silently, the love of a great people bore the pale sufferer to the longed-for healing of the sea, to live or to die, as God should will, within sight of its heaving billows, within sound of its manifold voices. With wan, fevered face tenderly lifted to the cooling breeze, he looked out wistfully upon the ocean's changing wonders; on its fair sails, whitening in the morning light; on its restless waves, rolling shoreward to break and die beneath the noonday sun; on the red clouds of evening, arching low to the hori- zon ; on the serene and shining pathway of the stars. Let us think that his dying eyes read a mystic meaning which only the rapt and parting soul may know. Let us believe that in the silence of the receding world he heard the great waves breaking on a further shore, and felt already upon his wasted brow the breath of the eternal morning. ^.<\/i^>-. M TABLET IN THE WAITING-ROOM OF THE RAILWAY STATION WHERE GARFIELD WAS SHOT. SAMUEL J. TILDEN, THE GREAT REFORM GOVERNOR. N 1876, the great Centennial Year of the Republic, occurred an event unprecedented in our history, and so portentous and alarming that for a time it threatened civil war and the destruction of our government. This was the disputed presidential contest of Hayes against Tilden, which was finally settled by the Electoral Commission, which decided the election in favor of Mr. Hayes. Mr. Tilden had received a large majority of the popular vote, and he and his supporters sincerely believed that he was duly and legally elected ; and it is not too much to say that his self- command and his patriotic efforts to quiet public excitement and promote acquiescence in the decision of the commis- sion went far to save the country from anarchy and possible war. Samuel Jones Tilden was born February 9, 18 14, in Columbia county, New York, — one of the counties lying between the Hudson and the western border of Massachusetts. He was a born politician. From boyhood he took a keen interest in political and economic questions, studied them thor- oughly, and discussed them eagerly. Near the home of his boyhood lived Martin Van Buren, — the "Sage of Kinderhook," as he was called, — the suc- cessor of Jackson, and one of the ablest political leaders of his time. For Van Buren young Tilden conceived a profound admiration, and throughout his whole career that shrewd statesman was his model. When only eighteen, he was so stirred by the political discussions of his elders, in the hot campaign of 1832, that he wrote an "Address to the People," a shrewd and forcible appeal on the pending issues, which so struck Mr. Van Buren that he advised that it should be published in the newspapers. This was done, and its ability was so marked that it was attributed to Van Buren himself, and he was at last obliged to deny being its author. Tilden, also, when only twenty-three, appeared suddenly one day on the platform to answer a speech of Senator Tallmadge, an old and prac- ticed politician ; and so effective was his impromptu reply that it was greeted with wild applause by friends and foes alike. His interest in politics, and his 425 426 SAMUEL J. TILDEN. ability both as a statesman and a practical campaign manager, continued and increased to the end of his life. After completing his college course, Tilden studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1841, beginning a long career of uninterrupted success and grow- ing fame. He was a " born lawyer," no less than a born politician. He had a genius for analysis, an insight into motives, an ability to untangle and make clear what was intricate or perplexed, which is possessed by very few. These qualities he exhibited in a high degree in the Flagg contested election case, in 1856. Flagg, the Democratic candidate for Comptroller of New York city, had 20,313 votes, and Giles, his opponent, had 20,134. Giles contested the election, and brought witnesses who swore that in one ward, which gave Flagg 316 votes and Giles 186, the numbers had been transposed on the return-sheet, and that the vote was really 186 for Flagg and 316 for Giles. The tally-sheet of "straight" votes had disappeared — conveniently for the prosecution ; and the tally-sheets of split votes corroborated the testimony of their witnesses. There was no evidence to be had but that offered by the prosecution. The defence seemed to be absolutely helpless. But Tilden took the remaining tally-sheets, and spent the night in working over them ; and by a process of reasoning from them and the " straight " ballots cast, he was able to actually reconstruct the missing tallies, with absolutely certain proof that the transposition claimed was impossi- ble. In his opening speech he gave his astounded opponents the first notion of the evidence which he had built up, seemingly from nothing, to destroy their case : — If, by a violent blow (he said), I should break out the corner of this table, and split a piece off, the fractured and abraded fibers of the wood would be left in forms so peculiar that, though all human ingenuity might be employed to fashion a piece that would fit in the place from which the fragment had been broken, it could not be done. Those things that are the work of God are so much superior in texture to anything we can do, that when they are broken up our ingenuity can- not restore them. He then placed in the hands of the court and jury printed copies of his reconstructed tallies, and of all the regular tickets, and went over them step by step, by which process they were enabled to perceive and demonstrate, each for himself, the impossibility of the alleged transposition. Within fifteen minutes after the case was submitted to the jury, they returned with a verdict in his favor. Mr. Tilden's wonderful powers of perception and analysis gave him great success in the management of legal business of great corporations, where intri- cate accounts and statistics, and the conflict of many different interests, hid and confused the real questions. So able was he in rescuing them from ruinous litigation, reorganizing their administration, and re-arranging their affairs, that it is said that more than half the great railway companies between the Hudson THE "TWEED RING.' 427 and Missouri rivers have at some time been his clients. In this practice he acquired both extensive fame and a large fortune. But it was as a reformer in politics that Mr. Tilden acquired his greatest THE STATUE OF LIBERTY IN NEW YORK HARBOR. and most lasting fame. In 1S69 the "Tweed ring" of thieves and adventurers had secured the absolute control of New York city. To illustrate their power over the city finances, it may be mentioned that at one meeting of the Board of Special Audit, three men ordered the payment of over six million dollars, hardly 428 SAMUEL J. TILDEN. ten per cent, of which in value was realized by the city. Nearly fifteen millions of dollars in fraudulent bills against the city were paid in a single day ! The thieves had so securely intrenched themselves that they defied any one to dis- lodge them. " What are you going to do about it? " was Tweed's famous reply to criticism. But there was one man who knew what to do about it. A combination of citizens was formed to attack the ring, and to this work Mr. Tilden gave his best powers. By obtaining from banks the checks which had been paid, and comparing them with accounts in the Comptroller's office, he was able to lay bare the details of the conspiracy. He proved that two-thirds of the whole amount GENERAL VIEW OF THE NEW YORK CITY HAIL. of bills audited had been divided among public officers and their accomplices, and was able to show what amount of public plunder was in the hands of each. With the proofs thus furnished the ring was at length broken up, its power destroyed, and the most prominent of the thieves brought to justice. Tweed fled to Europe, was brought back, and died miserably in prison. In consequence largely of Tilden' s good work in the overthrow of the Tweed ring, he was elected, in 1874, Governor of New York. In this position he. soon found work ready to his hand in the exposure and overthrow of the "Canal ring," a body of corrupt men who had secured control of the Erie and Champlain canals, and by a system of immense expenditures and false accounts THE DISPUTED ELECTION. 429 had robbed the State of large sums. Tilden's vigorous efforts resulted in over- throwing the ring, recovering large amounts of stolen money, and completely reforming the whole system of canal administration and management. Tilden had now gained a most enviable position. By his great reforms he had overthrown two powerful "rings," had reduced State taxation nearly one- half and as Governor of the greatest State of the Union he stood at the head of the Democratic party, with a national fame as a reformer and a statesman. It was natural that, in 1876, all eyes should have turned to him as the man to head the Democratic ticket in the coming election. He was nominated by the Democratic National Convention at St. Louis in June, 1876, amid great enthu- siasm. The" campaign of 1876 was most ably conducted. Mr. Tilden brought into the contest his unsurpassed sagacity and shrewdness as a political manager, and the result was astounding to his opponents. For some days after the elec- tion there seemed no doubt of his complete triumph. But soon it appeared that in the States of Louisiana, South Carolina, and Florida, where the colored vote was a principal factor, the result was disputed. If the Republican candi- date secured all of these three States it would give him 185 electoral votes, or just one more than Mr. Tilden would have. It soon became evident that there would be two sets of returns from these States, and then the question would be, Which set shall be received and counted ? The Senate was Republican, the House Democratic. Either House could, by objecting to a return, put a stop to the count before Congress, and thus the country would drift on into anarchy. The excitement was intense. Finally, it was proposed to establish an Electoral Commission of fifteen members, — three Republican and two Democratic sena- tors, three Democratic and two Republican representatives, and five justices of the Supreme Court, two of whom should be Republican and two Democratic ; and these fourteen members were to choose the fifteenth, who, it was expected, would be Judge David Davis, of Illinois, who was classed as an independent. Thus the commission would be evenly divided politically, and yet there could be no tie. To this commission was to be submitted the returns from any dis- puted State, and their decision was to be final. In spite of opposition, the bill creating the commission was passed ; and then occurred one of the trifling accidents which sometimes decide the fate of nations. Judge Davis was elected to the Senate, and resigned from the Supreme bench. He was thus disqualified to sit on the commission, and Justice Bradley, a Republican, was chosen the fifteenth member. In every case of dispute, the commission decided by a party vote — eight to seven — to count the Republican returns. The three doubtful States were thus all given to the Republican can- didate. The count was completed only two days before March 4th ; and thus, by the narrowest possible majority, Mr. Hayes was seated in the executive chair. 43° SAMUEL J. TILDEN. Never did Mr. Tilden appear to better advantage than during this exciting contest. He was entirely convinced of his election ; he had millions of sup- porters ; a word from him would have precipitated anarchy. It is to his lasting honor that, at that critical mo- ment, his every word and act was such as to preserve peace and order, even at the expense of the Presidency. After the contest of 1876, Mr. Tilden retired from public life. In both 1880 and 1884 the greatest pressure was* brought upon him to again accept the nomination for the Presidency ; but this he firmly resisted, main- taining that by long and arduous service he had earned the right to retirement. The last work of his life was a plan for a great public library, to found which he left by his will the bulk of his large fortune. His beneficent design was frustrated, however, by legal flaws in his will, which his relations successfully con tested, thus depriving him of the monument which his noble purpose and use- ful life deserved. He died in New York on August 4, 1886. RUTHERFORD ]:UROIARD HAYES. JAMES G. BLAINE, THE BRILLIANT AXD SUCCESSFUL STATESMAN. HE close of the great civil war of 1 86 1 marked a new era in American politics. The nation which was then restored to the people was a new nation. Freed from the blight of slavery, the country began to grow and expand with a rapidity which was absolutely startling. The South and West especially moved forward with giant strides. The permanence of the government being assured, the ques- tions of the hour became those of reconstruction and paci- fication, of the rights of the freedmen, of internal peace I j -h^*4J and security, of foreign and domestic commerce, of tariffs and finance. Of the many able men who won their fame in the period since the war, there is none more prominent nor more widely admired and beloved than James G. Blaine. Two States of the Union claim Blaine as a son. During most of his man- hood and later life he lived in Maine ; but he was born in Washington county, Pennsylvania, and the latter State always cherished for him the warmest affec- tion, giving him in the presidential election of 1884 a popular majority unprece- dented in the history of the State. He was, however, familiarly known as "The Man from Maine," and by that name will live in the memory of the people with that other great leader, Henry Clay, with wjiom he has often been compared. His life began on January 31, 1830. His father, Ephraim Blaine, was a farmer and justice of the peace, whose fortunes had become impaired by too generous living and lack of thrift. James was a healthy, happy, intelligent boy, showing, even in early childhood, some of the traits which afterward dis- tinguished him as a man. His courage and pugnacity are illustrated by a story told of him at that time. A well was being dug near the house, and little James, then three or four years old, was led by curiosity to lean over and peer down into the "big hole." One of the workmen, fearing that he would fall in, tried to frighten him away by making faces and glaring at him, and making threatening gestures with a shovel. But little Jim was not so easily scared. To him it was a case for fighting, not for running. Picking up clods from 433 434 JAMES G. BLAINE, the heap of dirt by the well, he began to heave them in upon the enemy. This vigorous bombardment was more than the workman had bargained for ; he feared that stones would follow next, and called for help. The boy's mother heard him, and came and led the pugnacious little fellow away. When Blaine was about eleven, he lived for a time at Lancaster, Ohio, with his uncle, Thomas Ewing, then Secretary of the Treasury, — the same large- hearted statesman who a few years before had taken into his family young William T Sherman, the boy who was to become one of the great generals of the civil war. Mr. Ewing' s home was a resort of statesmen and politicians, MR. BLAINE'S BIRTHPLACE, WEST BROWNSVILLE and in that atmosphere no doubt the mind of young Blaine received a strong impulse toward a political career. In 1843 he returned to his father's home, and entered Washington College, at Washington, Pennsylvania. He was an ardent student, and made rapid progress. Logic and mathematics were his favorite studies, but he also delighted in history and literature. He was always a leader among the boys, especially in debate. It is related that on one occasion, when he was ambitious to be elected president of the literary society, he committed " Cushing's Manual " to memory in one evening, in order to qualify himself on parliamentary practice. He had also a strong love for history, and it is said that he could recite from memory many of the chapters in " Plutarch's Lives." REMOVAL TO MAINE. 435 From Washington College Mr. Blaine went to Blue Lick Springs, Ken- tucky, where he became a teacher in the Western Military Institute, in which there were about 450 boys. A retired army officer, who was a student there, relates that Mr. Blaine was a thin, handsome, earnest young man, with the same fascinating manners that were characteristic of him throughout his whole career. He was popular with the boys, who trusted him and made friends with him from the first. He knew the full name of every one, and discerned his shortcomings and his strong points. While teaching here, Mr. Blaine met Miss Harriet Stanwood, who belonged to an excellent Maine family, and a few months afterward they were married. In 1 85 1 Mr. Blaine returned to Pennsylvania, bringing with him an intense hatred of slavery, which greatly influenced his future career. Going to Phila- delphia, he became a teacher in the Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction of the Blind. There he had charge of the higher classes in literature and science. An interesting memorial of his work in Philadelphia is still to be seen, in the shape of the journal of the institution, which bears the inscription : — JOURNAL OF THE PENNSYLVANIA INSTITUTION FOR THF. INSTRUCTION OF THE BLIND, FROM ITS FOUNDATION. Compiled from Official Records BY |AMES G. BLAINE, 1854. After two years work in teaching the blind, Mr. Blaine yielded to his wife's desire that he should make Maine his home. The young couple moved, in 1853, to Augusta. In the following year Mr. Blaine entered into partnership with Joseph Baker, a prominent lawyer of Augusta, and together they purchased The Kennebec Journal, of which Mr. Blaine at once became the editor, his ready intelligence and trenchant style being peculiarly adapted to this field. The Journal was a weekly paper, one of the organs of the Whig party, and exer- cised considerable political influence. Mr. Blaine speedily made his impress, and within three years he was a master spirit in the politics of the State. When the old Whig party went to pieces, Mr. Blaine joined hands with Governor Anson P. Morrill in organizing the Republican party in the Pine Tree State. He entered into this work with all his energy, and his earnest and incisive discussion in, The Journal, of the rising conflict between freedom and 436 JAMES G. BLAINE. slavery attracted wide attention. In 1856 he was a delegate to the first Repub- lican National Convention, held in Philadelphia, which nominated General Fre- mont for President. On his return home he made a report at a public meeting. His speech on this occasion, begun with hesitation and embarrassment, but advancing to confident and fervid utterance, first illustrated his capacity on the platform, and gave him standing as a public speaker. In 1 8=;8 Blaine was elected to the Maine House of Representatives, and re-elected in 1859 and i860. During the last two years he was chosen Speaker USE, BROWNSVILLE. PA., WHERE MR. BLAINE BEGAN HIS F.nrCATIO of the House, and there began his training for the higher post in Congress which the future held for him. He distinguished himself both on the floor and in the chair. He was a hard worker, a fine speaker, and a dignified and im- partial presiding officer. He became very popular in his State, and was seen to be a " rising man." In i860 Mr. Blaine was a delegate to the memorable convention at Chicago which nominated Abraham Lincoln for the presidency ; and when he returned, he took an active part in the campaign. He was in great demand in his own State as a political speaker. Whenever a call was made upon the State HIS CONGRESSIONAL CAREER. 437 Committee for help in a local contest, the demand was almost sure to be, "Send us Blaine !" In 1862 Blaine was elected a member of the famous Thirty-eighth Con- gress ; and then began that long career in the national legislature which made him one of the best known and most popular public men of the United States. He took his seat in 1863, in the midst of the civil war. He was a strong admirer and earnest supporter of the great President, who depended upon him for confidential information and aid regarding his own State. In the Presidential election of 1864, which for a time was very doubtful, Lincoln sent Blaine on a special mission to Maine, to ascertain if there was any adverse movement there. As far back as 1858, at the time of the Douglas debates, Blaine had prophesied in his paper that Douglas would beat Lincoln fn that contest, but that Lincoln would defeat Douglas for the Presidency in i860. This prophecy, copied in Illinois papers, was noticed by Lincoln, who cut it out and kept it in his mem- orandum book until long after. It naturally led to a confidential friendship between the two men. The election of 1864 resulted in the re-election of Blaine to Congress, and he took a prominent part in the difficult legislation of the "reconstruction era," and the stormy times which followed the war. In 1869, Schuyler Colfax, who had been elected Vice-President, was thus transferred to the Senate chamber, and Blaine was chosen to succeed him as Speaker of the House, and was re-elected in 1871 and 1873. He was one of the most popular officers who ever filled that exacting position, being elected for each of his three terms without opposition. He was always courteous and fair, and especially quick in the discharge of his functions. It was one of the sights of the time for visitors to watch Mr. Blaine facing a standing House to count the ayes and noes. With the head of his gavel clasped in his right hand, using the handle as a pointer, he swept it from right to left so rapidly that it was hardly possible to believe that he had counted the throng correctly ; but if his announcement of the vote was disputed, the count of the tellers always verified his declaration. By the election in 1874 the Democrats secured a majority in the House of Representatives, and of course Mr. Blaine's term as Speaker came to an end. This election really marked a new period in political history. During the civil war and the years following it, the Republican party had held almost undis- puted supremacy. It had re-established the power of the national government, had freed the negro, and had secured the adoption of the amendments to the Constitution. But its long lease of power had brought about the inevitable result. Base men had attached themselves to the party for corrupt purposes, and tried to shield themselves under the cloak of patriotism and loyalty to the Union. When threatened with exposure and punishment, such men of course sought to make the party responsible for their deeds, and to involve it in the 43« JAMES G. BLAINE. consequences. The result was the " era of scandal " of Grant's second adminis- tration, when the "Credit Mobilier," the "Whiskey Ring" frauds, and the Belknap episode were brought to light. A passion for "investigation" fol- lowed. Every prominent public man who manifested any unwillingness to have his private affairs made public fell under suspicion. Mr. Blaine was too shining a mark to be missed. He was accused of having been bribed with a gift of Little Rock and Fort Smith railroad bonds, by the Union Pacific Railroad Com- pany, when Speaker of the House, to give a decision favoring that company. He was accused of stealing letters — his own letters — which would have incrim- inated him ; and for years he was pursued with charges of various sorts of cor- WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON COLLEGE, WASHINGTON, PA. ruption. These charges he completely disproved on the floor of the House, showing that he had bought the bonds, and had lost over $20,000 by their purchase. After meeting and disproving the slanders against him, he said : — " Having now noticed the two charges that have been so extensively circu- lated, I shall refrain from calling the attention of the House to any others that may be invented. To quote the language of another, ' I do not propose to make my public life a perpetual and uncomfortable flea-hunt, in the vain efforts to run down stories which have no basis in truth, which are usually anonymous, and whose total refutation brings no punishment to those who have been guilty of originating them.' " INGERSOLL'S SPEECH. 439 The first charge against him, however, served its purpose. It was made a short time before the Republican convention of 1876, when Blaine was the most prominent candidate for the Presidential nomination. For several weeks Mr. Blaine was kept busy, under the pressure of excitement, repelling the attacks upon him, and at the same time attending to his public duties. One intensely hot Sunday in June, three days before the meeting of the convention, while on his way to church, he suffered a sunstroke, and for some days was greatly prostrated. This and the various charges which had been brought were made use of against him before the convention. Nevertheless, his vote grew steadily larger until the very end, and he was only defeated by a combination ot all the other delegates upon Hayes, on the final ballot, which stood, Hayes 384, Blaine 351, and Bristow 21. One of the episodes which made the con- r vention of 1876 memorable was the speech of Robert G. Ingersoll, made in presenting Blaine's name as a candidate. The vast audi- ence was stirred to the highest pitch of enthu- siasm by Ingersoll's vindication of the great leader. Referring to Blaine's dramatic defense and his sudden attack on his accusers, on the floor of Congress, Ingersoll said : — " Like an armed warrior, like a plumed knight, James G. Blaine marched down the halls of the American Con- gress and threw his shining lance full and fair against the brazen forehead of the defamers of his country and the maligners of his honor. For the Republican party to desert this gallant leader now is as though an army should ■desert their general upon the field of battle." DMUNDS, This speech gave to Blaine the title of the " Plumed Knight," — a name which clung to him to the end of his life. The winter of 1876-77 was the time of the great struggle over the dis- puted election, which was finally settled by the creation of the Electoral Commission. Mr. Blaine was not in favor of the commission, believing that the regular machinery of government was adequate to meet the situation ; but he did not strongly oppose it, and rejoiced at the peaceful settlement of the contest. During the winter Blaine was elected to the United States Senate by the Legislature of Maine, by a unanimous vote. This unprecedented honor, in which his political opponents in the Legislature all joined, showed what had been the effect of the slanders against him upon those who knew him best. He took his seat in the Senate at the special session called in October, 1877. 26 440 JAMES G. BLAINE. As the close of Hayes' administration approached, it became evident that Blaine would again be a leading candidate for the Presidential nomination. It was in this year that the famous effort was made by the supporters of General Grant to nominate him for a third term. Mr. Blaine was the most prominent candidate in opposition to Grant ; but beside him there were Sherman, Edmunds, and Washburne, who had considerable strength. The proceedings of that memorable convention, resulting in the nomination of Garfield, are more fully told elsewhere. (See James A. Garfield.) Blaine became Garfield's Secre- tary of State, upon his inauguration in March, 1 88 1 . Almost immediately upon the accession of the new admin- istration the famous contest over the government patronage in New York began, and did not end until after that fatal day of July 2, 1 88 1, when the bullet of the assassin laid Garfield low. During the long, hot days of that weary summer, Blaine's bur- den was heavy and hard to bear. The President's disability threw much extra work upon the Sec- retary of State, and when at last the drama closed at the tomb of Garfield in Cleveland, Blaine was much worn down. He continued in office for a time, however, at President Arthur's Request, and in order to accomplish a great measure on which he had set his heart. This was the inviting of all the American Republics to join in a Peace Congress at Washington, for the purpose of strengthening amicable relations, and especially to establish a tribunal of arbitration for the settlement of disputes without war. Differences of opinion, however, separated him from the administration, and in December, 1 88 1, Mr. Blaine resigned his portfolio and retired to private life. On February 27, 1882, Blaine delivered in the hall of the House of Rep- resentatives his great eulogy upon President Garfield, one of the finest and most pathetic orations ever heard within that Chamber. The audience assem- bled comprised the members of both Houses of Congress, the President and his Cabinet, the Supreme Court, the representatives of foreign govern- GROVKR CI.EVKI.ANI>. HIS EULOGY ON GARFIELD. 441 merits, and great numbers of distinguished men and women. It was a beautiful winter day ; business houses everywhere were closed, and all through the morning hours throngs of people traversed the avenues converging on the Capitol. The touching words in which he bore tribute to his dead friend were listened to with breathless attention by the great throng which filled the house, and when he pronounced that passage of sublime beauty with which the oration closed, the solemn hush which fell upon the great assembly deepened the impression felt by every one present, that he had listened to one of the greatest oratorical efforts of history. THE BLAINE RESIDENCE AT AUGUSTA, MAINE. When the Republican National Convention of 18S4 met, Blaine's nomina- tion was almost a foregone conclusion. The only prominent candidate beside Blaine was President Arthur, whose administration had been so acceptable to the country as to produce a considerable movement in his favor. On the fourth ballot, however, Blaine was triumphantly nominated. General John A. Logan was nominated for Vice-President, and the convention adjourned. Into the campaign of 1884 Blaine threw himself with intense enthusiasm. Strong efforts were made to defeat him upon personal grounds. These ques- 442 JAMES G. BLAINE. tions he refused to discuss, throwing his whole strength into the issues of the campaign. He took strong ground in favor of protection, and made that ques- tion the chief basis of his argument. It is nearly certain that he would have been triumphantly elected but for an accident occurring at the eleventh hour, which no care could possibly have foreseen or provided against. This is what has passed into history as the " Burchard incident." In the last week of the campaign, Mr. Blaine was visited at his hotel by a large gathering of clergymen of different denominations, who assembled for the purpose of making a formal address to him. After adopting resolutions stating their reasons for supporting Mr. Blaine, a committee was >> appointed to introduce him to the meeting. The entire body of clergymen went out into the main corridor of the hotel, and presently Mr. Blaine came down the stairway on the arm of Dr. King, with his wife and daugh- ters. He stopped a few steps from the foot of the stairway, and the Rev. Dr. Burchard ap- proached, addressing him as fol- lows : — "We are very happy to welcome you to this city. You see here a repre- sentation of all denominations of this city. You see the large number that are represented. We are your friends, Mr. Blaine, and, notwithstanding all the cal- umnies that have been urged in the papers against you, we stand by your benjamin harrison. side. (Shouts of 'Amen.') We expect to vote for you next Tuesday. We have higher expectations, which are that you will be the President of the United States, and that you will do honor to your name, to the United States, and to the high office you will occupy. We are Republicans, and don't propose to leave our party and identify ourselves with the party whose ante- cedents have been Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion. We are loyal to our flag. We are loyal to you." Mr. Burchard's alliterative phrase of "Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion" accomplished Mr. Blaine's defeat. His words were immediately taken up by the Democrats, who saw in them the opportunity to defeat Mr. Blaine. They were industriously circulated among members of the Catholic Church every- where, as indicating the hatred of Mr. Blaine to members of that communion. The result was to give Mr. Cleveland the State of New York by only ioco THE HARRISON-CLEVELAND CAMPAIGN. 443 majority. Mr. Blaine received 182 electoral votes, and Mr. Cleveland 219. If the vote of New York alone had been reversed, the result would have been to elect Mr. Blaine by 218 votes to 183 for Mr. Cleveland. During Mr. Cleveland's administration Mr. Blaine remained in private life. Some of his time was spent in literary work and some in European travel. He took a keen interest in political affairs, and frequently expressed his views on the issues of the day through the public press ; but he had now made up his mind that he would never again be a candidate for the Presidency, and he made this intention clear to the succeeding conventions of the Republican party, where a strong desire for his candidacy still existed. One of his most remarkable utterances was made in reply to President Cleveland's message to Congress, in December, 1887. In this message Mr. Cleveland took strong ground in favor of tariff reform and freer trade. All other, interests were entirely ignored, and the message confined to this one point. Its effect was tremendous. It was regarded as the platform on which Mr. Cleveland would appeal for re-election in the following year. The Republicans received the message with great satis- faction, for the tariff was the very issue on which they were most anxious to fight the next campaign. Mr. Blaine was at the time in Paris. An abstract of the President's message was published in the European newspapers the morn- ing after its delivery, and in the form of an interview Mr. Blaine made, in Paris, a full reply to President Cleveland's message, in which he supported the pro- tection view as opposed to that of free trade. These two documents were, in reality, the platform upon which the contest of 1888 was fought. Mr. Blaine declined a nomination so positively as to leave no doubt of his intention, and gave Mr. Harrison substantial aid in the campaign. The result was Mr. Harri- son's triumphant election ; and on his accession to office, Mr. Blaine a second time took the post of Secretary of State, and proceeded to carry out the policy which had been interrupted eight years before by the death of President Garfield. Mr. Blaine took an active part during President Harrison's administration in many important measures, among which were the Reciprocity amendment to the McKinley Tariff Bill, the settlement of the dispute with England over the seal fisheries in Bering Sea, the securing of indemnity from Chili for the killing of American sailors, and the adjustment of a diplomatic difficulty with Italy in consequence of the lynching of a number of Italians in New Orleans. The event which he considered most important, however, was the assembling of the Pan-American Conference, in 1889. This was a conference of represen- tatives of the different American governments, to consider measures for pro- moting peace and international good feeling, and the fostering of trade and ocean commerce ; and while it had no powers of legislation, great good was accomplished by its sessions. 444 JAMES G. BLAINE. In the last two years of Mr. Blaine's life, troubles fell upon him, "not singly, but in battalions." In January, 1890, Walker Blaine, his eldest son and trusted assistant, died suddenly, of pneumonia. Within a month afterward his daughter Alice died. A few weeks later he was himself prostrated by an attack of what proved to be paralysis, and from this time forward his health declined. He resigned his office in the spring of 1892, and returned to his home in Maine. Then another sorrow came to him in the death of his son Emmons. In Decem- ber he became suddenly worse, and died on January 27, 1893. There are few public men whose death caused so wide a sense of personal loss as that of Blaine. Few people are able to win the feeling of fami- liar attachment and affectionate loyalty which was so generally felt for him. "He had the rare fac- ulty," says Chauncey M. Depew, " of never forgetting a face or a name. It is said that Henry Clay possessed it ; but beyond Mr. Blaine, Mr. Thurlow Weed, and the Prince of Wales, I have never known any man in public or private life who had it Mr. Blaine would be introduced at some mass-meet- ing, or a reception in Washington, or at the railway station, to a farmer or a mechanic or a lawyer, and to hundreds of them. Subsequently one of these men would be in his presence at some place distant from the town where the introduction occurred. Mr. Blaine would take him by the hand, call him by name, recall the circumstances of the introduction, and with a cordial grasp and a peculiar look state some incident of their brief conversation ; and that man was ready for the rest of his life to be burned at the stake for James G. Blaine. . . . " He will stand in our history as the ablest parliamentarian and most skillful debater of our Congressional history. . . . He had an unusual com- bination of boundless audacity with infinite tact. No man during his active career has disputed with him his hold upon the popular imagination and his leadership of his party. He has left no successor who possesses, in any degree such as he possessed it, the affection and the confidence of his followers." > x , ^ ' CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW. @* ROBERT FULTON, THE PIONEER OE STEAM NAVIGATION. T is a curious and remarkable fact in the history of invention that between conception and achievement lies a gulf which many men of the greatest genius fail to bridge. The difficulty commonly lies not in making the invention, but in adapting it to the conditions, — in a word, in making it practical. Robert Fulton is distinguished as an inventor who has this great title to fame. He was not the inventor of steam navigation ; he was not even the first man to build a steamboat ; but he was the man who brought steamboats into practical use, doing successfully the work which needed to be done. Fulton was the son of a farmer of Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, where he was born in 1765. He was a dull boy at study, but very expert at drawing, and always fond of machinery, for which he often neg- lected his lessons. His teacher once remonstrated with him upon his course, and, failing to convince him by argument, rapped him sharply over the knuckles with a ruler, telling him he would make him do something. Looking his tutor sternly in the face, he replied, " Sir, I came here to have something beat into my brains, not into my knuckles." Having determined to be an artist, Fulton went to Philadelphia, where he formed a friendship with Franklin. His success was rapid, and when only twenty-one he went to England to study. There he met Watt, who had just produced his steam engine, which Fulton studied enthusiastically ; and he was persuaded to give up the profession of art and become an engineer. Con- vinced that the steam engine could be applied to navigation, he plunged into experiments, in which he was joined by Robert R. Livingston, then minister to France, whose daughter Harriet afterward became Fulton's wife. Several models made by Fulton convinced Mr. Livingston that he had overcome the cause of the failure of other inventors, and it was finally agreed between them to build a large boat for trial on the Seine. This experimental steamer was furnished with paddle-wheels, and was completed early in 1803. On the very 447 448 ROBERT FULTON. morning appointed for the trial, Fulton was aroused from his sleep by a mes- senger, who rushed into his chamber, pale and breathless, exclaiming, "Oh, sir, the boat has broken in pieces and gone to the bottom!" Hurrying to the spot, he found that the weight of the machinery had broken the boat in half and carried the whole structure to the bottom of the river. He at once set to work to raise the machinery, devoting twenty-four hours, without resting or eating, to the undertaking, and succeeded in doing so, but inflicted upon his constitu- tion a strain from which he never entirely recovered. The machinery was very slightly damaged, but it was necessary to rebuild the boat entirely. This was accomplished by July of the same year, and the boat was tried in August with triumphant success, in the presence of the French National Institute and a vast crowd of the citizens of Paris. This steamer was very defective, but still so great an improvement upon all that had preceded it, that Messrs. Fulton and Livingston determined to build one on a larger scale, in the waters of New York. Having resolved to return home, Fulton' set out as soon as possible, stopping in England on his return, to order an engine for his boat from Watt and Boulton. Scientific men and amateurs all agreed in pronouncing Fulton's scheme impracticable ; but Fulton went on with his work, his boat attracting great attention and exciting no less ridicule. The steam engine ordered from Watt and Boulton was received in the latter part of 1806 ; and in the following spring the boat was launched from the ship-yard of Charles Brown, on the East river. Fulton named her the "Clermont," after the country seat of his friend and partner. Chancellor Livingston. She was one hundred and thirty feet long, eighteen feet wide, and seven feet deep. The boat was completed about the last of August, and she was moved by her machinery from the East river into the Hudson, and over to the Jersey shore. This trial, brief as it was, satisfied Ful- ton of its success, and he announced that in a few days the steamer would sail from New York for Albany. THE TRIAL TRIP. Monday, September n, 1807, the time set for sailing, came, and expecta- tion was at its highest. The friends of the inventor were in a state of. feverish anxiety lest the enterprise should come to grief, and the scoffers on the wharf were all ready to give vent to shouts of derision. Precisely as the hour of one struck, the moorings were thrown off, and the "Clermont" moved slowly out into the stream. Volumes of smoke rushed forth from her chimney, and her wheels, which were uncovered, scattered the spray far behind her. The spec- tacle was certainly novel to the people of those days, and the crowd on the wharf broke into shouts of ridicule. Soon, however, the jeers grew silent, for it was seen that the steamer was increasing her speed. In a little while she was fairly under way, and making a steady progress up the stream at the rate of SUCCESS OF THE FIRST TRIP. 449 five miles per hour. The incredulity of the spectators had been succeeded by astonishment, and now this feeling gave way to undisguised delight, and cheer after cheer went up from the vast throng. In a little while, however, the boat was observed to stop, and the enthusiasm at once subsided. The scoffers were again in their glory, and unhesitatingly pronounced the boat a failure. Their chagrin may be imagined when, after a short delay, the steamer once more proceeded on her way, and this time even more rapidly than before. Fulton had discovered that the paddles were too long, and took too deep a hold on the water, and had stopped the boat for the purpose of shortening them. Having remedied this defect, the " Clermont " continued her voyage during the rest of the day and all night, without stopping, and at one o'clock the next day ran alongside the landing at Clermont, the seat of Chancellor Livingston. She lay there until nine the next morning, when she continued her voyage toward Albany, reaching that city at five in the afternoon. On her return trip, she reached New York in thirty hours running time — exactly five miles per hour. The river was at this time navigated entirely with sailing vessels. The sur- prise and dismay excited among the crews of these vessels by the appearance of the steamer was extreme. These simple people beheld what they supposed to be a huge monster, vomiting fire and smoke from its throat, lashing the water with its fins, and shaking the river with its roar, approaching rapidly in the face of both wind and tide. Some threw themselves flat on the decks of their ves- sels, where they remained in an agony of terror until the monster had passed, while others took to their boats and made for the shore in dismay, leaving their vessels to drift helplessly down the stream. The introduction of the steamboat gave a powerful impetus to the internal commerce of the Union. It opened to navigation many important rivers whose swift currents had closed them to sailing craft, and made rapid and easy com- munication between the most distant parts of the country practicable. The public soon began to appreciate this, and orders came in rapidly for steamboats for various parts of the country. Fulton executed these as fast as possible, and among the number several for boats for the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. Fulton followed up the "Clermont" in 1807 w ' tn a larger boat, called the " Car of Neptune," which was placed on the Albany route as soon as completed. The Legislature of New York had enacted a law, immediately upon his first success, giving to Livingston and himself the exclusive right to navigate the waters of the State by steam, for five years for every additional boat they should build in the State, provided the whole term should not exceed thirty years. In 1809 Fulton obtained his first patent from the United States, and in 181 1 he took out a second patent. His patents were limited to the simple means of adapting paddle-wheels to the axle of the crank of Watt's engine. Meanwhile the power of the Legislature to grant the steamboat monopoly 45o ROBERT FULTON. was denied, and a company was formed at Albany to establish another line of steam passage boats on the Hudson, between that city and New York. Fulton and his partner asked an injunction, which was refused, whereupon the State Legislature passed a special act confirming their monopoly. Years of litigation followed, continuing until after Fulton's death ; and, finally, the eloquence of Daniel Webster prevailed against the monopoly, the Supreme Court of the United States deciding, in the famous "steamboat case," that all navigable waters are under the sole jurisdiction of the United States, and free alike to all citizens. In January, 1815, Fulton was summoned to Trenton, New Jersey, as a wit* MIsMs^UTI slIAMliuATS OF TO-DAY. ness in one of the numerous suits which grew out of the efforts to break down his monopoly. During his examination he was very much exposed, as the hall of the Legislature was uncommonly cold. In returning home, he crossed the Hudson in an open boat, and was detained on the river several hours. This severe exposure brought on an attack of sickness, which for a short time con- fined him to his bed. The steam frigate, then almost ready for her engines, occasioned him great anxiety at the time, and before he had fairly recovered his strength he went to the shipyard to give some directions to the workmen employed on her, and thus exposed himself again to the inclemency of the weather. In a few days his indisposition prostrated him again, and, growing rapidly worse, he died on the 24th of February, 181 5, at the age of fifty years. SAMUEL F. B. MORSE, THE INVENTOR. OE THE TELEGRAPH. ■ PROBABLY no other Invention of modern times has done more to change the face of the world than the electric telegraph. The fact that one man in New York can speak to another in Texas or Brazil is charged with stupendous meaning. Through the telegraph the newspaper brings the whole earth before us at the breakfast table. The electric wire is like a nerve in the body, bringing all nations into sympathetic com- munication, dispelling ignorance and prejudice, and helping to make all men brothers. To the inventor of this great system is due a debt of gratitude that can- not be reckoned. Samuel Finley Breese Morse was born at Charlestown, Massa- chusetts, on the 27th of April, 1 79 1. He exhibited an early fondness for art, as well as studies of a scientific character, and while a student at Yale College displayed an especial aptness for chemistry and natural philosophy. Upon leaving college he decided to adopt the profes- sion of an artist, and was sent abroad to study under the tuition of West and Copley and Allston. He was obliged by lack of means to return in about four years. His youth was spent in a struggle for success as an artist. In 1829 he again went abroad for the purpose of completing his art studies. During his absence he was elected " Professor of the Literature of the Fine 453 SAMUEL F. B. MORSE. 454 SAMUEL F. B. MORSE. Arts " in the University of the City of New York. He set out on his return home to accept this professorship in the autumn of 1832, sailing from Havre oh board the packet ship " Sully." Among his fellow-passengers on the "Sully" were a number of persons of intelligence and cultivation, one of whom had recently witnessed in Paris some interesting experiments with the electro-magnet, the object of which was to prove how readily the electric spark could be obtained from the magnet, and the rapidity with which it could be disseminated. To Mr. Morse the develop- ment of this newly-discovered property of electricity was more than interesting. It showed him his true mission in life. He thought long and earnestly upon the subject, pacing the deck under the silent stars. He had long been con- vinced that electricity was to furnish the means of rapid communication between distant points, of which the world was so much in need ; and he at once set to work to discover how this could be done. He succeeded so well that before the "Sully" reached New York he had conceived "not merely the idea of an electric telegraph, but of an electro-magnetic and recording tele- graph, substantially and essentially as it now exists," and had invented an alphabet of signs, the same in all important respects as that now in use. But though invented in 1832, it was not until 1835 that he was enabled to complete his first poor, rude instrument. By its aid he was able to send signals from a given point to the end of a wire half a mile in length, but as yet there was no means of receiving them back again from the other extremity. He con- tinued to experiment on his invention, and made several improvements in it. It was plain from the first that he needed a duplicate of his instrument at the other end of his wire, but for a long time he was unable to have one made. At length he acquired the necessary funds, and in July, 1837, had a duplicate instrument con- structed, and thus perfected his plan. His telegraph now worked to his entire satisfaction, and he could easily send signals to the remote end of his line and receive replies in return. Having brought it to a successful completion, he ex- hibited it to large audiences at the University of New York, in September, 1837. DARK DAYS. He now entered upon that period of the inventor's life which has proved to many so wearying and disheartening — the effort to bring his invention into general use. He applied to Congress in vain for aid. Considerable interest in the subject was aroused in Congress and throughout the country, but he derived no benefit from it. If men spoke of his telegraph, it was only to ridicule it, or to express their doubts of its success. He was very poor, and, as one of his friends has since declared, had literally "to coin his mind for bread." His sturdy independence of character would not allow him to accept assistance from any one, although there were friends ready and even anxious to help him. AID FROM CONGRESS. 455 Alone and manfully he fought his way through these dark days, still hopeful of success for his invention, and patiently seeking to improve it wherever oppor- tunity presented itself. At length, in 1840, he received his long-delayed patent from the general government, and, encouraged by this, presented a second petition to Congress, asking its aid in the construction of an experimental line between Baltimore and Washington. He had to encounter a great degree of skepticism and ridicule, with many other obstacles ; but finally, on the very last day of the session, when he had given up all hope, a bill was passed appropriating thirty thousand dollars to construct the line. His dearest wish was at last realized, and the hour of his triumph was at hand. Work on the telegraph line was im- /Sgggl mediately begun, and carried on actively. At first, an insulated wire was buried under "round j n a lead SHOP IN WHICH THE FIRST MORSE INSTRUMENT WAS CONSTRUCTED FOR EXHIBITION BEFORE CONGRESS. pipe, but this failing to give satisfaction, the wire was elevated upon poles. On the 27th of May, 1844, the line was completed, and the first trial of it made in the presence of the government officials and many other distinguished men. Professor Morse was confident of success ; but this occasion was a period of the most intense anxiety to him, for he knew that his entire future was staked upon the result of this hour. Among the company present to witness the trial was the Secretary of the Treasury, John C. Spencer. Although very much interested in the undertaking, he was entirely ignorant of the principles involved in it, and he asked one of Professor Morse's assistants how large a bundle could be 456 SAMUEL F. B. MORSE. sent over the wires, and if the United States mail could not be sent in the same way. When all was in readiness, Professor Morse seated himself at the instru- ment, and sent his first message to Baltimore. An answer was promptly returned, and messages were sent and replies received with a rapidity and accu- racy which placed the triumph of the invention beyond the possibility of doubt. Congratulations were showered upon the inventor, who received them as calmly as he had previously borne the scoffs of many of these same men. Yet his heart throbbed all the while with a brilliant triumph. Fame and fortune both rose proudly before him. He had won a great victory and conferred a lasting benefit upon his race. The success of the experimental line brought Professor Morse numerous offers for the use of his invention. Telegraph companies were organized all over the country, and the stock issued by them was taken up as fast as offered. At the present day, not only the United States, but the whole world, is covered with telegraph lines. The Morse system is adopted on the principal lines of the United States, on all the lines of the Eastern continent, and exclusively on all the continental lines of Europe, from the extreme Russian north to the Italian and Spanish south, eastward through the Turkish Empire, south into Egypt and northern Africa, and through India, Australia, and parts of China. The rapid growth of the telegraph interest of the United States placed Professor Morse in the possession of a large fortune, which was greatly increased by the adoption of his invention in Europe. Honors, too, were showered upon him from all parts of the world. In 1848, his alma mater, Yale College, con- ferred on him the complimentary degree of LL.D., and since then he has been made a member of nearly all. the American scientific and art academies. From European governments and scientific and art associations he has received more honors than have ever fallen to the share of any other American. Almost every sovereign in the world has conferred upon Professor Morse some honor or title. In February, 1854, Mr. Cyrus W. Field, of New York, ignorant of Pro- fessor Morse's views upon this subject, wrote to him to ask if he considered the working of a cable across the Atlantic practicable. The Professor at once sought an interview with Mr. Field, and assured him of his entire confidence in the undertaking. He entered heartily into Mr. Field's scheme, and rendered great aid in the noble enterprise, which has been described elsewhere in these pages. He was present at each attempt to lay the cable, and ^participated in the final triumph by which his prediction, made twenty-three years previous, was verified. Professor Morse died in New York in April, 1872. THOMAS A. EDISON, AND OTHER GREAT INVENTORS AND THEIR INVENTIONS. 'ROBABLY no man in the United States is better known or more universally interesting than "The Wizard of Menlo Park," the inventor of the electric lamp, the dynamo, the phonograph, the "stock ticker," the elec- tric pen, and the mimeograph, and the discoverer and improver of innumerable things in the field of electricity. And yet, high as is the position that Edison has even now reached, he began at the very bottom. He was the son of a poor man, a village jack-of-all-trades, whose home was at Milan, Ohio, where the boy was born in 1847. While he was a child the family moved to Port Huron, Michigan. In his whole life Thomas had but two months of regular schooling ; the rest of his education was given him by his mother. But he had a restless, inquiring mind, an insatiable appetite for knowledge. When only ten years old he read Gibbon and Hume, and was fascinated by books of chem- istry, which he pored over long before he could pronounce the names of the substances which he read about. When Edison was twelve years of age, he became a newsboy on the Grand Trunk Railway. With the business of selling papers and candies on the trains, however, he still kept going his old hobby of chemistry, and established an amateur laboratory in one corner of the baggage-car, where he amused himself at leisure moments. One day, while he was absent from the car, a bottle of phosphorus was upset, and the car set on fire. This put an end to his chemi- cal experiments for a time. The baggage-master kicked his chemical apparatus out of the car, and Edison was obliged to set up his business in some other place. On one of his trips to Chicago, the publisher of one of the Chicago dailies made him a present of a lot of worn-out type, with which Edison improvised a printing-office, and began to publish a paper of his own, entitled The Grand Trunk Herald, which gave such items of news as the removal of a brakeman 27 459 460 THOMAS A, EDISON. or baggage-master to New York, or told how a train hand fell and hurt his leg. One day, during the war, he persuaded a telegraph operator at Chicago to send to the principal stations on the road a bulletin of the great battle of Shiloh, in consequence of which, when the train arrived, great crowds of people were at the stations hankering after papers, which Edison sold them at an immense profit. This turned his attention to telegraphing, to which he soon became devoted. About this time a stroke of luck came to him in saving the child of a tele- graph operator from being killed by a train. The grateful father rewarded the boy by teaching him telegraphing. Thomas rigged up wires and batteries in his old home at Port Huron, and devoted all his spare hours to practice. When he was eighteen, he secured a position at Indianapolis, and while there he worked out his first invention, an automatic register for receiving messages and transferring them to another wire. In this rude machine was contained the germ of the phonograph, which he perfected years after. By dint of incessant practice, Edison became an extremely expert and swift operator ; but his usefulness was always limited by his tendency to contrive schemes for saving labor. On one occasion, when he was night operator, he was required every half hour to telegraph the word "six" to the superinten- dent, to show that he was awake and attending to business. The ingenious young man contrived a machine which did the work for him, and spent the time poring over his beloved chemistry. This little artifice being discovered, he lost his situation by his cleverness. The beginning of Edison's career as an inventor was not more successful than is usual. He was undoubtedly ingenious, but his ingenuity actually prevented him from being a good telegraph operator. After a time, however, he found his niche. He drifted to New York, where, after vainly endeavoring to interest the telegraph companies in his inventions, he established himself as an expert in odd jobs pertaining to telegraphing. One day the Western Union wire to Albany would not work. The company's regular electricians experimented for days, but without success, and finally, as a forlorn hope, Edison was sent for. He seated himself at the instrument and got connection with Albany by way of Pittsburgh. Then he called for the best operator at the other end of the line, and with him experimented for two hours with currents of different intensities. At the end of this time he told the officers that the trouble was at a certain point on the line, and what it was. They telegraphed the office nearest that point, giving the necessary directions, and in an hour the wire was working properly. This established his reputation as an expert, and he soon began to rise in this line of business. Edison's first large profits came to him from the "stock ticker," an inven- tion for .reporting in brokers' offices the prices of stocks on the exchange, which WORK AT MENLO PARK. 461 is now in universal use. He settled himself in Newark, N. J., where he rented a shop and began to manufacture his machines. His connection with capitalists led to his making' a propo- sition to an association of wealthy men to experiment with electric lighting, they to supply the capital. He re- moved his shop to Menlo Park, a quiet and secluded place, where he carried on his experiments, which soon re- sulted in success. This placed him in an independent position, and from that time to the present his success has been only a question of degree. Edison is a man of infinite pertinacity and great endurance. When he becomes interested in solving an important question, he is entirely oblivious of 462 THOMAS A. EDISON. the passage of time and of physical needs. At one time, when his printing telegraph for some reason gave out and ceased to work, he worked for sixty hours without intermission, taking no sleep or rest, having for his only food crackers and cheese, at which he nibbled from time to time as he worked. At another time all of the electric lamps burning in Menlo Park suddenly gave out. The inventor was almost stunned. For five days he worked at the problem, giving neither himself nor his assistants any rest. At the end of that time the difficulty was still unsolved, and Edison went to bed sick with disappointment and anxiety. Ordinarily he is one of the most considerate of men, but on this occasion he was much surprised when, at the end of fifteen hours' incessant work, it was suggested that rest and refreshments were in order. Time proved the trouble to be in the imperfect exhaustion of the air from the globes in which the filament burned, and long and persevering application was required to devise means for more completely exhausting it. Finally this was accomplished, and the incandescent light became a practical success. Edison's mind is that of the typical inventor. He says of himself that his first thought on looking at any machine or contrivance whatever is to imagine how it could be improved. With him it is a maxim that " whatever is, is wrong," or at least that it might and ought to be better. This peculiarity has made him one of the most fertile inventors of history, but it also results in his being entirely wrapped up in the one absorbing pursuit. His ideal of luxury, when riches came to him, was not fast horses, or social enjoyment, or even distinction, but a perfect workshop, which had hitherto cost so much as to be unattainable to him. In his laboratory he has gathered every substance known to science — solid, fluid, and gas. Every effort is made to have at his command all the known resources of scientific research. Forty-five scientific journals, in different languages, are received in his library, and systematically indexed as fast as received, so that every item of information which they 'contain is right at his hand at any moment. In such respects Edison's workshop at Menlo Park is unique. It is hard to conceive of a chemical or mechanical experiment for which he is not perfectly equipped. Edison says of himself that he is a poor business man. He hates routine. Going over and over again the regular round of a business system is intoler- able to him. Most men are creatures of habit, and need to have their daily task laid out for them. They want to work without thinking. Edison cannot. His thought runs away with him. This tendency of his mind is well illustrated by his experience in manufacturing. When he had perfected his " stock ticker," he took a contract to manufacture some hundreds of them at a shop at Newark, N. J. "I was a poor manufacturer," he declares, "because I could not let well enough alone. My first impulse, upon taking in my hand any machine, from an egg-beater to an electric motor, is to seek a way of improving it. Therefore, OTHER GREAT INVENTORS. 463 as soon as I have finished a machine I am anxious to take it apart again in order to make an experiment. That is a costly mania for a manufacturer." The visitor to Edison's laboratory finds the master a rather tall, compactly- built man, with a somewhat boyish, clean-shaven face, which seems made prema- turely old by intense thought and application. Over his clothes he wears a blouse, which is stained with acids. "Good clothes are thrown away on me," he says. " I feel it is wrong to wear any, and I never put on a new suit when I can help it." His hands are discolored with chemicals and oil, and his hair has also received some touches, for he has a habit of wiping his fingers upon it. He is somewhat deaf, and watches his visitor's lips closely to catch what he is saying. He is kind and genial, and patient in explanation to those of inquiring minds. Edison is one of the busiest men in the world. Each invention or improve- ment seems only to widen the field. "These are only tools," he says, "with which we may accomplish still greater wonders. The very fact that this cen- tury has accomplished so much in the way of invention makes it more than probable that the next century will do far greater things." OTHER GREAT INVENTORS AND THEIR INVENTIONS. Great inventions are not necessarily large or costly. The scythe is a simple tool, and inexpensive ; yet the practical perfecting of it by Joseph Jenks, almost at the outset of farm-life in New England, is an epoch-mark in agriculture. It was the beginning of a new order of things. Putting curved fingers to the improved scythe-blade and snath furnished the American grain cradle, a farm-tool perfect of its kind, and likely to hold its place as long as grain is grown on uneven ground. The plow supplied to the Colonial farm- ers was as venerable as the reaping-hook. i It had been substantially unimproved for four thousand years. The moment our peo- *. pie were free to manufacture for themselves, ■^ they set about its improvement in form and material ; the very first patent granted by the Patent Office being for an improved plow of cast-iron. The best plow then in use was a rude affair, clumsily made, hard to guide, and harder to draw. Its improvement engaged the attention of many COLONIAL sriNNING-WHEEL. 464 OTHER GREAT INVENTORS. inventors, notably President Jefferson, who experimented with various forms, and made a mathematical investigation of the shape of the mould-board, to determine the form best suited for the work. He was the first to discover the importance of straight lines from the sole to the top of the share and mould- board. Colonel Randolph, Jefferson's son-in-law, "the best farmer in Virginia," invented a side-hill plow. Smith was the first to hitch two plows together ; and Allen, by combining a number of small plow-points in one implement, led the way to the production of the infinite variety of horse-hoes, cultivators, and the like. But Jethro Wood, of New York, probably did more than any other man to perfect the cast-iron plow, and to secure its general use in place of the cumbrous plows of the earlier days. His skill as an inventor, and his pluck as a fighter against stolid ignorance and prejudice, for the advancement of sensible plowing, cost him — what they ought to have gained for him — a fortune. The use of cast-iron plows had become general by 1825. COLONIAL PLOW WITH WOODEN MOLD-BOARD. ELI WHITNEY AND THE COTTON-GIN. Whitney was a New England genius, who graduated at Yale in 1792, and went to Georgia to teach school, living in the family of General Greene's widow. Having heard much of the slow and tedious work of separating the cotton from the seed, Whitney undertook to make a machine for doing the work, which he did in the same year, 1792. When it was introduced, the entire cot- ton crop of the country could have been grown on a single field of two hundred acres. A good day's work for a man was cleaning four or five pounds of lint, or a bale of cotton in three months. Whitney's gin enabled a man to do the same work in six days. As a conse- quence of the cheaper and more rapid means of preparing it with the Whitney gin, the cotton crop of the South rose to sudden prominence. In 1800 it was eighteen million pounds ; the next year, forty million. Ten years later it was eighty million pounds, which product was more than doubled in the next ten A NEW ENGLAND WEAVER WIND Mccormick and evans. 465 years. In 1830 it was a million bales; two millions in 1840; three in 1851 ; and four in i860. Without it modern cotton crops of eight or nine million bales would be impossible ; simply to pick the seeds out of the crop of 1S91 in the old way would have kept the entire working population of the United States busy for a solid month. It is sad to have to add that Whitney's invention was so extensively pirated that he derived but little benefit from an invention which has added almost untold wealth to the country and the world. cyrus h. Mccormick, and the reaping-machine. The circumstance that reaping by machinery was as old as the Christian era, and a multitude of comparatively modern attempts had been made, particularly in England, to apply horse-power to the cutting of grass and grain, only added to the merit of inventors like Hussey and McCormick, who practically solved the problems involved by means so simple and efficient that they have not been and are likely never to be entirely displaced. Hussey's mowing-machine of 1833 had reciprocating knives working through slotted fingers, a feature essen- tial to all practical grass and grain cutters. McCormick patented a combination reaper and mower in 1834, which he subsequently so improved as to make it the necessary basis of all reapers. In competitive trials at home and abroad, the American mowers and reapers have never failed to demonstrate their superi- ority over all others. Their first great victory, which gave them the world-wide fame they have so successfully maintained, was won in London in 185 1. In the competitive trial near Paris, in 1855, the American machine cut an acre of oats in twqnty-two minutes ; the English in sixty-six minutes ; the French in seventy-two. In the later competition, local and international, their superior efficiency has been not less signally manifested. OLIVER EVANS AND THE STEAM ENGINE. One of the most fertile inventors of the eighteenth century was Oliver Evans, who deserves immortal fame as the developer of the modern "high-pres- sure " or non-condensing engine, and the pioneer in improved milling machinery. As early as 1768 he was experimenting with steam, and was able to drive a small boat by means of steam and paddle-wheels. In 17S6 he applied to the State of Pennsylvania for a patent on the application of his engine to driving mills, and to a steam carriage, but his petition was denied. There was then no national patent office for the encouragement of men of original ideas ; if there had been, the practical development of the steamboat and the steam-carriage might have been materially hastened, for Evans was diverted from this line of work for a dozen years or more. In 1800 he returned to it, and built a novel non- 4 66 OTHER GREAT INVENTORS. condensing engine, designed for application to a steam-carriage, but for financial reasons set to working a plaster mill. A year or two after he built an engine of 150 horse-power for parties in New Orleans, who set it up in the boat for which it was intended. But a long season of low water prevented a trial of the boat, and wasted capital compelled the owners to take the engine out and set it to work in a lumber mill, where it did such good service that the steamboat project was abandoned. It was thus no fault of Evans that the pioneer engine, of the type afterward adopted for western river navigation, did not win for him the fame subsequently achieved by Fulton. In 1804 Evans built for Philadelphia a PRIMITIVE MODES OF GRINDING CORN. steam-dredger, which, set on wheels, propelled itself along the streets to the river, where it was launched and the engine applied to its stern-wheel, when as a steamboat it was navigated about the Schuylkill. JACOB PERKINS AND THE NAIL MACHINE. The first single machine of American production to become widely famous was the nail machine of Jacob Perkins. Perkins was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts, in 1766, and patented his great machine in 1795. At that time nails were mostly imported, and cost twenty-five cents a pound. They were. all hand-wrought, chiefly at chimney-corner forges, where, in New England, farmers PERKINS AND HIS NAIL MACHINE. 467 and lumbermen, fishermen and laborers, employed their evenings and other odd times in hammering nails. In Europe, more especially in the manufacturing districts of England, it was a common domestic industry, often employing whole families, but chiefly women and children, ill-paid, over-worked, and toiling under social conditions of the most appalling character. The American nail machine promptly displaced this domestic industry here, and more slowly that of Europe, by making it possible to use power in nail- making, while enabling a workman to do in a minute the previous task of an hour. The price ot nails was speedily reduced two-thirds, subsequently much more, with an assured supply equal to any demand. The early cut nails were A GREAT MiIHERN FI.oUR MILL. not so tough as the <- g# hand-made nails, but for most purposes they were neater and better; while any desired toughness was ulti- mately secured by annealing, and by the use of steel, particularly steel wire. Every style of nail, from the smallest tack to the railroad spike, is now made by machinery, at a cost but little above that of the raw metal, the forms being as various as their manifold uses. The manufacture of cut nails has become one of the most important of the great iron industries of the country. 468 HOWE AND JEROME. ELIAS HOWE AND THE SEWING MACHINE. Howe was born at Spencer, Massachusetts, in 1819. While employed as a machinist he made many experiments and efforts to invent a sewing machine, and after great discouragements completed one, for which he secured a patent in 1846. Though the practical parent of the modern sewing machine, it was not in itself a successful machine, nor was Howe at first successful in enlisting capital to aid him in developing from it a good machine. In the course of four or five years the defective details were corrected or displaced by the work of other inventors in great numbers, who attacked the problems of the sewing machine as soon as their importance became generally appreciated. The Singer machine, which closely resembled Howe's, came into the field in 1850, and took the lead in sales until 1854. The Grover & Baker machine became most popu- lar for four or five years ; then the Wheeler & Wilson for ten years. In the meantime, all the companies were infringing on the rights of Howe, who, after expensive litigation, won his case, and entered into an agreement with the great manufacturing companies, receiving five dollars for each machine made until i860 ; after that, one dollar a machine. Between 1856 and 1877, over six mil- lion machines were sold in the United States. Though the great bulk of these machines are held for family use, the factory machines were estimated to give (the world over) employment to 20,000,000 persons, mostly women. In social, not less than in industrial effects the sewing machine has been simply revolu- tionary. CHAUNCEY JEROME AND AMERICAN CLOCKS. The pioneer in American clock-making was Eli Terry, of Plymouth, Con- necticut, who was also the first clock peddler in the beginning of the present century. As the means and methods of cutting the wooden wheels were improved, the clocks were greatly cheapened. Chauncey Jerome, an apprentice of Terry, was especially successful in reducing the cost and improving the quality of these primitive time-keepers. In 1837, Mr. Jerome brought out the machine- made brass clock, which revolutionized the business of clock-making and sent a timepiece into every house. In 1841 he sent a cargo of Connecticut clocks to England, billed at so low a figure that the customs officers seized them for under- valuation, paying him his price plus ten per cent., as the law directed. The second cargo, much to his delight, met with the same reception. With the third, the tardily-enlightened Government allowed him to seek a less convenient cus- tomer. The metal movements were stamped from sheet-brass so rapidly that three men with one machine could cut out the works of five hundred clocks a day, reducing the cost of a clock-movement to fifty cents. At this rate the sale was enormous. The metal clocks, unlike the wooden clocks, could stand any climate, and this, with their astonishing cheapness, gave them worldwide acceptance. JOHN JACOB ASTOR, OUR PIONEER BUSINESS MAN AND FIRST MILLIONAIRE. 1 NEVER were greater extremes of poverty and wealth connected in the life of one person than were touched by John Jacob Astor, the founder of one of the first and greatest of the enormous fortunes that have been amassed in America. The life of a poor German peasant in the latter part of the eighteenth century reached a depth of poverty which can now hardly be conceived. John Jacob Astor was born in Waldorf, a little village of Baden, in 1763, — the year of the treaty which secured to England all the fur- bearing country of North America, from which Astor was destined to make such a splendid fortune. His father was a butcher, a shiftless, stupid, quarrelsome good-for-nothing ; and the son, bent upon making something of himself, resolved, when about nineteen, to seek his fortune in the " new land " of America, then brought into prominence by the Revolution. In March, 17S4, he landed at Baltimore. On the voyage he met a German, older than himself, who, beginning with almost nothing, had become a fur trader, and made large profits. He advised Astor to embark in the same business, which he proceeded to do. He had a brother living in New York, whither he went, and succeeded in getting a position in the fur store of Robert Bowne, a Quaker, where he set himself to learn the business in the most thorough manner. He bent all the powers of his remarkable mind to acquiring an intimate knowledge of furs, and 47i A MODERN Nt 472 JOHN JACOB ASTOR. of fur-bearing animals, and their haunts and habits. His opportunities for doing so were very good, as many of the skins were sold over Bowne's counters by the hunters who had taken them. These men he questioned with a minuteness that astonished them, and the result was that in a few years he was as thor- oughly familiar with the animals, their habits, their country, and the mode of taking them, as many of the trappers themselves. He is said to have been in his prime the best judge of furs in America. As soon as Astor felt himself master of his business, he left the employ of Mr. Bowne, and began life on his own account. The field upon which he pur- posed entering was extensive, but it was one of which he had made a careful sur- vey. The fur trade was at this time almost wholly in the hands of three English companies — the Hudson's Bay Company in the north, the Northwest Company in the Canadas, the Mackinaw Company in the territories of- the United States — and the few American traders in the field had to rely on their individual resources, with no aid from a government too feeble to do more than establish a few Indian agencies, and without constitutional power to confer charter privileges. The voyage of Captain Cook had brought to the notice of the fur dealers of the world the sea otter of the northern Pacific, and the announcement made upon the return of the expedition drew large numbers of adventurers to the west coast of America, in search of the valuable skins of these animals. It was into this field, already occupied by powerful and hostile corporations, that the young German entered. He began business in i 786, in a small store in Water street, which he furnished with a few toys and notions suited to the tastes of the Indians who had skins to sell. His entire capital consisted of only a few hundred dollars, a portion of which was loaned him by his brother. He had no assistants. He did all his own work. He bought his skins, cured, beat, and sold them himself. Several times during the year he made journeys on foot through western New York, buying skins from the settlers, farmers, trappers, savages, wherever he could find them. He tramped over nearly the entire State in this way, and is said to have had a better knowledge of its geography and topography than any man living. He used to boast, late in life, when the Erie Canal had called into being a line of thriving towns through the centre of the State, that he had himself, in his numberless tramps, designated the sites of those towns, and predicted that one day they would be the centres of business and population. Particularly he noted the spots where Rochester and Buffalo now stand, one having a harbor on Lake Erie and the other upon Lake Ontario. He predicted that those places would one day be large and prosperous cities ; and that prediction he made when there was scarcely a settlement at Buffalo, and only wigwams on the site of Rochester. EXTENDING HIS OPERATIONS. 473 Slowly, and by unremitting industry Mr. Astor succeeded in building up a certain business. His personal journeys made him acquainted with the trappers, and enabled him to win their good will. The savages sold their skins to him readily, and he found a steady market and a growing demand for his commodities in the Old World. It was about this time that he married Miss Sarah Todd, of New York. She entered heartily into his business, doing much of the buying and beating of the furs herself. Long after he was a millionaire he used to boast of her skill in judging furs and conducting business operations. In 1794, Jay's treaty placed the frontier forts in the hands of the Amer- icans, and thus increased the opportunities of our own traders to extend their m «£ :- CHAMPLAIN'S FORTIFIED CAMP IN QUEBEC. business. It was of the greatest service to Mr. Astor. It enabled him to enlarge the field of his operations, and, at the same time, to send his agents on the long journeys which he formerly made, while he himself remained in New York to direct his business, which by this time had grown to considerable proportions. He was now on the road to wealth. He had scores of trappers and hunters working for him in the great wilderness, and his agents were kept busy buying and shipping the skins to New York. As soon as he was able to do so he purchased a ship, in which he sent his furs to London, occasionally making a voyage thither himself. Under his skillful management his business grew rapidly ; but he avoided speculation and confined himself to legitimate commerce. He was plain and 474 JOHN JACOB ASTOR. simple in his habits, carrying this trait to an extreme long after economy had • ceased to be necessary to him. He worked hard, indulged in no pleasures except horseback exercise and the theatre, of both which he was very fond. It was only after he had amassed a large fortune that he ever left his business before the close of the day. Then he would leave his counting-room at two in the afternoon, and, partaking of an early dinner, would pass the rest of the day in riding about the island. So plain was his style of living that, before he became generally known as a wealthy man, a bank clerk once superciliously informed him that his endorsement of a note would not be sufficient, as it was not likely he would be able to pay it in case the bank should be forced to call upon him. " Indeed ! " said Mr. Astor ; " how much do you suppose I am worth ? " The clerk named a very moderate amount, at which the merchant smiled quietly. "Would the indorsement of Mr. , or Mr. , be sufficient? " asked Mr. Astor, naming several well-known merchants who lived in great style. "Entirely sufficient," was the reply. "Each one of them is known to be wealthy." " How much do you think each is worth ? " The clerk named large sums in connection with each of the gentlemen. "Well, my friend," said the merchant, "I am worth more than any of them. I will not tell you how much I am worth, but it is more than any sum you have named." The clerk looked at him in surprise, and then said, bluntly : " Then you are a greater fool than I took you for, to work as hard as you do." Mr. Astor was very fond of telling this story, which he regarded as one of the best jokes of the day. All this time Mr. Astor had lived over his store, but in 1800, after he had been in business fifteen years, he moved his dwelling to 223 Broadway, on the site of the Astor House of to-day. He lived here, with one removal, for up- ward of twenty-five years. t The house was plain and simple, but he was satisfied with it. He was now worth a quarter of a million dollars, and his business was growing rapidly. The fur trade was exceedingly profitable. A beaver skin could be bought from the trappers in western New York for one dollar and sold in London for six dollars and a quarter. By investing this amount in English manufactures, the six dollars and a quarter received for the skin could be made to produce ten dollars paid for the English goods in New York. The Chinese trade was also very profitable. China was an excellent market for furs. They brought high prices, and the proceeds could always be invested in teas and silks, which sold well in New York. His profit on a 476 JOHN JACOB ASTOR. voyage would sometimes reach seventy thousand dollars, and the average gain on a lucky venture of this kind was thirty thousand dollars. The high prices produced by the war of 1S12-15 were also in Mr. Astor's favor. His ships were all remarkably lucky in escaping capture by the enemy, and he was almost the only merchant who had a cargo of tea in the market. Tea having reached double its usual price, he was enabled to reap immense profits from his ventures. The most important of all of Mr. Astor's undertakings was his effort at founding the settle- ment of Astoria, on the coast of Oregon. " His design," says a writer, " was to organize and control the fur trade from the lakes to the Pacific, by establish- ing trading posts along the Mis- souri and Columbia to its mouth. He designed establishing a cen tral depot and post at the mouth of the Columbia river. He pro- posed sending regular supply ships to the Pacific posts around Cape Horn. It was part of his plan, if possible, to obtain pos- session of one of the Sandwich Islands as a station, for from the Pacific coast he knew that the Chinese market for his peltries could be most conveniently reached, and thus the necessity for a long and circuitous voyage be avoided. Instead of bringing the furs intended for China to New York, they could be sent from the Pacific. By the supply ships, too, the stock of goods suitable for the Indian trade would be kept up there, and the cargoes purchased with the pro- ceeds of the furs sold in China brought back to New York. The line of posts across the continent would become a line of towns ; emigration would follow, and civilization would belt the continent." A company was formed, at the head of which stood Mr. Astor, and an elaborate and carefully arranged plan of operations prepared. Two expeditions ANCIENT BLOCK HOUSE, ALASKA. FAILURE OF THE ASTORIA SCHEME. 477 were dispatched to the mouth of the Columbia, one by land, the other by sea. Many hardships were encountered, but the foundation of a settlement was suc- cessfully made on the Columbia. In spite of the war with England (1812-15), the enterprise would have been successful had Mr. Astor's positive instruc- tions been obeyed. They were utterly disregarded, however, and his partners and agents not only betrayed him in every instance, but sold his property to a rival British company for a mere trifle. His pecuniary loss was over a million dollars, and his disappointment bitter beyond expression. When the news of the final betrayal reached him, he wrote : " Had our place and property been fairly captured, I should have preferred it ; I should not feel as if I were dis- graced." Mr. Astor remained in active business for fifty years. During that entire period he scarcely committed an error of judgment which led to a loss in busi- ness. He was thorough master of everything pertaining to his affairs, and his strength and accuracy of judgment were remarkable. The particulars of his transactions were indelibly impressed upon his mind. His intellect was vigor- ous and quick, and he grasped a subject with a readiness which seemed like intuition. He was always careful of the present, but he loved to undertake enterprises which extended far into the future. He was a man of the utmost punctuality in all his habits. He rose early, and, until he was fifty-five years old, was always in his office before seven o'clock. His capacity for work was very great, so that, in spite of his heavy labors, he was always able to leave his office by two o'clock, while many of his associates, who really did less than he. were compelled to remain in their counting-rooms until four or five. One chief source of Mr. Astor's great wealth was his shrewd investments in real estate, and the great rise in values of New York property which have resulted from the steady growth of the greatest city of the American continent. In the early part of his career New York was little more than a town occupying part of the lower end of Manhattan Island ; the upper end was occupied chiefly by farms and country residences. Mr. Astor, with shrewd foresight, systemati- cally invested his spare capital in suburban land, which before the time of his death had by its increase in value added many millions to the great estate which he left to his children. During the last twenty years of his life Mr. Astor lived in the retirement of his family, leaving even the greater part of the management of his estate to the hands of others. He was exceedingly fond of literary men. Irving was his friend, and Halleck his business manager. He died at the age of eighty-four years and eight months, literally from old age. He was buried in St. Thomas's Church, on Broadway. His immense estate was left to his children, the bulk of it being bequeathed to his eldest son. All of his relatives were made comfortable. The village of 28 478 JOHN JACOB ASTOR. Waldorf, his native place, received a legacy of fifty thousand dollars for the benefit of its poor, and an amount in land and funds equal to four hundred thousand dollars was left to certain trustees to establish the Astor Library in the city of New York. Besides these, several charitable and benevolent asso- ciations received handsome donations from him. His career has been related in these pages as an example to those who are seeking to rise in legitimate commerce. It is the best instance on record of the facility with which success may be won by patient and intelligent industry. In his capacity for grasping and carrying out an enterprise, in his prudent and economical management of his business, in his tact, courage, sagacity, Mr. Astor's example is one which will lead many to success, and none to injury. 4So GEORGE PEABODY, OUR FIRST MILLIONAIRE PHILANTHROPIST. MONG the distinctive products of the nineteenth century is the modern millionaire ; and like other products, this one has been greatly developed and improved from the crude form in which it first appeared. One would hardly recognize, in contemplating the works of George W. Childs or Q~& Leland Stanford, that they belonged to the same species as Stephen Girard and John Jacob Astor. The first million aires could only get ; they could not give. They could '■■&/'' leave — since indeed they could not help leaving; but as to volun- ^ tarily giving what they had got, that faculty was not yet devel- oped. The two qualities were, in fact, quite naturally supposed to be incompatible. A rich man who scattered his riches seemed an ab- surdity — a contradiction in terms. But presently arose a man who showed how such a thing could be, by being it. He invented, and in himself developed, a new and most beneficent function : and to him, as to other great inventors and pioneers, mankind loves to pay tribute of well-deserved love and honor. His name is George Peabody. Mr. Peabody was born in Danvers, Massachusetts, on February 1 8, 1795. His parents were poor, and hard work was the lot to which he was born. His education was limited, for he was taken from school at the age of eleven, and set to earning his living. Upon leaving school he was apprenticed to a Mr. Sylvester Proctor, who kept a "country store" in Danvers. Here he worked hard and faithfully for four or five years, devoting himself with energy and determination to business. His mind matured more rapidly than his body, and he was a man in intellect long before he was out of his teens. At the age of sixteen, in the year 1S11, he went to Newburyport, and became a clerk in the store of his elder brother, David Peabody, who was engaged in the dry goods business at that place. He exhibited unusual capa- city and promise in his calling, and soon drew upon himself the favorable atten- tion of the merchants of the place. He was prompt, reliable, and energetic, and from the first established an enviable reputation for personal and profes- 481 482. GEORGE PEABODY. sional integrity. He did not stay long in Newburyport, as a great fire, which burned up a considerable part of the town, destroyed his brother's store, and obliged him to seek employment elsewhere. From New England, George Peabody turned his face southward, and entered the employment of his uncle, Mr. John Peabody, who was engaged in the dry goods business in Georgetown, in the District of Columbia. His uncle was a poor man and a bad manager, and for two years the business was con- ducted by George Peabody, and in his own name ; but at the end of that time, seeing the business threatened with ruin by his uncle's incapacity, he resigned his situation, and entered the service of Mr. Elisha Riggs, who had just estab- lished a wholesale dry goods house in Georgetown. Mr. Riggs furnished the capital for the concern, and Mr. Peabody was given the management of it. Soon after this, the latter became a partner in the house. It is said that when Mr. Riggs invited Mr. Peabody to become his partner, the latter informed him that he could not legally assume the responsibilities of business, as he was only nineteen years old. This was no objection in the mind of the merchant, as he wanted a young and active assistant, and had discerned in his boy-manager the qualities which never fail to win success. The new business in which he was engaged consisted chiefly in the impor- tation and sale of European goods, and consignments of dry goods from the northern cities. It extended over a wide field, and gave Mr. Peabody a fine opportunity for the display of his abilities. Mr. Riggs's friends blamed him very much for leaving his business so entirely in the hands of a boy of nine- teen ; but he had better proof than they that his affairs were not only in good, but in the best hands, and he answered them all by telling them that time would justify his course. Mr. Peabody traveled extensively in establishing his business, often journeying into the wild and unsettled regions of the border States on horseback. He worked with energy and intelligence, and in 1815 the business was found to be so extensive that a removal to Baltimore became necessary. About this time a banking business was added to the operations of the house. This was chiefly the suggestion of Mr. Peabody, and proved a source of great profit. Mr. Peabody quickly took a prominent rank among the merchants of Baltimore. His manner was frank and engaging, and won him many friends. He was noted for "a judgment quick and cautious, clear and sound, a decided purpose, a firm will, energetic and persevering industry, punctuality and fidelity in every engagement, justice and honor controlling every transaction, and courtesy — that true courtesy which springs from genuine kindness — presiding over the intercourse of life." His business continued to increase, and in 1822 it became necessary to establish branches in Philadelphia and New York, over which Mr. Peabody exercised a careful supervision. He was thoroughly REMOVAL TO ENGLAND. 483 familiar with every detail of his -business, and never suffered his vigilance to relax, however competent might be the subordinates in the immediate charge of those details. In 1827 he went to England on business for his firm, and dur- ing the next ten years made frequent voyages between New York and London. In 1829 Mr. Riggs withdrew from the firm, and Mr. Peabody became the actual head of the house, the style of the firm, which had previously been " Riggs & Peabody," being changed to "Peabody, Riggs & Co." The firm had for some time been the financial agents of the State of Maryland, and had managed the negotia- tions confided to them with great skill and success ; and every year their banking de- partment became more im- portant and more profitable. In 1836 Mr. Peabody determined to extend his business, which was already very large, to England, and to open a branch house in London. In 1837 he re- moved to that city for the purpose of taking charge of his house there, and from that time London became his home. The summer of this year was marked by one of the most terrible commercial crises the United States has ever known. A large num- ber of the banks suspended specie payment, and the majority of the mercantile houses were either ruined or in the greatest distress. Thousands of merchants, until then prosperous, were hopelessly ruined. "That great sympathetic nerve of the commercial world, credit," said Edward Everett, "as far as the United States was con cerned, was for the time paralyzed. At that moment Mr. Peabody not only 484 GEORGE PEABODY. stood firm himself, but was the cause of firmness in others. There were not at that time, probably, half a dozen other men in Europe who, upon the subject of American securities, would have been listened to for a moment in the parlor of the Bank of England. But his judgment commanded respect ; his integrity won back the reliance which men had been accustomed to place on American securities. The reproach in which they were all involved was gradually wiped away from those of a substantial character ; and if, on this solid basis of unsuspected good faith, he reared his own prosperity, let it be remembered that at the same time he retrieved the credit of the State of Mary- land, of which he was agent — performing that miracle by which the word of an honest man turns paper into gold." The conduct of Mr. Peabody, as well as the evidences which he gave of his remarkable capacity for business, in this crisis, placed him among the foremost merchants of London. He carried on his business upon a large scale from his base of operations in that city. He bought British manufactures in all parts of England and shipped them to the United States. His vessels brought back in return all kinds of American produce which would command a ready sale in England. Profitable as these ventures were, there was another branch of his business much more remunerative to him. The merchants and manufacturers on both sides of the Atlantic who consigned their goods to him, frequently pro- cured from him advances upon the goods long before they were sold. At other times they would leave large sums in his hands long after the goods were dis- posed of, knowing that they could draw whenever they needed, and that in the meanwhile their money was being so profitably invested that they were certain of a proper interest for their loans. Thus Mr. Peabody gradually became a banker, in which pursuit he was as successful as he had been as a merchant. In 1843 ne withdrew from the house of Peabody, Riggs & Co., and established the house of " George Peabody & Company, of Warnford Court, City." His dealings were chiefly with America and in American securities, and he was always regarded as one of the best specimens of the American merchant ever seen in London. He was very proud of his country ; and though he passed so many years of his life abroad, he never forgot that he was an Amer- ican. In speaking of the manner in which he organized his business establish- ment, he once said : " I have endeavored, in the constitution of its members and the character of its business, to make it an American house, and to give it an American atmosphere ; to furnish it with American journals ; to make it a cen- tre of American news, and an agreeable place for my American friends visiting London." It was his custom, from his first settlement in England, to celebrate the anniversary of the independence of his country by an entertainment at one of the public houses in the city, to which the most distinguished Americans in AID TV AMERICAN EXHIBITORS IN iS 5 r. 485 London were always invited, as were also many of the prominent men of Great Britain ; and this dinner was only discontinued in deference to the general cele- bration of the day which was afterward instituted by the whole body of Ameri- cans resident in the British metropolis. In the year 185 1, when it was thought that there would be no representation of the achievements of American skill and industry in the great exhibition of that year, from a lack of funds, Mr. Peabody generously supplied the sum of fifteen thousand dollars, which enabled the commissioners to make a suitable display of the American contributions. Said the Hon. Edward Everett, alluding to this act : — " In most, perhaps in all other countries, this exhibition had been a govern- ment affair. Commissioners were appointed by authority to protect the interests of the exhibitors ; and, what was more important, appropriations of money had been made to defray their expenses. No appropriations were made by Con- gress. Our exhibitors arrived friendless, some of them penniless, in the great commercial Babel of the world. They found the portion of the Crystal Palace assigned to our country unprepared for the specimens of art and industry which they had brought with them ; naked and unadorned by the side of the neighbor- ing arcades and galleries fitted up with elegance and splendor by the richest governments in Europe. The English press began to launch its too ready sar- casms at the sorry appearance which Brother Jonathan seemed likely to make ; and all the exhibitors from this country, as well as those who felt an interest in their success, were disheartened. At this critical moment, our friend stepped forward. He did what Congress should have done. By liberal advances on his part, the American department was fitted up ; and day after day, as some new product of American ingenuity and taste was added to the list, — McCor- mick's reaper, Colt's revolver, Powers's Greek Slave, Hobbs's unpickable lock, Hoe's wonderful printing presses, and Bond's more wonderful spring governor, — it began to be suspected that Brother Jonathan was not quite so much of a simpleton as had been thought. He had contributed his full share, if not to the splendor, at least to the utilities of the exhibition. In fact, the leading journal at London, with a magnanimity which did it honor, admitted that England had derived more real benefit from the contributions of the United States than from those of any other country." HIS BUSINESS HABITS. As has been said, Mr. Peabody made the bulk of his colossal fortune in the banking business. He had a firm faith in American securities, and dealt in them largely, and with confidence. His business instinct was remarkable, his judgment in mercantile and financial matters almost infallible, and he made few mistakes. His course was now onward and upward, and each year marked an increase of his wealth. His business operations were conducted in pursu- ance of a rigid system which was never relaxed. To the very close of his life 486 GEORGE PEABODY. he never abandoned the exact or business-like manner in which he sought to make money. He gave away millions with a generosity never excelled, yet he could be exacting to a penny in the fulfillment of a contract. ™i,' FT PRODUCE EXCHANGE Bl'lI.DI Xo, NEW YORK. The conductor on an English railway once overcharged him a shilling for fare. He promptly complained to the directors, and had the man discharged. " Not," said he, " that I could not afford to pay the shilling, but the man was cheating many travelers to whom the swindle would be oppressive." PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS. 487 In his youth he contracted habits of economy, and these he retained to the last. Being unmarried, he did not subject himself to the expense of a complete domestic establishment, but lived in chambers, and entertained his friends at his club or at a coffee-house. His habits were simple in every respect, and he was often seen making his dinner on a mutton-chop at a table laden (at his cost) with the most sumptuous and tempting viands. His personal expenses for ten years did not average three thousand dollars per annum. In his dress Mr. Peabody was simple and unostentatious. He was scrupu- lously neat and tasteful, but there was nothing about him to indicate his vast wealth. He seldom wore any jewelry, using merely a black band for his watch- guard. Display of all kinds he abominated. He made several visits to his native country during his last residence in London, and commemorated each one of them by acts of princely munificence. He gave large sums to the cause of education, and to religious and charitable objects, and made each one of his near kindred wealthy. None of his relatives received less than one hundred thousand dollars, and some were given as much as three times that sum. He gave immense sums to the poor of London, and became their benefactor to such an extent that Queen Victoria sent him her portrait, which she had caused to be executed for him at a cost of over forty thousand dollars, in token of her appreciation of his services in behalf of the poor of her realm. Mr. Peabody made another visit to the United States in 1866, and upon this occasion added large sums to many of the donations he had already made in this country. He remained here until May, 1867, when he returned to England. He came back in June, 1869, but soon sailed again for England. His health had become very feeble, and it was his belief that it would be better in the atmosphere of London, to which he had been so long accustomed. His hope of recovery was vain. He failed to rally upon reaching London, and died in that city on the 4th of November, 1869. The news of his death created a profound sadness on both sides of the Atlantic, for his native and his adopted country alike revered him as a benefac- tor. The Queen caused his body to be placed in a vault in Westminster Abbey, amidst the greatest and noblest of her kingdom, until all was in readiness for its transportation to the United States in a royal man-of-war. The Congress of the United States authorized the President to make such arrangements for the reception of the body as he should deem necessary. Sovereigns, statesmen, and warriors united to do homage to the mortal remains of this plain, simple man, who, beginning life a poor boy, and never departing from the character of an unassuming citizen, had made humanity his debtor by his generosity and goodness. He was borne across the ocean with kingly honors, two great nations acting as chief mourners, and then, when the pomp and the splendor of the 488 GEORGE PEABODY. occasion were ended, they laid him down in his native earth by the side of the mother from whom he had imbibed those principles of integrity and goodness which were the foundation of his fame and fortune. It is impossible to obtain an accurate statement of the donations made by Mr. Peabody to the objects which enlisted his sympathy. In addition to those mentioned in the list below, he gave away for various public purposes sums ranging from two hundred and fifty to one thousand dollars, and extending back as far as the year 1835. He divided among his relatives the sum of about three millions of dollars, giving them a portion during his last visit to this country, and leaving them the remainder at his death. The following is a statement of his more important donations during his life, including the bequests contained in his last will and testament : — To the State of Maryland, for negotiating the loan of $S, 000, 000, . . . $60,000 To the Peabody Institute, Baltimore, Md., including accrued interest, . 1,500,000 To the Southern Education Fund, 3,000,000 To Yale College, 150,000 To Harvard College, 150,000 To Peabody Academy, Massachusetts, 140,000 To Phillips Academy, Massachusetts, 25,000 To Peabody Institute, etc., at Peabody, Massachusetts, 250,000 To Kenyon College, Ohio, 25,000 To Memorial Church, in Georgetown, Massachusetts, 100,000 To Homes for the Poor in London, 3,000,000 To Libraries in Georgetown, Massachusetts, and Thetford, Vermont, . 10,000 To Kane's Arctic Expedition, 10,000 To different Sanitary Fairs, 10,000 To unpaid moneys advanced to uphold the credit of States, 40,000 Total. ,470,000 The good gifts of Mr. Peabody are every day building for him new and enduring monuments. The poor in London bless his memory, supposing him to be an Englishman ; while the people of Baltimore and the South, who are aided in their education by the great fund which he established, or the institute which bears his name, join with the thousands beyond the sea in keeping his name enshrined in grateful hearts. JH> FIRST TRAIN OF CARS IN AMERICA CORNELIUS VANDERBILT, AND THE STORY OR AMERICAN RAILROADS. P .TATEN ISLAND lies in the beautiful bay of New York, seven miles distant from the great city. Its lofty heights shut in the snug anchorage of the inner bay, and protect it from storms. It lies full in sight of the city, and is one of the most beautiful and attractive of its suburbs. The commanding heights and embow- ered shores are covered with villas and cottages, and it contains a large and flourishing population. A century ago, Staten Island was a mere country settlement, and its communications with the city were maintained by means of a few sail-boats, which made one trip each way per day. One of these boats was owned and navigated by Cornelius Vanderbilt, a thriving farmer, who owned a small but well cultivated estate on Staten Island, near the present Quarantine grounds. He was generally regarded as one of the most prudent and reliable men on the island. Having a considerable amount of produce to sell in the city, he purchased a boat of his own for the purpose of transporting it thither. Frequently, residents of the island would secure passage in this boat to the city in the morning, and return with it in the evening. This was the beginning of the New York and Staten Island ferry. His wife was a woman of more than usual character, and aided him nobly in making his way in the world. This admirable couple were blessed with nine children. The oldest of these, Cornelius, was born at the old farmhouse on Staten Island, on the 27th of May, 1794. He was a healthy, active boy, fond of all manner of out-door sports, and manifesting an unusual repugnance to the confinement and labors of the school-room. He was passionately fond of the water, and was never so well pleased as when his father allowed him to assist in sailing his boat. 491 492 CORNELIUS VANDERBILT. When he was only twelve years old, his father contracted to remove the cargo from a ship which had gone ashore near Sandy Hook, and to convey it to New York. The lighters which were to carry the goods to the city could not reach the ship, and it was necessary to haul the cargo, transported in wagons, across the sands from the vessel to them. In spite of his tender age, little Cornelius was placed by his father in charge of the undertaking, which he accomplished promptly and successfully. He loaded his lighters, sent them up to New York, and then started for home with his wagons. Upon reaching South Amboy, where he was to cross over to Staten Island, he found himself, with his wagons, horses, and men, without any money to pay his ferriage across to the island. The ferriage would amount to six dollars, and how he was to raise this sum he was, for a time, at a loss to determine. Finally, he went to the keeper of the tavern, to whom he was a stranger, and asked for the loan of six dollars, offering to leave one of his horses as a pledge for the money, which he promised to return within two days. The tavern-keeper was so well pleased with the boy's energy that he loaned him the money, and the party crossed over to Staten Island. The pawned horse was promptly redeemed. Young Vanderbilt was always anxious to become a sailor, and, as he approached his seventeenth year, he determined to begin life as a boatman in the harbor of New York. On the ist of May, 1810, he informed his mother of his determination, and asked her to lend him one hundred dollars to buy a boat. The good lady had always opposed her son's wish to go to sea, and regarded this new scheme as equally hare-brained. As a means of discour- aging him, she told him if he would plow, harrow, and plant with corn a certain ten-acre lot belonging to the farm, by the twenty-seventh of that month, on which day he would be seventeen years old, she would lend him the money. The field was the worst in the whole farm ; it was rough, hard, and stony ; but by the appointed time the work was done, and well done, and the boy claimed and received his money. He hurried off to a neighboring village, and bought his boat, in which he set out for home. He had not gone far, however, when the boat struck a sunken wreck, and filled so rapidly that the boy had barely time to get into shoal water before it sank. "Undismayed at this mishap," says Parton, "he began his new career. His success, as we have intimated, was speedy and great. He made a thou- sand dollars during each of the next three summers. Often he worked all night ; but he was never absent from his post by day, and he soon had the cream of the boating business of the port." During the War of 181 2, young Vanderbilt was kept very busy. All the harbor defenses were fully manned, and a number of war vessels were in port all the time. The travel between these and the city was very great, and boat- men were in demand. HIS MARRIAGE. 493 He was now so prosperous in his calling that he determined to marry. He had wooed and won the heart of Sophia Johnson, the daughter of a neighbor, and he now asked his parents' consent to his marriage, and also requested them ' JOHNNY BULL,' OR NO. I. ( The First Locomotive Used.) to allow him to retain his own earnings, in order that he might be able to sup- port a wife. Both of his petitions received the approval of his parents, and in the winter of 1 813 he was married. His wife was a woman of unusual personal beauty and strength of character, and proved the best of partners. He often 494 CORNELIUS VANDERBILT. declared that he owed his success in life as much to her counsel and assistance as to his own efforts. In 1815, in connection with his brother-in-law, Captain De Forrest, he built a fine schooner, called the " Charlotte," for the coasting service. She was cele- brated for the beauty of her model and her great speed. He continued to ply his boat in the harbor during the summer, but in the fall and winter made voyages along the coast, often as far south as Charleston. During the three years succeeding the termination of the war he saved nine thousand dollars in cash, and built two or three small vessels. This was his condition in 1818. By this time it had become demonstrated to his satisfaction that the new system of steamboats was a success, and was destined to come into general use at no very distant day. He therefore determined to identify himself with it at once, and thereby secure the benefits which he felt sure would result from a prompt connection with it. Accordingly, in 181 8, to the surprise and dismay of his friends, he gave up his flourishing business, in order to accept the cap- taincy of a steamboat which was offered him by Mr. Thomas Gibbons. The salary attached to this position was one thousand dollars, and Captain Vander- bilt's friends frankly told him that he was very foolish in abandoning a lucrative business for so insignificant a sum. Turning a deaf ear to their remonstrances, however, he entered promptly upon the duties of his new career, and was given command of a steamboat plying between New York and New Brunswick. For seven years he was harassed and hampered by the hostility of the State of New York, which had granted to Fulton and Livingston the sole right to navigate New York waters by steam. Thomas Gibbons believed this law to be unconstitutional, and ran his boats in defiance of it. The authorities of the State resented his disregard of their monopoly, and a long and vexatious war- fare sprang up between them, which was ended only in 1824 by the famous decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the "Steamboat Case," as it is usually called, in which Daniel Webster made the argument for Mr. Gibbons. As a means of crippling Gibbons, the New York authorities at one time determined to arrest Vanderbilt and his crew ; but the wary captain was too cunning for them. He would land his crew in Jersey City, and take charge of the engine himself, while a lady managed the helm. In this way he approached the wharf at New York, landed his passengers, and took on more. As soon as he had made his boat fast, he concealed himself in the hold until the moment of his departure. As soon as he appeared on deck, the Sheriff's officer (who was changed every day to avoid recognition) would approach him with a warrant for his arrest. His reply was an order to let go the line. The officer, unwilling to be carried off to New Jersey, where he was threatened with imprisonment in the penitentiary for interfering with the steamer, would at once jump ashore, or beg SETTING UP FOR HIMSELF. 495 to be landed. This was kept up for two months, but the captain successfully baffled his enemies during the whole of that period. In 1829 he determined to leave the service of Mr. Gibbons, with whom he had been connected for eleven years. He was thirty-five years old, and had saved thirty thousand dollars. He resolved to build a steamer of his own, and command her himself, and accordingly made known his intention to his em- ployer. Mr. Gibbons at once declared that he could not carry on the line with- out his assistance, and told him he might make his own terms if he would stay with him. Captain Vanderbilt had formed his decision after much thought, and being satisfied that he was doing right, he persisted in his determination to set LOADING A TRAIN OF TANK CARS' up for himself. Mr. Gibbons then offered to sell him the line on the spot, and to take his pay as the money should be earned. It was a splendid offer, but it was firmly and gratefully refused. The captain knew the men among whom he would be thrown, and that they could never act together harmoniously. He believed his own ideas to be the best, and wished to be free to carry them out. From that time he made his way gradually in his business, until he rose to the head of the steamboat interest of the United States. He owned or was interested in one hundred steam vessels, and was instrumental in a greater degree than any other man in bringing down the rate of steamboat fares. He never built a vessel without giving his personal superintendence to every detail, so that all his various craft were models of their kind. From this period he began by degrees withdrawing his interest from ship- ping, to some extent, and investing in railroads ; ten years later he was director in several ; and when the war broke out in i860 his investments were already 29 496 CORNELIUS VANDERBILT. in great measure transferred from the water to the land, so that his prosperity suffered no special shock by the practical destruction of our foreign carrying trade. Having gained considerable experience in the manipulation of stocks, he invested largely, more especially in 'Harlem," "Hudson River," and " Cen- tral," then separate roads. One of his most successful operations was in con- nection with Harlem. He had bought heavily of this stock when it was in a most depressed condition, advancing to the company a large sum of money, and consequently was placed upon the directors' board, and in 1863 became president of the road. Under his judicious management, and perhaps the magic of his name, the stock which in January had been at 30, rose in July to 92, and by a skillful manoeuvre was made to take a sudden jump in August up to 179. The next year occurred the famous " corner in Harlem," which sent this stock up to the astounding figure of 285 ! After this grand "bulling" exploit the directors of the Central road, covet- ing his influence, offered him the presidency. He bought the Hudson River Railroad outright, and had then in New York State but one rival in the field worthy of his metal ; this was the Erie road, then identified with the names of the famous trio, Daniel Drew, Jay Gould, and James Fisk. Vanderbilt wished to procure the consolidation of the ,r Harlem" and "Hudson River," and for this purpose caused a bill to be presented to the legislature at Albany. Whether it was under the suggestion of his ever-watchful antagonist, Mr. Drew, or arose from the speculating minds of members, or of the lobby, a coalition was formed to defeat the bill, its deserting friends evidently believing that they could make more in that way than by passing it. Many privately " gave away the point" to their friends, that Harlem stock could soon be bought for a song. But this conspiracy was not so secretly managed but that it reached the ears of Harlem's president. He made no protest to his defaulting friends in the as- sembly, but quietly went into the market and bought up every scrap of Harlem stock to be found. In the meanwhile the derelict assemblymen and their friends had been selling Harlem "short" for future delivery. The bill for the consoli-, dation was defeated, and the conspirators looked to see Harlem fall. To their astonishment it stood firm, and when they went into the market to buy the stock for delivery, there was none to be had ; they were consequently obliged to pay on " call " the value of the stock, which they had sold at a high price. Many of the speculators were ruined, while Vanderbilt's gains began to roll up in fabulous sums. From this time onward it has been impossible to exactly estimate the wealth of the railroad emperor. . At the time of the consolidation of the Harlem and Hudson River the property was. estimated at $35,000,000 ; he very soon increased the capital to $90,000,000, and on this enormous sum paid annual dividends of HIS GREAT WEALTH. 497 eight per cent. His will did not disclose the amount he left, but it was prob- ably near $100,000,000. Some of his uses of money may be considered as public benefits, and in these are included his improvements in railroad accom- modations. In 1862, during the most depressed period of the Union forces during the war, he made the magnificent gift of his splendid steamer, the " Van- derbilt," to the Government. Its cost was United States was greatly in need of timely and valuable. Congress passed a ordered a gold medal, commemorative of and presented to him. It was one of the pleasant traits of character that he never forgot his origin, nor the old homestead ; in fact, though he lived for many years, during the latter part about $800,000. The vessels, and the gift was resolution of thanks, and the event, to be struck Commodore Vanderbilt's THE VANDERr.lI.T FAMILY DRIVING IN CENTRAL PARK, NEW YORK. of his life, in New York city, No. 10 Washington Place, his first grand house was in Staten Island, and built upon a corner of his father's farm, which he had bought when quite a young man, and which, before he built upon it, was recognized by the neighbors as " Corneel's lot." Its site, when bought, was on the northeast corner of the farm, and very near the water's edge, but later improvements in filling in carried out the shore-line nearly an eighth of a mile 498 CORNELIUS VANDERBILT. beyond the house, which is situated upon a rise of land overlooking the bay, the approach being handsomely terraced, and separated from the road by a substantial stone coping and high iron fence. Mr. Yanderbilt's death occurred on the morning of the 4th of January, 1877, after an illness of six months, the result of a complication of diseases. The great bulk of his gigantic fortune descended to his son William H. Commodore Vanderbilt was the father of thirteen children by his first wife — four sons and nine daughters. His second wife, whom he married late in life, was a Miss Crawford, of Mobile, Ala. To this lady is attributed the influence which caused the endowment of the " Vanderbilt University," located at Nash- ville, Tenn., and the gift to Dr. Deems, of the Church of the Strangers, with those other beneficent acts which marked the last vears of the veteran finan- cier's life. SUSPENSION BRIDGE, NIAGARA FALLS. THE ROYAL GORGE, COLORADO. OUR AMERICAN RAILROADS. N view of the important part performed by railways in the evolution of American prosperity and power, there was some- thing specially significant in the name of the first American locomotive built for the first railway constructed for the carriage of passengers and freight by steam power exclusively. It was the "Best Friend," made at the West Point Works, New York City, in the summer of 1830, for the pioneer " * '-'-■'' " steam railway between Charleston and Hamburg, South Carolina, opened for service in the fall of that year. There had been railroads at an earlier date, but they were not steam roads. The historic three-mile (horse- power) railroad of the Ouincy Granite Company, built in 1827, to facilitate the transportation of stone for the Bunker Hill Monument, is a notable example. The Delaware and Hud- son Canal Company's gravity coal road between Carbondale and Hawley, Pa., was another ; and a later one was the tram-road for horses between Baltimore and Ellicott's Mills, now part of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail- road. And there had been numerous experimental locomotives, by several inventors, following the lead of Oliver Evans at the beginning of the century, and coming nearest to success, perhaps, in Peter Cooper's little "Tom Thumb." This, the first American locomotive to run on rails, was a toy affair, with a three and a-half inch cylinder, an upright tubular boiler made with old gun-barrels, and a fan-blower for increasing the fire-draft. It was about as big as a flour-barrel on a hand-car, and weighed two and a-half tons. In August, 1830, it made the run from Baltimore to Ellicott's, twenty-seven miles, in an hour ; but when raced against a fast team on the return trip it failed, through the slipping of the belt which moved the fan. A year earlier an English engine had been imported by 501 5 o2 OUR AMERICAN RAILROADS. the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, for hauling coal ; and, though suc- ceessful in a short run, it proved to be too heavy for the tracks and too tall to pass under highway bridges, and was never used. The " Best Friend " was more fortunate at first, and it was practically the pioneer American locomotive, and the South Carolina road was our pioneer steam railway — the first to carry passengers and the United States mail, and, withal, the longest railroad in the world when completed. It was not con- temptible, either, in the matter of speed. On trial trips (in the latter part of 1830), the " Best Friend " was able to run at the rate of twenty miles an hour, with four or five coaches and forty to fifty passengers ; and from thirty to thirty-five miles an hour without cars. Its own weight was five tons. On the stockholders' first anniversary, January 15, 1831, an excursion party of two hundred and more were carried over the road, in two trips, with a band of music and a detachment of United States soldiers with a field piece. This was only four months after the formal opening of the Manchester and Liverpool road, when Stephenson demonstrated for England the superiority of steam railways for passenger travel. Stephenson's locomotive, "The Rocket," had two features of the modern locomotive which the Best Friend lacked — a tubular boiler and steam draft ; and, in June, 1831, the West Point Works sent to the South Carolina road a better engine of the " Rocket" type. Soon after the Best Friend's career was ended by the excessive zeal of a negro fireman who sat upon the safety valve to stop the escape of steam. The fireman's career was ended at the same time. Closely pressing the South Carolina road in its claim for priority was the Mohawk and Hudson road, from Albany to Schenectady, N. Y., now part of the New York Central road. By many it is regarded as furnishing the first fully equipped passenger train drawn by a steam-engine to run in regular service in America. Trial trips were made in August, 1831, regular service beginning in October. The engine was the " De Witt Clinton." the third locomotive built at the West Point Works. It weighed three and a half tons v and, hauling half a dozen coaches, was able to run from Albany to Schenectady, seventeen miles, in less than an hour. An excursion trip made August 9, 1831, described by one of the party, gives a good idea of primitive railway travel. "The train was made up of the De Witt Clinton, its tender, and five or six coaches — old stage bodies placed on trucks, coupled together by chain links, leaving from two to three feet slack. When the locomotive started it took up the slack by jerks, with sufficient force to jerk the passsengers, who sat on seats across the tops, out from under their hats, and in stopping the cars came together with such force as to send the excursionists flying from their seats. " Pitch pine was used for fuel, and there being no spark-catcher to the smoke-stack, a volume of black smoke, strongly charged with sparks, coal, and CRUDE EQUIPMENT. 503 cinders, came pouring back the whole length of the train. Each of the outside passengers who had an umbrella, raised it as a protection against the smoke and fire. The umbrellas were found to be but a momentary protection, and in the first mile the last one went overboard, all having their covers burned off from the frames. At the first station a plan was hit upon to stop the jerking. A piece of fence rail was placed between each pair of cars, stretching the link-coupling, and fastened by means of packing yarn from the cylinders, an improvement not fully worked out practically for many years. A more formal exhibition of the possibilities of the road was made a month NEW TERMINAL STATION AND MARKET HOUSE OF READING RAILROAD. later, when a large number of State and city officials took part. A "powerful Stephenson locomotive " had been imported for the occasion, but it did not work well, and the DeWitt Clinton was brought into service to haul a train of three coaches, while seven other coaches followed, drawn by horses. The steam train made the trip in forty-six minutes ; the horse-drawn train in an hour and a quarter. Among the toasts offered at the subsequent dinner was this : "The Buffalo Railroad — may we soon breakfast in Utica, dine in Rochester, and sup with our friends on Lake Erie." Now we breakfast in New York, dine on the road while speeding through Central New York, and sup as the train flies past. Crude as were these early beginnings, they sufficed to convince a wide- 504 OUR AMERICAN RAILROADS. awake and enterprising people that the steam railroad was to be the future highway, and railway projects were started in all parts of the country, a num- ber of them to be carried out speedily. There were nearly a hundred miles of railways in operation at the end of 1831, and the first thousand miles were passed in 1835. In the meantime improvements were introduced in the con- struction of tracks, locomotives, and cars, and the characteristics which have since distinguished American railroads, rolling stock, and methods of operation, began to be developed. In Europe the railways were primarily to meet existing needs, social, commercial, and military. They connected strategic points, or established centres of population, and sought mainly to supply the demonstrated wants of ancient trade routes. In America the longer roads were planned chiefly to meet future needs. They were pioneers in national development. They pene- trated the wilderness to hasten its conquest, to make accessible natural resources not otherwise attainable. They created trade routes. Population followed the lines they laid down, and their points of intersection became centres of production and traffic. Built largely in advance of trade and travel, by a people too young to have accumulated an excess of capital, in their con- struction and equipment the early American roads showed less of solidity and elegance than of originality, one might almost say audacity, in design and execution. Curves of startling abruptness were common, and timber viaducts of spider-web lightness led over chasms that European engineers would have crossed only at a cost which would have thrown a new enterprise into bank- ruptcy, as indeed the cheapest construction too often did. The unsubstantial nature of the roadway, with wooden viaducts and bridges, compelled the use of rolling stock of home production. Almost invariably the imported engines proved too heavy and rigid for American service. They were built for level grades and wide curves, the axles being held rigidly parallel by the engine frames. The second engine of the South Carolina road had its run- ning-gear of eight wheels arranged in two trucks, turning on king bolts, so as to easily follow sharp curves. This was improved upon in the first Mohawk and Hudson engine, in which the driving wheels were separated from the swiveled "bearing" truck, apian which still better enabled the engine to follow readily sharp curves and adapt itself to sudden inequalities of the track. In 1836 two pairs of driving-wheels coupled together were adopted in connection with a swiveling bearing-truck ; and thereafter what has since been known the world over as the American type of locomotive became the rule here, to be accepted ultimately by other countries, — latterly even by the stubbornly conser- vative English locomotive builders. Closely following the Mohawk and Hudson road, in the same year, came the thirteen-mile railway between Richmond and Chesterfield, Va., and a five- RAPID RAILROAD EXTENSION, 5o5 mile road from New Orleans to Lake Pontchartrain. The next year Pennsyl- vania had a State-built railroad, using horses at first, from Philadelphia to Columbia, eighty-two miles, and the Portage road, for canal boats, over the mountains from Hollidaysburgh to Johnstown, using stationary engines. These roads, with their canal connections, gave Philadelphia a route through to the West, reducing the freight charge to Pittsburgh from $100 to $30 per ton. New York and Philadelphia were connected by the Camden and Amboy Rail- road, finished in 1834. Boston and Worcester were iron-linked in 1835. ON THE BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILWAY. Something of a railway mania ensued, culminating in 1842, in which year over seven hundred miles of new roads were built, brineino- the aeereeate mile- age up to four thousand. By this time Boston and Albany had been connected by railway, and wheat threshed and milled in Rochester on Monday had been delivered in Boston, converted into bread, and solemnly eaten at a public dinner on Wednesday. From New York one could go by rail all the way to Wash- ington ; and from Fredericksburg, Va., to Wilmington, N. C. In 1850 there was no direct rail connection between New York and Boston, nor between New York and Albany, The Hudson River Road was opened in the Fall of 1851. 5 o6 OUR AMERICAN RAILROADS. By the consolidation of a dozen previously independent roads, the New York Central was created in 1853. With the completion of the Hudson River road, the westward traveler could go by rail to Buffalo ; thence by boat through Lake Erie to Detroit ; across the State of Michigan by rail ; thence across Lake Michigan by boat to Chicago, then almost as far from New York as San Fran- cisco now is. Chicago's only railway connection was with Elgin, forty miles west. The Michigan Central reached Chicago, giving it direct Eastern connec- tion, in 1852. Meantime Western Ohio had reached Chicagoward from Toledo, passing through Northern Indiana. Two or three years later Chicago had be- come a great railway centre, with lines to Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and St. Louis, and had entered upon an era of civic development previously unknown even in America. During that decade — 1850 to i860 — the development of the region between the Great Lakes and the Ohio River was something marvelous, and the rapid extension of its railways must be considered as much a cause as an effect. Coincident with the extension of railway facilities were improvements in methods and appliances. The original coaches could carry from four to six passengers inside and two at each end outside. The next step was to low and narrow cars, with four or five coach-like compartments, into which perhaps twenty passengers could be crowded, in groups of four. Then the partitions were omitted, making a long box-car with doors at the ends. These cars were dimly lighted by tallow candles or whale-oil lamps, which smoked the tops of the cars and spattered the sides with grease. The more luxurious of the stiff, uncomfortable seats were covered with hair cloth. In winter some of the cars were heated by small sheet-iron stoves. There was no ventilation except by open windows, into which poured clouds of dust from the unballasted roadbed, and denser clouds of smoke and cinders from the locomotive, burning fat pine for fuel and belching forth a torrent of sparks that usually enveloped the entire train. The cars were without springs. The first rails were merely straps of iron nailed to longitudinal sleepers of wood. The continuous hammering of the wheels on one side of these bars caused them to curl ; the loosened ends would sometimes be struck by the wheels and thrust upward through the car, — causing "snake heads," which never failed to frighten, and not unfrequently to kill, passengers and derail the train. The modern rail, invented by Colonel Stevens, of New Jersey, removed this source of danger and commended itself to railway builders the world over. The strap rail was not entirely displaced, however, for many years. The early railroad stations were mere sheds with few conveniences for pas- sengers or baggage. There was no baggage checking, and every passenger had to keep track of his own luggage ; a serious bother and constant anxiety, as "through" cars were unknown and frequent changes of cars were made MODERN FACILITIES. 5°7 necessary by the short length and independent management of connecting roads. At every terminus the passenger had to get out, buy a new ticket, and see that his baggage was properly transferred. At night and in foul weather this was no pleasure. Coupon tickets, continuous trains, sleeping cars, baggage check- ing over con- necting routes, v ' and other con- veniences came in with the later fifties. By this time the elec- tric telegraph had become an important fac- tor in railroad management, a factor of safety as well as conveni- ence ; and that other American idea, the ex- press service, had demonstra- ted its advan- tages to travel- ers as well as to shippers of goods. In 1850 the railways of the country were almost entirely confined to the Atlantic slope north of Vir- ginia. Ten years later the Southern States were crossed in various directions from Rich- mond to Savannah and Memphis, from New Orleans to the mouth of the Ohio ; and a network of iron roads furnished transportation to the coast for the cotton of the Carolinas, Georgia, and Alabama. Still greater progress had 508 OUR AMERICAN RAILROADS. been made north of the Ohio. The great Central States were crossed and recrossed many times, and their fertile plains were tapped by the four or five great chains of connecting lines, furnishing through routes from New York to beyond the Mississippi River, and down the Mississippi to New Orleans; and Chicago had become a great railway centre. During the years of civil war railroad building was largely suspended, to begin again with increased vigor with the return of peace. The gigantic task of building an iron way across the continent had been accomplished before the decade was ended, and the aggregate mileage of the country had been increased to about sixty thousand. The example set by the New York Central, and the manifest convenience and economy of grouping related roads into united sys- tems under common management, had led to the formation of great corporations like the Pennsylvania Railway Company and the Baltimore and Ohio, thus bringing a confusion of independent roads into orderly and economical action, with lower tariff rates for freight and passengers, speedier service, and greater efficiency in every department. The great advantages of the rapid and uninter- rupted transmission of packages by the express companies led to the extension of such service to general freight carrying, and fast freight lines in charge of special companies were the beneficent result. While these improvements in railway management were developing, not less important improvements were making in the construction and equipment of the roads. The track was better laid, heavier rails employed, with larger cars, and more powerful engines. The Hodge hand-brake, and the Stevens brake, introduced about 1850, materially increased the economy and safety of handling trains. The Miller coupler and buffer was a more radical improve- ment, practically ending the jerking and jolting in starting and stopping trains, and lessening the risk of "telescoping " in case of collisions. The extension of railway lines and the increase of night travel gave rise to the need of better sleeping accommodations, and several roads experimented with sleeping-cars about the time of their introduction by Woodruff in 1856. Wagner cars were placed on the New York Central in 1858, and soon after the Chicago and Alton Road tried a number of day cars altered to sleepers by Pullman. Great improvements were developed by Pullman in 1865, the first car of the new type — costing the then extravagant sum of $18,000 — was first used in the funeral train of President Lincoln. Parlor or drawing-room cars were next introduced for day service, adding greatly to the comfort of travel- ing. The first hotel car was introduced by the Pullman Company in 1857, and the first dining-car, in which all the passengers of a train could take their meals as in a well-equipped restaurant, followed in 1868. Each decade since 1870 has seen a greater extension of railway lines and more numerous improvements in railway material and methods than in all the WIDESPREAD RAILWAY EXTENSION. sog years preceding, marvelous as their result had been. In 1870 the great rail- way States were Pennsylvania and Illinois, with nearly five thousand miles of iron roads each, while New York, Ohio, and Indiana had a mileage of over three thou- sand each. In 1880 Illinois' mileage ap- proached eight thousand, Penn- sylvania's over six thousand ; New York, Ohio, and Iowa had nearly as many; and sev- en other States exceeded three thousand miles each. Ofthese, Texas had in- creased her mileage over fourfold. Dur- ing that year the railway mileage of the whole country reached and passed a hun- dred thousand miles ; and over seventy thou- sand miles of new road have since been add- ed. Illinois re- mained in 1890 the greatest railroad State, with ten thousand miles ; Kansas had nine thousand ; Iowa, Pennsylvania, and Texas nearly as many. After these come Ohio with eight thousand miles; New York with seven thousand seven hundred and sixty miles ; and Michigan 510 OUR AMERICAN RAILROADS. with seven thousand three hundred and forty-two miles. Thirteen or fourteen States have more than five thousand miles each; and all except Rhode Island, Delaware, Vermont and Nevada have passed the first thousand. During the last two decades there have been three great periods of railway extension, culminating in 1871, in 1882, and in 1887, the advance in the last year named being nearly thirteen thousand miles, or as much as the whole country had in 1852. The present mileage of the United States — not counting town and city roads operated by horses, stationary engines, electric motors, and small steam engines, like those of our elevated roads — is more than half the railway mileage of the entire world, and more than six times that of any other country. At a low estimate something like one-fifth of the entire wealth of the United States is represented by these newly created highways of traffic and travel, or much more than the sum of the whole world's stock of money, of every kind — gold, silver, and paper. Their motive power is furnished by upward of 30,000 locomotives, valued at half a billion dollars, whose Hying trains comprise about twelve hundred thousand cars, worth more than a billion and a half. They would make a train extending half way around the globe ! Their annual traffic earnings exceed a thousand million dollars. They give direct employment to an army of 800,000 railway men, and four times as many men are employed in subsidiary occupations, in building and equipping them, the railway interests supporting fully a twentieth of our entire population. To haul on common roads the freight carried by American railroads would require not less than sixty million horses, with all the able-bodied men in the country to drive them, and the annual freight bill would be increased twenty- fold or more by such a return to primitive methods, were such a thing possible. Facts and figures like these serve not merely to indicate the magnitude and importance of our railway service, but to show how fundamentally necessary it is to a civilization like ours. Without such means of cheap and rapid move- ment of men and materials the greater part of our populous and wealth-pro- ducing territory would have remained a savage wilderness. Before the days of railways it cost a hundred dollars to haul a ton of freight from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh ; on the easier grades through Central New York to Buffalo the charge was twenty-five cents a mile. Only costly commod- ities could stand such expensive carriage. The value of a load of wheat would have been absorbed in half the distance ; indeed, a distance of a hundred miles is generally regarded as the limit of grain transport on common roads. By railway it can stand a carriage of two or three thousand miles, the average freight charge on all the railroads of the country being about a cent a mile ; on many roads it as low as three-fourths of a cent. It was over three cents a mile in 1853 and over two cents in i860. Since 1870 the average cost of bringing a bushel of wheat from Chicago to New York has fallen from about thirty-five THE NEW YORK CENTRAL SYSTEM. 5ii cents to less than fifteen cents, with corresponding benefit to Eastern and European consumers. To attempt to trace the causes of this cheapening of transportation for freight and passengers would carry us far beyond the limits of space prescribed. Some of the chief contributing factors, however, may be briefly noticed — compe- tition, due to the multiplication of roads ; more economical management, through the development of great systems under united and judicious control ; and, above all, improvement in the tracks, engines, cars, stations, and all related means, methods, and appliances. As an example, when the New York Central System comprised the consolidation of the Hudson River and Harlem Roads, in 1864, it included 281 miles of railway, with double tracks, sidings, and spurs, making a total mileage of 463. In 1 89 1 the system included sixteen roads, with over 5000 miles of track. Its valuation had increased sixfold, its operating expenses fivefold, and its gross earnings more than fivefold. In 1866 it used 125 locomotives, 251 passenger cars, and 1421 freight cars of all sorts and sizes. The average freight car was then twenty-eight feet long and carried ten tons ; the average passenger car was forty feet long and would seat forty passengers. Now the average freight car is thirty-four feet long, with a capacity of twenty- 3° 512 OUR AMERICAN RAILROADS. two tons ; the passenger coach is fifty-four feet long and carries sixty-four, with a comfort undreamed of at the earlier day. The fast express of 1866 attained a speed of thirty-four miles an hour. The Empire State Express of 1892 regularly maintains a speed of fifty-one miles from the sea to the lakes ; sometimes it exceeds a mile a minute. In 1866 the average passenger train, including the engine, weighed one hundred and thirty tons ; the average freight train perhaps twice as much. In 1891 some of the freight engines alone weighed one hundred tons, and a freight train of thirty-five cars, over five hundred tons. A limited passenger train would weigh nearly four-fifths as much. In 1891 the system, using over eleven hundred locomotives and forty times as many cars, carried over twenty million passengers more than six hundred million miles, at a cost to passengers of less than two cents a mile, and twenty million tons of freight over three thousand million miles. The chairman of the Board of Directors of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Com- pany is Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt, who devotes his time to furthering the interests of this great company. Mr. Chauncey M. Depew is the active president of the road, with Mr. Theodore Voor- hies as superintendent, maintaining a vigilant oversight of its business, and Mr. George H. Daniels is the efficient General Passenger Agent. The task of operating this vast enterprise, with its five hundred and eighty-six trains daily, devolves upon Mr. John M. Toucey, as General Manager, whose record may well serve as a stimulus to others — for Mr. Toucey rose from the ranks. John M. Toucey, General Manager of the New York Central & Hudson River R. R., was born at Newtown, Conn., July 30th, 1828. After preparing for Trinity College, Mr. Toucey, finding that his tastes did not lead him in the direction of the minis- try, turned his attention to school teaching, continuing in that profession for two years. At the age of nineteen he applied for and obtained a position on the Naugatuck R. R., then in course of construction, and was appointed station agent at Plymouth (nowThomaston), beginning business there before the station was erected. About a year after his appointment the station was robbed, and no clue obtained until about fifteen hours had elapsed. Mr. Toucey followed the thief to Goshen, near Litchfield, where he grappled with him alone, secured the money, and turned the man over to the authorities to serve a seven years' sentence in the State Prison. While running as conductor between Bridgeport and Winstead the road was badly damaged by freshets. Mr. Toucey was given JOHN M. TOUCEV. General Manager New York Centr System). THE PENNS \ X VAN I A S J 'STEM. 5 1 3 charge of the reconstruction of the road between Waterbury and Winstead, completing the work in a short time to the entire satisfaction of the Company. After serving at Indianapolis as agent of the Madison & Indianapolis R. R., and later as freight agent on the Morris & Essex R. R., Mr. Toucey entered the service of the Hudson River R. R., and in 1855 was appointed passenger con- ductor between New York and Troy, subsequently filling the position of agent at East Albany. In 1862 President Samuel Sloan, of the Hudson River R. R., appointed Mr. Toucey Train Master, from which position he was soon promoted to be Assistant Superintendent. In 1867 Mr. Toucey resigned from the service of the Hudson River Road and accepted the position of General Superintendent of the D. L. & W. R. R., under Mr. Sloan, the former President of the Hudson River Road, but after two months' service he was recalled to the Hudson River Railroad by Commo- dore Vanderbilt, and appointed General Superintendent, with full charge of the line then extending from New York to Albany. Some years after the consoli- dation of the New York Central Railroad and the Hudson River Railroad Mr. Toucey's jurisdiction was extended to Buffalo, and in February, 1890, he was appointed General Manager. Mr. Toucey's long experience in railway man- agement and his habits of close observation, combined with untiring energy and native sagacity, have brought him to the front rank among railway managers, and he is deservedly popular with the army of men employed on the great "New York Central System," where his ability is recognized and his tall form is so well known. THE PENNSYLVANIA SYSTEM covers between seven and eight thousand miles of track, with a freight traffic of one hundred and thirty million tons (over twelve thousand million tons one mile) and a passenger traffic of eighty-seven million passengers (over sixteen hun- dred thousand one mile), and carries seventy-four thousand names on its pay- rolls. The Union Pacific system covers over six thousand miles of connecting roads ; the Southern Pacific nearly as many ; the Richmond Terminal system something like seven thousand miles ; and in scope of territory and magnitude of business these are rivaled, if not surpassed, by several systems reaching westward from Chicago into regions that were an almost unbroken wilderness twenty-five years ago, now a chain of mighty States, reaching from Mexico to Manitoba, and from the Mississippi to the Pacific. The unprecedented progress in the social, industrial, and political development of that wilderness of yester- day is primarily due to the people who have converted it to the uses of civiliza- tion ; but their presence there was made possible by railways, and the railway has everywhere been their great engine of conquest and development — the bringer of population and carrier of the wealth they discovered or created. To trace adequately the conflicts of systems and the effects of competition in decreasing tariff rates, and in improving the means and methods of railway 514 OUR AMERICAN RAILROADS. service since 1880, would require a volume. Much less is it possible to describe the notable feats of engineering which have carried railways over rivers and chasms, over mountains impassable other than by sure-footed mules, across deserts too hot and dry even for mule trains. "No heights seem too great to-day, no valleys too deep, no canons too forbidding, no streams too wide ; if commerce demands it the engineer will respond and the railways will be built." The railway bridges of the country would make a continuous struc- ture from New York to San Francisco, and include many of the boldest and most original, as well as the longest and highest bridges in the world. The pioneer railway suspension bridge at Niagara Falls was as remarkable in its day for boldness and originality as for its size and its success. A single span of 821 feet, supported by four cables, carried the track 245 feet above the river that rushed beneath. The cables were supported by masonry towers, whose slow disintegration gave occasion for an engineering feat even more notable than the original construction of the bridge. The first railroad bridge across the Ohio was at Steubenville, completed in 1866 ; the first iron bridge over the Upper Mississippi was the Burlington bridge of 1869. The first great bridge across the Mississippi was Eads' magnificent structure at St. Louis, whose beautiful steel arches of over 500 feet span each give no hint of the difficult problems that had to be solved before a permanent bridge was possible at that point. It was completed in 1874. Since then the great river has been fre- quently bridged for railways, the latest at Memphis, while its great arm, the Missouri, has been crossed a dozen times. The Memphis bridge involves the cantilever construction, so boldly applied for the first time by the Cincinnati Southern Road to its crossing of the deep gorge of the Kentucky River, a canon 1200 feet wide and 275 feet deep, with a stream subject to rises of water of 55 feet. But to return to the subject of railways and their development : the latest and most promising phase of this development — the electric railroads— must have a paragraph. Though it is scarcely a dozen years since the first experimental electric locomotive was exhibited, there are already (June, 1892,) upward of five thousand miles of electric roads in operation, capitalized at nearly two hun- dred million dollars, Massachusetts leads in mileage, though exceeded by New York, Pennsylvania, and Ohio in number of roads. Thirty-six States claim one or more roads each, and St. Louis, Mo., boasts of the most complete and exten- sive city system. Assurance is given that electric locomotives will soon dis- place steam engines from the Elevated Roads of New York city. The largest electric locomotives thus far reported are the three eighty-ton electric engines for the tunnel service of the Baltimore Belt Railway. They are designed to haul a 1 200-ton freight train fifteen miles an hour, or a 500-ton passenger train thirty miles an hour. Similar heavy and powerful electric locomotives have been adopted for handling trains at the Northern Pacific Terminals at Chicago. CYRUS W. FIELD, THE SUCCESSFUL PROJECTOR OE THE ATLANTIC CABLE. OW necessary it is to succeed ! " sadly remarked Kossuth, the Hungarian patriot, as he stood at the tomb of Wash- ington. Many a noble and brave man beside Kossuth has illustrated the truth that the world bestows honor only for success ; but few have so nobly displayed the qualities necessary to win success as the projector of the great Atlantic cable. Cyrus West Field was born at Stockbridge, Massa- chusetts, November 30, 18 19. He was the son of Rev. David Dudley Field, a distinguished clergyman. He was carefully educated, and at the age of fifteen went to New York to seek his fortune. He had no difficulty in obtaining a clerkship in an enterprising mercantile house, and, from the first, gave evidence of unusual business capacity. His employers advanced him rapidly, and in a few years he became a partner. His success was so marked that in 1853, when only thirty-four years old, he was able to partially retire from business with a large fortune. Mr. Field had devoted himself so closely to his business that, at his retire- ment, he resolved to seek recreation and change of scene in foreign travel, and accordingly he left New York, and passed the next six months in journeying through the mountains of South America. Upon his return home, at the close of the year 1853, he declared his intention to withdraw entirely from active par- ticipation in business, and to engage in no new schemes. Scarcely had Mr. Field returned when he was solicited by his brother Mat- thew to accord an interview to a Mr. Frederick Gisborne, of Newfoundland, who had conceived a plan to establish telegraphic communication between New York and St. Johns, Newfoundland, and from the latter point to despatch swift steamers to London or Liverpool, which were expected to make the voy- age in five or six days. Mr. Field listened to his enthusiastic visitor with close attention, but without committing himself to the project. But, after the latter 517 5i8 CYRUS IV. FIELD. had left, he took out his maps and charts, and began to mentally estimate the cost and difficulties of the plan, when suddenly the idea came to him : " Instead of steamers, why not run an electric wire through the ocean itself? " This thought, he says, thrilled him like a veritable shock of electricity, and he could hardly contain himself until he had sought the opinion of persons more practi cally acquainted with the science of electricity, and with the conformation of the ocean-bed, than he was at that time. Being assured by the best authorities of the feasibility of the plan, he became thoroughly interested in the project, and resolved at once to try and interest a sufficient number of capitalists to enable the company to make a practical beginning. A company was soon found, consisting of a few wealthy men of New York. Mr. Peter Cooper was president. Mr. Field was the man who undertook the immense labor of pushing the enterprise. He visited England, where he obtained large subscriptions to the capital stock of the company. He secured the cordial aid of the British government, both in money and in the use of ves- sels for laying the cable. He attended to the manufacture of the cable itself, anil the construction of the machinery for " paying-out " from the vessels. Then he returned to America, and with difficulty secured the co-operation of the United States government. The bill passed Congress by very small majorities, and was signed by President Buchanan in March, 1857. THE FIRST ATTEMPT. On August 6th the " Niagara " and "Agamemnon," with the precious cable aboard, started from Valentia, a small town on the western coast of Ireland. Mr. Field was on board of the "Niagara ;" Professor Morse and other electri- cians accompanied Mr. Field to watch the execution of the enterprise. As fathom after fathom of the great cable passed over the side of the " Niagara " and slipped into the silent sea, every one on board began to feel a sort of human interest in the cable itself, as if it were a thing of life. An eye-witness on the "Niagara" has eloquently described the feeling of subdued solemnity which gradually took possession of the whole ship's company. Suddenly a great calamity came. By the too sudden application of a brake on the " paying-out machine," the cable snapped, parted, and wholly disappeared beneath the waves. The shock was almost too great for the firmest nerves. All felt as if a cherished comrade had just slipped the cable of life, and gone to his grave in the depths of the ocean. The lateness of the season precluded the idea of repairing the accident, so as to continue the work that year. The fleet returned to England, and Mr. Field immediately gave orders for the construction of seven hundred additional miles of cable to replace what was lost. During all this time his activity appeared almost to exceed the bounds of human endurance. Many were the THE FIRST SUCCESS. 5 19 successive twenty-four hours in which he had no sleep, except such naps as he would catch in a railway car. But faith in the final success bore him up. On the 10th of June in the following year the work of relaying the cable com- menced; but another disappointment was in store for him. About two hundred miles of cable had been laid, when it broke as did the former one, and once more the labor of months was swallowed up by the sea. The defect this time appeared to be in the construction of the cable itself, as it was repaired several times, and finally abandoned. Of course, it required all of Mr. Field's eloquence to induce the directors to make another essay; he himself was greatly chagrined at the failure; but he still saw that the difficulties to be overcome were not insurmountable, and that perseverance would finally win. Again the fleet left Oueenstown, on July 17th, making their rendezvous in mid-ocean on the 28th ; the next day the cables on the "Agamemnon" and the "Niagara" were spliced, and the steamers once more parted company, the "Agamemnon" trailing her share of the cable toward Ireland, the "Niagara" hers toward Newfoundland. Each vessel reached its destination on the 5th of August. Signals were passed and repassed over the whole length, and the enterprise seemed to be finally rewarded with success. Messages were exchanged between the Queen and President Bucha- nan ; a public reception was given to Mr. Field, and the event was celebrated in New York and other cities. For nearly four weeks the cable worked perfectly ; then came a sudden stop. On the 1st of September the cable refused to respond. The general disappointment was as great as the elation had been and many thought no further effort would ever be made. At a meeting of the Chamber of Commerce in New York, a gentleman present presumed to assert his belief that the cable had never really worked. Mr. Cunard, of the British steamship line, who also happened to be there, immediately arose and vehemently denounced the statement as false, adding, " I have myself sent messages and received replies." Only one or two others besides Mr. Field retained any con fidence that the difficulties of ocean telegraphy could ever be overcome. But Cyrus W. Field knew no such word as "fail." Perceiving, however, that he could not under the circumstances hope to obtain additional private sub- scriptions, he appealed once more to the British government to come to the rescue of the great work of the century. This was liberally extended ; but in the meantime the civil war in the United States interfered with further progress there. Little was done until 1863, when the manufacture of a new cable was begun. It was completed during the year 1864-5, an d the sum of ,£600,000 was raised for the company, mainly through the instrumentality of Mr. Field. On this occasion but one vessel was employed to bear the cable — but that was the "Great Eastern." 520 CYRUS W. FIELD. On the 23d of July, 1865, the land connection was made, and the great ship commenced her momentous voyage. Day by day the great wheel turned, and fathom after fathom of the new cable, heavier and more carefully insulated than its predecessors, slipped overboard into the sea. The work went bravely on for 1200 miles ; but when approaching Newfoundland the old misfortune recurred ; in spite of all the care and watchfulness, the cable broke and disappeared under the waves. Attempts were made to recover the cable by grappling ; but though it was >K TIIK GREAT EASTERN. several times caught and lifted nearly to the surface, the strain was too great for the grapnels ; they broke, and again the cable sank. It was evident that more efficient appliances would be required. The spot was carefully marked by buoys, and the great vessel returned to England. The strain of repeated disappointment was terrible ; but it had at least been demonstrated that a cable could be laid and a message sent over it. Public confidence in the ultimate success of the enterprise was greater. Before the next year Mr. Field succeeded in obtaining large new subscriptions. Another cable was made and all the appliances for laying it perfected ; and on Friday, THE FINAL TRIUMPH. 521 July 13th, the "Great Eastern " again sailed from Ireland, with the cable sinking into the ocean as she moved westward. LANDING OF THE CABLE. Public interest in the enterprise had now become intense. It was known that the cable would be landed at Heart's Content, in Newfoundland, and many had gone there from various parts of the country to witness the arrival of the " Great Eastern." The shore was fringed with visitors, opera- or spy-glass in hand, watching the eastern horizon. Fourteen days pass away ; it is Friday morning, the 27th day of July, 1866. Here at last she comes ! As she draws nearer the people see that her colors are all set, which at least indicates that they have met with no disaster. With every mile's advance of the steamer the excitement grows. Too impatient to wait the arrival, scores of boats put off to row toward her. A delay of nearly two hours occurs while the latter connects the heavy shore end with the main cable, and at last the two continents are united ! Unfortunately the cable across the Gulf of St. Lawrence was disabled, and it was not until Sunday, the 29th, that this was repaired, and the heart-cheering intelligence announced to the nation. This was the message : — " Heart's Content, July 27th. We arrived here at nine o'clock this morn ing. All well. Thank God, the cable is laid, and is in perfect working order. Cyrus W. Field." Almost immediately the " Great Eastern " again put to sea, and, proceed- ing to where the cable of 1865 had been lost, succeeded without much trouble in grappling it and bringing it to the surface. It was tested by sending a mes- sage to Valentia ; and being found perfect, was spliced to an additional section, which was brought to Newfoundland, and both of these cables have been in constant use to the present time. Many persons had contributed to this great success, but to Cyrus W. Field it is chiefly due. His energy and perseverance kept the subject constantly before the public. His courage inspired others, and his faith in its ultimate suc- cess alone kept its best friends from abandoning it in its darkest hours. In its behalf he spent twelve years of constant toil, and made over fifty voyages, more than thirty of which were across the Atlantic. He devoted his entire fortune to the undertaking, and cheerfully incurred the risk of poverty rather than abandon it. It is but just that he, who was the chief instrument in obtaining for the world this great benefit, should receive the largest measure of praise. At a banquet given in his honor by the New York Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Field said : — " It has been a long, hard struggle — nearly thirteen years of anxious watch- ing and ceaseless toil. Often my heart has been ready to sink. Many times, when wandering in the forests of Newfoundland in the pelting rain, or on the 522 CYRUS IV. FIELD. decks of ships on dark, stormy nights, alone, far from home, I have almost accused myself of madness and folly to sacrifice the peace of my family and all the hopes of life for what might prove, after all, a dream. I have seen my companions, one and another, falling by my side, and feared that I might not live to see the end. And yet one hope has led me on, and I have prayed that I might not taste of death till this work was accomplished. That prayer is answered ; and now, beyond all acknowledgments to men, is the feeling of gratitude to Almighty God." In 1 869, Mr. Field was present at the opening of the great Suez Canal, as ELEVATED RAILROAD IN NEW YORK. representative of the Chamber of Commerce of New York. In 1880 he made a tour around the world, and secured from the government of the Sandwich Islands concessions for a Pacific cable, to be laid from San Francisco. He became deeply interested in the elevated railway system of New York city, and devoted much time and money to its development. The latter part of his life was spent in New York, of which he was one of the most conspicuous and honored citizens. Domestic troubles and financial losses clouded the few years just before his death, which occurred on July 12th, 1892. LELAND STANFORD, AND THE STORY OK CALIFORNIA. HE opening up of the great West was more than the mere development of a country ; it was the development of men, the evolution of a new race. Not only did the struggle result in the building of an empire, but it also brought forth the abilities of the men who made that empire great. One of the foremost of these men is Leland Stanford. In him were developed not only the powers which make a man capable of great deeds, but the sympa- thies which had him to desire the equal development of all of his race. He will be remembered not merely as the builder of the great Pacific Railroad, not merely as the successful business man, but as the man whose desire for the advancement of others grew out of the experiences of his own struggle. His greatest monu- ment is the Leland Stanford, Jr., University, that noble institution whose object is to develop men and women. California was a foreign country to the people of the United States when it became a part of the national territory at the close of the Mexican War. Its immense wealth, its glorious climate, its unlimited possibilities of development, were all unknown. Peopled by an effeminate and unprogressive race, it lacked all of the features of civilization which characterized the East. Shortly after its acquisition by the United States, the discovery of gold in its mountain ranges brought the country into sudden prominence. The dis- covery was made by James Wilson Marshal, in January, 1S48. Marshal had been employed to construct a mill on the estate of a hundred square miles which General John A. Sutter had received as a grant from the Spanish government. Sutter's demesne had been the center of the American colonies in California. General Sutter himself, a Swiss by birth, was a generous-minded visionary, who had shown himself so hospitable to all American immigrants that he had attained to a certain pre-eminence in the affairs of the Territory, and was looked upon by many as a great and heroic figure. The discovery of gold took place on the afternoon of the 24th of January, 525 526 LELAND STANFORD. 1848, just after Sutter's mill had been completed, and Marshal and his men had for two weeks made a perilous fight to keep the dam from being destroyed by the heavy rains which had set in. In this contest with the water Marshal had exhibited a courage which made him half deserve the accidental fame that came through the finding of the gold. When his men were exhibiting to some amazed Indians the workings of their new saw-mill, Marshal was in- specting the lower end of the mill- race. He came back with the quiet remark, " Boys, I believe I have found a gold mine." He moved oft to his cabin, went back to the race, and then again returned to his men, directing them early in the morning to shut down the head- gate and see what would come of it. The next morning the men did as they were told, and presently Marshal came back looking won- derfully pleased, ILP IN' THE MILL-RACE. carrying in his arms his old white hat, in the top of whose crown, sure enough, lay flakes and grains of the precious metal. Comparing these pieces with a gold coin one of the men happened to have in his pocket, they saw that the coin was a little lighter in color, and rightly attributed this to the presence of the alloy. Then all the men hurried down the race, and were soon engrossed in picking gold from the THE GOLD EXCITEMENT. 527 seams and crevices laid bare by the shutting down of the head-gate. In the midst of their excitement doubts would sometimes arise, and some of the metal was thrown into vinegar and some boiled in the soap-kettle, to see if it stood these tests. Then Marshal went off to General Sutter, and, feverish with excitement, told him of what had come to light. When he returned to the men he said, "Oh, boys, it's the pure stuff! I and the old Cap went into a room and locked ourselves up, and we were half a day trying it, and the regulars there wondered what the devil was up. They thought perhaps I had found quicksilver, as the woman did down toward Monterey. Well, we compared it with the encyclopedia, and it agreed with it ; we tried aqua fortis, but it would have nothing to do with it. Then we weighed it in water ; we took scales with silver coins in one side, balanced with the dust in the other, and gently let them down into a basin of water ; and the gold went down, and the silver came up. That told the story, what it was." That did tell the story — and though Sutter tried to keep the story a secret until all the work in connection with the mills had been finished, the story would not keep. A Swiss teamster learned it from a woman who did some of the cooking about the mill, received a little of the gold, spent it for liquor at the nearest store, and then the fame of the discovery swiftly flew to the ends of the earth. General Sutter had been right in his endeavor to keep the discovery secret as long as was within his power, for no sooner did the gold hunters' invasion set in than it became impossible for him to get men to work his mill. The invaders carried things with a high hand, and ended by setting aside his title to his land and establishing the claims which they had made upon it. Never was money made with anything like such rapidity. Nearly every ravine contained gold.- Nobody waited to get machinery to begin work. Knives, picks, shovels, sticks, tin pans, wooden bowls, wicker baskets, were the only implements needed for scraping the rocky beds, sifting the sand, or washing the dirt for the gold. A letter in the New York Journal of Commerce, toward the end of August, said of the hunt for gold : " At present the people are running over the country and picking it out of the earth here and there, just as dogs and hogs let loose in the forest would root up ground-nuts. Some get even ten ounces a day, and the least active one or two. They make most who employ the wild Indians to hunt it for them. There is one man who has sixty Indians under his employ. His profits are a dollar a minute. The wild Indians know nothing of its value, and wonder what the pale-faces want to do with it, and they will give an ounce of it for the same weight of coin silver or a thimbleful of glass beads or a glass of grog, and white men themselves often give an ounce of it, which is worth in our mint $18 or more, for a bottle of brandy, a bottle of soda powders, or a plug of tobacco." California in those days was another part of the world. The journey to it overland took weeks, and even months, and was full of perils of starvation in case 5 28 LELAND STANFORD. of storm and drought, and perils of slaughter if hostile Indians were encountered. When things went well the life was pleasant enough, and is most picturesque to look back upon.- The buffalo hunts, the meetings with Indians, the kindling of the camp-fires at the centre of the great circle of wagons drawn up to form a " ; V :rv#) f *~"-r""_ i 77m* p^^m^^ GOLD WASHING IN CALIFORNIA. bulwark against attack and a corral for the cattle, the story-telling in the light of these camp-fires, — all present a picture which men will love to dwell upon so long as the memory of the " Argonauts of Forty-nine " survives. But there were many times when the scenes were those of heart-sickening desolation. The CALIFORNIA WAGES. 529 attacks of the Indians were less horrible than attacks of hunger and disease which set in when the emigrant train reached a territory where the grass had been consumed, or lost their cattle in the terrible snow storms of the Sierras. The journey by sea was hardly safer and was far less glorious. Every ship for California was loaded down with emigrants packed together as closely as so much baggage. Ships with a capacity for five hundred would crowd in fifteen hundred. The passage money was from $300 to $600. The companies that were able to get their ships back again simply coined money ; but it was no easy matter in those days to get a ship out of San Francisco harbor. The crews would desert for the mines, and the wharves were lined with rotting vessels. Vessels which did make the return voyage were compelled to pay the California rate of wages. One ship in which the commander, engaged at New York, received $250 a month, had to pay on return $500 a month to the negro cook. San Francisco in those days was the strangest place in the world. In February, 184S, it had hardly more than fifty houses ; in August it contained five hundred, and had a large population that was not housed. A pamphlet writ- ten in the fall of that year says : " From eight to ten thousand in- habitants may be afloat in the streets of San Francisco ; many live in shanties, many in tents, and many the best way they can." The best building in the town was the Parker House, an ordinary frame structure, a part of which was rented to gamblers for $60,000 a year. Even higher sums than this were said to have been paid. The accommodation was fearful. The worst that can be said of bad hotels may here be imagined. The pasteboard houses, hastily put up, were rented at far more than the cost of their construction, for every one figured that the land was as valuable as if it had been solid gold. The greater part of this city was five times destroyed by fire in the first INDIAN OF SC 53 o LELAXD STANFORD. three years of its existence ; but the people, with a hopefulness and energy which nothing could put down or burn up, would set to work and rebuild it almost as quickly as the flames had swept it away. Everybody worked. The poorest man received unheard-of wages, and the richest man was obliged to do most things for himself. When business of every sort was speculative to a degree so close akin to gambling, it is not strange that gambling itself took possession of the people and half frenzied them with its excitements. Physical insanity was a frequent result of the moral insanity of the community. There were few women in California, and most of these were of the worst sort. As a consequence, the men with no homes to go to in the evenings went into the gambling saloons, where they stayed till late at night. According to some descriptions, everybody gambled, but, as Royce points out in his admirable " History of California," the same men who talk half-boastfully of the recklessness and universality of the gambling, in the next breath speak with great fervor of the strength and genuineness of the religious life which soon showed itself in the community. There is no doubt that the forces for good as well as for evil were strong from the outset, and as the community grew older the forces for good kept growing stronger. More and more wives from the East had joined their husbands, and the young women who came from the East among the emigrants were married almost immediately on their arrival. Many a hotel keeper who engaged a servant girl at $200 a month was disgusted to find that she married and left him before the month was over. With the introduction of family life came a return to saner moral conditions, and by 1853 the old distempered social order began to be spoken of as a thing of the past. Never were so many men from so many different places suddenly' thrown together, as in California in '48 and '49. What came afterward in Nevada, and later still in Colorado, was like it in kind but not in degree. The Californian settlers of the early days were without law, and thousands of miles away from established tribunals. Every man was a law unto himself, except when the community, as a whole, became aroused, and forthwith con- stituted itself a tribunal. The Territory was indeed nominally organized ; but to wait for the regular process of law was to grant immunity to crime. The character of "miners' justice" may be illustrated by some of the scenes at Sonora, where gold was first discovered. Here there had been law and order previous to the miners' invasion, but with the invasion demoralization set in. In the fall of '48 the new-comers, following the Mexican fashion, elected two "alcaldes," or chief officers, but when one of the storekeepers at the settlement killed a man in a fight, both the officers promptly resigned rather than run the risk of arresting the homicide. Another storekeeper, however, called the people together to take action. This storekeeper was promptly elected alcalde, and it 'MIXERS' JUSTICE." 531 was decided that one alcalde was enough. A prosecuting attorney was likewise required, but no one was ready to take the office, and each person nominated promptly declined 'and nominated some one else. Finally the energetic store- keeper was obliged to accept this office also. The meeting succeeded in find- ing a second man to take the office of sheriff. The offender was arrested, a jury impaneled, and the trial begun. The prisoner, on being brought in court, was requested to lay his arms on the table, and did so. On this table stood a plentiful supply of brandy and water, to which everybody in the court-room helped himself at pleasure. The trial, however, proceeded with much attempt at M EXH I'THIN 11 Y THE VIGILANCE cuMMI'ITKE IN' SAX FRANCISCO. legal form, and presently the judge arose and began a plea for the prosecution. " Hold on, Brannan," said the prisoner, "you are the judge." "I know it," replied that official, "and I am prosecuting attorney, too." He went on with his speech, and ended it by an appeal to himself as judge in connection with the jury. When he had finished, the prisoner, after helping himself to a glass of brandy, made an able speech in his own defense. Night came on, and the jury scattered, without bringing in a verdict. The prisoner was admitted to bail, because there was no prison to put him in. The next day the jury met, but disagreed. A new trial was held, and the prisoner acquitted. 532 LELAND STANFORD. The gold fever filled California with a population almost entirely ignorant of the surroundings of their new home, and almost entirely unprovided with the necessary appliances for living. The most terrible hardships were endured by this population. There was need of everything, — provisions, clothing, tools and implements, furniture, wagons and horses, and, above all, the means of transpor- tation. To supply these essential things were needed men who had the brains and foresight to quickly supply the wants of the rapidly growing State. Each man was bent upon taking care of himself alone. Where were the men to come from who should take care of all ? Into this strange new life of the Pacific coast came, in 1852, a man who was destined to bear a great part in its development, and to leave a name forever associated with its history, — a name perpetuated by one of those great educa- tional institutions which form " a monument more enduring than brass," and whose influence will remain and increase when marble shall have crumbled into dust. In the beautiful Mohawk Valley of New York, near the village of Water- vliet, lived the father of Leland Stanford. He was a man of English descent, whose ancestors long before had made their home among the Dutch settlers of the Valley. He was a plain farmer, and his son Leland was brought up to simple country living and hard work. In after life he was fond of telling how, when six years old, he had made six shillings by digging horseradish and selling it in Schenectady, and how two years later he cleared $25.00 by gathering chestnuts in the woods. For education he had the ordinary opportunities of a country boy, — work in summer and study in winter. Soon, however, the youth determined that he would have an education to fit him for a higher level of life. His father, while anxious to forward his son's plans, was not able to provide the means. It happened, however, that he had purchased a tract of land covered with timber, which he had not time to clear. He made Leland an offer of the wood, on condition that he would cut and haul it away, leaving the ground clear for cultivation. This offer the boy, then eighteen years old, accepted. He had saved money enough to hire help in chopping the wood, and he worked persistently until he had the tract clear, selling the wood to the Mohawk and Hudson River Railroad. By this operation he cleared $2600, besides developing the knowledge and good judgment which were to stand him in such good stead a few years later. With the proceeds of his timber young Stanford entered upon the study of law in Albany, and in three years was admitted to the bar. This was in 1849. Then arose the question where to settle. Albany was the State capital, and over-crowded with young lawyers. Like thousands of other young men, Stan- ford was drawn westward, and he determined to follow his drawing ; but he had an anchor in Albany in the shape of an attachment to Miss Jane Lathrop, the ARRIVAL AT SACRAMENTO. 533 daughter of a prosperous merchant. He wisely determined to draw up his anchor and take it with him ; in other words, to get married, which he did, and then started for Chicago. When Stanford reached that future metropolis of the West, it was in the swamp stage of development. He perceived its possibilities, and inclined to settle there ; but it happened that in the first night of his stay he was torment- ed by Lake Michigan mosquitoes to such an extent that the next morning he re- solved to escape at once. He went to the town of Port Washington, on the lake above Milwaukee, where he opened a law office. For a few months all GIANT TREE OF THE YOSEMITE VAI I 1 V, IN CALIFORNIA. went prosperously. He began to secure business, mingled in poli- tics, and joined in starting a news- paper ; but disaster overtook him ; his house, office, and legal library were burnt, and he was left almost penniless to start again. Like many others, he too had been attracted by the sudden growth of California. Several of his brothers had already settled there, and he now resolved to join them. In July. 1852, after a long, tedious, and dangerous journey, he reached Sacramento. In California Stanford engaged in business with his brothers as a merchant, and quickly became successful. He easily adapted himself to the novel sur- roundings and conditions, and his knowledge and business capacity, joined with his personal popularity, soon made him one of the most prosperous and promi- nent men in the new State. Among his brothers he quickly took the lead, and RAILROADS AND POLITICS. 535 it was characteristic of him that people with whom he was associated quickly learned to place implicit reliance on his business ability and prudence. In the midst of the absorbing struggle for material success, Stanford was one of the few who saw far enough into the future to perceive the political problem which was beginning to press for solution. California had been counted upon by the advocates of slavery as an addition to the territory for its extension. The line of the Missouri Compromise [See Henry Clay) ran through the Terri- tory, and the immigrants were from both free States and slave States. Stanford saw that the development of the State by railroads and the other features of civilization would tend to promote the sentiment of freedom rather than slavery, and with rare wisdom he fostered the popular desire for railroads, as a political as well as an economic movement. The explorations of the great " Pathfinder," Fremont, who had discovered and opened a new route to California, and his efforts to win the State for freedom, enlisted Stanford's enthusiastic sympathy. He was one of the most earnest of those who joined the Republican party at its establishment in 1854, and when the idea of a railroad across the moun- tains and plains to California first came to be agitated, Stanford was one of its most enthusiastic supporters. In 1859, a Railroad Convention of the State was held at San Francisco. Delegates were present from all over California, from Oregon, and Washington. It was resolved to send a memorial to Congress, indicating the route preferred by California, and asking national aid. The Pacific Railroad question became a prominent factor in politics, and was one of the measures taken up and advo- cated by the Republican party, then just about to win its first great victory. In i860, when the Republican National Convention met at Chicago, Stan- ford was there as a delegate from California. Lincoln was his first choice, and he was overjoyed at his nomination. He returned to California to work for his election, and at the same time to push the Pacific Railroad scheme. The difficulties of building a railroad across the mountains were immense. The idea of taking trains of cars through those tremendous canons, and over the snow-capped heights of the Rocky Mountains, seemed to many people absurd in the extreme. In the spring of 1S61, when the Union armies were gathering in the East, a meeting of the leaders in the Pacific Railway enterprise was held at Sacramento, and there, on the 28th of June, the Central Pacific Railway Company was organized. Mr. Stanford was chosen President, and half a dozen of the wealthiest and most energetic men of California, Hunting- ton, Hopkins, Crocker, and others, were made directors and officers of the company. The difficulties of the enterprise were very great. A few of the most prominent of the company went on horseback over the proposed route of the road. When they reached the summit of one of the great mountain ranges, 53^ LELAND STANFORD. they dismounted, and sat down to discuss the situation. At their feet was a precipice a quarter of a mile in height. The idea of carrying a railroad across these mountains seemed impossible. One of the company said that the cars would have to be hoisted up the sides of the moun- tains by der- ricks; but Mr. Stanford was confi- dent that the difficul- ties could be overcome, and he sup- plied a large part of the energy nec- essary to overcome them. Work was begun and pushed on the building of the * road. In July, 1862, came the re- sponse of the Government to the g company's appeal for aid. It was a proposition to loan to the com- pany United States bonds, at the rate of $16,000 per mile to the foot of the mountains, and $48,000 a mile through them. The first forty miles furnished a severe test of the courage and endurance of the projectors ; and even after they were completed, they had still to meet the difficulty of supplying the immense amount of money needed in construction. Soon began a race with the company which was building the line westward from Omaha. The Central Pacific Company built 530 miles of railroad in 293 days, a feat of railroad building which astonished the world. On May 10, 1869, the last spike was driven at Promontory Point, Utah, and the long-desired connection of California with the; East was complete. A REE RANCH IN LOWER CALIFI iRN] \. THE PALO ALTO RANCH. 537 In the meantime, Mr. Stanford had not neglected his political duties. In 1862 he accepted the Republican nomination for Governor of California, and was elected by a large majority. At the close of his term he declined re-elec- tion, as the war for the Union was then practically won, and his business affairs required all his attention. With the completion of the Pacific Railroad began an era of great pros- perity in California. A constant flow of immigration poured in from all parts VALLEY IRRIGATION IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA. of the United States, and the value of property everywhere increased immensely. Mr. Stanford was a large owner of real estate, and in these years the increase in its value made him immensely wealthy. About thirty miles south of San Francisco he owned an immense tract of land known as the Palo Alto ranch, and here he built himself a beautiful home, supplied with every luxury that wealth could secure. A most bountiful hospi- tality was here dispensed, and the ranch became the resort of prominent men 538 LELAND STANFORD. from all parts of the State and nation. But it was something more than a mere country-seat. Mr. Stanford had always taken a deep and intelligent interest in agriculture, and he made of his Palo Alto ranch a farm which did much to show what the soil of California would do under scientific cultivation. His vineyard was the largest in the world, and he carried on an experimental fruit farm on a great scale. His aim was to develop the possibilities of farming in California, and with this view he also established a model stock farm, where he developed a breed of horses which soon gained for the Palo Alto ranch a wide fame. The best qualities of improved stock were mingled with those of the native breeds, so as to secure the best points of all. In connection with his scientific culture of stock, Mr. Stanford was one of the first to make use of the new process of instantaneous photography, which by this means was devel- oped along with the raising of horses. He secured a skillful practical photographer, put un- limited means at his disposal for experiment, and thus produced results which astonished the world. But with all he had done, Mr. Stanford's life work had not yet come to an end. He had accumulated immense wealth, and had made for himself a great name ; but the great uni- versity which was to be his chief monument had not yet taken form even in his own mind. In Mr. Stanford, as in many others, the best and noblest that was in him was called out by affliction. In i868, eighteen years after his marriage, his only child, Leland Stanford, Jr., was born. To the loving parents this boy was the greatest of all their treasures. Whatever they did was done with a view to his future. All of their desires and affections were centred on him. In 1884, while they were traveling in Italy, the boy was stricken with Roman fever, and died at Florence. There is a touching story that the father (who was away from his son at the time of his death) firmly believed that in his dying hour the boy said to him, " Father, don't say that you have nothing left to live for ; you have a great deal to live for." From that time both the parents resolved to devote their wealth and their powers to the establishment of an educational institution which should be both a monument THE GREAT DOME AND TELESCOPE OF LICK OBSERVATORY, CALIFORNIA. 540 LELAND STANFORD. to the memory of their dead son, and the means of giving to other boys and girls the training for life which they had hoped to give him. The Leland Stanford, Jr., University was founded in 1887. The great buildings are located on the Palo Alto ranch, about half a mile from the Stanford home. In his address at the laying of the corner-stone, Mr. Stanford said, for himself and his wife : " We do not believe that there can be superfluous educa- tion. As a man cannot have too much wealth and intelligence, so he cannot be too highly educated." It is, however, an essential part of the scheme of edu- cation in the University that it shall be practical, including not only mathematical and scientific studies, but also those which lead to a thorough knowledge of business, — farming, engineering, photographing, type-writing, and book-keeping. The whole purpose of the University may be expressed by saying that it is intended to give the youth of California a practical education. Leland Stanford, Jr., University is one of the most richly-endowed educa- tional institutions in America. Not only does it own the immense property on which it is located, but also some 78,000 acres in other parts of the State. In addition to these enormous properties, an amount of money was given sufficient to support the institution with an endowment of some $20,000,000 ; and besides this, the larger part of the estate of Senator Stanford is to go to the University at the death of his wife. Claims of the United States against the Central Pacific Railroad have of late years threatened to impair the property which forms this great endowment ; but it is to be hoped that nothing will be per- mitted to really endanger the prosperity and success of the University. In 1887 Mr. Stanford was chosen United States Senator from California. While never distinguished as an orator or political leader, he was regarded as one of the most practical and efficient business men in the Senate. His favorite measure, which well illustrates his philanthropic intentions, was a scheme known as the "land loan," which provided for the lending by the United States of money to owners of farms and other real estate on the security of their property. The years that he spent in Washington were years of intense toil, and in 1892 his health broke down. At the close of the session of Congress, in the spring of 1893, he returned to his Palo Alto home, convinced that he should never again leave it, and there on the 20th of June he died. It was characteristic of him that his affairs were at his death found in the most perfect order, so that no harm or shock of any sort could result to any person dependent upon him. His wife, who in all his plans of beneficence was in the closest sympathy with him, was made his executor. 542 GEORGE W. CHILDS, THE GREAT PUBLISHER AND PHILANTHROPIST. j,,..-- — <$y HFRF arc two kinds of men who arc especially interesting ^$f7&\ to Americans, — successful men who have risen by their -^J^ own abilities, and wealthy men who have used their wealth j40 g - iifT^ in doing good. Never, perhaps, was there a man who more ^^^ SL?* completely combined in himself both of these characters F^gBf' than George W. Childs. In one respect he was almost tffwriSf I^T unique, — he seemed to have no enemies. This quality usually indicates weakness of character ; but though Mr. Childs was one of the most amiable of men, no one ever accused him of lacking force. He had the rare faculty of ac- complishing his purposes without crossing or offending others ; and this quality, combined with his generosity and goodness of heart, made him one of the most universally popular men that America has ever produced. George William Childs was born in Baltimore, Md., on May 12, 1829. His parents died when he was very young. His opportunities for intellectual de- velopment were limited, and he received but little schooling. It is said that, even as a child, he exhibited two traits seldom found in one individual — a remarkable aptitude for business, and an unusual liberality in giving away the results of his quickness. At a very early age he developed a sense of the value of time, and an inclination toward independence and self-support. In his tenth year, when school was dismissed for the summer, he took the place of errand boy in a book-store, and thus spent the vacation at work. When thirteen years of age he entered the navy as an apprentice on board the United States ship Pennsylvania. He remained in the service only fifteen months, and it is proba- ble that during this time was laid the foundation of that disposition toward per- fect order and system which always thereafter marked his own conduct and the direction of the great newspaper to which it was ordained he should attain. When he was fifteen years old young Childs went to Philadelphia under similar circumstances to those under which another poor boy, Benjamin Franklin, once walked the streets of the Quaker City. Like Franklin, he was poor and almost friendless, and like him he was destined to make his mark in a printing 543 544 GEORGE W. CHILDS. office. He obtained employment in a book store, kept by an old Quaker named Peter Thompson, in Arch street. He did his work so well that, after a year's service, he was intrusted with the responsibility of attending the book auctions, and soon became known as the regular representative of his employer at the trade sales in New York and Boston. He worked for Mr. Thompson four years, and saved a few hundred dollars. With this, and the more valuable capital of a knowledge of his business and the good opinion of his associates, he determined to start for himself. At this time he was a quiet, studious lad, spending all his spare time in reading. He hired a small room in the building then occupied by the Public Ledger, and did so well that, before he was twenty- one, the head of the old firm of R. E. Peterson & Co., publishers, sought an alliance with him, and the house of Childs & Peterson was the result. Mm tri-^iSCTO-.y > k ;iJ,, K* , 585 AN OLD COLONIAL HOUSE NEAR PHILADELPHIA. Writing in later life of his start in the world, Mr. Childs said : " When I left home to come to Philadelphia, I overheard one of my relatives say that I would soon have enough of that, and would be coming back again. But I made up my mind that I never would go back — I would succeed. I had health, the power of applying myself, and, I suppose, a fair amount of brains. I came to Phila- delphia with three dollars in my pocket. I found board and lodging for two dollars and a half, and then I got a place in a bookstore for three dollars. That gave me a surplus of fifty cents a week. I did not merely do the work that I Was absolutely required to do, but I did all I could, and put my whole heart into it. I wanted my employer to feel that I was more useful to him than he expected me to be. I was not afraid to make fires, clean and sweep, and perform what A SUCCESSFUL PUBLISHER. 545 might be considered by some young gentlemen nowadays as menial work, and therefore beneath them. "While I was working as errand-boy, I improved such opportunity as I had to read books and to attend book-sales at night, so as to learn the market value of books, and anything else that might be useful to me hereafter in my business. It was my aim always to be in a position where I could use my best talents to the best advantage. I fixed my ambition high, so that, even if I did not realize the highest, I might at least always be tending upwards." The new firm was well calculated to succeed. Mr. Peterson had good literary taste, and his partner had the business aptitude of knowing whether a book was salable, so that after a book had been issued young Childs was able to push its sale to a remunerative number of copies. Thus the combination pros- pered. One of the first works published by the firm was "Wells's Familiar Science," which Mr. Childs's energy pushed to a sale of 200,000 copies. Other well-known successes of the firm were "Dr. Kane's Arctic Explorations," "In- stitutes of American Law," " Fletcher's Brazil," " Parson Brownlow's Book," and many others. Mr. Childs remained in the publishing business for about twelve years. He had long desired to be the owner of a leading newspaper. This had been his ambition for years, and while he was still a lad he fixed his eyes upon what was then the popular daily journal of Philadelphia — the Public Ledger — and resolved that one day he would be its proprietor. The audacity of such a thought in a boy of eighteen can hardly be appreciated by any one who was not familiar with Philadelphia at the time and with the solid basis of prosperity upon which the Ledger stood. HE BUYS THE " LEDGER." At last the long-wished-for opportunity came. James Parton tells the story in this way : — " The Public Ledger had fallen upon evil days. Started as a penny paper in 1836, the proprietors had been able to keep it at that price for a quarter of a century. But the war, by doubling the cost of material and labor, had rendered it impossible to continue the paper at the original price, except at a loss. The proprietors were men naturally averse to a change. They clung to the penny feature of their system too long, believing it vital to the prosperity of the Ledger. They were both right and wrong. Cheapness was vital, but in 1864 a cent for such a sheet as the Ledger was no price at all ; it was giving it half away. Retaining the original price was carrying a good principle to that extreme which endangered the principle itself. " The establishment was then losing $480 upon every number of the paper which it issued. This was not generally known. The paper looked as pros- perous as ever ; its circulation was immense, and its columns were crowded with advertisements. And yet there was a weekly loss of $3000, — $150,000 a year ! 546 GEORGE IV. CHILDS. Upon learning this fact the friends of Mr. Childs whose opinion he sought said with decision, ' Don't buy ! ' Nevertheless, he looked the ground carefully over ; he made minute calculations ; he kept on his thinking cap day and even- ing. He bought the Public Ledger — the whole of it, just as it stood — for a sum little exceeding the amount of its annual loss." From the day of the purchase of the Ledger Mr. Childs became its sole controller and gave all his attention to the work. He brought the paper up out of the depths to which it had sunk financially, until at the time of his death it was one of the most valuable and profitable in this country, and Mr. Childs for many years had been in the receipt of a princely income. A GREAT BENEFACTOR. How generously and nobly this wealth has been employed all the world knows in a general way, though no one will probably ever know all the good done by him. Of George W. Childs it may be said with exact truth that since Providence blessed him with means he constantly sought out opportunities to benefit his fellow-creatures. He not only gave liberally when it was asked of him, but it was his delight to seek out deserving cases where his money and his friendship would exchange poverty for comfort, suffering for happiness. He often gave in secret, and thousands who were too proud and sensitive to make their wants known have blessed an unknown donor for substantial help which was sadly needed. Mr. Childs loved to make those in his employ happy and prosperous. He erected a new building for his newspaper which combined comfort with elegance in a remarkable degree. Such conveniences as bath- rooms and ice-water fountains abound, and every work-room is a model of comfort. Every man in his employ received a good salary and a handsome Christmas present every year. When the Typographical Union voluntarily reduced the price of composition in 1878, Mr. Childs, on receiving the official notification, said quietly: "I shall not make any reduction of wages in this office. My business has not suffered by the depression, and why should my men suffer? Why should not they continue to receive the benefit of my success ? " Every man in his employ was assured of a position during good behavior, and Mr. Childs said more than once that he had provided in his will that no changes were to be made in the personnel of the Ledger after his death. He took a personal interest in the affairs of his workmen, and often made a careless, unthrifty fellow a present of a bank book, with a sum to his credit, as an induce- ment to save money. It was his pride that every man of family in his employ should own his dwelling-house, and he frequently advanced money to pay for the houses of his workmen, without security. He presented his assistants with insurance on their lives, and sent to Europe or on other pleasure trips the THE PRINTERS' HOME. 547 heads of his departments when confinement to business affected their health. He presented to the Typographical Society a large burial plot in Woodlands Cemetery, besides contributing to the society's endowment. He frequently sent entire charitable institutions on pleasure excursions during the hot weather, and the Fourth of July and Christmas he was accustomed to celebrate by a banquet to the newsboys or bootblacks, or by some other entertainment to the street waifs. Messrs. Childs and Drexel sent their respective checks for $5000 to the Convention of the International Typographical Union in 1S86, then in session ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS, PHILADELPHIA. at Pittsburgh, provision being made that the individual members should have the opportunity to assist in augmenting the fund until it was sufficient to estab- lish a " Home " for disabled printers. It was arranged that the printers east of the Mississippi should, for this purpose, contribute the price paid for setting one thousand ems on Mr. Childs' birthday, May 1 2, of each year, and those west of the Mississippi should do likewise on the annual recurrence of Mr. Drexel's birthday, September 13. , Speaking of giving, Mr. Childs wrote : " I think the habit of generosity may be cultivated, like other habits. And I have felt that it is a great mistake to put 32 548 GEORGE IV. CHILDS. off being generous until after you are dead. In the first place, you lose the pleasure of witnessing the good that you may do ; and, again, no one can administer your gifts for you as well as you can do it for yourself. It is a great pleasure to be brought into personal relations of that kind, and to make people feel that you are not a philanthropist in the abstract, but that you are interested in them personally, and care for their welfare." "One naturally thinks of Childs," writes Julian Hawthorne, " in connection with the late George Peabody. The two men were friends, and in the latter years of Peabody's life he once spoke to Childs as one rich man to another. ' I have worked hard to make money,' he said, ' with the intention of giving it away in large amounts. I mean to give it away in my own lifetime, so as to enjoy the pleasure of seeing and overseeing the good it does. I do not wish my heirs and connections to be impatient for my death, consequently have given to each of them liberally. I wish to distribute its effects widely, rather than concentrate them in any one direction. There is value, not only in the act, but in the example it furnishes to others. If yoif will take my advice, you will be your own executor, and begin betimes.' Mr. Childs was quick to adopt counsel so consonant with his own predilections ; and he has bettered his instructions." GIFTS TO OTHER COUNTRIES. So great was his reputation for liberality that he probably received more applications for help than any other man in the country. Begging letters came to him by the score in his daily mail, and visitors on begging missions were constantly calling on him. He was always easy of access, and very seldom turned a deaf ear to a deserving case. But his good works were not confined to his own city and country. He presented to Westminster Abbey an elegant stained glass memorial window in honor of the poets George Herbert and Wil- liam Cowper. In 1887, the jubilee year of Queen Victoria, Mr. Childs presented to the town of Stratford-upon-Avon, the birthplace of Shakespeare, a public drinking fountain, with clock tower. He subsequently gave to St. Margaret's Church, Westminster, London, a memorial window to John Milton. This gift was inspired by his friend, Archdeacon Farrar. This window was formally unveiled on the 18th of February, 1888. In March, 1889, there was unveiled in St. Thomas' Church, Winchester, England, a reredos, the gift of Mr. Childs also. In many other ways he has given of his wealth to worthy objects in Eng- land and on the continent. As a compliment from the English government he was appointed in 1876 Honorary Commissioner for Great Britain and the Colo- nies to the Centennial Exhibition. He never held any other public office. He was frequently urged to accept a political appointment, and was asked to repre- sent his country abroad in an exceedingly exalted position, but he refused this, as he did every other similar offer. DISTINGUISHED GUESTS. 549 The homes of Mr. Childs were the abodes of picturesque beauty and of everything that could make them inviting. In Bryn Mawr, one of Philadelphia's prettiest suburbs, was his country house, known by the name of " Wootton." Great lawns sloping away on all sides of the house are dotted here and there with trees, every one of which has been planted by some man or woman whose name has served to make the history of to-day. It is a bright, breezy, wide- hailed, and charmingly rambling structure, and it is filled with costly, quaint, and beautiful things from all parts of the world. Among Mr. Childs' guests were Generals Grant, Sherman, Meade, Sheri- THE DREXEL INSTITUTE, PHILADELPHIA, FOUNDED BY MR. CHILDS' FRIEND AND FARTNER. dan, Hancock, McDowell, and Patterson ; Edmund Ouincy, Chief Justice Waite, A. J. Drexel, Asa Packer, the Astors, Cadwaladers, Professor Joseph Henry, Hamilton Fish, Robert C. Winthrop, Charles Francis Adams, Presidents Hayes, Arthur, and Cleveland ; Chauncey M. Depew, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Thomas A. Edison, Simon Cameron, Henry Wilson, William M. Evarts, James G. Blaine, John Welsh, August Belmont, Alexander H. Stephens, Samuel J. Tilden, Cyrus W. Field, B. J. Lossing, Mrs. Grover Cleveland, Charlotte Cushman, Christine Nilsson, Harriet Hosmer, John Bigelow, Thomas F. Bayard, Parke Godwin, Edwards Pierrepont, and many others. Mr. Childs said that one of the chief pleasures of his life had been the 55 o GEORGE W. CHILDS. keeping of an open house to worthy and distinguished persons. The reception he gave to the Emperor and Empress of Brazil was perhaps the most notable gathering ever assembled in any private house in America. There were six hundred guests, and Mr. Childs' was the first private house at which the Emperor and Empress had ever been entertained. Among his English visitors were the Duke and Duchess of Buckingham, the Duke of Sutherland, the Duke of Newcastle, Lords Dufferin, Rosebery, Houghton, Ilchester, Ross, Iddesleigh, Rayleigh, Herschel, Caithness, and Dunraven ; Sir Stafford Northcote, Lady Franklin, Dean Stanley, Canon Kingsley, Charles Dickens, George Augustus Sala, Joseph Chamberlain, M. P. ; James Anthony Froude, Professor Tyndall, Professor Bonamy Price, Admiral Lord Clarence Paget, Sir Philip Cunliffe Owen, Colonel Sir Herbert Sanford, Charles Kean, Marquis de Rochambeau, John Walter, M. P. ; Sir Charles Reed, Herbert Spencer, Thomas Hughes, M. P.; Sir John Rose, Sir Edmond Thornton, and Robert Chambers, D. C. L. Mr. Childs was an intimate friend of General Grant and of many of the representative men of this country and Europe. A friend of his says : " When I carried letters from him to Europe, in 1867, his name was a talisman, and it was pleasant to see how noblemen like the Duke of Buckingham honored the indorsement of an American who thirty years ago was a poor boy." His closest personal friend, probably, was Mr. Anthony J. Drexel, the banker. They were intimately associated both in business and social matters, and there was a long-continued partnership of the two in charitable work. Every morning in pleasant weather Mr. Childs could be seen at the same hour walking down Chestnut street to his office by the side of his friend, Mr. Drexel, and in the afternoon the familiar figures could be seen returning together. " Remembering their good deeds," says one writer, "the reader of Dickens was very apt to think of the Cheeryble Brothers as he saw the plump and smiling figures of the two friends as they walked up Chestnut street on an afternoon." Mr. Childs died in Philadelphia, after a brief illness, on February 3, 1894. In person Mr. Childs was rather below the medium height. He was inclined to be stout, but made it a rule to walk to and from his office and to live very temperately. He had a bright, smiling, amiable face, and was never known to be out of temper. He was gifted with the faculty of placing every one at ease in his company, and it was said of him that he gave a Christmas dinner to newsboys and bootblacks or dined traveling dukes and earls with the same ease and familiarity. " Perhaps I cannot better sum up my advice to young people," writes Mr. Childs, " than to say that I have derived, and still find, the greatest pleasure in my life from doing good to others. Do good constantly, patiently, and wisely, and you will never have cause to say that your life is not worth living." MARSHALL FIELD, THE MODERN BUSINESS MAN. THE term "New West" to most of us is apt to call up a picture of the growth of a great agri- cultural country; of vast areas of land brought under cultiva- tion ; of enormous crops raised ; of improved processes in farming and mining. But the new West in reality includes a great deal more than this. With the growth of the country have sprung up great cities, which are just as typical features of the West as the mines of Colorado or the wheat farms of Dakota. The most important crop, after all, is the crop which is raised in cities as well as in the country, — the crop which indeed raises the cities, — namely, the crop of men. Marshall Field is one of the men who has made the new West. His influence on the growth, trade, and habits of mer- cantile life would be hard to measure. A more complete contrast between the West of to-day, and the West as it was when he became a part of it, would be hard to find. Marshall Field was a country boy, born in Conway, Massachusetts, in 1835. His father was a farmer, a man in moderate circumstances, able to give his son the moderate but sound education which every intelligent New England farmer considers indispensable. He had in his boyhood the advantages of good public schools, and later of the Conway Academy. Marshall was a quiet, thoughtful boy, always inclined to make the most of his opportunities. He never liked farming, however, but from his earliest years inclined toward a mercantile life ; 553 LAKE SHORE DRIVE, CHICAGO. 554 MARSHALL FIELD. and when he was seventeen left the farm and went to Pittsfield, where he obtained employment in a country store. Here he remained four years, and exhausted the opportunities of the situation, so far as business training was concerned. In these four years he developed a determination to reach something higher than was attainable in a New England country town. The tendency of the time was toward the West, and in 1856 he left Massachusetts and made straight for Chicago, where he became a salesman in the wholesale dry-goods house of Cooley, Farwell & Co. A CHICAGO MANSION IN THE EARLY DAYS. When Marshall Field reached Chicago, the city, and the whole country as well, was in a state of wild unrest and feverish growth. Chicago had been originally built on the prairie level ; not high enough above the waters of the lake to permit cellars underneath the houses, or to allow facilities for drainage. The grade of the street was being raised some eight feet, and the buildings also had to come up to the same level. The streets were in a state of chaos, and going round them was a perpetual going up and down stairs. The most characteristic feature of western life in the year preceding the GROWTH OF A GREAT HOUSE. 555 panic of 1857 was unsettlement. The growth of the country was tremendous ; the crops were increasing enormously, and the stream of immigration, increasing the population and the products of the country to an unheard-of extent, taxed every avenue of trade to the last degree. To do business safely amid the chang- ing life of a new country, where men were poor one day and rich the next, and where few took time or had the prudence to ascertain from day to day where they stood, required rare abilities and a "level head." The whole tendency of business at such a time is speculative. To be conservative is well-nigh impossi- ble. Marshall Field had a conservative mind ; he was cool, careful, calculating, prudent. To such a man a training in the midst of such conditions was invalu- able, and it helped him in great degree to form the character which became the basis of such great success. Over this chaos of unhealthy growth, speculation, and unsettlement the panic of 1857 swept like a tornado. Of the prominent business houses of Chicago one of the survivors was that of Cooley, Farwell & Co., and the lessons which were received in that time of trial made Marshall Field indispensable to the house he served. By 1 860 he had worked his way up to the position of junior partner. Then came the flush times of the war, and the unsettlement of financial conditions produced by a fluctuating currency. But such conditions as these, which, in a man of less steadiness, would have produced a tendency toward speculation, worked exactly the other way with Marshall Field. As the temptations to reckless dealing multiplied, he grew more cautious and careful. While everybody else was expanding credits, he was restricting them. Safety was the first condition insisted upon, and the result was to establish the house upon a basis which nothing could shake. In 1865 the firm was re-organized, and Mr. Field, who had for some time been the real head, became so in name as well, the title of the firm being changed to Field, Palmer & Leiter. Two years later, with the withdrawal of Mr. Palmer, the firm was changed to Field, Leiter & Co., the guiding and control- ling spirit of the house remaining still the same. After the war the life of the West exhibited still the same conditions. In those well-remembered years of expansion and speculation preceding the panic of 1873, the great firm of which Mr. Field was the head went on the steady, safe course which was inevitable under his control. Their business grew even more rapidly than that of others, although Mr. Field had applied to it conditions which many in the same line of business believed to be absolutely preventive of growth. At a time when other houses were extending almost unlimited credit to their customers, and themselves buying on a similar basis, he restricted credits absolutely to thirty and sixty days, and required absolute promptness in the meeting of accounts when due. This was of itself sufficiently novel ; but a still more novel feature was that of paying cash for all purchases, thus restricting the 556 MARSHALL FIELD. credit which he took even more rigidly than that which he gave to buyers. Nor could he be tempted to speculate upon the credit of his house in other ways. He absolutely refused to sell goods of inferior character, no matter what the inducements offered. He insisted upon practically guaranteeing the quality of all goods sold ; and this, with the low prices which a practical cash system enabled him to make, drew to his house the cream of the trade from a large part of the entire West. In 1 87 1 came another great blow, but of a different kind. This was the THE BURNING OF CHICAGO IN 1873. fire which almost entirely destroyed the city of Chicago. Mr. Field was, of course, well insured"; no man of his well-known prudence would neglect that; but in this emergency insurance itself failed, for so many of the companies were wiped out by the disaster that a comparatively small part of the insurance had was available. "What next? " was the question on thousands of lips, as men stood gaz- ing on the smoking ruins of Chicago. With Marshall Field it was a question of the best thing available. Few buildings of any kind were left standing ; but AFTER THE GREAT FIRE. 557 at the corner of State and Twentieth streets were some horse-car sheds which had been spared by the fire. While the smoke was still rising from the ruins of the great city, Mr. Field hired these sheds, and began to fit them up for the accommodation of the dry-goods business. At the same time gangs of men were set to work clearing away the ruins of the burned stores of the firm, and erecting on them new buildings for permanent use. In the next year the new stores were ready for occupancy. In rebuilding a great improvement had been made by separating the retail from the wholesale department, giving to each a building adapted to its own especial needs. On the heels of the fire came the great panic of 1873 ; but the house of WHOLESALE STORE OF MARSHALL FIELD 4 CO. Marshall Field & Company passed through it unscathed. It was hard to ruin a house which owed nothing, and whose customers had paid all bills up to within two months. The long-credit concerns, almost without exception, went down in the crash, but Mr. Field's house stood more firm than ever. In the years that followed, the business grew steadily. The wholesale department especially expanded, until in 1885 ^ was necessary to build once more. In that year was begun a building of granite and sandstone which is to-day one of the finest wholesale dry-goods establishments in the world. To the retail store, building after building has been added on the State street side, and later a magnificent annex at Wabash avenue and Washington street. In 558 MARSHALL FIELD. 1865 Mr. Field's firm did a business aggregating $8,000,000 ; in 1892 the figures had risen to $70,000,000. In 1 88 1 Mr. Leiter withdrew from the firm, and the name became Marshall Field & Company. It consists of Mr. Field and eight junior partners. All of these have grown up in the house. The store is a great school, which has furnished from its graduates not only the heads of the business itself, but also heads for many other businesses throughout the country. " Glancing over the hundreds of men in the wholesale department yester- THE AUDITORIUM BUILDING, CHICAGO. day," says a Chicago reporter, "the writer saw a splendid display of bright young faces. Scarcely an employee in the building could boast of forty years of life, and gray hairs were not in line at all. With scarcely an exception, every man in a responsible position has grown up with the house, and won his spurs by merit; and in a number of cases the spurs carry from $10,000 to $30,000 per year salary with them. It is in a great measure true of Marshall Field & Company's employees that they are 'raised in the house,' and among them the great merchant has found his most loyal friends and ablest counsellors." F*?. JOHN WANAMAKER, THE GREAT BUSINESS ORGANIZER. HE time-honored saying that " What man has done, man may do," has cheered and encouraged multitudes of patient workers, toiling upward along the steep road to success. But among the mass are a few whose motto might well read, " I will do what others have never yet done." Something of originality, of special and unique power, marks the individuality of a few. Among these is John Wanamaker. He has not only achieved success, but in achieving it he has wrought changes in the business world which will long remain as marks and monuments of the peculiar powers which distinguish his character. John Wanamaker was born in Philadelphia in 1S37. Like many other Americans who have risen to the top, he began at the bottom. His father was a brickmaker, and the boy's first business experience was in " turning bricks" and doing odd jobs around the yard. When he was a few years older, school had to be given up for steady work. He found a place as errand boy in a book- store, where he earned a salary of $1.25 a week. Every morning and evening he trudged over the four miles which lay between his home and the store, eating at noon the simple lunch which he brought with him from home, put up for him by a loving mother's hands. Soon he left the bookstore, and secured employment in a clothing store at $1.50 a week, — a large advance to him then. He quickly began to rise. He was prompt, obliging, civil to customers, and attentive to business. He was one of the kind of boys that are always in demand. His salary began to rise also, and kept on rising. John's poverty had obliged him to leave school with a very limited educa- tion ; but he was always anxious to get more. He read and studied in the evenings, and improved every opportunity to add to his stock of knowledge. In later years, when he was asked how he got his education, he answered, " I took it in as I went along, as a locomotive takes up water from a track tank." It is said that he received a special impulse toward study by hearing a sermon in 56i 562 JOHN WANAMAKER. which the speaker used a number of words the meaning of which John did not know. Having a good memory, he carried these words in his head until the next morning, when he had a chance to look them up in the dictionary. He concluded that, as the preacher would not be likely to use words which were not understood by most of the congregation, the trouble must be that John Wana- maker was uncommonly ignorant ; and this condition of affairs he resolved to remedy. When the civil war broke out in 1861, John Wanamaker was twenty-three years old. He had saved a little money, had acquired a thorough knowledge of the clothing business, and married a wife. In April of that year he formed a partnership with his brother-in-law, Nathan Brown, and embarked in the clothing business at Sixth and Market streets. From the beginning the business pros- pered. Both the partners were practical men. No unnecessary help was employed. They were not ashamed to take down the shutters, to sweep the store, or to deliver packages themselves, if necessary. But the business soon reached dimensions which gave them other work to do. It was perpetually outgrowing its facilities in every direction ; and to meet and pro- vide for this expansion called into exer- cise just those powers which Mr. Wana- maker possesses in such wonderful meas- ure, — the powers of organization. In 186S Mr. Brown died. By 1871 the business had absorbed all the space from Market to the next street, — a space which, when the firm began business, had been occupied by forty -five tenants. Still it continued to grow, and in 1875 the large block occupied by the old Pennsyl- vania freight depot, at Thirteenth and Market streets, was bought, and a store built for a business of a new kind. The old, rambling freight station was remodeled, and turned into a great mart of trade, where dry goods, clothing, furniture, books, and nearly everything in the shape of supplies for the person and the home were sold, a separate department being devoted to each. Upon the establishment of this great "department store," Mr. Wanamaker concen- trated all his energies, and the experience of his previous career in his extensive lines of business. It is not too much to say that Mr. Wanamaker's innovations upon previous methods have revolutionized the manner of conducting retail businesses in gen- eral. Up to the time when his clothing store began to make its mark, the atti- JOHN WANAMAKER AS A YOUNG MAN. NEW BUSINESS METHODS. S63 tude of merchants toward customers was commonly rather that of a party doing a favor. The modern spirit of doing everything possible to conciliate and accommodate the customer was almost unknown. The characteristics of retail stores were negligent, indifferent, and sometimes surly salesmen ; slowness, con- fusion, and lack of method in delivering goods, and general absence of the spirit of seeking and cultivating business, which is now the rule instead of the excep- tion. Moreover, a sale once made was made forever. A merchant who in that day was asked to take back unsatisfactory goods and return the money would have met the request with contemptuous astonishment. Wanamaker changed all this. He not only sought trade, but made it evident that he was seeking trade. A customer coming into his store was met as a courteous host would meet a guest. His wants were quickly ascertained ; he was put in the hands of a polite and accommodating salesman, who did everything in his power to supply him with the article that suited him ; and if for any reason, or even without reason, the goods which he had bought did not please him, they might be returned, and the money was repaid. When this last feature was inaugurated, it was looked upon with in- credulous contempt by competitors. "That won't last long," they said with confidence ; but not only did it last, but they were themselves obliged to conform to the prac- tice, and it is now the uniform custom among the best stores. From the time when he first began business, John Wanamaker had a rare appreciation of the value of advertising, and his persistence and originality in this field have always distinguished his business. In this respect also he was a pioneer. Before his time the capabilities of advertising were little known or believed in. It was done fitfully and carelessly at best. The idea of advertising a retail business regularly, week in and week out, rain or shine, good business or bad business, was one" which was almost as novel as Wanamaker' s plan of returning the money for unsatisfactory goods. For some time after these in- novations were begun, he had the field to himself. His competitors had no faith that such new-fangled notions would last, and waited with contemptuous confi- dence for his business to wind itself up. But they waited in vain. Instead of ruining his business under these methods, it grew at such a rate that it was almost impossible to provide accommodations for it which did not in a few years become too small. As it grew, Wanamaker grew. Every year developed his GEORGE H. STUART, ONE OF MR. WANAMAKER S PROMINENT CO-LABORERS. 564 JOHN WANAMAKER. wonderful organizing powers, and when the time came for the purchase of the great building at Thirteenth and Market streets, he was better prepared than ever before to build upon it a store in which should be carried on a business that would embody the results of all his previous experience. The secret of Mr. Wanamaker's great success in business maybe summed up in one word, — Organization. It has been his uniform practice to secure for the heads of departments the best men to be had, regardless of cost. Many men in his employ receive salaries larger than those of cabinet ministers. They are given full latitude for exercising all their best powers, and full reward for success. Each head of a department is treated as though he were himself the owner and master of the department. He is charged with all the ex- penses of the department, including his share of rent and advertising, the sala- ries of clerks, bookkeepers, etc. On the other hand, he is credited with all of the profits made in his department, -and if he is able to show good results and increased sales, his position becomes bet- ter and better. He is allowed to manage his department in his own way, limited only by certain fixed rules of policy com- mon to the entire store. This system of management gives the responsible heads of the business every incentive to do their best, and results in an organization which is well-nigh perfect. In addition to the other motives fur- nished by Mr. Wanamaker for those in his employ to do the best of which they are capable, it has been for some years his practice to share profits to a certain extent with his employees. At the end of the first year after this practice was begun, $100,000 of profits were received by the employees of the Thirteenth street store. Considering the great load which Mr. Wanamaker has carried for many years, and considering also the fact that he has not followed the beaten paths of trade, but has been a great innovator, and constantly introducing novel methods of business, it is not surprising to learn that he has more than once been on the edge of failure ; but, like the greatest generals, he is a man who does not know when he is beaten. He refuses to recognize defeat, and the result has been that even the greatest emergencies have been met, and victory secured. He has not only learned how to do business himself, but he has taught thousands of others. Department stores, conducted on the same plan as that of the great emporium at Thirteenth and Market streets, have sprung up all over the United States ; and for the ease with which buyers of all sorts of goods at retail can now make their purchases, and for the general tone of reliability, accommoda- BETHANY SUNDAY- TENT. 1859. BETHANY SUNDAY-SCHOOL. 565 tion, promptness, and cheapness which pervade retail business, the buyers of to-day have chiefly to thank John Wanamaker. HIS WORK FOR OTHERS. No one who knows the abounding and restless energy which characterizes Mr. Wanamaker, and his humane desire for the welfare of others, would expect to find his time employed exclusively for his own benefit. His public work has long been a most important part of his life. Before he went into the clothing BETHANY CHURCH AND SUNDAY SCHOOL BUILDING. business in 1861 he filled the position of Secretary of the Young Men's Chris- tian Association of Philadelphia, an organization in which his interest has never ceased. In later years, when he was carrying on a very large business, he became the President of this Association. His genius for organization has wrought results in that body no less important than those which he had already brought about in his own business. He helped to point out and develop the possibilities of the organization, which had hitherto been little known. During his presidency the splendid new building of the Association at Fifteenth and Chestnut streets was built, and this, like his store, was an object lesson to 566 JOHN WANAMAKER. others who were carrying on the same line of work. Since that time handsome buildings for homes of the local associations have sprung 'up in nearly all the large cities of the United States, and in these homes are found facilities for instruction, for social work, and for the help and betterment of young men gen- erally, which have made the Young Men's Christian Association such a power for good. One of the most characteristic of Mr. Wanamaker's enterprises outside of his own business is the Sunday-school of Bethany Presbyterian Church, of which he has long been superintendent. His connection with this now famous school goes back to the days when he was a poor and struggling young man. In the early days of his business life, and while still embarrassed by narrow means, Mr. Wanamaker went into one of the roughest districts of Philadelphia, where low groggeries abounded, and opened a Sunday-school in a shop occupied during the week by shoemakers. The district was one of the lowest and most disorderly in the city. It was even looked upon as dangerous to attempt such work in such a neighborhood. But to Mr. Wanamaker the obvious reflection was that the worse the neighborhood the greater the need of improvement. He succeeded in interesting the children, and the children interested their parents. After a few months the school had so increased that it outgrew the accommodations, and a large tent was rented in which it was carried on during the summer. From this beginning grew up the famous Bethany Sunday- school, which is now one of the largest in the country. Out of the school grew a church, whose membership is made up largely of the parents of the Sabbath- school children, and of the Sabbath-school children themselves, who have grown to manhood and womanhood in the years since this work was begun. Sunday- school and church together have wrought a great change in the character of that district, and now the person who should suggest that there was danger in attempting to do such work in that neighborhood would be met with surprise indeed. It is characteristic of Mr. Wanamaker that for rest from business he turns, not to idleness, but to work of a different sort. His Sundays are spent in religious work of various kinds. He is interested in movements for the spread of practical Christianity in almost every direction. He was one of the pioneers in the Moody and Sankey revival movement, and before the freight station was remodeled as a store in 1875, it was for some months used for the meetings, where frequently twenty thousand persons were gathered at one time. He was one of the original organizers of the Christian Commission, and of the Citizens' Relief Committee, a Philadelphia organization which gives aid in cases of sudden disaster, pestilence, or other trouble anywhere, which appeals to the sympathies of the citizens of Philadelphia. He is one of the managers of the Williamson Trade School. At the time of the Centennial Exposition he was POSTMASTER-GENERAL. 567 Chairman of the Bureau of Revenue, and raised the first million dollars for that great enterprise. He was also Chairman of the Press Committee, and in many ways aided to make the work successful. When Mr. Harrison was elected to the Presidency in 1888, Mr. Wanamaker entered his cabinet as Postmaster- General, — a position for which his talents and experience in business organiza- tion especially fitted him. His administration of the Post-Office Department was marked by a number of reforms, and a great improvement in its methods. At the end of his term of office he took a well-earned vacation, making with his family an extensive tour through the United States and Mexico. On this journey he received many tokens of high esteem and wide popularity. Mr. Wana- maker has given to the various charities and benevolent en- terprises what is of more value than m o n e y, namely, himself and his abilities. Even when the duties of Post- master-General of the United States were added to his al- ready enormous undertakings, he came regularly every week from Washington to Philadelphia to superintend his Sunday-school at Bethany. But few have been more generous givers of money as well. He has given over $100,000 to Bethany Church and Sunday-school ; he has given $100,000 to the Young Men's Christian Association. The Children's Wing of the Presbyterian Hospital, practically a complete hospital in itself, was paid for by Mrs. Wanamaker. He has established on Broad street a home for those of his female employees who have no regular home in the city : and in many other ways Mr. Wanamaker has given proof of the spirit of practical good work which is the moving force of his whole life. ' LINDENHURST, &> I PLACES OF WORSHIP IN NEW YORK IN 1742. 1. Lutheran. 2. French. 3. Trinity. 4. New Dutch. 5. Old Dutch. 6. Presbyterian. 7. Baptist. 8. Quaker. 9. Synagogue. HENRY WARD BEECHER, THE GREAT PULPIT ORATOR AMD REFORMER. AND THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN CHURCH, BY BISHOP J. H. VINCENT, LL.D., Chancellor of Chautauqua University. IN the dark days of the War of 181 2 there lived and labored in the town of Litchfield, Connecticut, a Congre- gational minister named Lyman Beecher. Like most preachers of that day, he was poor in this world's goods, but rich in children. Seven of these already gathered around his fireside when, on June 24, 181 3, his son Henry Ward Beecher, destined to leave so deep and strong an im- press upon the life and thought of his day, was born. Dr. Beecher's salary was eight hundred dollars a year, not always promptly paid ; and under these cir- cumstances it may easily be imagined that the tenth member of the family received only such care and attention as were absolutely required. The struggle for existence was too severe to leave much time or thought for other things. Litchfield was a mountain town, where the winter was a stern reality for six months of the year, where there were giant winds, and drifting snows of immeasurable depth, and ice and sleet storms of a sublime power and magnitude. Under this rugged nursing the boy grew outwardly vigorous. When but three or four years old he was sent to the Widow Kilbourn's school, where he said his letters twice a day, 57i BIBLE BROUGHT OVER IN THE " MAYFLOWER. 57^ HENRY WARD BEECHER. and passed the rest of his time in hemming a brown towel or a check apron. It was not expected that he would learn very much from " Marm Kilbourn," but the school kept him out of the way of the "home folks " for the greater part of the day. Next, a small, unpainted district school-house being erected within a stone's throw of the parsonage, he graduated from Ma'am Kilbourn's thither. Henry Ward was not marked out by the prophecies of partial friends for any brilliant future. His utterance was thick and indistinct, partly from bashful- ness and partly from enlargement of the tonsils of his throat, so that in speak 1 ing or reading he was with difficulty understood. The last success that ever would have been predicted for him is that of an orator. " When Henry is sent to me with a message," said a good aunt, "I always have to make him say it three times. The first time I have no manner of an idea, more than if he spoke Choctaw ; the second, I catch now and then a word ; by the third time I begin to understand." Sunday was a day of terror to Henry, for on that day the Catechism was administered to him. "I think," said he afterward to his con- gregation, referring to this part of his life, "that to force childhood to associate religion with such dry morsels is to violate the spirit, not only of the New Testament, but of common sense as well. I know one thing, that if I am 'lax and latitudinarian,' the Sunday Catechism is to blame for a part of it. The dinners that I have lost because I could not go through ' sanctifica- tion,' and 'justification,' and 'adoption,' and all such questions, lie heavily on my memory ! . . . One Sunday afternoon with my Aunt Esther did me more good than forty Sundays in church with my father. He thundered over my head ; she sweetly instructed me down in my heart. The promise that she would read Joseph's history to me on Sun- day was enough to draw a silver thread of obedience through the entire week ; and if I was tempted to break my promise, I said, ' No ; Aunt Esther is going to read on Sunday ;' and I would do, or I would not do, all through the week, for the sake of getting that sweet instruction on Sunday." When Henry was twelve years old his father accepted a call to Boston and removed thither with his family. At this time the boy developed a great love of adventure, and he was filled with a longing to be a sailor. This feeling made him restless and discontented, and he resolved to leave home and ship on board some vessel sailing from the harbor. He hovered about the wharves, con- )LD DUTCH CHURCH, NEW UTRECHT, LONG ISLAND. AT MT. PLEASANT SCHOOL. 573 versing with the sailors and captains, and sometimes carrying his little bundle with him. But the thoughts of home were too strong for him, and he could never quite summon resolution enough to run away. In a fit of desperation he wrote a letter to his brother, telling him of his wish to go to sea, and informing him that he meant to first ask his father's permission, and if that were not granted he would go without it. This letter he dropped where his father would be sure to find it. Dr. Beecher soon discovered it, and, reading it, put it into his pocket without comment. The next day he asked the boy if he had ever thought of any definite avocation for his future life. "Yes," said Henry, "I want to go to sea. I want to enter the navy, be a midshipman, and rise to be a commander." " Oh, I see," said the Doctor, cheerfully ; "but in order to prepare for that you must study mathematics and navigation." " I am ready, sir." "Very well. I'll send you up to Amherst next week, to Mount Pleasant, and then you'll begin your preparatory studies at once. As soon as you are well prepared, I presume I can make interest to get you an appointment." The boy was delighted, and the next week started for Amherst. The Doctor felt sure that the sailor scheme would never come to anything, and exclaimed, exultantly, as he bade his son good-bye, " I shall have that boy in the ministry yet." At the Mount Pleasant Institute young Beecher took lessons in elocution from Professor John E. Lovell. Under the instructions of this able teacher, he learned to manage his voice, and to overcome the thickness and indistinctness of utterance which previous to this had troubled him so much. He continued at this school for three years, devoting" himself to study with determination and success, and taking rank as one of the most promising pupils of the school. As time passed on, the ardent desire for a seafaring life began to weaken. The stories of Nelson's conquests and Captain Cook's wanderings lost some- thing of their old fascination. Life was filling fast with larger meanings. About this time, when in a mood of spiritual anxiety, a religious revival arose, stirring the deep undercurrents of his nature. Henry Ward Beecher resolved to be a Christian, and set himself to "follow the Lord fully." His conversion — if we may use that word in this connection — was not the doleful giving up of every- thing glad and beautiful to live a life of gloom and sadness. It was a joyful consecration to the Lord. If Mr. Beecher could not have been a- joyful Chris- tian, he would not have been a Christian at all. All life was glad to him. Existence alone, under the blue skies and in the happy fields, was a luxury. And he judged that the Christian life ought to be of all lives the most joyful. True to these convictions, his life was sunny where some thought it should only be solemn. Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe writes of him at this period in her own 574 HENRY WARD BEECHER. characteristic manner: "The only thing," she says, "which prevented Henry from taking the first rank as a religious young man was the want of that sobriety and solemnity which was looked upon as essential to the Christian character. He was like a converted bobolink, who should be brought to judgment for short quirks and undignified twitters and tweedles among the daisy heads, instead of flying in dignified paternal sweeps, like a good swallow of the sanctuary, or sitting in solemnized meditations in the depths of pine trees, like the owl." In 1832 Dr. Beecher removed from Boston to Cincinnati, to enter upon the presidency of Lane Seminary, to which he had been elected. Henry fol- lowed him to the West after his graduation at Amherst, and, in 1836, completed his theological studies at the seminary, under the tuition of his father and Professor Stowe, the latter of whom married Henry's sister Harriet. Immediately on finishing his theological course, Mr. Beecher married and settled in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, ac- cepting the very first offer MORAVIAN EASTER SERVICE, BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA. made him. It was work that he wanted, and one place he thought about as good as another. His parish was a little town on the Ohio river, not far from Cincinnati. Here he preached in a small church, and did all the work of the parish sexton, making his fires, trimming his lamps, sweeping his house, and ringing his bell. "I did all," he said whimsically, "but come to hear myself preach — that they had to do." Mr. Beecher was soon invited from Lawrenceburg to Indianapolis, the cap- ital of the State, where he labored for eight years. A member of his church in Indianapolis thus gives his recollections of him : — " In the early spring of 1842 a revival began, more noticeable than any that PLYMOUTH CHURCH. 575 this community has seen. The whole town was pervaded by the influences of religion. For many weeks the work continued with unabated power, and nearly one hundred persons were added to the church on profession of their faith. This was God's work. It is not improper, however, to speak of the pastor in that revival, as he is remembered by some of the congregation, plunging through the wet streets, his trousers stuck in his muddy boot-legs, earnest, untiring, swift ; with a merry heart, a glowing face, and a helpful word for every one ; the whole day preaching Christ to the people where he could find them, and at night preaching still where the people were sure to find him. Some of those who have been pillars since found the Saviour in that memorable time. Nor was the awakening succeeded by an immediate relapse. " Early in the following year, at the March and April communions, the church had larger accessions. There was, indeed, a wholesome and nearly continuous growth up to the time when the first pastor resigned, to accept a call to the Plymouth Congregational Church, in Brooklyn, New York. This occurred August 24, 1847." HIS WORK AT PLYMOUTH CHURCH. On his removal to Brooklyn, Mr. Beecher immediately announced in Ply- mouth pulpit the same principles that he had followed in Indianapolis ; namely, his determination to preach Christ among them, not as a bygone historical per- sonage, but as the living Lord and God, and to bring all the ways and usages of society to the test of his standards. He announced that he considered tem- perance and anti-slavery a part of the gospel of Christ, and should preach them accordingly. In the ten years of agitation preceding the civil war, Plymouth Church rose grandly to the need of the age. When Wendell Phillips found no place for free speech in New York or Brooklyn, Mr. Beecher invited him to the platform of his church, and counted the words of the great abolitionist no desecration ; for did not the Son of Man come to preach the gospel to the poor, and to set the captives free ? From the hour that Wendell Phillips made his great anti- slavery speech in Plymouth Church, until the Emancipation Proclamation, nearly twenty years after, the Plymouth preacher became a flaming advocate for liberty of speech and action on the question of the national evil. If there was any- thing on earth to which he was sensitive, up to the day of his death, it was any form of denial to liberty, either in literature, politics, or religion. A touching incident occurred early in the year of 1861, which helped to increase Mr. Beecher's reputation as the friend of the slave : — A beautiful octoroon girl, raised and owned by a prominent citizen of this country, Mr. John Churchman, attempted to make her escape North. She was arrested and brought back. Her master then determined to sell her, and found a ready purchaser in another citizen, Mr. Fred Scheffer. Mr. Schefler proposed 576 HENRY WARD BEECH ER. to Sarah that she should go North, and raise enough money from the Abolition- ists to purchase herself. This proposition she eagerly accepted, and, being furnished with means by Mrs. Scheffer to pay her fare, she started. A few days after her arrival in New York she was taken to Mr. Beecher, and on the follow- ing Sabbath evening was escorted to his pulpit in Brooklyn. She was a woman of commanding presence, winning face, and long, jet-black hair, and, of course, attracted most eager attention and interest from the large and wealthy congrega- tion assembled. She was requested to loosen her hair, and as she did so it fell in glistening waves over her shoulders and below her waist. Robed in white, her face crimsoned and her form heaving under the excitement of the occasion, she stood in that august presence a very Venus in form and feature. For a moment Mr. Beecher remained by her side without uttering a word, until the audience was wrought up to a high pitch of curiosity and excitement. Then, in his impressive way, he related her story and her mission. Before he concluded his pathetic recital the vast audience was a sea of commotion ; and as the pastor announced that he wanted $2000 for the girl before him to redeem her promise to pay for freedom, costly jewels and trinkets and notes and specie piled in so fast that in less time than it takes to write it, enough and more was contributed than was necessary to meet the call that had been made. In i860 the crisis of the nation was seen to be at hand, and Plymouth's patriot preacher girded himself for the fight. With pen and voice he labored for the success of Abraham Lincoln in the campaign of i860, urging the preserva- tion of the Union. When, on April 12, 1861, the first shot was fired at Fort Sumter, Mr. Beecher sprang to the aid of his country. From Plymouth pulpit came ringing words of patriotism, cheering the timid, encouraging the down- cast, denouncing traitors, but hopeful of the future, pointing out clearly the path of right and duty for those who loved their country. His church, prompt to answer, raised and equipped a regiment, the First Long Island, in which his eldest son was an officer. Before this regiment went into active service, Mr. Beecher often visited the camp and preached to the young soldiers, many being " my own boys," as he used to call them. Meanwhile, besides the cares of his pastorate, he was constantly delivering speeches. At last his health began to fail. His voice gave way, and he was imperatively commanded to seek rest. To recruit his exhausted energies he sailed for Europe, little thinking that a work awaited him in England far more arduous than -anything which he had yet undertaken. SPEAKING AGAINST ENGLISH MOBS. S77 On his outward voyage Mr. Beecher was urged to speak in England for the Union cause, but declined on the ground of his health. After some weeks of travel in France and Switzerland, he was met at Paris with the news of Gettysburg and Vicksburg, and also with letters from friends in England saying that a small party there was supporting the side of the North against heavy odds, and again urging him to help them with his voice. At last he consented, and engagements were made for him to speak in the chief cities of England. In order to fully comprehend the situation, it is necessary to recall the state of feeling in England at that time. Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote after Mr T% COLONIAL MONASTERY, ILLUSTRATING EARLIER DAYS. Beecher's return : "The devil had got the start of the clergyman, as he very often does, after all. The wretches who had been for three years pouring their leprous distillment into the ears of Great Britain had preoccupied the ground, and were determined to silence the minister if they could. For this purpose they looked to the heathen populace of the nominally Christian British cities. They covered the walls with blood-red placards, they stimulated the mob by inflammatory appeals, they filled the air with threats of riot and murder. It was in the midst of scenes like these that the single, solitary American opened his lips to speak in behalf of his country." 57 8 HENRY WARD B EEC HER. But Mr. Beecher braved the British lion in his most angry mood. His great speeches in Manchester, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Liverpool, and London were magnificent as specimens of natural oratory, but they were sublime and heroic as the utterances of one who loved his country, who believed his country to be in the right, and dared to say so in the face of all the world. Mr. Beecher had a firmly knit, vigorous physical frame, come down from generations of yeomen renowned for strength, and it stood him in good service now. In giving an account afterward he said: "I had to speak extempore on subjects the most delicate and difficult as between our two nations, where even the shading of my words was of importance, and yet I had to outscream a mob and drown the roar of a multitude. It was like driving a team of runaway horses and making love to a lady at the same time." The printed record of this speech, as it came from England, has constant parentheses of wild uproars, hootings, howls, cat-calls, clamorous denials and interruptions ; but by cheerfulness, perfect, fearless good-humor, intense perse- verance, and a powerful voice, Mr. Beecher said all he had to say, in spite of the uproar. The following description of the great meeting in London is from the pen of a gentleman who was present : — It was my privilege to hear him when he addressed an audience of Englishmen in Exeter Hall, London, on the then all-absorbing topic of the American war. Never shall I forget the scene. The masses of the English people had already taken sides in favor of the Southern Confederacy, and only a few, such, for instance, as Rev. Newman Hall, Baptist Noel, Francis Newman, and a few other nonconformist clergymen of the same stamp, had the courage to defend the North, and this at the hazard of mob violence, when Mr. Beecher suddenly appeared, and, fighting his way from Manchester to London, dared to face the howling mobs who assailed him, and by his indomitable courage succeeded in gaining at least a respectful hearing, which at Exeter Hall culminated in a grand triumph for liberty and justice. On that occasion his grand eloquence carried his audience until burst after burst of deafening cheers greeted every period; and the scene at the close of his address can never be fully realized, except by those who were eye-witnesses of this grand event. To him alone should be attributed the credit of having turned the tide of English opinion, and of having succeeded in laying the foundation of that better judgment which prevented the govern- ment from officially recognizing the Confederacy." Soon after his return the war closed, and he went to Charleston to deliver the address at Fort Sumter upon the occasion of the rehoisting of the flag of the United States over that work. The news of the assassination of Mr. Lin- coln met him upon his return to Brooklyn, and drew from him one of his most memorable sermons. At the close of hostilities, he preached a sermon to his congregation, urging forgiveness and conciliation toward the South as the policy of the hour, saying truly that that crisis was a rare opportunity, which would never come again if spurned. The sermon was unpopular, and caused him some trouble even in his own conoreo-ation. THE GREAT TRIAL. 579 During the years after the war Mr. Beecher was busy with voice and pen, in the pulpit, on the lecture platform, and in the press. His reputation and in- fluence as a preacher were immense ; and Plymouth Church became the centre of what may properly be called a permanent revival of religion. Suddenly, in the midst of this busy, happy, and useful life, came the great trouble known as the Beecher-Tilton scandal, which, though bravely met and finally conquered, cast such a dreadful shadow over Mr. Beecher's life. THE BEECHER-TILTON TRIAL. " This most distressing episode in Mr. Beecher's life," says an account which appeared at the time of his death, " occurred when his fame and influence were at their zenith. At a time when the most cultured classes of the country ac- cepted him as their guide, when the first place as a preacher and an orator was accorded to him on all hands, and when his writings were eagerly read from one* end of the land to the other, a formidable assault was made upon his reputa- tion. At first vague hints were circulated reflecting upon him ; then a direct charge appeared in print ; finally, in an action at law, brought by Theodore Tilton against Mr. Beecher, with a claim for $100,000 damages, the whole case was disclosed, and for six months the morbid appetites of the sensual and the malice of scoffers at Christianity were gratified by the terrible accusation against the pastor of Plymouth Church. " Three times did Mr. Beecher meet his accusers, and three times the charge was investigated. First it was heard by a committee of the church, ap- pointed at Mr. Beecher's request, and the committee pronounced the pastor innocent. Afterward it was tried in court, when the jury disagreed ; and thirdly, by a council of Congregational ministers. Undoubtedly the scandal was a cause of reproach not only to Mr. Beecher, but to religion. That it would be so if it were made public, whatever the issue might be, Mr. Beecher and his friends had foreseen from the first, and, unhappily, in attempting to prevent its coming to trial, they prejudiced the case ; their efforts to keep it from the public were regarded as an admission of guilt. It was a noteworthy fact that Theodore Tilton, who brought the charge, was a protege of Mr. Beecher's, a man pos- sessing undoubted talent, a sphere for the exercise of which had been provided by Mr. Beecher." The unwavering fidelity of Plymouth Church to its pastor during this fierce ordeal, the love and sympathy of his wife, and the unfaltering allegiance of a host of friends in this country and in Europe, encouraged and supported him, arfd enabled him to continue his pastorate and public work. But the damage to the cause of religion was incalculable ; and nothing but the cheerful and steadfast faith which had become a part of his being could have enabled him to recover from this awful trial. 5 8o HEXRY WARD BEECH ER. From among the latest utterances of Mr. Beecher in Plymouth Church, we take the following paragraph, which gives the impression that he was half aware that his end was not far off : — " I look back now upon nearly forty years' ministry here, and see what the fruit has been. It has not been as large and as good as it would have been if you had had a better fruiterer. But I am not unwilling to compare with others the men and women that have grown up under my preaching, their develop- ment in nobleness, their cheer, their hopefulness, their courage, their kindness, their lovableness, and their self-denial, which ceases to be self-denial because they learn to love working for others. I think I am not apt to be proud, but I may thank God that I have the test before me in hundreds and in thousands that the word preached by me has been blessed, not simply to the hope of their final salvation, but to their present evolution into higher, statelier, more beauti- ful, attractive, winning souls. " I have never preached what I did not believe ; I have never asked myself whether to preach a truth that I did believe would be popular or unpopular. I have never been afraid of man, though I have been afraid of God as the child is afraid of a father that he loves. The whole conception of life that I have had has been to serve my fellow-man, and when, in the day that men despised the poor oppressed negroes, that could not plead their own cause, I was more than willing, I was inexpressibly grateful, to be permitted to stand for them, and not to forsake them until they were clothed in the majesty of equal rights by the great revolution. I attempted all my life long to take the part of those who had no defender ; and I have done it. And in all matters in my own church I have steadily sought one thing — to reproduce, so far as I was able to reproduce, the lineaments of the Lord Jesus Christ in your hearts." HIS LAST DAYS. The dawn of the year 1887 found Mr. Beecher in the enjoyment of good health, and full of plans of work. He had addressed himself with new energy to the second part of his "Life of Jesus, the Christ," and was also engaged on his autobiography, which would have been of unspeakable value. But his sun was setting, though he knew it not. The golden bowl was soon to be shattered, the pitcher broken at the fountain, and the wheel at the cistern. The voice that had swayed tens of thousands, and influenced the history of the nation through two generations, was to be hushed in pathetic silence. He had often expressed the hope that he might be spared the agonies of a lingering illness. His hope was fully realized. On the evening of March 3, 1887, he retired to bed, and after an hour or two of restlessness, he fell into that dreamless sleep that knows no waking. He continued in this unconscious state till the morning of Tuesday, March 8th, when, with his family gathered THE LAST TRIBUTE. 5S1 around him, he passed away. A ray of sunlight, full and strong, flashed into the chamber just as his last breath was drawn. Calmly, and with no struggle, the regular breathing ceased, and the great preacher was gone! The face, though worn, looked peaceful and noble. The blue eyes which had looked for the last time on earthly scenes were closed, and the eloquent tongue was silent forever. There was nothing of gloom in the last tribute to the nation's foremost citizen. All day long, through the aisles which led to his coffin, passed the ceaseless stream, never pausing ; yet night fell, and found man)- thousands still ungratified. Churches were thronged to hear his praises and thank God for PASSOVER SUPPER, AS OBSERVED BY Till, YORK IN Ii such a man, yet not a tithe of those eager to do him reverence could find a foot- hold ; the streets about his resting-place teemed all day with hundreds awaiting their turn ; no building in the world could have contained the myriads gathered to do honor to his name. One who knew him and loved him well writes thus of that funeral scene : " He loved the multitude, and the multitude came to his funeral ; he loved the flowers, and ten thousand buds breathed their fragrance and clad his resting- place in beauty ; he loved music, and the voice of the organ rose, and the anthems which had delighted him again rolled their harmonies to the rafters ; he loved the sunshine, and it streamed through the windows and was a halo around him. 582 HENRY WARD BEECHER. No emblem of sorrow or parting was there, but the symbols of love, and faith, and hope, the glad tokens of resurrection, immortality, and eternal reward, such as befitted his life, his death, and his fame, which shall endure, for many gener- ations shall approve him and bless him." " What biographer shall statue this incomparable man ? Almost any one may feel that his forehead does not touch the feet of the noble figure ; but it is from below that we appreciate impressive objects. Defects of teaching and defects of character will be recorded. Men without faults are apt to be men without force. The faults of great and generous natures are often the shadows which their virtues cast. But there is noble praise for him which far outweighs the deficiencies. In the life-long warfare that he waged against the slavery of moral evil, and in behalf of intellectual, religious, and political liberty, he wielded the weapon of oratory with the splendid excellence of insight, sincerity, sym- pathy, simplicity, and strength. ' Lay on his coffin a sword ; for he was a brave, brilliant, and effective soldier in the war for the liberation of humanity.' " THE AMERICAN CHURCH BY BISHOP J. H. VINCENT, Chancellor of Chautauqua University. As the century draws toward its end, and men make careful survey of the work it has wrought in the many and varied fields of human activity, it is natural that each observer should take a special interest in the department which con- stitutes his specialty. The statesman studies the social and political phenomena and forces of the age. The scientist, the educator, the manufacturer, the finan- cier, the merchant, find in their respective spheres problems to be taken in hand and carefully investigated, that the experience of the past may become wisdom for the future. While this division of labor may tend to develop one-sidedness in the indi- vidual, it provides ample material for the true student of history, who, by collecting the data furnished by these various inves- tigators, may make wide and wise gener- alizations, and thus contribute to a more complete study of human nature and human history. The increase of general interest among special observers and students will ensure in due time cooperation, increased intelligence, and enthusiasm in the promo- tion of the highest civilization. BISHOP J. H. VINCENT. ° As the procession of the years which form the most wonderful century of human history closes its solemn march, those who look on time as deriving its chief worth from its relations to eternity, and who estimate civilization as it bears upon the immortal character of man, will of necessity judge a century by its religious quality and results, asking : What place has religion held, what work has it wrought, what errors have weakened it, what 585 584 THE AMERICAN CHURCH. are the tendencies which now dominate it, what are the opportunities which open before it ? In pursuance of this line of inquiry, I purpose in the present chapter, which I have consented to contribute to this " Memorial Story of America," to consider the place of the American Church in the nineteenth century, the ruling thought and force determining its policy and influence, and the work it is expected to attempt just beyond the open portals of the twentieth century. The religious thought of the United States is chiefly Christian, for this is a Christian nation, and the Church of the American people is the American Church ; not Greek, not Roman, not English, but American ; expressing its power and putting forth its endeavors under the control of Christian and American ideas. For these ideas which we call American are essentially Christian ; products of the Christian revelation, embodied in a form of civilization which is as real an outcome of the direct divine providence as was the civilization of Moses or the religious institutions growing out of the ministry of Jesus. The American type of Christianity is in advance of all other Christian types, since it grows among and permeates political and social ideas and institutions which give it larger and fuller opportunities than it has ever before known, opportunities to develop humanity on all sides and in all relations. The American Church is made up of all individuals, classes, societies, and agencies which bear the Christian name or hold the Christian thought. It is not a " State Church." It is not a " union Church" — constituted by the formal unification of diverse sects or denominations. It embraces all believers (and in a sense all citizens) without visible consolidation ; it favors all without legislative interference ; it gives freedom to all without partiality or discrimination. The distinguishing feature of American life, which makes what we call "freedom" mean more and promise more than does the civil, political, and religious freedom of any other land, and which therefore gives a distinctive character to the American Church, is that the liberty of the individual has large and unhampered opportunity for growth and action. Individual liberty here is actual liberty ; unhindered by governmental provisions for privileged classes — sovereigns, princes, nobles — who, by the accident of birth, leap into place and prerogative without merit of their own, and whose unearned advantage is detrimental to the well-being of the multitude. It is liberty which carries with it opportunity, — the liberty of the lowest in the nation to reach the rank of the highest ; of the poorest to become the richest ; of the most ignorant to become the most learned ; of the most despised to become the most honored ; the liberty of every man to know all that he can know, to be all that he can be, and do all that he pleases to do, so long as he does not interfere with the right of any other man to know all that he can know, to be all that he can be, and to do all that he pleases to do. It is the liberty among brothers, who, with all the prerogatives THE CHRISTIAN IDEA OF FREEDOM. 585 of individuality, need not forget the brotherhood of man, and who have every inducement not merely to guarantee to each other this regal right of full personal development, but who easily learn how to render mutual aid — every man helping every other man to know all that he can know, be all that he can be, and to do all that he pleases to do. This, then, is the ideal of American civilization : A nation of equals, who are brothers. This is the doctrine of the closing American century ; the root of the goodly tree that covers such ample area with its fruitful and bending branches ; the vine which the right hand of the Lord our God hath planted ; this the lesson running along the bars and shining out of the stars of our national flag. It is necessary that the race experiment with this great idea of freedom and fraternity. It is an idea that sounds well in rhyme and song, but it must stand the test of practice as well ; and is it capable of this ? May this large Gospel of the Christ be realized by a nation, and this nation become in spirit and fact a church ? This is the glorious thought running through the civilization of our century, and this we believe to be the purpose of the God of nations. During the past century the Republic has made a series of experiments on the various classes and races which have been shipped to our shores from foreign ports. We are, in fact, in the very midst of this experimental process and period. We glorify the Declaration of Independence. We are yet to prove that its doctrines are practicable. We insist that the race can easily dispense with kings, nobles, hierarchies, and all other aristocracies ; that the nation entrusted with this great gift of human freedom can endure the severe tests to which she is subjected by the immigration and emancipation of uneducated and degraded masses of humanity. It is comparatively easy to be fair, friendly, and even fraternal with people of our own kind, who share our Saxon blood, speak our language, hold our political and religious ideas, and live after our fashion ; but the American idea — the fruit of the earliest Christian idea — requires fairness and fraternity with all — with people of alien blood and of alien faith. Can we welcome and assimi- late this inrushing tide of Irish Romanism, with centuries of tumult and trucu- lence in their veins ; of Poles, Hungarians, Italians, and Russians, who have never yet learned to spell the first syllable of the word "Freedom," and yet who are scarcely on our shores before they are clothed with the rights of citizen- ship, about the responsibilities of which they know nothing? Can the seasoned and cultured Puritan of the North and the refined cavalier of the South clasp hands with the representatives of this surging mass of humanity, and say, " Welcome, man ! Welcome, brother ! " ? And what of the Negro, and of the Chinaman ? Is the Republic equal in force of sympathy to the breadth, warmth, and splendor of her own theory of individual freedom and universal brother- hood ? 5S6 THE AMERICAN CHURCH. The distinctive feature of the nineteenth century in America is the struggle for the recognition of these two noble ideas : The freedom of the individual and the brotherhood of the race. And this thought is thoroughly religious. It is preeminently Christian. It was taught, enforced, and illustrated by the Nazarene. It is asserting itself in our civilization. The work is now going on. It has not gone far, but it is bound to go on to the blessed end. The leaven is working every day. We are in the midst of the great experiment. There is, however, more in religion than the recognition of human rights and the cultivation of good will. To serve humanity is only one side of human duty. Man must worship. He is "a religious animal." Comte and his school may be contented to bow at the shrine of Humanity, but the common sense and inborn reverence of the race demand a personal Deity, to whom the individual can come with his sin, and grief, and longing of soul. Everywhere and in all ages we find this religious instinct, deep-seated, and usually passionate and intense. It builds temples, kindles altar-fires, sets up shrines and symbols, inspires prayer and song, and expresses itself among all peoples in fastings and thanksgivings, in surrenders and self-sacrifices. The more highly cultivated a nation, the more truly reverent it is. Where the schools are, there are the churches. The Church, in this land and age of freedom and progress, is the most popular and the most effective of our institutions. Men may neglect its services temporarily, and in times of excessive activity, but in days of worry, bereavement, and peril, and under normal conditions of thoughtfulness and high and noble aspiration, they turn to the Bible, the ministry, the restful charms of religious literature, and the stimulating power of pulpit ministries. In America these statements find ample illustration. A free people, we are a reverent and church-loving people. Standing for the rights of humanity, we stand by the religious creeds and customs of our fathers. The advanced and independent thought of our age modifies but does not destroy these religious faiths and ordinances. There is much doubt afloat ; the perversions of truth have wrought their evil work ; audacious infidels fulminate against Church and Bible ; some scientific men, unduly devoted to the physical, have become dull and unsusceptible on the side of the spiritual ; but on the whole, there is more Bible study, more gospel preaching, more church-going, more reverence of speech and life, than ever. And it is almost amusing here in free America, where no State Church or civil restrictions have imposed any belief upon the people, after a century of thorough religious independence and of boastful and arrogant skepticism, to find " infidel " real estate agents building churches, or donating lots to denominatidns who pledge themselves to build, in the new towns and villages which these skeptical speculators are " booming. " All of which goes to prove that the root of our civilization is religious, and that the institution which fosters religion is a necessity. We heed more TWO IMPOR TANT MO VEMENTS. 5 £7 than ever the second part of the divine law, "Love thy neighbor;" but more than ever we bow in reverence to obey the first : "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God * * * Him only shalt thou serve." The American Church is not a State Church. It is supported not by law, but by love. No large subsidies corrupt it. No political complications weaken it. Church and State serve each other best when the only bond between them is one of individual conviction arid mutual confidence. The beginnings of the Republic were made by religious men, who organized religious communities. They sought our shores to secure religious liberty. Some of them may have been narrow, but they were true and brave. Some of the fetters that bound them had been severed, but some still remained. They had not yet conceived the idea of an emancipated and responsible individuality. Protestants fled from Roman rule, and Roman-Romanists fled from the oppressions of Roman- Protestants. And it took a long time for Protestants to become free. Romanists are not yet free. They were not from Rome who banished Roger Williams, and who lighted the witch-fires of Salem ; and they are not Protestants who still fasten their faith to an infallible Pope, implicitly obey a priesthood professino- to be divinely endowed and empowered, telling secrets, which God alone should know, to self-constituted father-confessors, who have no right, human or divine, thus to tamper with and torture the individual conscience. But the founders and fathers of the Republic were religious and God-fearing men. They were simply pupils (" primary pupils " at that) in the school of human rights and human brotherhood. The lessons were long and hard. It has taken more than a century to get half through the "first reader," and there is ample work for the century ahead, but as a people we are coming to see the life of the Church in the aims and order of the State, and to learn that God is in all history, that His claims upon men extend to all social relations, sanctifying all secular and political life, and embracing charity, sympathy, and justice in the minutest details of life, as well as awe, reverence, and worship. Two important religious movements greatly aided, during the formative years of the Republic, in developing a true religious life, in promoting a more thorough knowledge of God's Word, and in giving a just conception of the worth and responsibilities of the individual. The one was the spread among all the Churches, and among the out-of-Church multitudes, of the spirit and doctrines of Methodism, which the distinguished Presbyterian divine of Scotland called " Christianity in earnest." I do not now refer to the separate ecclesi- astical system known as Methodism, but to the general revival in the last century of New Testament doctrines, spirit, effort ; the doctrines of personal freedom and responsibility, of universal redemption and privilege, which lie at the very basis of republican life ; the spirit of love and equality which fill the heart of men with good will, and the effort, personal and persistent, which sent 588 THE AMERICAN CHURCH. men after men with divine intent, into highways and hedges, into cottages and palaces, a spirit of zeal, love, and importunity. This movement in America, under the leadership of far-seeing and devout men, touched every part of the continent, north, south, east, and west. It set other pulpits on fire. It modified rigid theological creeds. It breathed warmth and power into church forms. It disintegrated the masses. It put into the degraded poor and the frivolous rich the sense of personal responsibility to God and to the neighbor. It awakened conscience and hope. Thus, Methodism created Christian citizens, without which there can be no republic. All branches of the Christian Church have testified to the stimulating power of the Methodist awakening at the organizing of the nation. Simultaneously with the rise of the Republic began the great Sunday-school system, which went everywhere with the open Bible and the living teacher, with inspiring Christian songs, attractive books for week-day reading, juvenile pictorial papers, social gatherings, and the stimulating power of friendly fellow- ship in religious life. It brought the people together, old and young, learned and unlearned, rich and poor. It did more to "level up" society than any other agency in the Republic. It made the adult who taught susceptible and affectionate childhood a better citizen. It prepared the children to be wiser, more conscientious, and more loyal citizens in the next generation. In the widely extended Methodist revival, and in the all-embracing Sunday-school movement, we see the hand of God fashioning the Nation and the Church, that they might be one in aim and spirit, and that through them might be promoted liberty, equality, and fraternity. The various branches or denominations of the American Church are influ- enced by these ruling ideas of the century : the freedom and unrestricted opportunity of the individual and the spirit of generous fraternity. The old warfare between the Protestant denominations has virtually ceased. Coopera- tion in religious and reformatory effort — the Young Men's Christian Association, the Women's Christian Temperance Union, the Young People's Society of Christian Endeavor, the International Lesson system, the State and Interna- tional Sunday-school Conventions, the Evangelical Alliance, the Chautauqua Assemblies, the exchange of pulpits, the frequent union revival meetings held by representative evangelists, the ease with which ministers pass from one denomination to another, the warm, personal friendships between representative leaders of the several Churches, the growth and enrichment of non-denomina- tional periodical literature — these are some of the signs of the larger thought now controlling our people. Organic and external union is unnecessary. It would be a burden and a bondage. The emphasis which its advocates put upon it is and must be unfavorable to freedom and individuality. It is a significant fact that the five or six sects of Christendom which make the most of external CHURCH UNION. 589 unity are more widely separated in organization, sympathy, and Christian endeavor than are those branches of the Church which lay stress on doctrine, spirit, and conduct, and leave outward unity to be the spontaneous outgrowth of truth and love. In increasing numbers, the lay members of those Churches whose ministry (usually regarded as a "priesthood ") makes so much of outward uniformity are entering emphatic protest against this narrow and unscriptural view of Christian and Church unity. One problem remains to be solved in order to the promotion of true catholicity : How shall the feeble denominations on the frontier more effectually cooperate ? The denominational life has its advantages. The only serious objection to it, as at present organized in America, is the rivalry in sparsely settled communities, where there is at present room for but one society. Each Church, from its metropolitan centre, to increase its strength and promote its growth, is constantly pushing out into new fields, building new churches, organizing new congregations. In the normal growth of every such community there soon comes to be a demand for all denominations, but for a few years the cooperation of these feeble fragments of the several regiments in the army of the Lord is most desirable, and it is possible to effect such temporary combina- tion and yet retain the denominational distinctions for a later development. Here, for example, is a Kansas town where there are twenty-five Congrega- tionalists, twenty Baptists, twenty Methodists, thirty Presbyterians, ten Protest- ant Episcopalians, and thirty more believers of other communions. Must we have five or six separate churches in this frontier town ? Some day we must. If the town should grow, we may, within ten years, need ten different churches, and it will be just as well for the cause of humanity to have the ten represent ten different denominations as to be all of "one faith and order." The "first," "second," and "third" churches of a single "sect" are less likely to be on good living and working terms with each other than three churches of three different kinds. The social lines are less likely to be drawn in the church. The questions of doctrine are more likely to be discussed. Varieties of con- viction and taste are more likely to be satisfied. A larger number of repre- sentative leaders, men of power, are more likely to visit the place during the year and give it the benefit of their genius and experience. But in the meantime, in the early time of that community, why divide and struggle ? why appear for so slight a reason to be in rivalry ? Why not organize one church, with its several sections or classes — regular churches in the germ — bound to help on the common cause while all are weak ; bound, later on, as each develops in strength and numbers, to become self-supporting churches in different por- tions of the new city ? Why may not these thirty Presbyterians, in the begin- ning, rally around the common centre ; support the present minister ; work in the Sunday-school ; show zeal, magnanimity, and love ; and at the very time 5 9 o THE AMERICAN CHURCH. they are thus building up the cause of Christ in a cooperative church, hold an occasional meeting of the Presbyterian "class ; " subscribe for the Presbyterian papers ; contribute to the Presbyterian benevolences ; train their children at home in the Presbyterian catechism ; and make sure of a lot in some part of the town for a future Presbyterian church ? In this way the denominational spirit — the regimental spirit — may be maintained and the spirit of large catholicity promoted. The plan is practicable. The coming century will wit- ness more than one successful experiment in this scheme of denominational and catholic cooperation. The American idea of personal freedom and true fraternity has met its most serious opposition from that singular ecclesiastical and political organiza- tion known as the Roman Catholic Church. But on the members of that great foreign secret society America is gradually exerting an emancipating influence. The diligence, vigilance, and persistency of the priesthood is marvelous, but every year the power of free thought and general good will so characteristic of our civilization is disintegrating the great mass of Roman subserviency and superstition which Europe has shipped to our shores. The laymen are begin' ning to apply to their Church relations the doctrines of the Republic, and to demand from their leaders freedom of thought and speech. The Roman Church has been compelled to allow what it never before encouraged — the holding of laymen's congresses, — and it will not much longer dare to prevent free discussion. The national flag floats over many of the parochial schools. The old policy of the Jesuits, to divide the school fund between public and sec- tarian schools, is yielding to their new policy, which aims to control the public school by bringing its interests into the political arena, and securing Roman school-teachers of our American and Protestant children through the old politi- cal processes by which they now secure the control of the police force and other partisan advantages in many of our American cities ; and • this new scheme of the old foe to freedom is awakening the American Republic, and will receive the rebuke it deserves. Our people are fair and generous, but generosity may go too far. The Church of Rome is a political power, and as such it must be treated. Its members are American citizens, and must be recognized as such ; but all interference with the true doctrines of American freedom, and with the rights of the individual, must be as sharply rebuked when it assumes an ecclesiastical form — Roman or Mormon — as when it becomes a kingdom or a confederacy within the Republic. The public school must be maintained. The cry against it as "godless" is absurd. It is not and must not be a sectarian nor in any formal sense a religious institution. The closing of the school-house on the Sabbath is a sufficient tribute to the religious idea. The school of the Nation, by closing its doors on the one day of the week which is accounted by most of our citizens a holy day, offers to the home and to the Church opportunity for NO CREED BUT REPUBLICANISM. 59 : religious instruction. Let the public school be a school of American ideas, of the doctrines contained in the Declaration of Independence and in the Constitu- tion of the United States. Let it teach the true history of the Republic. Hoist the national flag above it. Train the children to sing our national songs and observe the national holidays. Bring the children of all classes and of all faiths into friendly fellowship on the playground and into helpful rivalry in the recita- tion room. Keep out of the public school all sectarianism and partisan politics. Make no compromise with the priesthood ; refuse to divide the public school funds ; tear off all ecclesiastical badge and garb from the public school teacher ; train every child to be a free American, to honor all men, and to observe the Golden Rule. This policy will irritate still more the promoters of foreign societies in the Republic, but it will create a public sentiment which servile tools of a foreign ecclesiastical system on our shores cannot longer resist. The American Church, which imposes no creed but the creed of the Republic, which knows no lines of division — sectarian, political, or territorial — but which seeks the well-being of the individual and the fellowship of all true citizens, will soon wield an immense influence in matters political. It will discuss great ethical questions ; it will carry conscientiousness and independence into political action ; it will dissipate the weak heresy that Christians are not to take part in national affairs. In the days of Christ and the Apostles, the governing powers, the rulers of this world, were beyond the touch and control of the people. It was for them humbly to serve and uncomplainingly to suffer. But now all this has been changed. The people to-day stand where Caesar used to stand ; and to be a thoughtful, conscientious, active, consistent politician, is to be doing God's service. The church member who neglects political duty is guilty of sin against both God and the neighbor. The power of the people will be felt for good when the people begin to know and to defend the true and the good. They have during the century expressed the purpose of the American Church on the subject of slavery. At its declaration the shackles have fallen. They have recently pronounced on the subject of the Louisiana Lottery. Through the press, the ballot, and the authority of law, the moral force of the nation nation expresses itself and the base conspirators surrender. So must it be with the saloon, and with all political evil. If politicians carry moral questions into the political arena, the pulpit and all other agencies of the church must go with the questions to which every consideration — moral, political, and religious — they are pledged to stand. One of the most significant movements of modern times, a product of this century, and a guarantee of strength and light for the century to come, is that known as Chautauqua, which through more than sixty summer centres, and through correspondence and home-reading methods, which are accepted by tens 592 THE AMERICAN CHURCH. of thousands of adult students in all parts of the nation, is awakening the older part of our population to the value of the higher culture. Chautauqua aims to place before full-grown men and women, especially those who were not favored with early educational advantages, the possibility of intellectual growth even in the years of maturity. It insists that men in middle life may acquire knowledge, literary taste, and habits of close and careful thought ; that lowly homes, full of hard work, may be made interesting ; that parents, hitherto indifferent to the education of their children, may become both helpers and inspirers ; that by this awakened parental interest more students may be sent to the colleges and universities ; business men and mechanics may be brought to take an interest in something besides trade ; Christian people may have more light, breadth, and power put into their lives ; the various elements of the community be lifted to a higher plane of thought, and thus the more certainly and effectively combined to improve the manners, the morals, the laws, the tone of society and of the State. The American Church, founded on the large ideas of individual freedom, responsibility, and brotherhood, finds its almost perfect realization in this beau- tiful product of the century — the Chautauqua Movement. "It is folly," said a distinguished Irish scholar and churchman, when informed that at Chautauqua representatives of fifteen different religious bodies meet in harmony, discussing their points of difference with utmost frankness and liberality, and then unite in public religious worship, "It is folly to think of such a thing; it cannot be," he said. After spending ten days in the groves of Chautauqua, critically exam- ining the theory and methods of the system, he said, "It is really so. It is really so. You have the perfection of Christian unity here." Thus Chautauqua concentrates and embodies in its great social, educa- tional, and religious work, for all classes, all people, of all creeds, of all sorts and conditions, the fundamental ideas of the century which lie at the basis of the American Church, and which are wrought into our very Constitution. God over all and in all ; God our Father ; Man His creature and His child ; man free, responsible, independent ; man the brother of every other man, entitled to reverence, good-will, fairness, and love ; Jesus the elder Brother, the Saviour of humanity ; our civilization in its material, educational, moral and religious conditions and relations, the sphere and opportunity for the working out of the divine and gracious purpose by which the kingdom of God is to come, and the will of God is to " be done in earth as it is in Heaven." J. H. Vincent. v WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON, THE GREAT ANTI-SLAVERY AGITATOR. • . y^ HbH^. ^^ ' on S struggle over slavery in the United States devel- iw» »^| oped two characters which were a curious contrast to each r other,— Calhoun and Garrison ; the man who believed that slavery was divinely right, and who would sacrifice the Union to establish it, and the man who believed slavery eternally wrong, and who would sacrifice the Union to de- stroy it. Calhoun died ten years before the great war by which the long debate was at last ended ; but to Garrison it was given to see the final triumph of freedom. History records no more impressive scene than that which took place after the fall of Charleston, when Garrison stood beside the grave of the great advocate of slavery-. There were the victor and the van- quished. In these two men were embodied the opposing moral forces whose conflict had brought about the great struggle. The cause to which Calhoun's life had been devoted was overthrown at the cost of untold blood and treasure, and the conqueror stood gazing upon the tomb which held his dust. William Lloyd Garrison was born in 1805, in Newburyport, Massachusetts. When he was only three years old, his father, who was a sailor, deserted his family, leaving his wife and two boys in great poverty. Lloyd learned the trade of printing, and when only twenty-one became editor of the Newburyport Free Press, in which the earliest productions of the poet Whittier were first pub- lished. He afterward edited the National Philanthropist, of Boston, devoted to temperance and other reforms, and a paper at Bennington, Vermont. The real work of his life, however, began in 1829, when he joined Benjamin Lundy in publishing the Genius of Universal Emancipation, in Baltimore. Lundy was a gentle and mild-mannered Quaker, devoted to gradual emancipation and colonization. He had but little conception of the white heat which burned in Garrison's bosom, or of the conflagration which it would kindle in a country ruled by the slave power. The theory of gradual emancipation was contemptuously tolerated by the pro-slavery party, as it furnished a sort of safety-valve which kept agitation from reaching too high a pressure. When 595 596 WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON. Garrison joined Lundy, it was agreed that each should advocate his own princi- ples, signing his initials to his articles. "Thus," says Goldwin Smith, "the Genius had two voices, of which one was by far the louder and clearer." In his salutatory, Garrison declared for immediate and unconditional eman- cipation. This declaration could not fail to arrest attention in a city like Balti- more, which was the centre of slave-traffic, and where slave auctions and the shipment of cargoes of slaves were constantly going on. Every week the, Genius had a column of slavery horrors, a large share of which occurred in Baltimore. One Sunday the two reformers were visited by a slave, who had just been flogged with a cowhide ; his fault being that he had not loaded a wagon to suit the overseer. On his bleeding back they counted twenty-seven terrible gashes. Garrison noted that he frequently heard in passing houses the sound of the whip, and cries of anguish. Garrison's engagement on the Genius was still recent when he got into trouble with a Mr. Todd, a merchant of his own town of Newburyport, who had allowed one of his ships to be freighted with slaves from Baltimore. Todd was denounced in a flaming editorial, for which Garrison was promptly sued. He was adjudged guilty of libel, and condemned to pay a fine of fifty dollars and costs, amounting in all to about one hundred dollars. Not being able to pay the fine, he was sent to jail. His imprisonment, however, did not depress or discourage him. He was allowed to receive visitors, and had the free range of the prison. His friends outside, among them John G. Whittier, were more troubled than he himself. To their sympathetic letters he responded by con- trasting his brief and mild captivity with the cruel and life-long captivity of the slaves ; and he asked, if the oppression of one man excited so much sympathy, how much greater ought to be the sympathy excited by the far worse oppression of millions. After forty-nine days' imprisonment, Whittier was successful in securing the aid of Arthur Tappan, a wealthy merchant of New York, who paid Garrison's fine, and he was set free. This episode brought the partnership of Garrison and Lundy to an end. Garrison went back to Massachusetts, and in 1830 began lecturing for the cause. But he soon had a chilling experience in the quarter where he might have expected warm sympathy. The churches of both Newburyport and Boston were closed against him ; if the pastor was willing to open the door, the trustees, more careful of financial interests, were not. At Boston it was left for a society of avowed infidels to give the Christian lecturer the use of a hall for a cause in which they had no interest beyond their loyalty to freedom of opinion, and in support of which he appealed to the gospel which they rejected. Garrison soon resolved to publish a paper of his own in support of imme- diate abolition, — a paper which should have but one voice, and that clear and unmistakable. His partnership with Lundy had convinced him that no gentle THE POWER OF SLAVERY. 597 and gradual measures would accomplish anything. Slavery was at the height of its power. Instead of gradual decay and extinction, which the framers of the constitution had antici- pated, it had begun to dream of endless life and unlimited A SLAVE HUNT. extension. The people idolized the Union, which they believed to be the source of security, wealth, and power, and any threat of secession by the slave- holders was enough to bring to their knees those who regarded the Union as essential. On Saturday, Janu- 59 8 WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON. ary ist, 1831, appeared in Boston the first number of the Liberatoi-. It was a small four-page paper, with four columns to the page, and was to be issued weekly. Garrison had not a dollar of capital. The paper was printed at first with borrowed type. His only helper was his old friend, Isaac Knapp, who had become his partner in the enterprise. The two did all the work of every kind. In the first issue they declared their determination to continue the paper as long as they had bread and water to live on. They did in fact live on bread and milk, with a little fruit and cakes bought in small shops near by. Emancipation, immediate, unconditional, and without compensation, was the doctrine which the Liberator, as soon as it got fairly under way, began to preach. The utter wrongfulness and sinfulness of slavery was the basis of the movement, and in adopting it Garrison had grasped the certain assurance of ultimate victory. The salutatory of the Liberator showed that its editor meant to speak out without restraint. " I will be as harsh as truth and as uncompromising as justice. On this subject I do not wish to think or speak or write with modera- tion. No ! No ! Tell a man whose house is on fire to give a moderate alarm ; tell him to moderately rescue his wife from the- hands of the ravisher ; tell the mother to gradually extricate her babe from the fire into which it has fallen — but urge me not to use moderation in a cause like the present. I am in earnest — I will not equivocate — I will not excuse — I will not retreat a single inch — and I will be heard !" The Liberator, in spite of the smallness of its circulation, soon told. The South was profoundly moved. The slaves, indeed, could not read ; but the pic- torial heading, which represented an auction at which " slaves, horses, and other cattle" were being offered for sale, and a whipping-post, at which a slave was being flogged, spoke only too plainly. In the background was the Capitol at Washington, with a flag inscribed "Liberty" floating over the dome. Vigilance associations took Garrison in hand. First came bloodthirsty editorials ; then threats of lynching ; then attempts to prevent by law the circulation of the Liberator at the South. The grand jury of North Carolina indicted Garrison for the circulation of "a paper of seditious tendency," the penalty for which was whipping and imprisonment for the first offense, and death for the second. The Assembly of Georgia offered a reward of five thousand dollars to any one who, under the laws of that State, should arrest the editor, bring him to trial, and prosecute him to conviction. In 1833 Garrison was sent to England by the Anti-Slavery Society. The act abolishing slavery in the West Indies was then before Parliament, and there was great public interest in the subject. Garrison was heartily received, and among other attentions paid him, was invited to breakfast by Buxton. When he entered, his host, instead of taking his hand at once, scanned him with a look of THE ANTI-SLA VERY SOCIETY. 599 surprise, and inquired with an accent of doubt whether he had the pleasure of addressing Mr. Garrison, of Boston. Being told that he had, he lifted up his hands and exclaimed, " Why, my dear sir, I thought you were a blackmail ! and I have consequently invited this company of ladies and gentlemen to be present to welcome Mr. Garrison, the black advocate of emancipation from the United States of America." Garrison took this as a high compliment, since it implied a belief that no white American would plead as he had done for the slave. On Garrison's return he was received as a traducer of his country, because of his utterances in England. A meeting to organize an Anti-Slavery Society in New York, for whicn he chanced to come in, was mobbed, and the Abolition- ists driven from the hall. A threatening mob beset the Liberator office at Bos- ton. But Garrison, in face of the storm, nailed his colors to the mast. " I speak the truth, painful, humiliating, and ^terrible as it is ; and because I am bold and faithful to do so, am I to be branded as the calumniator and enemy of my country? Sir, it is because my affection for her is intense and paramount to all selfish considerations that I do not parley with her crimes. I know that she can neither be truly happy nor prosperous while she continues to manacle and brutalize every sixth' child born on her soil. Lying lips are speaking ' Peace, peace' to her, but she shall not see peace until the tears of her repentance shall have washed away every stain of blood from her escutcheon." In October, 1833, a call was issued for a convention to form the American Anti-Slavery Society. The meeting-place was in Philadelphia, to which in the beginning of December the Abolitionists made their way, though many had to meet the difficulties of a slender purse. On the steamboat from New York Garrison got into conversation with a fellow-passenger on the subject of slavery. The stranger was most favorably impressed by Garrison's exposition, and said that if all Abolitionists were as fair and reasonable as he there would be less opposition to the enterprise. " But, sir, depend upon it, that hare-brained, reckless fanatic, Garrison, will damage if he does not shipwreck any cause." "Allow me, sir," said a fellow-delegate, the Rev. S. J. May, "to introduce you to Mr. Garrison." THE ERA OF MOB LAW. In 1834, George Thompson, a famous English anti-slavery lecturer, with whom Garrison had formed an alliance in England, was brought over to the United States to assist in the crusade. Thompson was a most eloquent man, ami had done good service to the cause in his own country. The arrival of the "British emissary," and his appearance on the anti-slavery platform in New England, where he did not fail to show his power, inflamed the popular wrath to fur) r . The result was a riot, got up, not by a rabble, but by " men of property and standing," in Boston, who were determined " to put a stop to the impudent, bullying conduct of the foreign vagrant, Thompson, and his associates in mis- 6oo WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON. chief!" Thompson was expected to speak at a meeting of the Ladies' Anti- Slavery Society. Fortunately he was not there ; had he fallen into the hands of the mob, it is certain he would have been tarred and feathered, and not unlikely that he would have been lynched. Missing their intended victim, the mob laid violent hands on Garrison, tore his clothes off his back, and dragged him through the streets with a rope round his body. He was rescued from his enemies by Mayor Lyman, who saw no other way to place him in safety than to send him to prison, to which he was accordingly consigned, the crowd surging fiercely round the dying carriage. In 1845 tne triumph of slavery seemed complete. The annexation of Texas, as fresh slave territory, was accomplished, and a war of conquest against Mexico was soon begun. In 1847, Garrison, accompanied by Frederick Doug- lass, the famous negro orator, traveled in the West. When seated in the cars, Douglass was ordered by a white man, who had a lady with him, to "get out of that seat." He quietly replied that he would give up the seat if asked in a civil manner ; where- upon the white man seized him, dragged him violently out of the seat, and when Douglass pro- tested, threatened to knock his teeth down his throat. At Har- risburg, the mob, having heard that a " nigger " was to lecture, greeted them with brickbats, fire- crackers, and rotten eggs. Doug- lass was not allowed to sit at the tables of the hotels, and for two days hardly tasted food. The clergy were generally hostile. Sometimes places for meetings could hardly be found ; but at other places great crowds attended, and listened with respect and sympathy. The next episode in Garrison's life was pleasant. George Thompson, now an M. P., ventured over again from England. He was charged to present a testimonial to Garrison, in the shape of a gold watch, commemorating the twenty years of the Liberator' s life. In acknowledgment, Garrison said : — "Mr. President, if this were a rotten egg" (holding up the watch) "or a ZACHARY TAYLOR, PRESIDENT IN lS49~'50. SLAVERY AND THE WAR. 60 1 brickbat, I should know how to receive it." (Laughing and cheers.) "If these cheers were the yells of a frantic mob seeking my life, I should know precisely how to behave. But the presentation of this valuable gift is as unexpected by me as would be the falling of the stars from the heavens ; and I feel indescribably small before you in accepting it. A gold watch ! Why, I have been compensated in this cause a million times over ! In the darkest hour, in the greatest peril, I have felt just at that moment that it was everything to be in such a cause." In 1854 the slavery question became the foremost political issue. From thenceforth no agitation was needed to keep it before the country ; and as Garrison no longer stood alone in denouncing slavery, his position became more tolerable. When Lincoln was elected, and the secession movement began, Garrison welcomed the dissolution of the Union, which he had called "a cov- enant with death and an agreement with hell," in the language of Scripture, because the Constitution recognized and protected slavery. "Now, then," said Garrison, " let there be a convention of the Free States called to organize an independent government on free and just principles ; let the South take the public property on which it has laid piratical hands, let it take even the capital if it will, and depart in peace to organize its own confederation of violence and tyranny." But he had scarcely penned the words when all thought of peaceful separation was swept away by the torrent of public wrath evoked by the firing on Fort Sumter. Whatever the professions of the Government might be, the war was practi- cally a war against slavery. While it was a war for the Union only, Garrison stood aloof; nor till it manifestly became a war against slavery was his sympathy declared. Even then he seemed to feel that his position needed explanation ; and he humorously said that when he called the Union "a covenant with death and an agreement with hell," he had not foreseen that death and hell would secede. After emancipation he heartily supported President Lincoln. He was a conspicuous figure on that memorable occasion in Boston when Andrew, the great "war governor" of Massachusetts, put the colors into the hands of Colonel Shaw, the devoted young commander of the first negro regiment, who fell while leading his regiment in the assault on Fort Wagner. After the close of the war, when the thirteenth amendment, abolishing slavery, was passed, he felt that the long contest was at an end. He resolved to cease the publication of the Liberator, and retire to private life. "Most happy am I," he said, "to be no longer in conflict with the mass of my fellow-countrymen on the subject of slavery. For no man of any refinement or sensibility can be indifferent to the approbation of his fellow-men, if it be rightly earned." Most touching and inspiring was the strain of praise and thanksgiving with which he concluded the Liberator : — " Rejoice, and give praise and glory to God, ye who have so long and 35 Go2 WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISO^J. so untiringly participated in all the trials and vicissitudes of that mighty conflict ! Having sown in tears, now reap in joy. Hail, redeemed, regenerated America ! Hail, North and South, East and West ! Hail, the cause of peace, of liberty, of righteousness, thus mightily strengthened and signally glorified ! . . . Hail, ye ransomed millions, no more to be chained, scourged, mutilated, bought and sold in the market, robbed of all rights, hunted as partridges upon the moun- tains, in your flight to obtain deliverance from the house of bondage, branded and scorned as a connecting link between the human race and the brute creation ! Hail, all nations, tribes, kindreds, and peoples, ' made of one blood,' interested in a common redemption, heirs of the same immortal destiny ! Hail, angels in glory and spirits of the just made perfect, and tune your harps anew, singing, ' Great and marvelous are thy works, Lord God Almighty ! just and true are thy ways, thou King of Saints !". . . The evening of Garrison's life was as peaceful as its prime had been stormy. He was a frequent contributor to periodicals, and he took a keen interest in political affairs, especially in all measures affecting the black race. His work had won for him many devoted friends, both in America and England, in whose society his leisure was happily spent. He died in New York on May 24, 1879, and was buried in Boston. THE STORY OF" AMERICAN SLAVERY. THE history of the negro in America is, in brief, the record of slavery agitation, political struggle, civil war, emancipation, and gradual growth into citizenship. When, over two hundred and seventy years ago — it is in doubt whether the correct date is 1619 or 1620 — a few wretched negroes, some say fourteen some say twenty, were bartered for provisions by the crew of a Dutch man-of-war, then lying off the Virginia coast, it would have seemed incredible that in 1890 the negro population of the Southern States alone should almost reach a total of seven million souls. The peculiarity of the form of slavery, begun almost by chance it seemed, in that act of barter in the feeble little colony of Virginia, was that it was based on the claim of race inferiority. African negroes had, indeed, been sold into slavery among many nations for perhaps three thousand years ; but in its earlier periods slavery was rather the outcome of war than the deliberate subject of trade, and white captives no less than black were ruthlessly thrown into servitude. It has been estimated that in historical times some forty million Africans have been enslaved. The discovery and colonization of America gave an immense stimulus to the African slave trade. The Spaniards found the Indian an intract- able slave, and for the arduous labors of colonization soon began to make use of negro slaves, importing them in great numbers and declaring that one negro was worth, as a human beast of burden, four Indians. Soon the English adventurers took up the traffic. It is to Sir John Hawkins, the ardent dis- coverer, that the English-speaking peoples owe their participation in the slave trade. He has put it on record as the result of one of his famous voyages, that he found " that negroes were very good merchandise in Hispaniola and might easily be had on the coast of Guinea." For his early adventures of this kind he was roundly taken to task by Queen Elizabeth. But tradition says that he boldly faced her with argument, and ended by convincing the Virgin Queen that the slave trade was not merely a lucrative but a philanthropic undertaking. 603 604 THE STOR Y OF AMERICAN SLA VER Y Certain it is that she acquiesced in future slave trading, while her successors, Charles II and James II, chartered four slave trading companies and received a share in their profits. It is noteworthy that both Great Britain and the United States recognized the horrors of the slave trade as regards the seizing and transportation from Africa of the unhappy negroes, long before they could bring themselves to deal with the problem of slavery as a domestic institution. Of those horrors nothing can be said in exaggeration. They exist to-day in the interior of Africa, in no less terrible form than a hundred years ago ; and the year 1 89 1 has seen the Great Powers combining in the attempt to eradicate an evil of enormous and growing proportions. The peculiar atrocities attending the expor- tation of slaves from Africa to other countries have, however, happily become a thing of the past. What those atrocities were even in our day may be judged from one of many accounts given by a no means squeamish or over sensitive sailor, Admiral Hobart. He thus describes the appearance of a slaver just captured by a British ship : "There were four hundred and sixty Africans on board, and what a sight it was ! The schooner had been eighty-five days at sea. They were short of water and provisions ; three distinct diseases — namely, small-pox, ophthalmia, and diarrhoea in its worst form — had broken out, while coming across, among the poor, doomed wretches. On opening the hold we saw a mass of arms, legs, and bodies, all crushed together. Many of the bodies to whom these limbs belonged were dead or dying. In fact, when we had made some sort of clearance among them we found in that fearful hold eleven bodies lying among the living freight. Water ! Water ! was the cry. Many of them as soon as free jumped into the sea, partly from the delirious state they were in, partly because they had been told that if taken by the English they would be tortured and eaten." The institution of slavery, introduced as we have seen into Virginia, grew at first very slowly. Twenty-five years after the first slaves were landed the negro population of the colony was only three hundred. But the conditions of agriculture and of climate were such, that once slavery obtained a fair start, it spread with continually increasing rapidity. We find the Colonial Assembly passing one after another a series of laws defining the condition of the negro slave more and more clearly, and more and more pitilessly. Thus, a distinction was soon made between them and Indians held in servitude. It was enacted, " that all servants not being Christians imported into this colony by shipping, shall be slaves for their lives ; but what shall come by land shall serve, if boyes or girles until thirty years of age, if men or women twelve years and no longer." And before the end of the century a long series of laws so encompassed the negro with limitations and prohibitions, that he almost ceased to have any criminal or civil rights and became a mere personal chattel. In some of the Northern colonies slavery seemed to take root as readily BEGINNING OF THE SLAVE TRAFFIC. 605 and to flourish as rapidly as in the South. It was only after a considerable time that social and commercial conditions arose which led to its gradual abandon- ment. In New York a mild type of negro slavery was introduced by the Dutch. The relation of master and slave seems in the period of the Dutch rule, to have been free from great severity or cruelty. After the seizure of the government by the English, however, the institution was officially recognized and even encouraged. The slave trade grew in magnitude ; and here again we find a series of oppres- sive laws forbidding the meet- ing of negroes together, laying down penalties for concealing slaves, and the like. In the early years of the eighteenth century fears of insurrection became prevalent, and these fears culminated in 1741 in the episode of the so-called Negro Plot. Very briefly stated, this plot grew out of a succession of fires supposed to have been the work of negro incendiaries. The most astonishing contradictions and self-inculpations 606 THE STORY OF AMERICAN SLAVERY. are to be found in the involved mass of testimony taken at the different trials. It is certain that the perjury and incoherent accusations of these trials can only be equaled by those of the alleged witches at Salem, or of the famous Popish plot of Titus Oates. The result is summed up in the bare statement that in three months one hundred and fifty negroes were imprisoned, of whom fourteen were burned at the stake, eighteen hanged, and seventy-one were transported. Another result was the passing of even more stringent legislation, curtailing the rights and defining the legal status of the slave. When the Revolution broke out there were not less than fifteen thousand slaves in New York, a number greatly in excess of that held by any other Northern colony. Massachusetts, the home in later days of so many of the most eloquent abolition agitators, was from the very first, until after the war with Great Britain was well under way, a stronghold of slavery. The records of 1633 tell of the fright of Indians who saw a " Blackamoor " in a tree top whom they took for the devil in person, but who turned out to be an escaped slave. A few years later the authorities of the colony officially recognized the institution. It is true that in 1645 the general court of Massachusetts ordered certain kidnapped negroes to be returned to their native country, but this was not because they were slaves but because their holders had stolen them away from other masters. Despite specious arguments to the contrary, it is certain that, to quote Chief Justice Parsons, " Slavery was introduced into Massachusetts soon after its first settlement, and was tolerated until the ratification of the present constitution in 1780." The curious may find in ancient Boston newspapers no lack ot such advertisements as that, in 1728, of the sale of " two very likely negro girls" and of " A likely negro woman of about nineteen years and a child about seven months of age, to be sold together or apart." A Tory writer before the out- break of the Revolution, sneers at the Bostonians for their talk about freedom when they possessed two thousand negro slaves. Even Peter Faneuil, who built the famous " Cradle of Liberty," was himself, at that very time, actively engaged in the slave trade. There is some truth in the once common taunt of the pro-slavery orators that the North imported slaves, the South only bought them. Certainly there was no more active centre of the slave trade than Bris- tol Bay, whence cargoes of rum and iron goods were sent to the African coast and exchanged for human cargoes. These slaves were, however, usually taken, not to Massachusetts, but to the West Indies or to Virginia. One curious out- come of slavery in Massachusetts was that from the gross superstition of a negro slave, Tituba, first sprang the hideous delusions of the Salem witchcraft trials. The negro, it may be here noted, played a not insignificant part in Massachusetts Revolutionary annals. Of negro blood was Crispus Attucks, one of the "martyrs" of the Boston riot; it was a negro whose shot killed the EXECUTING NEGR'JES IN NEW Y"KK. 6o3 THE STORY OF AMERICAN SLA VERY. British General Pitcairn at Bunker Hill ; and it was a negro also who planned the attack on Percy's supply train. As with New York and Massachusetts, so with the other colonies. Either slavery was introduced by greedy speculators from abroad or it spread easily from adjoin : ng colonies. In 1776 the slave population of the thirteen colonies was almost exactly half a million, nine-tenths of whom were to be found in the Southern States. In the War of the Revolution the question of arming the negroes raised bitter opposition. In the end a Comparatively few were enrolled, and it is admitted that they served faithfully and with courage. Rhode Island even formed a regiment of blacks, and at the siege of Newport and afterwards at Point's Bridge, New York, this body of soldiers fought not only without reproach but with positive heroism. With the debates preceding the adoption of the present Constitution of the United States the political problem of slavery as a national question began. Under the colonial system the responsibility for the traffic might be charged, with some justice, to the mother country. But from the day when the Declaration of Independence asserted " That all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights ; that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," the peoples of the new, self-governing States could not but have seen that with them lay the responsibility. There is ample evidence that the fixing of the popular mind on liberty as an ideal bore results immediately in arousing anti-slavery sentiment. Such sentiment existed in the South as well as in the North. Even North Carolina in 1 786 declared the slave trade of "evil consequences and highly impolitic." All the Northern States .ibolished slavery, beginning with Vermont, in 1777 and ending with New Jersey in 1 804. It should be added, however, that many of the Northern slaves were not freed, but sold to the South. As we have already intimated, also, the agricultural and commercial conditions in the North were such as to make slave labor less and less profitable, while in the South the social order of things, agricultural conditions, and the climate, were gradually making it seemingly indispensable. When the Constitutional debates began the trend of opinion seemed strongly against slavery. Many delegates thought that the evil would die out of itself. One thought the abolition of slavery already rapidly going on and soon to be completed. Another asserted that "slavery in time will not be a speck in our country." Mr. Jefferson, on the other hand, in view of the retention of slavery, declared roundly that he trembled for his country when he remem- bered that God was just. And John Adams urged again and again that "every measure of prudence ought to be assumed for the eventual total extirpation of slavery from the United States." The obstinate States in the convention were South Carolina and Georgia. Their delegates declared that their States SLAVERY ESTABLISHED IN THE SOUTH. 609 would absolutely refuse ratification to the Constitution unless slavery were recognized. The compromise sections finally agreed upon avoided the use of the words slave and slavery but clearly recognized the institution and even gave the slave States the advantage of sending representatives to Congress on a basis of population determined by adding to the whole number of free persons, "three-fifths of all other persons." The other persons thus referred to were, it is needless to add, negro slaves. The entire dealing with the question of slavery, at the framing of the Con- stitution, was a series of compromises. This is seen again in the postponement of forbidding the slave trade from abroad. Some of the Southern States had absolutely declined to listen to any proposition which would restrict their freedom of action in this matter, and they were yielded to so far that Congress was forbidden to make the traffic unlawful before the year 1808. As that time ap- proached, President Jefferson urged Congress to withdraw the country from all " further participation in those violations of human rights which have so long been continued on the unoffending inhabitants of Africa." Such an act was at once adopted, and by it heavy fines were imposed on all persons fitting out vessels for the slave trade and also upon all actually engaged in the trade, while vessels so employed became absolutely forfeited. Twelve years later another act was passed declaring the importation of slaves to be actual piracy. This latter law, however, was of little practical value, as it was not until 1861 that a conviction was obtained under it. Then, at last, when the whole slave question was about to be settled forever, a ship-master was convicted and hanged for piracy in New York for the crime of being engaged in the slave trade. In despite of all laws, however, the trade in slaves was continued secretly, and the profits were so enormous that the risks did not prevent continual attempts to smuggle slaves into the territory of the United States. The first quarter of a century of our history, after the adoption of the Con- stitution, was marked by comparative quietude in regard to the future of slavery. In the North, as we have seen, the institution died a natural death, but there was no disposition evinced in the Northern States to interfere with it in the South. The first great battle took place in 1820 over the so-called Missouri Compromise. Now, for the first time, the country was divided, sectionally and in a strictly political way, upon issues which involved the future policy of the United States as to the extension or restriction of slave territory. State after State had been admitted into the Union, but there had been an alternation of slave and free States, so that the political balance was not disturbed. Thus, Virginia was balanced by Kentucky, Tennessee by Ohio, Louisiana by Indiana, and Mississippi by Illinois. The last State admitted had been Alabama, of course as a slaveholding State. Now it was proposed to admit Missouri, and, to still maintain the equality of political power, it was contended that slavery should be 6io THE STORY OF AMERICAN SLA VER Y prohibited within her borders. But the slave power had by this time acquired great strength, and was deeply impressed with the necessity of establishing itself in the vast territory west of the Mississippi. The Southern States would not tolerate for a moment the proposed prohibition of slavery in the new State of Missouri. On the other hand, the Middle and Eastern States were beginning to be aroused to the danger threatening public peace if slavery were to be allowed indefinite extension. They had believed that the Ordinance of 1787, adopted simultaneously with the Constitution, and which forbade slavery to be established in the territory northwest of the Ohio, had settled this question definitely. A fierce debate was waged through two sessions of Congress, and in the end it was agreed to withdraw the prohibition of slavery in Missouri, but absolutely prohibit it forever in all the territory lying north of 36 30' latitude. This was a compromise, satisfactory only because it seemed to dispose of the question of slavery in the territories once and forever. It was carried mainly by the great personal influence of Henry Clay. It did, indeed, dispose of slavery as a matter of national legislative discussion for thirty years. But this interval was distinctively the period of agitation. Anti-slavery sentiment of a mild type had long existed. The Quakers had, since Revolu- tionary times held anti-slavery doctrines, had released their own servants from bondage, and had disfellowshiped members who refused to concur in the sacri- fice. The very last public act of Benjamin Franklin was the framing of a memo- rial to Congress deprecating the existence of slavery in a free country. In New York the Manumission Society had been founded in 1785, with John Jay and Alexander Hamilton, in turn, as its presidents. But all the writing and speak- ing was directed against slavery as an institution and in a general way, and with no tone of aggression. Gradual emancipation or colonization were the only remedies suggested. It was with the founding of the "Liberator" by William Lloyd Garrison, in 1831, that the era of aggressive abolitionism began. Garri- son and his society maintained that slavery was a sin against God and man ; that immediate emancipation was a duty ; that slave owners had no claim to compen- sation ; that all laws upholding slavery were, before God, null and void. Garri- son exclaimed : "I am in earnest. I will not equivocate — I will not excuse — I will not retreat a single inch. And I will be heard." His paper bore conspicu- ously the motto " No union with slaveholders." The Abolitionists were, in numbers, a feeble band ; as a party they never acquired strength, nor were their tenets adopted strictly by any political party ; but they served the purpose of arousing the conscience of the nation. They were abused, vilified, mobbed, all but killed. Garrison was dragged through the streets of Boston with a rope around his neck — through those very streets which, in 1854, had their shops closed and hung in black, with flags Union down and a huge coffin suspended in mid-air, on the day when the fugitive slave, Anthony Burns, was marched through AGITATION AND AGITATORS. 611 them on his way back to his master, under a guard of nearly two thousand men. Mr. Garrison's society soon took the ground that the union of States with slavery retained was "an agreement with hell and a covenant with death," and openly advocated secession of the non-slaveholding States. On this issue the Abolitionists split into two branches, and those who threw off Garrison's lead maintained that there was power enough under the Constitution to do away with slavery. To the fierce invective and constant agitation of Garrison were, in time, added the splendid oratory of Wendell Phillips, the economic arguments of Horace Greeley, the wise statesmanship of Charles Sumner, the fervid writ- A COTTON FIELD IN GEORGIA. ings of Channing and Emerson, and the noble poetry of Whittier. All these and others, in varied ways and from different points of view, joined in educating the public opinion of the North to see that the permanent existence of slavery was incompatible with that of a free Republic. In the South, meanwhile, the institution was intrenching itself more and more firmly. The invention of the cotton-gin and the beginning of the reign of Cotton as King made the great plantation system a seeming commercial neces- sity. From the deprecatory and half apologetic utterances of early Southern statesmen we come to Mr. Calhoun's declaration that slavery "now preserves 6 1 2 THE STOR Y OF AMERICAN SLA VER Y. in quiet and security more than six and a half million human beings, and that it could not be destroyed without destroying the peace and prosperity of nearly half the States in the Union." The Abolitionists were regarded in the South with the bitterest hatred. Attempts were even made to compel the Northern States to silence the anti-slavery orators, to prohibit the circulation through the mail of anti-slavery speeches, and to refuse a hearing in Congress to anti-slavery petitions. The influence of the South was still dominant in the North. Though the feeling against slavery spread, there co-existed with it the belief that an open quarrel with the South meant commercial ruin ; and the anti-slavery senti- ment was also neutralized by the nobler feeling that the Union must be pre- served at all hazards, and that there was no constitutional mode of interfering with the slave system. The annexation of Texas was a distinct gain to the slave power, and the Mexican war was undertaken, said John Quincy Adams, in order that " the slaveholding power in the Government shall be secured and riveted." The actual condition of the negro over whom such a strife was being waged differed materially in different parts of the South, and under masters of different character, in the same locality. It had its side of cruelty, oppression, and atrocity ; it had also its side of kindness on the part of master and of devotion on the part of slave. Its dark side has been made familiar to readers by such books as " Uncle Tom's Cabin," as Dickens' " American Notes," and as Edmund Kirk's 'Among the Pines ;" its brighter side has been charmingly depicted in the stories of Thomas Nelson Page, of Joel Chandler Harris, and of Harry Edwards. On the great cotton plantations of Mississippi and Alabama the slave was often overtaxed and harshly treated ; in the domestic life of Virginia, on the other hand, he was as a rule most kindly used, and often a relation of deep affection sprang up between him and his master. Of insurrections, such as those not uncommon in the West Indies, only one of any extent was ever planned in our slave territory — that of Nat Turner, in Southampton County, Virginia — and that was instantly suppressed. With this state of public feeling North and South, it was with increased bitterness and increased sectionalism that the subject of slavery in new States was again debated in the Congress of 1850. The Liberty Party, which held that slavery might be abolished under the Constitution, had been merged in the Free Soil Party, whose cardinal principle was, "To secure free soil to a free people " without interfering with slavery in existing States, but insisting on its exclusion from territory so far free. The proposed admission of California was not affected by the Missouri Compromise. Its status as a future free or slave State was the turning point of the famous debates in the Senate of 1850, in which Webster, Calhoun, Douglas and Seward won fame — debates which have never been equaled in our history in eloquence and acerbity. It was in the THE FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW. 613 course of these debates that Mr. Seward, while denying that the Constitution recognized property in man, struck out his famous dictum, " There is a higher law than the Constitution." The end reached was a compromise which allowed California to settle for itself the question of slavery, forbade the slave trade in the District of Columbia, but enacted a strict fugitive slave law. To the Abolitionists this fugitive slave law, sustained in its most extreme measures by the courts in the famous — or as they called it, infamous — Dred Scott case, was as fuel to fire. They defied it in every possible way. The Underground Rail- way was the outcome of this defiance. By it a chain of secret stations was A NEGRO VILLAGE IN ALABAMA. established, from one to the other of which the slave was guided at night until at last he reached the Canada border. The most used of these routes in the East was from Baltimore to New York, thence north through New England ; that most employed in the West was from Cincinnati to Detroit. It has been estimated that not fewer than thirty thousand slaves were thus assisted to freedom. Soon the struggle was changed to another part of the Western territory, now beginning to grow so rapidly as to demand the forming of new States. The Kansas-Nebraska Bill introduced by Douglas was in effect the repeal of the 6 1 4 THE STOR V OF AMERICAN SLA VER Y. Missouri Compromise in that it left the question as to whether slavery should be carried into the new territories to the decision of the settlers themselves. As a consequence immigration was directed by both the anti-slavery and the pro- slavery parties to Kansas, each determined on obtaining a majority to control the form of the proposed State Constitution. Then began a series of acts of violence which almost amounted to civil war. " Bleeding Kansas " became a phrase in almost every one's mouth. Border ruffians swaggered at the polls and attempted to drive out the assisted emigrants sent to Kansas by the Abolition societies. The result of the election of the Legislature on its face made Kansas a slave State, but a great part of the people refused to accept this result ; and a convention was held at Topeka which resolved that Kansas should be free even if the laws formed by the Legislature should have to be " resisted to a bloody issue." Prominent among the armed supporters of free State ideas in Kansas was Captain John Brown, a man whose watchword was at all times Action. " Talk," he said, "is a national institution ; but it does no good for the slave." He believed that slavery could only be coped with by armed force. His theory was that the way to make free men of slaves was for the slaves themselves to resist any attempt to coerce them by their masters. He was undoubtedly a fanatic in that he did not stop to measure probabilities or to take account of the written law. His attempt at Harper's Ferry was without reasonable hope, and as the intended beginning of a great military movement was a ridiculous fiasco. But there was that about the man that none could call ridiculous. Rash and unreasoning as his action seemed, he was yet, even by his enemies, recognized as a man of unswerving conscience, of high ideals, of deep belief in the brother- hood of mankind. His offense against law and peace was cheerfully paid for by his death and that of others near and dear to him. Almost no one at that day could be found to applaud his plot, but the incident had an effect on the minds of the people altogether out of proportion to its intrinsic character. More and more as time went on he became recognized as a pro-martyr of a cause which could be achieved only by the most complete self-sacrifice of individuals. Events of vast importance to the future of the negro in America now hurried fast upon each other's footsteps — the final settlement of the Kansas dispute by its becoming a free State ; the forming and rapid growth of the Republican party ; the division of the Democratic party into Northern and Southern factions ; the election of. Abraham Lincoln ; the secession of South Carolina, and, finally, the greatest civil war the world has known. Though that war would never have been waged were it not for the negro, and though his fate was inevitably involved in its result, it must be remembered that it was not undertaken on his account. Before the struggle beran Mr. Lincoln said : " If WAR AND HOW IT EMANCIPATED THE SLAVE. 615 there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time save slavery, I do not agree with them. If there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time destroy slavery, I do not agree with them. My paramount object is to save the Union, and not either to destroy or to save slavery." And the Northern press emphasized over and over again the fact that this was "a white man's war." But the logic of events is inexorable. It seems amazing now that Union generals should have been puzzled as to the question whether they ought in duty to return runaway slaves to their masters. General Butler settled the controversy by one happy phrase when he called the fugitives " contraband of war." Soon it was deemed right to use these contrabands, to employ the new-coined word, as the South was using the negroes still in bondage, to aid in the non-fighting work of the army — on fortification, team driving, cooking, and so on. From this it was but a step, though a step not taken without much perturbation, to employ them as soldiers. At Vicksburg, at Fort Pillow, and in many another battle, the negro showed beyond dispute that he could fight for his liberty. No fiercer or braver charge was made in the war than that upon the parapet of Fort Wagner by Colonel Shaw's gallant colored regiment, the Massachusetts Fifty-fourth. In a thousand ways the negro figures in the history of the war. In its 616 THE STORY OF AMERICAN SLA JERY. literature he everywhere stands out picturesquely. He sought the flag with the greatest avidity for freedom ; flocking in crowds, old men and young, women and children, sometimes with quaint odds and ends of personal belongings, often empty-handed, always enthusiastic and hopeful, almost always densely ignorant of the meaning of freedom and of self-support. But while the negro showed this avidity for liberty, his conduct toward his old masters was often generous, and almost never did he seize the opportunity to inflict vengeance for his past wrongs. The eloquent Southern orator and writer, Henry W. Grady, said : " History has no parallel to the faith kept by the negro in the South during the war. Often five hundred negroes to a single white man, and yet through these dusky throngs the women and children walked in safety and the unprotected homes rested in peace. . . A thousand torches would have disbanded every Southern army, but not one was lighted." It was with conditions, and only after great hesitation, that the final step of emancipating the slaves was taken by President Lincoln in September, 1862. The proclamation was distinctly a war measure, but its reception by the North and by the foreign powers and its immediate effect upon the contest were such that its expediency was at once recognized. Thereafter there was possible no question as to the personal freedom of the negro in the United States of America. With the Confederacy, slavery went down once and forever. In the so-called reconstruction period which followed, the negro suffered almost as much from the over-zeal of his political friends as from the prejudice of his old masters. A negro writer, who is a historian of his race, has declared that the Government gave the negro the statute book when he should have had the spelling book ; that it placed him in the legislature when he ought to have been in the school house, and that, so to speak, "the heels were put where the brains ought to have been." A quarter of a century and more has passed since that turbulent period began, and if the negro has become less prominent as a political factor, all the more for that reason has he been advancing steadily though slowly in the requisites of citizenship. He has learned that he must, by force of circumstances, turn his attention, for the time at least, rather to educational, in- dustrial, and material progress than to political ambition. .And the record of his advance on these lines is promising and hopeful. In Mississippi alone, for instance, the negroes own one-fifth of the entire property in the State. In all, the negroes of the South to-day possess two hundred and fifty million dollars' worth of property. Everywhere throughout the South white men and negroes may be found working together. At the beginning of the war the negro population of the country was about four millions, to-day it is between seven and seven and a-half millions ; in 1880, fifteen-sixteenths of the whole colored population belonged to the Southern States, and the census of 1890 shows that the proportion has not greatly changed. THE FREE NEGRO. 617 This ratio in itself shows how absurdly trifling in results have been all the move- ments toward colonization or emigration to Northern States. The negro emphatically belongs to the Southern States, and in them and by them his future must be determined. Another point decided conclusively by the census of 1890 is seen in the refutation of an idea based, indeed, on the census of 1880, but due in its origin to the very faulty census of 1870. This idea was that the colored population had increased much more rapidly in proportion than the white population. The new census shows, on the contrary, that the whites in the Southern States increased during the last decade nearly twice as rapidly as the negroes, or, as the census bulletin puts it, in increase of population, "the colored race has not held its own against the white man in a region where the climate and conditions are, of all those which the country affords, the best suited to its development." The promise of the negro race to-day is not so much in the development of men of exceptional talent, such as Frederick Douglas or Senator Bruce, as in the general spread of intelligence and knowledge. The Southern States have very generally given the negro equal educational opportunities with the whites, while the eagerness of the race to learn is shown in the recently ascertained fact that while the colored population has increased only twenty-seven per cent, the enrollment in the colored schools has increased one hundred and thirty-seven per cent. Fifty industrial schools are crowded by the colored youth of the South. Institutions of higher education, like the Atlanta University, and Hampton Institute of Virginia, and Tuskegee College, are doing admirable work in turning out hundreds of negroes fitted to educate their own race. Within a year or two honors and scholarships have been taken by half a dozen colored young men at Harvard, at Cornell, at Phillips Academy and at other Northern schools and colleges of the highest rank. The fact that a young negro, Mr. Morgan, was in 1890 elected by his classmates at Harvard as the class orator has a special significance. Yet there is greater significance, as a negro news- paper man writes, in the fact that the equatorial telescope now used by the Lawrence University of Wisconsin was made entirely by colored pupils in the School of Mechanical Arts of Nashville, Tenn. In other words, the Afro- American is finding his place as an intelligent worker, a property owner, and an independent citizen, rather than as an agitator, a politician or a race advocate. In religion, superstition and effusive sentiment are giving way to stricter morality. In educational matters, ambition for the high-sounding and the abstract is giving place to practical and industrial acquirements. It will be many years before the character of the negro, for centuries dwarfed and distorted by oppression and ignorance, reaches its normal growth, but that the race is now at last upon the right path and is being guided by the true principles cannot be doubted. ',6 6i8 THE STORY OF AMERICAN SLAVERY. Says one who has made an exceedingly thorough personal study of the subject in all the Southern States : " The evolution in the condition has kept pace with that of any other races, and I think has been even a little better. The same forces of evolution that have brought him to where he is now will bring him further. One thing is indisputable : the negro knows his destiny is in his own hands. He finds that his salvation is not through politics, but through indus- trial methods. STATUE OF WASHINGTON IN THE GROUNDS OF THE STATE HOUSE, RICHMOND. FRANCES E. WILLARD, THE ORGANIZER AND HEAD OE THE " W. C. T. U." ITH the latter years of this century a new power has made itself felt in the world, — the power of organized womanhood. Fifty years ago such a body as the " Woman's Christian Temperance Union was not only unknown, but impossible ; and fifty years ago the woman who has done more than any other to bring it into being was a bright, healthy child of five years, living at Oberlin, Ohio, whither her father and mother had moved from Monroe County, New York, where she was born in September, 1839. In 9/ 1N46 then- was another move westward, this time to Forest Home, near Janesville, Wisconsin. Here Miss Willard spent twelve years, in which she grew from a child to a woman. She had wise parents, who gave free rein to the romping, freedom-loving girl, and let her grow up "near to nature's heart." She could ride a horse or fight a prairie fire "just as well as a man." After twelve years of life on Wisconsin prairies, the Willard family moved to Evanston, on the shore of Lake Michigan, just north of Chicago. Here Miss Willard began her work as a teacher, which she pursued in different institutions until 1870, when she was chosen president of Evanston College for Ladies. This place she filled until 1874, when she finally gave up teaching to enter upon a new and still larger work. In 1873 occurred in Ohio the memorable "Women's Crusade" against the rum shops. Bands of devoted women besieged the saloons for days and weeks together, entreating the saloon-keepers to cease selling liquor, praying and sing- ing hymns incessantly in bar-rooms or on the sidewalks, until the men who kept them agreed to close them up, and in many cases emptied barrels of liquor into the gutters. This movement at once arrested Miss Willard's attention. She saw in it the germ of a mighty power for good. She resigned her position as president of the college at Evanston, and threw all her energies into the anti- liquor movement. With her customary thoroughness she entered upon a sys- 621 622 FRANCES E. WILLARD. tematic study of the subject of intemperance and the sale of liquor, and of the different measures which had been undertaken to abate this mighty evil. She sought the counsel of Neal Dow and other leaders in the temperance cause. She joined in the crusade against liquor-selling in Pittsburgh, kneeling in prayer on the sawdust -covered floors of the saloons, and leading the host in singing "Jesus, Lover of My Soul," and "Rock of Ages," in strains which awed and melted the hearts of the multitude thronging the streets. The result of her work was a determination to combine in one mighty organization the many sep- arate bands of women temperance workers which had sprung up over the coun- try ; and this was achieved in the autumn of 1874, in the organization at Cleve- land of that wonderful body, the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union. The resolution which was adopted at that meeting, written by Miss Willard herself, beautifully expresses the spirit in which they entered upon the work. It read as follows : — "Resolved, That, recognizing that our cause is and will be contested by mighty, determined, and relentless forces, we will, trusting in Him who is the Prince of Peace, meet argument with argu- ment, misjudgment with patience, denunciation with kindness, and all our difficulties and dangers with prayer." From that time Miss Willard's life is the history of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Like the "handful of corn in the tops of the mountains," all over this and in other lands it has taken root and grown until the fruit does indeed " shake like Lebanon." In almost every corner of the United States is a subordinate organization of some sort, a local union, a children's band, a young woman's circle, or perhaps all of these. It has built the great "Tem- perance Temple," one of the largest of the immense business buildings in Chicago. It has organized a large publishing business, from whose busy presses temperance literature is constantly being circulated in all parts of the country. It has by its political power made and unmade governors, senators, and representatives ; and it has done much to bring the time when women shall take an equal share in the government of church and state. In all this work the head and guiding spirit has been Frances E.' Willard. Overwork has of late somewhat impaired her health, and made travel and rest abroad necessary. But in whatever corner of the world she may dwell, there is always a warm corner kept for her in the many thousand hearts and homes that have been cheered and brightened by her work " for God and home and native land." Miss Willard's friend and co-worker, Hannah Whitall Smith (see page 623), says of her : " Miss Willard has been to me the embodiment of all that is lovely and good and womanly and strong and noble and tender in human nature. She has done more to enlarge our sympathies, widen our outlook, and develop our gifts, than any man or any other woman of our time." FAMOUS AMERICAN WOMEN. BY FRANCES E. WILLARD. President of the World's If. C. t. U. This book of American biography would be incomplete without some account of what women have done and suffered in helping to make the great republic what it is. I am therefore glad once more to take up my pen to treat of this my favorite theme. There were two distinct early types of women, the Northern and the Southern. Both were patrician in their purity of ethical quality, but the latter more technically so in its environment. Individuality developed earlier in the North, because personal initiative was necessary, owing to financial needs. The Southern woman had a downier nest, and found it so soft and warm that she rested more than she worked. Her features were less distinctive than those of her Northern sister, but more soft ; her tones were deeper and more mellow, but had less of the clarion timbre of conscious power. The line of grace was more pro- nounced in the figure and movement of the Southerner — the line of power was HANNAH WHITALL SMITH. apparent in the expression and bearing of the woman of the North. Each was a noble type, the one more lovely, the other more achieving. As a matter of history, public schools, which were established in New England within 25 years after the landing of the Pilgrims, had no room for girls, and Harvard College, founded twenty years after the Massachusetts landing, 623 624 WOMAN IN AMERICA. was for young men, not for their sisters. Half a century passed before public schools were granted to the people. It was prophetic that Hartford, Connecticut, should witness the first of these — that beautiful city in which Emma Willard reached her early fame. The date in Hartford was 1 77 1 , only five years before the Revolution. In the South, the better class of girls never dreamed of going to the public school ; like the aristocracy of Great Britain, they were taught by the governess, a shadowy figure who had small Latin and less Greek — indeed, small everything, except a smattering of English, much manner, and unbounded deference. This describes the situation in early days ; but when Emma Willard sent out from her training school in Troy young and forceful women, combining Northern strength with Southern grace, they wrought marvels in the thought and development of the Southern woman in those semi-baronial homes which slave labor rendered possible, even on a new continent. The Dame-School was the source from which Northern girls imbibed the little that they knew up to the present century. Our highest authority on this subject is Miss Mary F. Eastman, who says that these schools were of an in- ferior order, in which women, often those who themselves could hardly more than read, would gather a few girls about them, teach them to "make their man- ners," according to the ancient phrase, drill the alphabet into their brains, and enough beyond that to enable them to spell out the Catechism, which every well- regulated girl was obliged to learn by heart. Charles Francis Adams says that during the first 150 years of our colonial history "the cultivation of the female mind was regarded with utter indifference," and Abigail Adams in one of her famous letters declares that " it was fashionable to ridicule female learning." These were the days when women given to scolding were condemned to sit in public with their tongues held in cleft sticks, or were thrice dipped from a duck- in^ stool. Miss Eastman says, referring to this barbarism, " It would be better that their tongues had been tamed by instruction to becoming speech, or that they had been permitted to drink at the fountain of learning." It is significant that in Northampton, Massachusetts, as late as the year 1788, and in an intelli- gent community, where Smith's College is now located, the village fathers voted "not to be at the expense for schooling girls." In 1792 the Selectmen of Newburyport decided that " during the summer months, when the boys have diminished, the Master shall receive girls for instruction in grammar and read- ing, after the dismission of the boys in the afternoon, for an hour and a half." The visitor to this beautiful and historic seaport is shown with pride the site on which stood the school-house to which it is believed women were first admitted on this continent to an education at public expense. That was just one hundred years ago. The same progressive town voted in 1 803 to establish four girls' schools, the first on record, which were to be kept six months in the year, from six to eight o'clock in the morning and on Thursday afternoon, — for the CHURCH AND SCHOOLS. 625 boys had the pick of the time as well as the training. We next find it re- corded that in 1 789, when the Revolutionary War had been over for six years, the city of Boston, rising to the occasion, established three reading and writing schools, which were open all the year round to boys, and to girls from April to October. There were no free schools in that city for "that boy's sister" until this date. In Rhode Island girls were not admitted to the public schools till 1828. But little by little the different gates were opened, until in about the first quarter of our century girls were permitted to attend the whole year through, the same as boys ; but it must be remembered that this was in New England, which has always led in everything pertaining to intellectual develop- ment. The more remote States followed at a greater distance. Now came the battle for the higher education — which was much more difficult. The whole woman question was here passed in review, and the conservative cast of mind, as was inevitable from its native limitation, declared that the family relation would be subverted and the new continent depopulated if women were per- mitted to follow their own sweet will in the development of the intellects with which, by some strange inconsistency of fate, they were endowed. Much as it is the fashion to decry the Church as the great conservative force, let it be gratefully remembered by women everywhere, that the first schools of higher education were denominational institutions, and resulted from the enlightened love of generous fathers, who, having girls of promise in their families, felt that they had no right to leave their mental cultivation unprovided for. Happily, competition among the different Churches developed along the line of multiply- ing these seminaries of higher education for girls, for no Church wished its daughters to attend a school founded by some other ! Perhaps this education of the future mothers of our nation is the best result to which we can refer in the everlasting battle among the broken fragments of the body of Christ. High •schools for girls did not exist until about the middle of the present century. As in the lower grades, the girls came only at early hours, because it was a settled principle that they must not be in the same school with boys, and they must in nowise inconvenience these latent lords of creation. From the first, however, the girls have proved to be so eager for instruction that* their fathers, pleased, perhaps, to see repetitions of themselves in the vigorous intellects of these little ones, have responded to their importunities by establishing separate high schools for their daughters. The first to do this was Newburyport again, in 1842, and Salem, Mass. (where once they hanged the witches), in 1845, Dut progressive Boston did not found a high school for girls until 1852 — almost two hundred years after she had established a Latin school for boys, and more than two hundred after the founding of Harvard College for young men. The practical outcome of high-school education in these latter years has been the State university, and women owe more to this last-named institution 626 WOMAN IN AMERICA. than to any other single force, for their education, up to this time. By the inevitable processes of thought, the men who had admitted girls to every department of public school instruction could not close to them the doors of that highest school — the university. By parity of reasoning, when the uni- versity added professional schools, it would have been most illogical to deny to the young women, entrance to these ; hence the higher classes of occupation, all of which are taught in various State institutions, and later on professional schools for doctors, lawyers, civil engineers, etc., have been freely opened to young women at State expense. Collegiate training for women was more difficult to gain. The pioneer was Oberlin, founded in Ohio, in 1833 ; woman was welcomed here from the beginning. Mount Holyoke Seminary, in Massa- chusetts, was established in 1836, by the immortal Mary Lyon — that daughter of the people — who, by her unique method of domestic services performed wholly by the students, enabled the farmer's daughter to win as good an intellectual training as Madam Emma Willard provided in Troy for the daughters of the rich. In 1852 Antioch College was founded in Ohio, and women were admitted to all of its advantages. In 1862 Cornell University was established on the same basis, until now there is not a college west of the Alleghanies the advantages of which are not equally offered to the sons and daughters of our people, while the Leland Stanford University, recently opened on the Pacific Coast, near San Francisco, and having an endowment of $20,000,000, is in all its departments free to women. The same is true of the great new Chicago University, founded by John D. Rockafeller ; the great Northwestern University, of the Methodist Church, at Evanston, in the suburbs of the city ; while the Annex of Harvard ; Barnard College, in connection with Columbia College, of New York city ; the newly acquired rights of women at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, and Middlebury College — that ancient and honorable institution in Vermont, — with the American University of the Methodists, founded by Bishop Hurst, in Washington, D. C, and Evelyn College, which is the Annex of Princeton, in New York — mark the latest open- ings for women in the fields of higher education — collegiate and professional. Vanderbilt, in the South, cannot long resist the oncoming tide, that each day cries more insistently, "Place aux dames!" and "The tools to those that can use them." In 1865 Matthew Vassar founded, in Poughkeepsie, New York, a college for women. This was a real college, and, with Smith, Wellesley, and Bryn Mawr, shows the high-water mark of woman's separate education in this country. Nobody questions that before another generation the colleges that have the annex will be themselves annexed, and co-education will universally prevail. There is another phase of the higher education of women which has exerted a vast influence on the public sentiment of the Republic. Nothing SELF-SUPPORT. 627 shows the advance made in a single century from a more salient point of view, than the fact that from having been grudgingly admitted to the lowest grade of the public school, and obliged to attend at the unseemly hour of six o'clock in the morning, woman, when she had the opportunity, proved herself so worthy of it that to-day eighty-two per cent, of all the teachers in the public schools in the United States arc women. The normal schools of the forty-four States, with their admirable methods of the latest and most helpful kinds for the acquire- ment of thorough training as teachers, swarm with the girl of the period. Recently, when I addressed the Normal School near Chicago, under the care of that famous educator, Colonel Francis W. Parker, seventy-five fair damsels, in graceful reform dress, walked up the aisle to the platform, accompanied by a single specimen of the genus homo attired in black, and I laughingly said to myself, "Is he in mourning by reason of lonesomeness and lost opportunity, or does he serve as an exclamation point to mark the new order of things ? " Southern women have wakened to a new life since the war. Higher edu- cation and self-support are now accepted as a matter of course by all save the most prejudiced minds, while the whole cause of woman, in the large sense herein defined, is supported by the ablest brains among Southern men and women. The White Ribbon movement has been the largest influence thus far introduced into that sunny land, to reveal to the home-folk their privileges and powers in this Christian civilization. Women have been appointed as directors, jointly with men, in the Colum- bian Exposition of 1893, and those mighty "auxiliary" departments, which mean the convening of philanthropic, educational, religious, and other special- ties from every quarter of Christendom for great conventions throughout the World's Fair, means more than we thought possible at first, and especially to the bright women of the South. As a natural outcome of the mental development of women throughout the Republic, they have now the range of almost all forms of industry, and are practically debarred from none they care to follow. The recent census enu- merates over four thousand different branches of employment in which women are now engaged, and the consensus of opinion is, that as a class they do admirably well. It is no longer considered a token of refinement to live upon the toil of others, but women who support themselves have the hearty respect and good will of all sensible women and of all members of the other sex whose good will and respect are worth desiring. As brain-power is the basis of suc- cess in every undertaking, whether it be baking potatoes or writing sonnets, the immense amplitude given to the activities of woman-kind is the greatest fact of the century. To translate this mass of brain from the dormant to the active stage means, not only to the individuals now living, but through the mighty forces of heredity to coming generations, more than the greatest mind can 628 WOMAN IX AMERICA. possibly perceive. The expansion thus given to the total of brain momentum throughout the nation may be trusted to conduct us to such discoveries, inven- tions, philosophies, applications of religion, as the most adventurous have not yet dreamed, and will, we believe, be for the universal uplifting of the race in power, in purity, and peace. It is to be remembered that all these mighty opportunities have come to women largely by the permission of men. They might have formed industrial and other guilds and rigidly excluded women from membership. If men, as a class, had been imbued with the spirit manifested by that brilliant writer, Mr. Grant Allen (who deliberately declares that there is nothing that woman has ever done as well as man can do it, except to extend the census list), where would women have been in respect to the development of brain and hand ? Mr. Grant Allen remands them to that one occupation in which they have distinguished themselves, and says they were "told off" like so many soldiers from an army selected to conduct some difficult enterprise, and that, having been thus separated to a special work, they have not in the nature of the case a right to scatter elsewhere. But as he is the only man who has ever said this in public and in so many words, and as our brothers of the journalistic pen have impaled him without mercy on the point of that swift weapon, we may conclude that the common sense of universal manhood has reached the conclusion : Let any woman do whatever thing she can do well. Upon this basis all business colleges and schools for typewriting and shorthand are now open to women ; manual training and industrial schools admit them freely ; colleges and universities, professional schools and art classes, accord them every advantage ; the whole field of journalism is open to them, and but two citadels yet remain to be captured, — those of ecclesiastical and civil power. Sapping and mining are going on vigorously around these citadels, and many of their outposts have been already taken. Twenty-three States have already granted school suffrage ; Kansas has municipal, and Wyoming com- plete suffrage for women. In the younger denominations women stand equal with men in the pulpit as well as out of it, and the question of inducting them into every position in the great denominations is being actively discussed and often favorably commented upon by the great constituency of ministers, editors, and publicists. The place of woman in literature is striking. Here she has won the largest standing room. No publisher asks the question, " Did a woman furnish that manuscript? " but he pays according to its merit. The same is true in journalism. Clubs for women are springing up everywhere, philanthropic guilds are numerous, there are religious societies practically without number, and reform movements are more vigorously directed by women than by the most notable or most distinguished experts among men. IN THE PROFESSIONS. 629 Perhaps no feature of this splendid evolution is more remarkable than the last, namely, the intellectual development of woman as a home-maker. The bright, well-disciplined intellects among society women have now found their exact niche. They are somewhat too conservative to take up the temperance reform or the suffrage movement, although we believe that almost without exception these great enterprises have their hearty sympathy, but in the department of woman as a housekeeper and home-maker they find a congenial field. They would help lift this profession from the plane of drudgery. They would so train the household workers, once called servants, that theirs shall be a veritable voca- tion. All that science and art can do to elevate the culinary department of the home, to improve its sanitary conditions, and to embellish its surroundings, these women are determined to see done. The number of new industries and the subdivisions or new avocations that will grow out of this movement are incalculable. We rejoice in it, for while we firmly believe in the old French motto, " Place aux dames ! " and "The tools to those that can use them," we always think that the mother is the central figure of our civilization, and to be treated accordingly ; that the home-maker is the genius of what is most holy and happy in our lives. We believe that invention, science, education, and re- ligion should converge in systematic fashion upon the evolution of the home, which evolution is bound to come, and is rapidly keeping pace with develop- ments in all other lines of human uplift. While it pains a progressive woman to hear any man speak as if the home bounded the sphere of her sex, and while we believe the highest duty of all women is to help make the whole world home-like ; while we believe that woman will bless and brighten every place she enters, and that she will enter every place, we would sympathize with the possibilities of honorable employment and of high development to those who bring just as much talent, discipline, and de- votion to the building up of. home as others do to the larger world outside. In making the transition from woman as a cipher outside of home, to the splendid civilization that welcomes her to every one of its activities, it was necessary for the " present distress " to emphasize out of their due proportion the importance of education, industrial avocations, philanthropic vocations, science, and art for women. But when the pendulum swings to its extreme limit, and Church and State are freely opened to her, we feel sure it will swing to the harmony of a real circuit described by the interests of home, and our brightest brains, most skillful hands, and deepest hearts shall give themselves to the beautiful amen- ities and sacred ministries of that institution which has been called, and not too often, "Our Heaven below." A book is now being written entitled " A Woman of the Nineteenth Century," and is to include one thousand names of American women. It is found entirely practicable to gather up so large a number of notable names WOMAN IN AMERICA. 631 illustrative of the different forms of activity in which women are now engaged. This being true, it is a hopeless endeavor to characterize even the most repre- sentative women in an article like the present. To do so would but invite the criticism of making invidious distinctions. The political activities of women have been perhaps more criticised than any others. Naturally enough, perhaps, as politics is to-day the arena where men fight with ballots rather than with bayonets or bullets. But in England the Primrose Dames and the Women of the Liberal League are a mighty factor in working out the rights of the people on the one hand, and the preservation of aristocratic prerogative on the other. This country has yet had no political uprising of women to match that of the motherland, but the Prohibition party has for years had women as its truest allies, and in the People's party they take equal rank with men, while both declare for the ballot in the hand of woman as her rightful weapon. Conventions, committee meetings, newspaper organs, and the public platform all bear the impress to-day of the growing intelligence and disciplined zeal of women as partisans. This is but the beginning of a new movement, the consequences of which promise to be more vast than any we have yet attained in the mighty development of the multitudinous woman question. There was in the Declaration of Independence the percussive force of giant powder when we deliberately said, "All men are born free and equal, and have certain inalienable rights, and among these rights are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." We then and there invoked that trinity of issues which are to-day involved in the mighty " Human Question," namely, the labor question, temperance question, and the woman question. Not until all these have been wrought out into statutes and constitutions will there be rest for the land. It is a blessed fact that woman cannot rise alone. From the first she has been at the bottom of the human pyramid ; she has the mother heart, and the stream cannot rise higher than its fountain. Whatever lifts and puts better conditions about her in all stages of her earthly life, does the same for every son she gives to the nation by daring to walk the Via Doloroso of Danger when she passes the sacred but terrible ordeal of motherhood. Well has the poet sung that " Men and women rise and fall together, dwarfed or god-like, bond or free." No woman worthy of the name forgets that she had a father and brother in her early home, and for their sake, as much as for mother's and sister's sake, all true women seek to help both men and women in the solution of the great problems of modern civilization. To be strong-minded was once thought a crime in woman, but upon strength of mind there is a premium now. The bread-winning weapon, eagerly sought and firmly held in the delicate but untrembling hand of woman, is the only sword she needs. We would make her thoroughly independent of marriage, that she 632 SPHERE OF WOMAN. still might choose its old and sacred path from motives more complimentary to the man of her choice than that " He will be a good provider." We would educate her thoroughly, that she might be the comrade of her husband and her sons, for while religion and affection form two of the strands in the cable that binds human hearts together in the home, we believe that intellectual sympathy is that third bright strand which this glad age is weaving, and that no charm more holy or enduring survived the curse of Eden. We would endow her with power in Church and State, that these two hierarchies might belong to the many and not to the few, to the people, and not to priest and politician. We would make woman partner in the great world's activi- ties, that she might more greatly endow the children whose gifts depend so largely on her goodness, greatness, and grace. God made woman with her faculties, her traits, her way of looking at all great questions from the highest to the lowest, and he made her to be a helpmeet for man, and he made man to be a helpmeet for her ; he made them to Stand in a republic, as I believe, bearing equally its magnificent burdens. The world needs the tender sweetness of the alto voice, the jubilant good-will of the soprano, in sermon as in psalm ; tenor and bass become monotonous at last, and the full diapason of power and inspiration is impossible except we listen to the full chorus of humanity. God hasten that great chorus, in church and state alike, with its deep-hearted love and its celestial hope ! JULIA WARD HOWE, of the " Battle Hymn of the Republic' Frances E. Willard. HENRY W. LONGFELLOW. AND THE STORY OK AMERICAN LITERATURE. BY HAMILTON W. MABIE, LL.B., LIT. D., Editor of the "Outlook," .V. )'. HE author of "Evangeline" and "Hiawatha," and the many short poems which have become "household words " in so many homes, was born in a stately old man- sion in Portland, Maine, in 1807. He spent a most happy childhood in this lovely home, and at fifteen entered Bow- doin College, where he graduated in 1825. He was then offered a professorship in the college, with the privilege of spending some years in Europe, in study and preparation. After his return he was married to Mary Storer Potter, a young lady of Portland, to whom he had long been attached, and entered upon the duties of his position. He was very popular with the students, and soon came to be quite a power in the University. He became a contributor to the North American Review, then the foremost literary period- ical of America, and began to acquire reputation as a writer. In 1835 Longfellow received the offer of a professorship in Harvard Uni- versity, which he accepted, with the stipulation that he should be allowed first to spend some time abroad in the further study of German and Scandinavian litera- ture. While in Amsterdam, his young wife died suddenly, and the bereaved husband turned for solace to intense work and study. Years afterward he embalmed her memory in the beautiful poem, "Footsteps of Angels : " — " With a slow and noiseless footstep Comes that messenger divine, Takes the vacant seat beside me, Lays her gentle hand in mine." In 1836 he returned to Cambridge and entered upon his duties at Harvard. Here he soon began to form those friendships which were so long a blessing and delight to him and to all of the circle, — Felton, Sumner, Hillard, Lowell, Agassiz, Hawthorne, Fields, and others. With Sumner especially he became 635 636 HENRY IV. LONGFELLOW. very intimate. Whenever Sumner was in the neighborhood he always spent Sunday with his friend, and many are the records in his journal of " Sumner to dine," " Sumner to tea," or to pass the night, and always some note of the absorbing talk which reached into the midnight hours. In 1843 Longfellow married Miss Frances Appleton, whom he had met in Europe, and- who figures in the pages of " Hyperion." The famous old " Craigie mansion," which had been Washington's headquarters, was purchased, and until the poet's death remained his home. A hedge of lilacs led to the door, and grand old elms spread their branches over the house. Here his chil- dren were born ; and here, in 1 861, he met the great sorrow from which he never entirely recovered, — the tragic death of his wife. She was sealing some papers of the children's curls, in the library, when she trod upon a match, which set fire to her clothing, causing injuries from which she died. She was buried upon the anniversary of her marriage, crowned with a wreath of orange blossoms. Most pathetic are the passages in Longfellow's journal in after years, telling of his desolation. For a long time he could speak to no one of his grief; only after months had passed did he even allude to it in a letter to his brother: "And now, of what we both are thinking I can write no word. God's will be done." In his journal he writes : "Another walk in the pines, in the bright morning sunshine. Everything without full of loveliness ; but within me the hunger, the famine of the heart." At Christmas : " How inexpressibly sad are all holidays ! But the dear little girls had their Christmas-tree last night, and an unseen presence blessed the scene !" It was long before he could take up work again ; but at last he began his translation of Dante, and in this absorbing occupation found some alleviation of his sorrow. His best comforters, however, were the little group of close friends who met often to criticise the work as it proceeded, and whose society was much enjoyed. But soon these friends began to fall by the wayside, — first Felton, then Hawthorne and Agassiz, and last his beloved friend Sumner, to whom, in the exquisite poem, "Three Friends of Mine," he thus bids farewell: — " Goodnight ! good-night ! as we so oft have said Beneath this roof at midnight, in the days That are no more, and shall no more return. Thou hast but taken thy lamp and gone to bed ; I stay a little longer, as one stays To cover up the embers that still burn." The last years of Longfellow's life passed serenely at his home in Cam- bridge, cheered by tokens of the ever-increasing love and honor which came to him from all parts of the world. His pen was not idle ; and some of his finest poems are those written in these closing years. In 1882, at the age of seventy- five, he died, and was laid to rest in the beautiful cemetery of Mount Auburn. THE STORY OF" AMERICAN LITERATURE, BY HAMILTON W. MABIE, I.I..K, Lit. D. ^etsjYSTEMATIC description of American literature is impossible. f Our best books cannot be marshaled into one phalanx. They cannot be grouped wholly by time, by place, or by class dis- tinctions. They are the writings of widely different times and of widely different places, if not of different civilizations. Our colonial literature bears no resemblance to that which followed the Revolution, and our present literature grows increasingly dif- ferent from either. The literature of New England and that of California have little in common, while the literature of the South is in no sense akin to that of the North. Letters have always played a subordinate part in American life, and, have been under the influence, not of one impulse, but of many antagonistic impulses. Our people are a heterogeneous people, and their books constitute a heterogeneous literature. In the times of the colonies, men were too busy in nation-building to acquire the arts of book-making. A lew adventurers like the brave gasconader, John Smith, wrote to the Old Country, in a style forcible, but awkward and fre- quently incorrect, graphic and highly imaginative descriptions of the New ; a few painstaking diarists detailed, with a minuteness which can now please only the antiquarian, the daily vicissitudes of the colonists ; and, more important than either, a few earnest orators instilled a high-minded patriotism into their coun- trymen's hearts with an eloquence more remarkable for its genuineness of conviction and ardency of feeling than for its skill in argument or mastery of language. But before the Declaration of Independence America could boast only three men whose writings, in any way, deserve the name of literature. There was John Woolman, the gentle-hearted Quaker, like Izaak Walton, a tailor, and like him, also, a lover of man, animal, and plant. Although he was an irrepressible reformer, his writings have none of the pride of opinion and self- righteousness which are the besetting sins of reformers. Catholic, humble, receptive, his words are a benediction. Such Charles Lamb, the purest and manliest of modern English writers, found them, and as such he praised them. Of a very different stamp was "one Mr. Wordly-Wiseman " (as one critic has 57 637 6 3 8 THE STORY' OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. well called him) Benjamin Franklin. Well known abroad as a statesman, and still better as a scientist of the first rank, he was equally well known at home for his proverbial wisdom. He had a gift for putting much prudence into few words. His low ideals and the self-complacence which appear in his autobio- graphy do him little credit, but as a counselor in matters of expediency he was much needed by his excitable, extravagant, and often over-sanguine country- men. As great as either, though his writings are less enduring, was the great Calvinist divine, Jonathan Edwards. His doctrine has been largely discarded since his day, but there was an imaginativeness and clearness in depicting it, a purity of life and character behind it, and a devout mysticism in it, which make it elevating reading to-day. It is a significant fact that neither of these three men, neither the abolitionist, the scien- tist, nor the preacher, was primarily a writer. The greatest writers of America have always been some- thing more than writers. Irving and Motley were diplomats, Bryant was a journalist, Holmes a phy- sician, and Lowell had something of the states- man in him. All of them found outlets for their energies beyond their books. This circumstance has given to them a breadth of view, a sense of proportion, and a manly reserve which wins the re- spect of the reader and instills in him self-respect, but it has also deprived them of that intensity, that individuality, that surcharge of meaning and emotion which makes contemporary English books seem at times like the scrolls of prophets. It was not until after the Revolution that American literature began to take on distinctive national traits. Even then they came gradually. In our modes of thought and expression, we grew away rather than broke away from England. George Washington was more like an Englishman than like a modern Yankee, and Washington Irving, the earliest representative author of the century, was quite as truly a countryman of Addison, Steele, and Goldsmith as he was of the HAWTHORNE'S BIRTHPLACE. POST-REVOLUTION LITERATURE. 639 native American farmer or the Dutch knickerbocker. In his essays the spirit of the eighteenth century revived. He seemed to represent an old England rather than a young America. He formed his style after the models of Queen Anne's day and improved upon them in flexibility. Foreign readers were surprised to find grace and melody in an American book, and yet little has been written in the English language more graceful and melodious, more delicate in its humor, more artistic in its moods and pictures, than the " Legend of Sleepy Hollow." Since its day, grace has become the characteristic virtue of American essays. It was, however, in the rollicking extravaganza of his " Diedrich Knickerbocker's History of New York " that Irving' s admirers thought they detected the new nation's peculiar gift to letters. Born in New York city, Irving had from boyhood roamed at will through its woody environs. Though no antiquarian, he was familiar with those details of its local history which could be gleaned only from the traditions of the country-folk. With such unconscious training for it, he wrote his wholesome and hearty burlesque of the phlegmatic old Dutch ancestry of the town. There has been much American extravaganza since his day, but none of it, unless it be Mr. Stockton's fantastic tales, deserves the name of literature. Quite as American as either his gracefulness or his occasionally extravagant spirits was the poetic idealism which makes of his life of Goldsmith at once a delightful idyl and a delicate interpretation of character. He found a place for the imagination in biography, the aim of which, it must be remembered, is' primarily to depict character, not to narrate vicissitudes. By his very idealizing he gave his readers a new insight into Goldsmith's heart. Though it contains some pure fiction, his volume has in it much poetic truth. It must be acknowledged, however, that Irving had no such power of impressing his own personality on his reader as some of even the gentlest of English writers have had. He was lacking in originality and personal force. But he was pre-eminently a gentleman. Abroad, his courtesy of manner, his kindness of heart, his thorough genuineness and simplicity of life made him even more welcome than his books, and his books were welcome everywhere. The reputation of American letters was 'soundly established abroad when the great publisher, Murray, offered him fifteen thousand dollars for the privilege of issuing one of his productions in England, and Campbell, Jeffrey — the English critic of the day, — Moore, and Scott were counted among his friends. The appointment of Irving as our representative at the Court of Madrid proved later a precedent for appointing such scholars as Motley, Bancroft, and Lowell as foreign Ministers. There was no appearance of extravaganza in any of Irving's literary con- temporaries in New York. Except in the " Culprit Fay " of Joseph Rodman Drake, there was no delicate and fanciful idealism. But all who versified, versified with polish. Not always flexible, seldom spirited, never very original, 640 THE STORY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. they were unexceptionably refined. They sedulously imitated classical stand- ards. Chaste diction, soundness of feeling, and manly reserve combined to make some of Fitz-Greene Halleck's poems perfect of their kind. His " Marco Bozzaris " has deservedly come down to our day, though only as a school-boy classic. Even the fop of American letters, shallow, frivolous, clever Willis, always wrote smoothly and with an air of good breeding. The greatest repre- sentative of this class of poets, however, was William Cullen Bryant. He was born in Massachusetts, but removed to New York in 1825, when twenty-eight years of age, and a year later became the editor of the New York Evening- Post. His vocabulary was limited ; his poetry was frigid. To be stirred by. it is, in the words of Lowell, "like being stirred up by the very North Pole."* It had little capacity for growth, and was at its best before the poet was out of his teens. But it had great virtues. Written in classic English, imbued with great dignity of thought and feeling, pervaded with what Wordsworth has called the "religion of the woods " — the devout and solemn reverence for the invisible powers of nature — its manly reserve and repose elevated not only his countrymen's ideals of literary excellence, but their ideals of life as well. While he lived. New York city, which usually values only business abilities, * lames Russell Lowell, " Fable lor Critics." RECENT LITERATURE. 641 respected his three vocations — that of the poet, that of the conscientious and constructive journalist, and that of the public man who never held office. This last vocation has been a characteristic, if not a peculiarity, of our political life. Although Bryant contributed no such fund of thought to American litera- ture as did his New England contemporaries, of whom we mean to speak later, his work may be taken as a type of the epoch between the Revolution and the Civil War. But since his prime our writers have come to a parting of the ways. They can no longer be at once publicists and emulators of the English classics. The spirit of democracy, the influence of the masses, is now universally felt, even though not universally welcomed. It is dividing our modern writers into two classes, the litterateurs, who enter their studies as a refuge from its noise and self-confident intolerance, and the popular sympathizers, who enter their studies as a vantage-ground from which they may further popular aims and proclaim popular aspirations. The iconoclastic, self-assertive, sanguine characteristics of the masses appear, for instance, in the disordered rhythmic utterances of Walt Whitman. The strength of his lines is their freedom ; their weakness is their license. Their author is virile, but not always rational. Too often he opens his eyes wide with amazement at mere matters of quantity and magnitude. He makes extravagant claims for his extravagant muse. He does not appreciate delicate effects and nice distinctions of thought. He has something of mob violence about him, but also much mob power and vehemence. He is the pioneer and extreme of his class, but certain of his traits appear, scattered and incidental, in the work of some of our recent novelists and critics. Mr. Howells' novels, for instance, though they are often delicate and urbane and always conscientious and humanitarian, are occasionally marred by a certain aggressiveness of manner, at times approaching swagger, and by crude treatment of the literary lientage of the past. The present generation has a great conceit of its own powers, and that conceit Mr. Howells does much to cultivate. It is far too ignorant of the heart thoughts of the past, and Mr. Howells has done much to make that ignorance complacent. But among the cultured he is a strenuous proselyter for popular thought, and deserves to be counted a tribune of the people. Over against Mr. Howells must be set the preeminent litterateur of our times, Mr. Henry James. The principal characters of his novels are Anglicized Americans of leisure ; his principal scenes are European. He exercises in his readers those scholastic qualities of mind to which the great mass of his readers are supremely indifferent. Both Mr. Howells and Mr. James, however, have one important characteristic in common. They believe that fiction should vig- orously reproduce and dissect the ordinary phenomena. They would use neither Shakespeare's dramatic power of compressing some great truth of daily life into little compass, nor Hawthorne's power of gaining insight into the human heart through the use of the supernatural. They construct their novels according to 642 THE STORY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. an earnest, scientific theory, and so occasionally pain and perplex the reader with problems for which they offer no solution. They are attempting to accli- matize in American letters foreign methods ; already they have not a few disci- ples, but whether they will finally succeed or not is still an open question. Superior to both Mr. Howells and Mr. James in versatility, in creative power, in catholicity of sympathy, and in insight into the basal principles of art and of human nature is the novelist, Mr. F. Marion Crawford, though he is their inferior in conscientiousness of purpose, in evenness of execution, and in deli- cacy of expression. Mr. Crawford is cosmopolitan. There is hardly a country of importance that has not furnished him with a scene for a novel, and of every country he gives a view from within. It is the secret, however, both of Mr. Crawford's power and of his limitations that he is unique and stands outside the line of our literary development. He is in no sense a typical American novelist. Neither the democratic movement nor the aristocratic reaction measurably affects him. A class even more free from the influence of either current survives in such writers as "Ike Marvel," Charles Dudley Warner, and George William Curtis, who belong to an older school of American essayists and have the courtly graces of Irving with the practical interests of Steele and Addi- son. Roughly speaking, however, Ameri- can literature may be divided into three periods, the colonial, the classic, and the modern ; and this last period is marked by two contradictory forces, aggressive democ- racy on the one hand and the appearance of caste-spirit on the other. Thus far we have treated chiefly of the literature of New York, for it is the least provincial, and therefore, in a sense, the most representative of the nation at large. The so-called Empire State, however, has played but a small part in American letters as compared with New England. Our greatest novelist, Hawthorne ; our greatest orator, Webster, and our greatest essayists, historians, and poets, are all New Englanders. The literature of Massachusetts and its adjacent States has a flavor of its own. It is always provincial, often narrow, occasionally fanatical, occasionally patronizing, but its voice is always the voice of conscience. It is preeminently the literature of the Puritan. Its Webster and its Wendell Phillips appeal to the sense of justice in their hearers and to that strenuous desire to maintain their individual responsibilities which is the WALDO EMERSON. WHITTIER—L J I 'ELL. 643 New Englander' s idea of liberty. Its Prescott and Motley trace not the material, but the moral progress of the peoples whose development they •chronicle. Its Hawthorne dramatizes the deepest problem of the conscience. The themes of its Emerson are always of natural religion. Its Longfellow, Lowell, and Whittier look almost exclusively on the moral aspects of even litera- ture and romance. There is " no art for art's sake" in Massachusetts. We can never " escape from the diocese of a strict conscience." No book furnishes mere amusement or recreation. The sense of duty sometimes inspires the New Englander with eloquence, sometimes elicits the beauties of mystical imagina- tion sometimes presents itself in a play of wit, as in the Biglow Papers of James Russell Lowell, sometimes is made almost winsome, as in the poems of Longfellow, but it is never totally forgotten. New Englander of New Englanders is the Quaker poet of Massachusetts, John Greenleaf Whittier. Although not a Puritan, he is the most typical of the New England poets. His early life was that of a farmer's boy, and his poems are full of farm scenes and homestead incidents. His "Snow Bound" pictures the cheer within and the cold without of a New England winter. He makes graphic the sturdy qualities of the old New England settlers. The reminiscences of his early days, picturing, as they do, a stalwart human nature, confirm the conscience of his readers against present temptations. His rhymes are often faulty, his metre sometimes rough, his spirit too surcharged with local feeling to be called national, his verse falls just short of inspiration, but what he has added to the moral worth of American letters is invaluable. He has given to American poetry a dignity of its own — the dignity of unaffected but undaunted manhood. A poet of conscience, courage, and fervor is sure to do earnest work in the world, and Whittier was among the first to throw himself into the anti-slavery cause. His anti-slavery poems, Quaker though he is, ring with a martial vigor. He has never made any peace with sin. Yet with all his warmth of temperament, often waxing hot with indignation, he has also that benignity, that gentleness, that purity of motive, that sense of peace which belong to the disciples of the " Society of Friends." He is the representa- tive poet of his fellow Christians as well as of his State. His poems breathe the religious spirit. The anti-slavery cause had an advocate of a very different temperament, but quite as earnest and quite as poetic, in James Russell Lowell. It was the love of letters, not the love of the muse, which first started him on his literary career. He was in his early tastes primarily a critic. To careless readers his earliest poems seemed the work of a dainty and graceful amateur, and gave no promise of his future powers. His gift of criticism, his love of verbal by-play, his enjoy- ment and mastery of the lighter veins in literature he did not lose as he grew older, and showed his ability as well to encounter the dangers and responsibilities 644 THE STORY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. of active American citizenship and energetic public life. He was the most scholarly and most original of American critics to the end. Familiar with all the literatures of Europe, ancient and modern, at home in all the by-paths of English letters, he was yet no pedant and no traditionalist. He seemed to enter as an equal the Elysium of the poets. He was so keen and appreciative an observer of every aspect of nature that Charles Darwin said that he was born to be a naturalist. He was so alive to the world of to-day, that another friend early prophesied of him that "he would never dally with his muse when he could invite her aid in the cause of the oppressed and suffering." His literary essays revivified whatever they touched upon, because they themselves were vital with the modern spirit. His earnestness never prevented him from enjoying the quaint charms of the past. He would not have been so great a critic, however, had he not been much more than a critic. Even though his powers of execution were not equal to his powers of conception, he was a genuine poet. " He has the eye and mind of a poet," says one critic, "but wants the plastic touch which turns to shape the forms of things unknown." In his verse there was much poetry, though it was often in the rough. He was some- times careless. He was sometimes so clever as to seem forced, and he was sometimes forced without being at all clever. But his "Commemoration Ode," his "Cathedral," and his "Vision of Sir Launfal," not to mention many minor poems, are full of poetic beauty and strong with poetic' truth. It was the shame of slavery, however, that kindled his powers into flame. It was characteristic of his Yankee blood that he used not mere argument as his weapon, but wit and conscience fused by his hot indigna- tion into a blade as keen as Damascus steel. His " Biglow Papers" are the keenest, the most racial, the most national of all American satires. The first of them appeared in 1846. In its Yankee hero, concealing not one drop of his Yankee blood, abating not one jot of his Yankee pride or Yankee manners, and softening by not one touch his Yankee wit, appeared a new figure in American life. It was a figure around which the Puritan elements of the community could rally. Lowell had awakened the dormant conscience of the nation. He fiercely ridiculed the hypocrisies and glossed-over selfishness of the slave-power and the still more contemptible cowardice of the silent and the "prudent" in the North. WALT. WHITMAN. LONGFELLOW. 645 He fairly defied ridicule in return, for what the drawl and dialect of his hero could not make ridiculous nothing could make ridiculous. To-day its wit still retains its freshness, and its satire of pretentiousness, demagogy, and false standards of honor in American politics has unfortunately not lost its seasonableness. His "Fable for Critics," a running comment of clever, good-natured, unfinished epigrams on his literary contemporaries, showed Lowell to be a wit, but his " Biglow Papers " showed him to be a genius and not a little of a statesman. In the words of George William Curtis, literature was Lowell's pursuit, but patriotism was his passion. He was the more patriotic that he never fought over old battles. He was too busy fighting new ones for that. Sent as our Minister to England, he represented us abroad courteously but unswervingly, nor concealed for a moment his faith in the republican constitution and democratic principles of his native country. If occasionally a democratic self- assertiveness mars the general dignity of his writings, it marks him as the more typically a modern American. No other writer represents so many and so varied phases of American life as does this wit, gentleman, publicist, critic, scholar, and poet. LONGFELLOW. More representative of American poetry, though not of American life, than Lowell, and more national than Whittier, and more popular than either, is our household poet, Longfellow. Originality of thought has not been a notable characteristic of American poetry, and Longfellow was not markedly original. But what he lacked in originality he supplied with scholarship. He was versed in both the Norse and the Romance languages and literatures. His mind was stored with poetic traditions. He popularized the literary heritage of Europe. Clearness of thought, precise perception, transparent expression, thatdefiniteness and accuracy which give force, have not been notable characteristics of Amer- ican poetry, and Longfellow often wrote vaguely because he saw vaguely. At times he lacked definite meaning, though the sense of the hearers is dulled to the loss by the pleasant sound of his verse. But his words are always gracious, . gentle, manly, unsophisticated, melodious, and full of catholicity and content- ment. They are written to comfort the sorrowing, to give courage to the toil- ing, or to add happiness to the youthful. The moods which he evolves from his readers are tranquil, innocent, reverent, purifying. American readers, living as they do in the stress of competition, with little in their lives to give rest to their eyes or satisfaction to their aesthetic nature, turn to poetry not so much for truths as for beauty. Since life furnishes them with vigor, but with little that is delicate Or graceful, they treasure most in poetry, ease, dignity, simplicity, chasteness of diction, the quiet Mow of sound on sound and mood on mood. Such qualities they find in this scholarly laureate of the people. Though Longfellow is the favorite poet of young girlhood, womanhood and the home, 646 THE STORY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. there is no sentimentality and no melancholy in his personality. His pastorals are full of picturesque figures of speech, and are imbued with a love of nature and a genial love of man. The poet has done much to create among his coun- trymen a love of European literature and to instill the beginnings of what may prove a mellowing culture, while, in his Hiawatha and Evangeline, he has given to the world two classics, distinctively American. There is a certain barrenness to the eye in plain American life, which we lose sight of when enjoying the scholarship and poetic imaginations of Long- fellow. The same sense of barrenness, his friend and contemporary, Ralph Waldo Emerson, the " philosopher of Concord," relieves in a characteristically different way. He gratifies and charms his readers with the beauties of an idealistic, vague and pantheistic philo- sophy, surcharged with his own poetic and imaginative individuality. His idealism was often curiously inappropriate to his circumstances and surroundings. There was an impervious self-complacence in his writings which gave to them that gravity and that appearance of wisdom and author- ity which are characteristic of the Oriental seer. He was sometimes superficial, but never flippant. He never argued ; he never even unfolded truths ; he formu- lated and declared ex cathedra dogmas, and gathered together, without sequence or system, a number of apposite apoth- egms in a single theme. In common with Longfellow, he was often led to say what sounded well and meant little, but unlike Longfellow he was seldom commonplace at once in manner and matter. Although no writer is in reality more provincial than Emerson, no writer has such a semblance of superiority to all prejudices of race, nation, religion and home training as he. But if there was much that was factitious in Emer- son, there was also much that was genuine. He had at times an illuminating insight into the heart. His essays are elevating and suggestive. He was gifted with great powers of imagination. His severity had its source in his inner- most character, and was more effectual against the storms of life than was the stoicism of the Romans, or the light-headedness of the Greeks. He was so free from all worldliness in motives or in tastes that he seemed immaculate. He had that courage in his faiths which only purity can give. He lived as in another world. If not quite the seer he purports to be, he was unquestionably a genius. HAWTHORNE— MINOR NOVELISTS. 647 But far greater in genius than the idealist Emerson was the mystic and recluse, Nathaniel Hawthorne. His actual life was of the simplest. He was born in quaint Salem, Massachusetts, in 1804; he graduated from Bowdoin College, held in the course of his career two political offices, shunned publicity and wrote novels which met at the time with no remarkable sale. But from this simple career came the weirdest, most imaginative and most profound tales in American, if not in all Anglo-Saxon literature. His novels are essentially Puritan. Their scenes, their men and women, their weird traditions, their sombre creeds are unmistakably native to New England, though to a New England under the spell of the supernatural. In his own neighborhood, he found enough to feed his love of antiquity and of the legendary. His novels imbue the reader with a reverential awe for the Puritan fathers. No cavalier in Scott's novels ever seemed more romantic than do the stern and gloomy Calvinists of the " Scarlet Letter " and the " House of Seven Gables." Tales of witchcraft, of ill-starred lovers, of hereditary taints, of sin and its awful consequences, fascinated Hawthorne, and under his artistry became often fantastic, occasionally morbid, but always impressive. Never avoiding provincialism, he was always something more than provincial, for his themes dealt with human problems of universal significance. Unlike most mystics his style was transparently clear and exceedingly graceful. In those delicate, varied and impalpable but permanent effects which are gained by a happy arrangement of words in their sentences, no modern writer surpasses him, while no American writer equals him in that unerring directness and unswerving force which come from the exact use of words. To the rhetorician, his style is a study ; to the lay reader a delight that eludes analysis. There is also much humor and satire in Hawthorne, so delicate as to escape the observation of the careless and the obtuse. MINOR NOVELISTS. That the love of mystery, which found its perfect expansion in Hawthorne, was something of a national art, not merely a personal trait, is evident after reading the crude, but effective and highly original tales of our first American novelist, Charles Brockden Brown, who wrote impossible but impassioned stories of the supernatural and pseudo-supernatural. Edgar Allan Poe, a much better known writer of the same school, delighted in working out the horrible fancies of his brain in graphic and often artistic forms. His tales suffer, how- ever, from their total lack of moral substance. It is a significant fact, testifying, possibly to the sense of freedom and therefore the contentment which our national writers feel, that Poe was the only American author of any prominence to wreck his happiness and his character from sheer perversity and love of extravagance. He was the only one in this country to fling himself, as did Marlowe, Byron, and many others in England, so willfully against the conventional standards of his THE STORY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. environment as to destroy himself. His plots are so sensational and his dra- matic efforts so bold and unnatural that we seldom give their author sufficient credit for his polished and careful workmanship. Though there was a certain flashiness in his art which cheapens it, he was both an artist and a genius. "There comes Poe," says Lowell, in his " Fable for Critics," " With his raven, like Barnaby Rudge, Three-fifths of him genius, and two-fifths sheer fudge." A romancist of a very different type was James Fenimore Cooper, some- times diffuse and sometimes stilted, but more frequently an exciting narrator of Indian tales and pioneer adventures. The power of his stories is due not to any noticeable gifts of style or to any remarkable originality or profundity of thought, but to the wild prairie life or as wild sea life which they minutely depict, and to the roman- tic types of Indian, trapper and sailor, which they have created. They are written in an honest, hearty and patriotic spirit, and the "Spy," the "Pilot," and the " Leather-Stocking Tales " are still i the delight of boys. Manly tales of pure adventure are rare in American literature. Our romance is usually didactic, sentimental, supernatural or retrospective. Di- dactic romance has attained its best expression and gained the greatest results in the " Uncle Tom's Cabin," of Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe — a tale full of dramatic situations, written with Yankee directness and Puritan sympathy for the oppressed, and by its very bias and idealism of invaluable service to the anti-Slavery cause. Pathetic romance is best typified by the Ramona of Mrs. Helen Hunt Jackson — a tale full of poetic insight as well as of poetic beauty, in behalf of the Indian. Its author is the greatest representative of a large school of modern writers, characterized by extreme sensitiveness, artistic perception, poetic aspirations and a somewhat sentimental but a very genuine love for the suffering and the oppressed. Their chief fault is, that while they soften the heart they never invigorate the will. It is to the South that we must turn for the best examples of retrospective romance. Idealizing has always been the Southerner's peculiar gift ; in the com- LOUISA MAY ALCOTT. ' a Photograph by Xotman, Boston.) THE LITERATURE OF THE SOUTH AND WEST. 649 paratively successful days before the war, it usually ran into bombast and grand- iloquence, but the disasters of invasion and conquest have subdued it to the pastoral, the pathetic, the retrospective. In the days of slavery politics absorbed all the best energies and intellect of the South, but since the days of reconstruc- tion, more than one Southerner of promise has found in literature an attractive career. In a number of short dialect stories of plantation days, as well as in the tender, musical, visionary poems of Sidney Lanier, the South has contributed new and artistic elements to American literature. Indeed, the South is the home of our most characteristic short stories. The typical Southerner is still imbued with an intense local patriotism. Every village under his native skies is a little world to him. He finds compacted within its narrow limits many a theme for a brief romance, full of human interest. The romance of its vicissitudes in war, the romance of its love scenes — where love is still looked upon as the grand passion — the pathos of the disasters it suffered in the South's defeat, and the quaint humor of its colored folk, make a union of elements favorable to the story-teller's art. The South has produced at least two authors to do justice to these gifts of circumstance. Mr. Thomas Nelson Page depicts in his pages the South before the war. Under his hand, an idealizing regret beautifies the past till it seems a golden age. A half vicarious boastfulness, a meagre achievement and a genuine poetic aspiration blend in the true Southerner's tem- perament. Mr. Page has nothing of the boastfulness ; he seldom, if ever, depicts the meagre externals, but he does exquisite justice to the poetic aspira- tions of his countrymen. His tales are pathetic, romantic, picturesque, catholic, and toward both races sympathetic and appreciative. Of very different tem- perament is his compeer, Mr. Joel Chandler Harris. Mr. Harris's sketches are artistically true, not, as is the case with Mr. Page, because they reveal the aspi- rations of the old-time Southern temperament, but because of their author's alert observations of life as it h He is alive with a vitality which makes for cheerfulness, quickness, deftness, appreciativeness. Though he deals with a passing, if not a past, civilization, he looks back to it neither regretfully, nor inimically, nor indifferently. He even goes to it for invigoration. Though there is pathos in his stories, they are full of hope and freshness of life. On the one hand he does not touch such deep chords as does Mr. Page ; on the other, he is more vivacious and stimulating. Successful studies in provincial life, however, are not limited to the South. Every distinctive region in the United States can claim its distinctive literature. To-day Miss Wilkins and Miss Jewett, of a decade or so ago, Saxe Holme, and to go back much earlier, Hawthorne, are the names which naturally occur to us, when we turn to New England. Of these, Miss Wilkins' painstaking and often painfully conscientious sketches are the most trustworthy, though not always the pleasantest depictions of Puritan manners, customs, and habits of utter- 650 THE STORY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. ance. Not only to the meagre, rigid and self-repressive lives of these village Calvinists, but as well to their earnest purposes, their loyal consecra- tion to duty and their genuine reverence for the home, the church and the state, Miss Wilkins is just. Her studies — stories they can hardly be called — are perhaps works of science rather than works of art, but in either case, they are literature. That cosmopolitan New York should furnish material for the same scien- tific study in provincialism would seem to involve a contradiction in terms. Yet whittier's birthplace. that city has an individuality of its own, difficult as it is to depict. Mr. Janvier has done something for its art studios and its French colonies. Mr. Howells, in his " Hazard of New Fortunes," has done something for its streets and houses, but it is to Mr. Hamlin Garland and to Mr. Richard Harding Davis that we are indebted for the introduction of typical New Yorkers to Ameri- can readers. Bach, in his different view, gives a hint of the literary possibil- ities to be found in what has heretofore seemed commonplace New York. In Mr. Eugene Field's grotesque commingling of New England reminiscence, the love of exaggeration to be found all over the western plains, and the quips of AMERICAN HUMOR— AMERICAN HISTORIANS. 65 1 humor and turns of tenderness which are closely associated with the Pacific coast, we find writing appropriate to Chicago, while further west, Arkansas finds utterance in the sympathetic studies of Octave Thanet. The early min- ing excitement of the Californian coast had its own peculiar literature in the racy sketches of Bret Harte — a skillful pupil' of Dickens in his mingled humor and pathos, grotesqueness and idealism, and in his depiction of acts of gentleness in lives of hardship. His pictures of mining-life, however, have in them an originality which makes him something more than a mere pupil. He has made a distinct, though a provincial contribution to letters. Outside of these sketches there is little genuine humor in American litera- ture. We have many writers of extravagant burlesque ; we have in Dr Oliver Wendell Holmes a kindly, brilliant, scintillating, suggestive wit ; but we can find nowhere in American letters that delicate and quizzical self-revelation, that pathetic oddness, those fantastically expressed confidences, those self-amused idiosyncracies which constitute humor and which flavored the conversations of Abraham Lincoln. There is a reserve in American writers which prevents such humor. To find it we must go to the English Charles Lamb, Thomas Fuller, and Sir Thomas Browne. Few nations, however, have produced any wittier books than Dr. Holmes' Breakfast Table Series, or more laughable extrava- gances than Mark Twain's, while more quiet and more graceful, though less original than either, are the shorter sketches of Charles Dudley Warner and "Ike Marvel." Scientific observation and poetic insight united in Thoreau to give him a familiar acquaintance with the shy beauties of nature. His writings are marred by infelicities and affectations in expression, but they are the work of a genuine lover and interpreter of the woods and streams. He is the master in a school which includes an increasing number of writers every decade. At least those American historians, Prescott, Parkman, and Motley, have gained a transatlantic reputation for the eloquence of their style, the beauty of their description, and the artistic power of their presentations of historic movements. All three were careful scholars, though idealists, vigorous, and clear writers, and sanguine Americans. To those at all seriously inclined their histories are as absorbing as fiction, and, if too enthusiastic to be accurate in all their details, are unquestionably true in general outline. They have made use of the imagination as an aid to scholarship, not as a substitute for it, and they have used it chiefly, if not solely, to elucidate truth. There is nothing in oratory more profoundly eloquent than the two addresses of Abraham Lincoln on the field of Gettysburg. They are the simple and devout expressions of a national patriotism, purged of all worldly passion. The chasteness, the harmony, the marvelous beauty of their language is, however, forgotten in the sublimer beauty of their thought and spirit. They are so sacred 652 THE STORY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. » to something higher than literature that we never think of them as literature. The clear and animating orations of the chivalric, visionary Wendell Phillips deserve a passing mention for their beauty of form and transparency of argument. But our one great orator is the Whig statesman, Daniel Webster. He was educated in New Hampshire, under that vigorous discipline which only the hardships of poverty can give, and showed the value of his training in the stalwartness of his after-life, when he stood for a conscientious adherence to the Union and to the Constitution liberally interpreted. To this day, his sonorous, significant, and impressive utterances must be studied for any thorough appreciation of the responsibilities of American citizenship and the genius of American institutions. By his inherent dignity he long maintained against the en- croachments of the modern politician our forefathers' standard of dignity in Ameri- can public life. Unquestion- ably the inferior of the great English statesman, Edmund Burke, in beauties of imagi- nation, precision and incisive- ness of language, and in profundity of statesmanship, he was at least more smooth, more even, and more self- controlled. The contrast between the two well illustrates the contrast between England and America in every department of literature. The typical English writer shows the greater mastery of the powers and striking beauties of language. The American is the smoother and the more polished. The English is the more intense, and the more self-expressive, and the more powerful ; the American the more guarded and the more contented. America has produced as yet no literature comparable to the greater classics of England, but she has produced much worthy to be found in every Anglo-Saxon house- hold, and capable of cheering and strengthening in his work and hardships every Anglo-Saxon reader. (/•" WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. a Photograph by Sarony, New York.) FAMOUS AMERICAN AUTHORS. WASHINGTON IRVING, AUTHOR OF THE "SKETCH BOOK.' IRVING, one of the first authors to make a real American literature, was born in New York in 1783. In consequence of delicate health he spent much of his youth in Euro- pean travel. In 1809 he published his famous " Knickerbocker's His- tory of New York," which had great success. But it is by his "Sketch Book," published in 1819, that he will be longest remembered. Rip Van Winkle and his twenty years' sleep, the amorous school- master and the Headless Horse- man of Sleepy Hollow, are charac- ters which live forever immortal. This book, although published in America, was written in England, where Irving was then living, en- joying the pleasures of intimate friendship with Sir Walter Scott, Campbell, and the most famous English writers of the time. Syd- ney Smith's famous taunt, "Who reads an American book?" lost its truth and its sting after the "Sketch Book" came from America to charm and captivate the reading world of England. John Murray, the famous English publisher, paid Irving large sums for that book and for " Bracebridge Hall" anil the "Tales of a Traveler," which followed it. There is a story that while Irving was at the height of his popularity in England, two women were overheard in conversation before a bust of Washington in- an art gallery. " Who was Washington, mother ? " asked the younger. " Why, my dear, don't you know?" was the reproving reply; "he wrote the 'Sketch Book.' " In 1826 Irving went to Spain, occupying for some time a suite of rooms in the 3 S 653 "~ WASHINGTON IRVING. 654 WASHINGTON IRVING. famous old Moorish palace of the Alhambra. While there he wrote his "Life of Columbus," the "Conquest of Granada," and the "Alhambra" tales, all of which had great success. In 1832 he returned to America, and settled at his country seat, "Sunnyside," on the Hudson, near Tarrytown. This lovely home soon became the resort of the foremost literary and public men of America. AM n II HOUSEH01 D, « I'l SCRIBED BY "KNlCKERIiOCKF.lt." Irving was a most charm- ing host, and was never more in his element than when surrounded by appreciative and responsive friends. In 1842, at the sug- gestion of Daniel Webster, he was appointed by President Tyler minister to Spain, where he spent four years, returning in 1846 to his beloved Sunnyside, where he lived until his death in November, 1859. WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. 655 " Irving was as quaint a figure," says George W. Curtis, " as Diedrich Knickerbocker himself, . . . tripping with elastic step along Broadway, with low-quartered shoes, neatly tied, and a Talma cloak, — a short garment that hung from his shoulders like the cape of a coat. There was a chirping, cheery, old- school air in his appearance, which was undeniably Dutch, and most harmonious with the associations of his own writings. He seemed, indeed, to have stepped out of his own books ; and the cordial grace and humor of his address were delightfully characteristic." WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT, THE OLDEST OF THE GREAT AMERICAN POETS. {See portrait, page 652.') $&* ROBABLY there is no other one among the list of American authors whose career so links the literature of the past and of the present as Bryant. " Thanatopsis," one of his most popular poems (though he himself ranked it low), was written in 18 12, when the poet was only eighteen. He was born in western Massachusetts in 1794, and removed to New York in 1825. In 1826 he began to edit the Evening Post, and from that time until the day of his death William Cullen Bryant and the Evening Post were almost as conspicuous and permanent features of the city as the Bat- tery and Trinity church. He lived under twenty Presidential administrations, closing his life in New York in 1878. In 1 82 1 Mr. Bryant married Frances Fairchild, the loveliness of whose char- acter is hinted in some of his sweetest poems. The one beginning " O fairest of the rural maids," was written some years before their marriage ; and "The Future Life," one of the noblest and most pathetic of his poems, is addressed to her: — " In meadows fanned by Heaven's life-breathing wind, In the resplendence of that glorious sphere And larger movements of the unfettered mind, Wilt thou forget the love that joined us here ? " Will not thy own meek heart demand me there, — That heart whose fondest throbs to me were given ? My name on earth was ever in thy prayer, And wilt thou never utter it in heaven? " 656 WILLI AM CULLEX BRYANT. Among his best-known poems are "A Forest Hymn," "The Death of the Flowers," "Lines to a Waterfowl," and "The Planting of the Apple-Tree." One of the greatest of his works, though not among the most popular, is his translation of Homer, which he completed when seventy-seven years of age. Bryant had a marvelous memory. His familiarity with the English poets was such that when at sea, where he was always too ill to read much, he would beguile the time by reciting page after page from favorite poems. However long the voyage, he never exhausted his resources. "I once proposed," says a friend, " to send for a copy of a magazine in which a new poem of his was announced to appear. 'You need not send for it,' said he, 'I can give it to you.' 'Then you have a copy with you ? ' said I. ' No,' he replied, 'but I can recall it,' and thereupon proceeded immediately to write it out. I congratulated him upon having such a faithful memory. ' If allowed a little time,' he replied, 'I could recall every line of poetry I have ever written.' " His tenderness of the feelings of others, and his earnest desire always to avoid the giving of unnecessary pain, were very marked. " Soon after I began to do the duties of literary editor," writes an associate, "Mr. Bryant, who was reading a review of a little book of wretchedly halting verse, said to me : ' I wish you would deal very gently with poets, especially the weaker ones.' Later, I had a very bad case of poetic idiocy to deal with, and as Mr. Bryant happened to come into my room while I was debating the matter in my mind, I said to him that I was embarrassed by his injunction to deal gently with poets, and pointed out to him the utter impossibility of finding anything to praise or lightly to condemn in the book before me. After I had read some of its stanzas to him, he answered: ' No, you can't praise it, of course ; it won't do to lie about it, but ' — turning the volume in his hand and inspecting it — ' you might say that the binding is securely put on, and that — well, the binder has planed the edges pretty smooth.' " Bryant was a man of very striking appearance, especially in age. "It is a fine sight," says one writer, "a man full of years, clear in mind, sober in judg- ment, refined in taste, and handsome in person. ... I remember once to have been at a lecture where Mr. Bryant sat several seats in front of me, and his finely-sized head was especially noticeable. . . . The observer of Bryant's capacious skull and most refined expression of face cannot fail to read therein the history of a noble manhood." JAMES FENIMORE COOPER, THE PIONEER OF AMERICAN HISTORICAL ROMANCE. COOPER has been called "The Walter Scott of America." His historical romances of frontier and Indian life in the early days formed a new and distinctive American lit- erature. Cooper was born in Bur- lington, New Jersey, in 1789, but his boyhood home was at Coopers- town, in central New York, where his father had built a house in the wilderness, on the shores of Otsego lake. The place was surrounded by Indians of the " Six Nations," who came to Cooperstown for purposes of trade, and sometimes with hostile intent. The romantic surroundings of his early youth doubtless had a powerful influence upon Cooper's literary career. In 1803 he entered Yale College ; but his love of free- dom and roving disposition led to lawless excursions to the seashore and the interior, in consequence of which, in his third year, he was expelled. In 1806, when only seventeen, he went to sea as a common sailor, and afterward entered the navy as a midship- man. In 181 1 he married the daughter of Peter De Lancey, one of a New York family who had been Tories during' the Revolution. This marriage was one of several events which led to his being charged with English sympathies, and to his subsequent unpopularity. Cooper was thirty years old before the thought of a literary career had entered his mind. One day, when reading an English novel to his wife, he exclaimed in disgust, " I believe I could write a better story myself." Encour- 657 fAMES FENIMORE COOPER. 658 JAMES FEN I MO RE COOPER. aged" by her, the thoughtless remark became a purpose, and resulted in his first story, " Precaution," which, while dealing with unfamiliar scenes, was successful enough to prompt further effort. The story of a spy of the Revolution, told to him years before by his friend John Jay {see p. pj), recurred to his mind, and he wrote the tale of "The Spy," which had a success then unprecedented in American literature. Then followed rapidly "The Pioneers," "The Pilot," and "The Last of the Mohicans," which in 1826 raised his fame to the highest point. The power of his description is well illustrated by its effect on an old sailor, to whom Cooper read parts of "The Pilot," while he was writing it. When he came to the passage describing the vessel beating out of the " Devil's Grip" shoals, in the gathering storm, his auditor became restless, rose from his chair, and began uneasily to pace the floor. Not a detail escaped him. Pres- ently he burst out, "It's all very well, my fine fellow, but you have let your jib stand too long." Cooper was delighted with his success, but took the hint, and made the wind blow the jib from its bolt-ropes. For a quarter of a century a ceaseless succession of books poured from Cooper's busy pen. In the latter part of his life, unfortunately, he became involved in numerous controversies and quarrels, most of them resulting from strictures in his books upon America and Americans, especially in " Homeward Bound." A friend, writing from Italy after reading that book, said, " I think you lose your hold on the American public by rubbing down their shins with brickbats as you do." In consequence of newspaper attacks, Mr. Cooper brought libel suits against Thurlow Weed, Horace Greeley, James Watson Webb, and other editors. These cases he argued himself, showing great ability as a lawyer, and secured numerous verdicts giving him damages ; but the result increased his unpopularity. He retired to his domain at Cooperstown, where he died in 1851, leaving an injunction to his children that no biography of him should be written or materials furnished by them. Six months after his death a public meeting in honor of the great novelist's memory was held in New York. Daniel Webster presided and addressed the gathering, and William Cullen Bryant made an address which did much to restore Cooper to his rightful place among the writers who have won for American literature a great and enduring fame. GEORGE BANCROFT, THE EMINENT AMERICAN HISTORIAN. THE great historian of the United States was the son of Rev. Aaron Bancroft, a typical New England clergyman. He was born in Octo- ber, 1800, — the same month and year in which Macaulay, the great English historian, first saw the light. To his native brains Mr. Bancroft was fortunately able to add unusual educational oppor- tunities. He entered Harvard at thirteen, graduated at seventeen, and after his graduation pursued a long course of study and travel in Europe, whence he returned in 1822, bringing the fruits of his ex- perience in the shape of rare stores of knowledge and culture, and an extensive acquaintance with the most distinguished men of the time. He then entered political life, in which for many years he took an active part. In 1834 ap- peared the first volume of his great History. Politics interrupted his literary work, and the succeeding volumes followed at long intervals. In 1845 ne was made Secretary of the Navy under President Polk, and in 1846 minister to England. The tenth and last volume of the History was not published until 1874. It comes down only to the close of the Revolution. The intense patriot- ism of the author is manifest in nearly every page, and the work has been criticised as "a Fourth-of-July oration in ten volumes." This fault, however, if it be a fault, is easy for Americans to forgive, and the work is generally regarded as the standard history of America up to the time of the Constitution. GEORGE BANCROFT. 66o RALPH WALDO EMERSON. Mr. Bancroft was an orator as well as a historian and politician, one of the best-known of his addresses being the famous oration on Lincoln, delivered before Congress irt 1866. During the latter part of his life he had a winter home in Washington, where the national archives and the Library of Congress were always at his hand, and a summer home at Newport, where he had a won- derful garden of roses, which was a great attraction. Rose-growing and horse- back riding were his recreations, and the erect and striking form of the historian, with his long gray beard, mounted on a fine horse, was for years a familiar figure at Newport and on the streets of Washington. RALPH WALDO EMERSON, THE CONCORD PHILOSOPHER AND POET. {See portrait, p. 642. \ ,MERSON, the famous philosopher, poet, and essayist, the "Sage of Concord," was born in Boston in 1803, and graduated at Harvard when only eighteen. It is characteristic of him that while in college he spent most of his time in the library ; and at graduation, although not above the average of his class in general studies, in literature he was far beyond any of them. He studied for the ministry, and for a few years was pastor of a Boston church ; but he soon resigned because he could not accept some of the doctrines of the church, and thereafter devoted himself to literature. His home was in Concord, Massachusetts, near the scene of the famous battle of 1775, commemorated by his own verse : — " There first the embattled farmers stood, And fired the shot heard round the world." This home, especially after his works had given him reputation and author- ity, became a sort of Mecca to which Emerson's disciples and admirers, drawn either by the man himself or by his works, made pilgrimages. He had a pecu- liarly attractive and impressive personality. One writer says of him : " One day there came into our pulpit the most gracious of mortals, with a face all benig- nity, who gave out the first hymn and made the first prayer, as an angel might have read and prayed. Our choir was a pretty good one, but its best was coarse and discordant alter Emerson's voice." Miss Fredrika Bremer, the Swedish novelist, who visited America in 1849, thus describes him : — " Emerson came to meet us, walking down the little avenue of spruce firs EDGAR A. POE. 661 which leads from his house, bare-headed amid the falling snow. He is a quiet, nobly grave figure, his complexion pale, with strongly marked features and dark hair. That which struck me most, as distinguishing him from most other human beings, is his nobility. He is a born nobleman. I have seen before two other men born with this stamp upon them. Emerson is the third who has it, and perhaps in a yet higher degree. And added thereto that deep intonation of voice, that expression, so mild yet so elevated at the same time, I could not but think of Maria Lowell's words, ' If he merely mentions my name I feel my- self ennobled.' " It was in his home life that the peculiar power and loveliness of Emerson's character shone most conspicuously. "His charm," says one writer, "lay largely in his manners, which were simple, yet faultless. He greeted his friends with all the mildness and serenity of the very god of repose, and induced in them ... a feeling of entire contentment with all the world. No heat, no fret, no hurry, no great call to strenuous exertion to appear well or make a fine impres- sion. All was ease, calm, unstudied attention to every little want, and talk fit for the noblest and the best." He was an example of what he himself honored most: — "I honor," he says, "that man whose ambition it is, not to win laurels in the State or the army, not to be a jurist or a naturalist, not to be a poet or a commander, but to be a master of living well, and to administer the offices of master or servant, of husband, father, and friend." Emerson died at Concord in April, 1882. EDGAR A. POE, THE BRILLIANT POET AND AUTHOR.' AMONG the geniuses of literature there are few names whose history is so completely dark and sad as that of Edgar A. Poe. The author of "The Raven " and "The Bells," and of those wonderful romances which have made his name famous, was the son of a pair of actors on the variety stage, and was born in Baltimore in 1809. His parents were miserably poor, and the death of the mother in Richmond in 181 1 left her three children to the care of the public. Edgar, who was a beautiful and precocious child, was adopted by Mrs. John Allan, by whom he was brought up in luxury. He was a brilliant scholar, and had the best educational advantages; but at the University of Virginia,, which he entered at the age of seventeen, he formed the habit of drinking, — a habit which wrecked his whole life. After graduating, he spent a year in 662 EDGAR A. POE. Europe, and became editor first of the Southern Literary Messenger and after- ward of the Gentleman 's Magazine and Graham s Magazine. He married his cousin, Virginia Clemm, when she was only fourteen years of age, and the two, with Virginia's mother, led a life of the deepest poverty for ten years, until his wife's death. This marriage, rash and foolish as it seems, was one of the best things in Poe's life. He was a kind and devoted husband, and his wife repaid him with an affection that was little short of worship. But he was never able to rid himself of his appe- tite for drink, and he died at last of delirium tremens. Poe was a fine reader and elocutionist. A writer who at- tended two lectures by him in Richmond says, " I never heard a voice so musical as his. It was full of the sweetest melody. Dur- ing the lecture he recited Hood's ' Bridge of Sighs.' A little boy about twelve years of age was sitting near me. He was listen- ing intently, and before Poe had finished the poem he was in tears. Could there be any greater tri- bute to a speaker's power? After the lecture Poe very modestly said, ' I have been requested to recite my own poem, "The Ra- edgar a. IDE. ven." ' No one who heard this will ever forget the beauty and pathos with which this recitation was rendered. The audience was as still as death, and as his weird, musical voice filled the hall, its effect was simply inde- scribable. It seems to me that I can yet hear that long, plaintive ' Nevermore.' " A lady who was an intimate friend of Poe in his later years says of him : — "I have never seen him otherwise than gentle, generous, well-bred, and fastidiously refined. To a sensitive and delicately nurtured woman there was a peculiar and irresistible charm in the chivalric, graceful, and almost tender reverence with which he invariably approached all women who won his respect." Poe died in Baltimore in 1S49. NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE, THE GREATEST AMERICAN WRITER OF ROMANCE. THE famous author of "The Scarlet Letter " and " The Marble Faun " was the son of a sea-cap- tain, and was born in Salem, Mas- sachusetts, in 1804. (See p. 638.) He graduated at Bowdoin College, Maine, Longfellow, the poet, and Franklin Pierce, afterward Presi- dent of the United States, being among his classmates. Hawthorne was moody and melancholy, and Pierce did much to cheer and en- courage him, thus laying the foun- dation of a lifelong friendship. In 1845 Hawthorne took up his resi- dence at Concord, in the " Old Manse " (see p. 640), which he has made so famous, and from whose windows, it is said, the minister of the parish, on April 19th, 1775, looked out upon the memorable battle between his fellow-townsmen and the British troops. In 1846 he published "Mosses from an Old Manse," and in 1850 "The Scarlet Letter," which immediately placed him at the head of American writers of fiction. In 1852 President Pierce appointed him consul at Liverpool, and most of the remainder of his life was spent in Europe. In general company, Hawthorne was silent and reserved. He was intensely shy, so much so that he has been known to leave the road and take to the fields rather than encounter a group of passers-by. He loved to go on solitary walks, seeking out secluded places where he could muse and dream without fear of disturbance. Once he brought Mr. Fields, his friend and publisher, to one 66; NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE. 664 NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE. of these haunts, and bade him lie down on the grass, and watch the clouds float above, and hear the birds sing. " As we steeped ourselves in the delicious idle- ness," writes Mr. Fields, "he began to murmur some half-forgotten lines from Thomson's ' Seasons,' which he said had been favorites of his boyhood. While we lay there, hidden in the grass, we heard approaching footsteps, and Hawthorne hurriedly whispered, ' Duck ! or we shall be interrupted by somebody.' The solemnity of his manner, and the thought of the down-flat position in which we had both placed ourselves to avoid being seen, threw me into a foolish semi- hysterical fit of laughter, and when he nudged me, and again whispered more lugubriously than ever, ' Heaven help me, Mr. is close upon us ! ' I felt convinced that if the thing went further, suffocation, in my case at least, must ensue." Fortunately for Hawthorne, and for the- world as well, he was most happily married, his wife being a woman of strong common sense and strength of character, able to shield her sensitive, shy, unpractical husband from the world, willing and glad to bear the burdens of poverty for his sake, and finding her abundant recompense in his love and companionship. The early years of their marriage, before the publication of " The Scarlet Letter," were spent in poverty and obscurity ; but there was the most perfect sympathy and companion- ship in the home life. Theirs was in truth an ideal marriage. Hawthorne himself writes : — " My wife is in the strictest sense my sole companion, and I need no other ; there is no vacancy in my mind any more than in my heart. In truth, I have spent so many years in total seclusion from human society that it is no wonder if now I feel all my desires satisfied by this sole intercourse." Hawthorne returned from Europe with his family during the time of the civil war, and died not long after his return. "We carried him," writes Fields, "through the blossoming orchards of Concord, and laid him down under a group of pines on a hillside ; the unfinished romance which had cost him such anxiety laid upon his coffin." His friend, Longfellow, in one of his most exquisite poems, describes the scene, referring to the uncompleted romance in the closing lines : — " Ah, who shall lift that wand of magic power, And the lost clue regain ? The unfinished window in Aladdin's tower Unfinished must remain." HENRY D. THOREAU, THE CONCORD HERMIT AND NATURALIST. THOREAU is one of the most quaint and striking figures of the " Concord group " of writers and philosophers, of which Emerson was the head. He was born in 1 8 1 7, and graduated at Harvard in 1837. In manners, dress, and mode of life he was very eccentric. In 1845 he built a small frame house on the shores of Walden Pond, near Concord, where for some years he lived as a hermit, devoting himself to the study of nature. He gives an account of this part of his life in the little book entitled " Walden." In later years his writings became better known and more popular ; but a year after an edition of one thousand copies of his first work was printed, he wrote to a friend that he could now say that he was the owner of a library of nearly a thousand volumes, over nine hundred of which he wrote him- self. It is said that Thoreau never went to church, never voted, and never paid a tax. The only business which he ever followed was that of a surveyor. Emerson says of him, " Mr. Thoreau dedicated his genius with such entire love to the fields, hills, and waters of his native town, that he made them known and interesting to all reading Americans and to people over the sea. Whilst he used in his writings a certain petulance of remark in reference to churches and churchmen, he was a person of rare, tender, and absolute religion, — a person incapable of any profanation." He was never married. He died in 1862. 665 HENRY I>. THOREAU. JOHN G. WHITTIER, THE QUAKER POET OF AMERICA. WHITTIER, the poet of freedom and right and truth, the author of "Snow-Bound" and "The Tent on the Beach," was a New Eng- land farmer's son, born at Haver- hill, Massachusetts, in 1809. He has given us a most perfect picture of the home life of his youth, glow- ing with life and color, in the ex- quisite poem of "Snow-Bound." Not even the hard, bare, practical round of farm life in a Quaker home could repress the poetry in him. When he was a boy of eighteen, he sent with fear and trembling some anonymous verses to the weekly paper in Newbury- port, of which William Lloyd Gar- rison, afterward the famous aboli- tionist, was editor. When the next paper came, Whittier was trans- fixed with delighted surprise to find his verses not only printed, but commended, with a note by the editor asking for more. Soon afterward Garri- son, himself little more than a boy, came to see the young poet, and to plead with his parents for an education for him. Whittier thus naturally drifted into advocacy of the cause of freedom, and for many years his earnest and thrilling poems were devoted to that cause. On more than one occasion he was threat- ened with mob violence for his part in the abolition movement, for which, after the final overthrow of slavery, he was so much honored. Whittier was never married. His home was presided over for many years . 666 JOHN 1^. WHITTIER. JOHN G. WHITTIER. 667 by his sister Elizabeth, a most lovely and talented woman, between whom and her brother was an unusually close and affectionate bond. Her death was the greatest loss of his life, and he has written nothing more touching than his tribute to her memory in "Snow Bound": — "The birds are glad; the brier-rose fills The air with sweetness ; all the hills Stretch green to June's unclouded sky ; But still I wait with ear and eye For something gone which should be nigh, — A loss in all familiar things, In flower that blooms, and bird that sings. And yet, dear heart, remembering thee, Am I not richer than of old ? Safe in thy immortality, What change can reach the wealth I hold ? What chance can mar the pearl and gold Thy love hath left in trust with me?" In personal appearance Whittier was described in his prime as "tall, slen- der, and straight as an Indian. He has a superb head ; his broad brow looks like a white cloud under his raven hair ; eyes large, black as sloes, and glowing with expression, . . . flashing like stars under such a magnificent forehead." Although Whittier was for nearly half a century famous as a poet, his works, until his later years, brought him a very scanty revenue. From his "Life and Letters," published in 1894, we learn that the first sales of "Snow Bound" realized $10,000, after which he was in comfortable circumstances. "The Tent on the Beach" sold for some weeks at the rate of a thousand copies a day, and he wrote to his publisher, "This will never do. The swindle is awful." He could hardly credit the popularity of his poems, and felt that it was not merited. The poet was shy and diffident among strangers and in formal society, but among his friends genial and delightful, with a fund of gentle and delicate humor which gave his conversation a great charm. He was extremely fond of children, who rarely failed to appreciate and return his love. Though always a member of the Society of Friends, he was broad and liberal, dwelling little upon forms or creeds. Once, when a little niece wanted a scarlet cape such as other children were wearing, and her Quaker mother objected, Mr. Whittier pleaded for the little girl so well that she was allowed to have her way. The evening of Mr. Whittier's life was passed among near friends at Dan- vers, Massachusetts, with the pleasant consciousness of being widely esteemed and beloved. He died on September 7th, 1892. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL, THE GREAT POET AND ESSAYIST. (•StY portrait, p. 646.) IT IS hard to label this many- sided man, author of "The Vision of Sir Launfal " and the " Fable for Critics," the " Biglow Papers " and the "Present Crisis," poet, essay- ist, critic, wit, man of letters, diplomatist, and professor. He was born in Boston in 1 8 19. He graduated at Har- vard, and began the study of law, but soon gave it up to devote himself to literature. He married Maria White, a woman of singular beauty and loveliness, who is the subject of some of his most exquisite poems. Mrs. Lowell was her- self a poet, the best known of her works being those sweet and pathetic poems, "The Alpine Sheep"* and "The Morning-Glory," both in memory of a dead child. Mrs. Lowell herself died in 1853. On the night of her death a daughter was born to Mr. Lowell's neighbor, the poet Longfellow, who sent to his friend the beautiful poem, "The Two Angels." '• 'Twas at thy door, O friend, and not at mine The angel with the amaranthine wreath, Pausing, descended, and with voice divine Uttered a word that had a sound like death. " Then fell upon the house a sudden gloom, A shadow on those features fair and thin, And slowly, from that hushed and darkened room, Two angels issued, where but one went in." 668 INTERIOR OF MEMORIAL HALL, HARVARD UNIVERSITY. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. 669 In 1854 Mr. Lowell was appointed to the chair of belles-lettres in Harvard University, and for a number of years delivered lectures on literature of .a very high order. When the Atlantic Monthly was established, in 1857, he became its editor, and under his care it attained the highest literary rank. He also edited for some years the North Atnerican Review. He was appointed by President Hayes minister to Spain, and afterward minister to England, where he received the highest honors. He was particularly distinguished for his admir- able public addresses, of which he made a number while in England, receiving the highest praise for his efforts. MI.MnKIM HAIL, HARVARD I'M V K.RM1 V. Lowell began early to employ his pen in behalf of the cause of freedom. The first series of the " Biglow Papers," satirizing the Mexican War, showed that a new force had appeared in literature. Many who had been indifferent to the subject were attracted and interested by their keen wit and sarcasm. A certain John P. Robinson attained undying fame by being pilloried in a verse of Lowell's, whose jingle caught the popular ear ; and poor Mr. Robinson, dis- tracted by hearing on every hand some one repeating how "John P. Robinson he Sez they didn't know everything down in Judee," 670 WALT WHITMAN. sailed for Europe ; but one of the first things he heard on arriving on foreign shores was that same tormenting rhyme, which pursued him wherever he went. The first series of these "Papers" undoubtedly had a powerful influence in forming public opinion against slavery ; while the second series, published during the war, was even more potent in winning support for the government in prosecuting the war, and for the emancipation measures. The stinging words of his " Mason and Slidell," written when England was threatening war because of the capture of the Confederate commissioners, still thrill the heart and stir the blood. And his greatest poem, the noble " Commemoration Ode,'' was read at the dedication of "Memorial Hall," at Harvard, to the sons of the great Uni- versity who fell in the civil war. Nowhere is Lowell's fervent patriotism more worthily expressed than in the closing lines of that great poem : — " What words of lover or of poet Could tell our love and make thee know it, Among the nations bright beyond compare! What were our lives without thee? What all our lives to save thee ? We reck not what we gave thee, We will not dare to doubt thee ; But ask whatever else, and we will dare ! " Mr. Lowell died at- his home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on August 1 2th, 1 89 1. WALT WHITMAN, THE AUTHOR OF "LEAVES OF GRASS." (See portrait, p. 644. ) NE of the most original and striking figures among American writers is Walt Whitman, the author of " Drum-taps " and " Leaves of Grass." Whitman was born on Long Island in 1819, and learned the printing trade in Brooklyn, which favored the development of his literary ability. From boyhood he had a " passion for humanity," and an equally strong one for nature, and spent much of his time on the lonely Long Island beaches, and again among the crowds on the streets and at the ferries. For some years he was engaged as a printer and journalist, editing the Brook- lyn Eagle and other papers. "Leaves of Grass" was first published in 1855. It was certainly a new kind of poetry, and stirred up much discussion, being LOUISA M. ALCOTT. 671 vehemently denounced by many critics for its violation of all accepted rules of literary propriety. During the civil war Whitman was a volunteer nurse in the Washington hospitals, and on Lincoln's tragic death wrote his fine poem, " My Captain," which was published in the collection called " Drum-taps." This book confirmed his reputation as a poet, which from that time increased steadily, especially in England. During the latter part of his life he lived in a small house in Camden, New Jersey. He was a familiar figure on the streets and ferry-boats, with his long white beard, slouch hat, and peculiar dress. His kindness of heart and amiable disposition made him greatly beloved among those by whom he was best known. He died in 1892. LOUISA M, ALCOTT, THE AUTHOR OF "LITTLE WOMEN." (See portrait, page 6jS.) OT one of the stories of the author of "Little Women," fasci- nating as the young people of America have found them to be r ' is half so interesting or pathetic as the story of her own life and work. Miss Alcott was born in 1832, in Germantown,, now a suburb of Philadelphia. She was the daughter of Amos Bronson Alcott. one of the " Concord school " of philosophers, of whom Emerson was the head. He was an amiable, scholarly, unworldly man, — one of the geniuses of whom it has been aptly said that they "have every kind of sense but common-sense." Mr. Alcott's various hobbies, his frequent changes, and his utter lack of thrift, made life hard indeed for his devoted wife and their children. In 1834 the family moved to Boston, where Mr. Alcott undertook a private schodl. This was financially unsuccessful, and in 1840 he moved to Concord, Massachusetts. "These Concord clays," writes his daughter, "were the happiest of my life, for we had charming playmates in the little Emersons, Channings, and Hawthornes, with their illustrious parents to enjoy our pranks and share our excursions." Ire 1842 he undertook a communistic experiment at a farm near Concord, where several families were to live together in Arcadian simplicity, eating no meat, going to bed at sundown, and studying Transcendental philosophy. This soon came to an end, and brought Mr. Alcott to utter ruin and poverty. It was at this time that Louisa, although a mere child, began the noble and unselfish 672 LOUISA M. ALCOTT. efforts to retrieve the family fortunes to which her whole life was devoted. When only fifteen she turned her thoughts to teaching, and for a short time had a little school in the barn for the children of Mr. Emerson and other neighbors. But her chief resource was her pen, which for several years she employed in writing largely for the "story papers," — a line of work which she followed only because it brought her money and was always open to her. Soon, however, her work began to be accepted by the At/antic Monthly and other magazines of reputation ; and in 1861 she published her first book, called " Moods." It was a failure at the time, though it had a large sale when republished years after- ward, when her later books had made her name famous. During the war she went as a nurse to the hospitals near Washington, where she contracted a severe illness, from the effects of which she never entirely recovered. Her experiences were told in a volume entitled " Hospital Sketches," which was quite popular. Her most successful book, " Little Women," was published in 1867, and made her position at once secure. The end for which she had struggled was attained, and her beloved parents and sisters assured of comfort for the future. But this great success only made her more busy. Following " Little Women" came in rapid succession " An Old-Fashioned Girl," " Little Men," " Work," and a long list of other stories. She had contracted the habit of working hard, and the great demand for all that she could write resulted in wearing out her strength. In the last years of her life her health was poor, though her bright and cheerful spirit shone clear and strong through sickness and health alike. She made two journeys to Europe, where her sister May (the " Amy " of " Little Women " ) lived, and who died there a year after her marriage. So strong was the habit of work in Miss Alcott that she hardly laid down her pen until the day of her death, which occurred in August, 1888. Miss Alcott made no pretense of being a poet, though she wrote much in verse ; but once, on the death of her beloved mother, the inspiration of the occasion produced th^ beautiful and pathetic poem, "Transfiguration," one of the finest of her works. A few years after her death was published her " Life, Letters, and Journals," one of the most charming of American books, and one which should be read by every one who has laughed and cried over her stories, and learned through them to admire and love the strong and noble woman who wrote them. HORACE GREELEY, THE FOUNDER OF MODERN JOURNALISM. HE men of whom we love to read are those who stand for some great principle, whose lives and deeds exemplify its power. When we think of patriotism, the figure of Jim H; ■4T^- Washington rises before us, as the man whose life, above r^* L^ " a " others, was controlled by pure love of country. Prac- tical wisdom, shrewdness, and thrift are embodied in Ben- jamin Franklin. Astor and Girard represent the power of accumulation ; Stewart, Carnegie, and Pullman, the power of organization ; and so, when we consider the power of the press, the image which comes up before our mental view is that of Horace Greeley. In almost every personal quality there have been men who far surpassed him, — men who were greater as politicians, as organizers, as statesmen, as speakers, as writers, — but in the one respect of influencing public opinion through the press, of "mak- ing his mind the mind of other men," no man in America has ever wielded such power as the great editor and founder of the New York Tribune. Greeley is one of the most interesting and picturesque characters in our history. A strong individuality, a marked and peculiar personal flavor, charac- terized all his words and acts. Everything he said or did was said or done in the Greeley way, — a way which was known and recognized all over the United States. His political influence was incalculable. Thousands of men who had never seen him or heard his voice accepted his words as political gospel. W. D. Howells, writing of his own boyhood days, tells how the neighbors gathered in the country store when the Tribune was received, and, as it was opened with the words, "Well, let's see what old Horace says this week," listened with unquestioning assent. What a tremendous engine such a newspaper was can hardly be appreciated by those who did not live in the stirring times "before the war," and who knew not the Tribune and Greeley in the days of his power. Horace Greeley was one of the poor country boys who have afterward be- come the bone and sinew of the republic. He was born in Amherst, New Hampshire, in 1811. His father, Zaccheus Greeley, was a struggling farmer. He 6 ; 5 . 676 HORACE GREELEY. moved to Vermont in 1821, and a few years later to the western part of Penn- sylvania. Horace was a precocious child ; and his mother, Mary Woodburn, who was of Scotch-Irish stock, used to recite to him ballads and stories, so that he really acquired a taste for literature before the age at which many children conquer the alphabet. At the age of three he went to school — in bad weather having to be carried on his father's shoulder ; but he had learned to read even before this, — sitting by his mother, with the book on her lap, while she sewed or knitted. The book was often misplaced, and the child learned to read with it sideways or upside-down, an accomplishment which came to his aid when he began to set type. For this business he possessed another natural qualification — he was a perfect prodigy at spelling. Such an excellent reputation did he obtain for correct scholarship and good conduct, that the school authorities in Bedford, which was beyond his legal district, passed a unanimous vote " that no pupils from other towns should be received into the school except Horace Greeley alone : " a most unusual compliment to a New Hampshire schoolboy. LEARNING THE PRINTERS TRADE. In his fifteenth year Horace felt that he could endure farming no longer, and at last procured from his father a reluctant consent that he should definitely seek employment as a printer. He found the longed-for opportunity at East Poultney, Vermont, in the office of the Northern Spectator. An agreement was made for Horace to remain as an apprentice until twenty years of age. All the money he received was forty dollars a year for clothing, and out of this it was quite certain he bought many books and very little else for himself. Though he was frequently excessively fatigued after his day's work, he was never satisfied until he had spent some hours in study. His scanty wardrobe, unfashionable clothes, and generally outre appearance often excited derisive comment. His annual salary of forty dollars would have gone far in that place to enable him to make a presentable appearance had he spent it on himself, but instead of this he sent nearly the whole of it to his father, who was ever in need of money. In 1830, before Horace's apprenticeship ended, the Spectator collapsed, and he was again set adrift. His father had removed to Western Pennsylvania, and the boy turned his face in that direction. After working for a few months on different country papers, he resolved to try his fortune in New York, and went to that city in August, 1831. Greeley was, on his first entrance in New York, about twenty years of age, tall, slim, pale, with flaxen locks and pale blue eyes. He always had a habit of wearing his hat on the back of his head, as if accustomed to star-gazing, which gave him, even late in life, a peculiarly "green " look. It is probable that he was still assisting his parents, for with his correct and temperate habits, there is no other reason why he should have come to the city without a respectable suit EXPERIENCES IN NEW YORK. 677 of clothes, and with all his personal effects tied up in a handkerchief. This sort of economy may be carried too far, as it was in his case ; preventing him from getting a situation, which a more respectable appearing person might have obtained. David Hale, editor of the Journal of Commerce, to whom he applied for work, took him for a runaway apprentice, and plainly told him so. In his search for a boarding-house he met with a somewhat similar experience. At the first house where he applied, on Wall street, on asking the terms, the answer was, " Six dollars a week, but something cheaper will probably suit you better." And it did; he wandered over to the north side, and found, he said, "the sign of 'Boarding' on a humbler edifice ; I entered, and was offered shelter and subsist ence for $2.50 per week, which seemed more rational, and 1 closed the bargain." After a most persistent search for work, Greeley at last found employment on a Polyglot Testament, which was so difficult and slow that most printers re- fused to work on it. By working twelve and fourteen hours daily, he managed to earn six dollars a week. For months he ploddec along in this manner, not always having employment. In January, 1832, he procured a situation on the Spirit of the Times, the fore- man of which, F. V. Story, after- ward became his partner. The young firm hired rooms on the corner of Nassau and Liberty streets. Their principal dependence was the printing of Sylvester's Bank-note Reporter. All the money invested by Greeley and Story was about $240, Mr. George Bruce, the type founder, granting them credit for some additional material. Mr. Story was drowned in June, 1833. His place in the business was supplied by Mr. Jonas Winchester, and early the next spring (March, 1834) Mr. Greeley commenced his first editorial work, the firm publishing a weekly paper called the A t czl' Yorker, which lasted until the March of 1841, when it went under, with a credit on its books of $10,000 due to Mr. Greeley for editing the paper, all of which was sunk with the wreck. But the debts which the firm owed to others troubled him far more than what WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. 678 HORACE GREELEY. he lost in the concern himself. His expressions on this subject are pathetic in their intensity. "For my own part," he says, "and I speak from sad experi- ence, I would rather be a convict in State's prison, a slave in a rice-swamp, than to pass through life under the harrow of debt. If you have but fifty cents, and can get no more for a week, buy a peck of corn, parch it, and live on it, rather than owe any man a dollar." In the famous campaign of 1840, when Harrison was "sung and shouted into the presidential chair," Greeley started a small weekly called the Log Cabin. He threw all his spirit and energy into it ; he made it lively, crisp, and cheap. It attained an almost unheard-of success, reaching editions of eighty and ninety thousand. It was continued for several months after the triumphant election of Harrison, and then merged into the New York Tribune, which Greeley started at this time, the first issue appearing April 10, 1841. GREELEY AND THE "TRIBUNE.' 1 The new enterprise soon became successful. It was helped at the start by a bitter attack from the Sun, then in the hands of Moses Y. Beach. The de- fense and rejoinders were equally pungent and amusing. Mr. Greeley always throve best upon opposition. His spicy retorts, and especially his partisan en- thusiasm, forced the attention of the public, and the subscription-list of the Tribune soon rose from hundreds to thousands ; by the third week in May it had 10,000 names on its books. New and more powerful presses had to be bought to work off these large editions. Advertisers came rushing in, and it became absolutely necessary for the overwhelmed editor to seek a business partner. The Tribune office would soon have become a modern spectacle of chaos had not its financial affairs been taken in hand by a competent financier. This " good angel of the profit and loss account " was Mr. Thomas McElrath, through whose efficiency and good management was soon brought order out of confu- sion, making the " Tribune office not only one of the best conducted, but one of the best paying in the city." Greeley was now in his element. Political and social discussion were the breath of his nostrils ; and under his hand the Tribune quickly became the most interesting paper in the country, as well as the most powerful. Mr. Greeley was a very earnest and emphatic writer ; it was impossible to mistake his mean- ing ; he had positive opinions on all subjects upon which he touched. Hence he drew devoted followers and admirers on the one side, while exciting the most bitter opposition from the unconvinced. He was the most pugnacious of edit- ors, and was much stronger in a fight than when unopposed. One thing which undoubtedly tended to bring the Tribune into prominence was Greeley's tendency toward " isms." He always had something to say about new social, industrial, and religious theories, and was very apt to advocate them. SUCCESS OF THE " TRIBUNE." 679 In this direction he was much influenced by his wife, whom he had married in July, 1836. She was a lady deeply imbued with the ultra-transcendentalism of the period ; she was also a vegetarian, and in many respects held eccentric and unusual views. Horace Greeley was devoted to her. It was, perhaps, in a measure due to her influence that Mr. Greeley took, up with such zeal the cause of Fourierism, be- coming a devoted follower and ex- ponent of this theory for reor- ganizing society. Mrs. Greeley was one of those who joined in the " Brook Farm ex- periment," a de- velopment of Fourierism in Massachusetts, which was a rather ludicrous failure. One thing in particular gave the Tribune emi- nence ; that was Greeley's policy of employing as contributors the best writers of the time. To name all the able men and women who thus won fame for both themselves and the Tr ibune, would make a list too long to print ; but among them may be mentioned Bayard Taylor, whose "Views Afooi" first appeared in the form of letters to the Tribune ; Margaret Fuller, whose articles gave her a wide reputation ; George Ripley, Moncure D. Conway, Sydney Howard Gay, and George W. Smalley ; and for years Thomas WHITELAW RF.ID, GREELEY S SUCCESSOR AS EDITOR OF THE 68o HORACE GREELEY. Hughes, the popular author of " Tom Brown at Oxford," sent frequent and able letters from London. The result of this liberal policy was to make the Tribune indispensable to people of intelligence, even though utterly opposed to its political views. In 1848, when General Zachary Taylor, "the hero of Buena Vista," was elected President, Greeley was chosen as member of Congress from New York city. He made no effort to secure the election, and when consulted by a fellow-candidate, Mr. Brooks, as to what should be done to accomplish it, he said to his messenger, "Tell Mr. Brooks that we have only to keep still, and General Taylor will carry us both in." Mr. Greeley's presence in Congress was -soon felt. He discovered that it was the custom with members of Congress to charge " mileage " by long and circuitous routes from their homes to Wash- ington ; and he soon made one of the greatest newspaper "hits " of the time by publishing in the Tribune a complete statement of what each member would receive if his mileage were computed by the shortest mail route, along- side of the amount he actually did receive. It may be imagined that that issue of the paper had a large sale in Washington, and for some time there was a great deal of "rising to explain " by honorable members. Mr. Greeley also introduced a "Homestead bill," which years afterward became one of the most popular measures ever passed by Congress, but which then received not a single vote beside his own ! THE YEARS BEFORE THE WAR. But Greeley's strength was as a journalist, not as a legislator. At the close of his brief term he retired from Congress, and during the stormy decade preceding the civil war he made the Tribune a mighty power. He warmly espoused the cause of freedom, and denounced the Fugitive Slave Law, the Kansas-Nebraska bill, and the endless aggressions of the slave power with a vigor and pertinacity which made him one of the best-hated men in America. His course was not always consistent ; and he often brought upon his head the wrath of friends as well as enemies. Moreover, in the conduct of a great daily paper much must be left to the judgment of subordinates ; and all their mis- takes were, of course, laid to the charge of their chief. Many of the old readers of the Tribune supposed that every line in the paper was actually written by Horace Greeley. He rarely took the trouble to justify or explain ; and there- fore, while in one sense one of the best known men in the country, he was one of the most misunderstood. Mr. Greeley had no time or thought for personal explanations ; he was bent upon saving the country, — individuals could take care of themselves. During the war Mr. Greeley's course was somewhat erratic and unstable. The Tribune had been considered in the South an "Abolition" paper; Mr. HIS COURSE DURING THE WAR. 68 1 Greeley had condemned all the preliminary movements of the secessionists, and had come very near demanding the impeachment of President Buchanan. Just at the crisis, when every word from an influential source was potent to turn the scale for good or evil, Greeley astounded and dismayed the loyal, and put a ready weapon into the hand of secession, by his ill-timed, ill-considered article, " Let the South Go ! " The advocates of secession were triumphant, and con- cluded that if the Tribune was willing to "Let the erring sisters go in peace," other people might be depended upon to acquiesce. The immediate result of that article was to cause fifty Southern officers in New York to vote that they " resign their commissions in the United States army and join their brethren in the South." But no sooner had these men taken his advice, and the " erring sisters " attempted to "go," than the Tri- bune was the first to try to pull them forcibly back again. Before the administration was ready with its plans, before the Union army was drilled or properly organized, Mr. Greeley broke out with his famous war-cry, "On to Richmond ! " which undoubtedly did much to precipitate the disaster of Bull Run. Then, . when the Union cause looked dark, "de- spairing of the republic," he rushed to Canada to discuss, unauthorized, with Confederate envoys, terms for a treaty of peace disgraceful and injurious to the United States ; yet all this time the Tribune flourished. After the war closed it received another shock, when one morning its readers learned that its senior editor had gone to Richmond to offer bail for Jefferson Davis. Mr. Greeley afterward justified his action with much force ; but at the time it seemed utterly unaccountable. Throughout all these tergiversations, however, he kept a hold upon a large class of readers who believed in him, to whom he was a mental and moral lawgiver, who refused to believe any evil of him; and, if some visitor to the city — for a large proportion of Tribune readers were country, and particularly Western, people — on coming back, reported that in an interview with Mr. Greeley the editor had indulged in JEFFERSON PAVIS 682 HORACE GREELEY. unlimited profanity, the unlucky individual was incontinently discredited and voted a calumniator. In the years following the war, Greeley's pen was more busy than ever. Beside his editorial writing in the Tribune, he prepared the second volume of R KENWOOD CEMKTERY. his war history, "The American Conflict," and his delightful autobiography, "Recollections of a Busy Life." He was always intensely interested in the growth of the West, where he had made a memorable tour in 1859, extending to Salt Lake City ; and now he unceasingly advocated western emigration. His terse advice, "Go West, young man, and grow up with the country," THE CAMPAIGN OF 1872. 683 became a sort of national watchword, and many thousands of eastern people resolved to turn their faces toward the empire of the West. In 1872 a curious political combination was made. Probably such a sur- prise was never sprung upon the country as the nomination of Horace Greeley for the Presidency, by a convention of "Liberal Republicans" and bolting Democrats. That he should be defeated at the polls was inevitable. Strange to say, his experience as an editor, his own denunciations of political opponents, had not prepared him for the bitter attacks which were made upon him. He could not digest the ridicule of the caricaturists, who, it is safe to say, never before had such a tempting opportunity. He worked hard through the canvass, traveling and addressing meetings ; body and mind suffered from the fatigue and excitement. To add to his troubles, Mrs. Greeley, who had been out of health for a considerable time, died at this period ; he watched over her day and night, obtaining very little sleep, and altogether the burden became too great for him to bear. His health gave way ; he became unable to sleep ; and sleeplessness was followed by inflammation of the brain, which soon ended his life. Everything which medical skill and attention, with the loving care of his. two devoted daughters, could do, was done ; but all was unavailing. A short time before his death, the terrible delirium incident to his disease sub- sided, and he became himself once more. After some hours of calm and serene rest, with his faculties restored, he passed quietly away, repeating the sublime words of Job, "I know that my Redeemer liveth." Horace Greeley sleeps in Greenwood Cemetery, Long Island, on a hill over- looking the beautiful bay of New York, and within sight of the great city where his busy life was spent. ' In the centre of the plot stands a granite pedestal, on which is a portrait bust of heroic size, showing the upper part of his figure, in the historic white overcoat, with the front thrown back, exposing to view the inner pocket, filled with letters and papers. This monument was erected by the printers of New York, the bust and the two tablets on the sides of the pedestal being of type metal. On one of the tablets is the figure of a young man setting type, his " stick " in his left hand, the right resting on the "case." On the other tablet is the inscription : — HORACE GREELEY. Born February 3d, 1811. Died November 29th, 1872. Founder of the New York Tribune, NEWSPAPERS AND JOURNALISM. HERE are, a latter-day philosopher has said, no such things as inventions ; all we have are discoveries. Without dwelling upon the identity of the two terms, it may be added that nearly all our modern arts and sciences are not even discoveries, but mere evo- lutions. Away back in antiquity, perhaps among the cave-dwell- ers, men observed certain facts and practically applied them to the satisfaction of their needs. And the bulk of human progress in all the centuries since has been chiefly development and elaboration of those primitive ideas. It is really startling to notice how many fundamental princi- ples, of architecture, of engineering, of mechanics, date back to or before the earliest historic times ; and to notice, moreover, how largely the really new dis- coveries have been utilized only in application to ancient processes. The steam engine, for example, is a modern device. Yet it scarcely gives us one new pro- cess, but is harnessed to the work that was formerly done by wind or water, or brute or man. The steamship is an evolution from the galley, the railroad train from the ox-cart. The Springfield rifle and the Krupp gun are only new means for doing the same old work that was done by the "cloth-yard shaft" and the catapult." Modern improvements" is a literally accurate term. Some few features of nineteenth century civilization, however, are alto- gether new, and have not even a prototype in ancient history. And among these, perhaps, the most conspicuous is the newspaper. If printing itself be only a development of the old idea of writing and engraving, the newspaper still stands unique. Neither in the posted bulletin nor in the herald's proclama- tion can we find a trace of the essential idea of the modern journal ; nor in any other feature of ancient life. The newspaper belongs, both in spirit and in substance, to the modern world. Nor can this fact be made more evident, and the necessitous value of the thing be made more apparent, than by imagining ourselves suddenly and entirely deprived of it. Were the steamship and rail- road abolished, we could still get on with the sailing-ship and stage-coach ; with- out the telegraph, we could still depend upon the mails ; with no electric lamps or gas,, we could make use of oil or candles ; without steam-power, we could 4° 685 686 NEWSPAPERS AND JOURNALISM. employ the earlier and simpler motor-forces. But were the newspaper swept out of existence, absolutely nothing would be left to take its place, in kind or in degree ; and it seems not extravagant to say that its absence would be more keenly felt than that of almost any, and perhaps of any, other device of modern ingenuity. Well did Jefferson say, "I would rather live in a country with newspapers and without a government, than in a country with a government but without newspapers;" and Bonaparte: "Four hostile newspapers are more to be dreaded than a hundred thousand bayonets." It is beyond the purpose of this essay to review the whole history of the printing art, from the Chinese blacksmith, Pi Ching, in 1041, and Gutenberg and Schoeffer four hundred years later ; an art that at the discovery of America was still regarded as somewhat akin to sorcery. Nor can we even summarize the record of the newspaper press of the world, with its uncertain origin. Apart from the Pckin Gazette, the Chinese Government organ, said to have been founded about 1 200, there are varying claims for priority in newspaper work. About 1240, the Venetian Government issued its famous Gazette, but this was merely a series of manuscript war bulletins, scarcely to be reckoned as a news- paper. There is a legend of a printed journal at Nuremberg, in 1457, but scarcely authenticated. In much dispute, also, is the story of the English Mer- cury, said to have been founded by Queen Elizabeth and Lord Burleigh, in 1588, to disseminate true tidings of the Spanish war, though it seems certain that such an occasional printed bulletin, at least, was issued. But the first real journal published in Europe was probably Die Frankfurter Obcrpostamis Zcitung, a daily, founded in 161 5 and still in existence. The first English news- paper appeared on October 9, 1621, when Nathaniel Butter, of London, began publishing his Courant ; on May 23, 1622, Thomas Archer and Nicholas Bourne first issued their Weekly News ; and on August 23 of the same year Butter gave to the public his Certain Netus of the Present Week. It is interesting to observe, from these dates, that the origin of the English newspaper press and the foundation of the New England colonies were practically simultaneous. Our task now is to trace the progress of the press in the great nation of which these colonies were the germ. The Massachusetts settlers were the first to introduce the printer's art into North America, though Mendoza had set up a press in Mexico in 1535. It was in 1639 that printing was begun at Cambridge, Massachusetts. The year be- fore, Jesse Glover, an English clergyman, had reverently packed up press and types and set sail with them for the colony. He died on the voyage ; but the precious freight reached its destination and was unpacked and set up in the house of Nathaniel Eaton, the head of the famous school founded by John Har- vard. There American literature had its birth. THE EARLY NEWSPAPERS. 68; The first attempt to publish a newspaper was made by Benjamin Harris, in Boston. On September 25, 1690, he issued, from the press of Richard Pierce, a paper called Public Occurrences, both Foreign and Domestic. It was a sheet fourteen by twenty-two inches in size, folded into four pages, with two columns to a page, and with the fourth -page blank. Only one number, however, came out, the Government forbidding a second issue. More fortunate was the next attempt, also in Boston, in 1704. On Monday, April 24, Bartholomew Green began printing The Boston Nezvs Letter, and Nicholas Boone began selling it at his shop. It was a sheet of coarse paper, eight by twelve inches in size, not folded, with two columns on each of the two pages. Chief Justice Sewall had the historic honor of taking the first copy from the press. There was just one advertisement in that initial number, its own, and it read as follows : — "This News-Letter is to be continued Weekly ; and all persons who have any Houses, Lands, Tenements, Farms, Ships, Vessels, Goods, Wares, or Merchandise, etc., to be Sold or Let ; or Servants, Runaway, or Goods Stole or Lost ; may have the same inserted at a Reasonable Rate, from Twelve Pence to Five Shillings, and not to exceed : Who may agree with John Campbell, Postmaster of Boston. All persons in Town or Country may have the News-Letter every Week, Yearly, upon reasonable terms, agreeing with John Campbell, Postmaster, for the same." This journal endured for seventy-two years. Bartholomew Green, the printer, succeeded Camp- bell as proprietor in 1722; he was succeeded by his son-in-law, John Draper, in 1733, and he by his son, Richard Draper, in 1762. The last-named changed its title to The Weekly News Letter and New England Chronicle ; then to The Massachusetts Gazette and Boston News Letter ; then, in 1768, united it with The Boston Post-Boy ; and finally, in 1769, restored the original name. Its publication ceased in March, 1776. Its rival, The Boston Gazette, was started on December 21, 1 7 19, and some years later was printed by James Franklin, elder brother of Benjamin Franklin, of whom we shall presently hear much more. The Gazette died in 1752. The third American paper appeared one day after the second, on December 22, 17 19. It was The American Weekly Mercury, issued by Andrew Bradford, in Philadelphia. The fourth was The New England Courant, brought out by James Franklin, at Boston, on August 7, 1721. Its aggressive tone kept it in a state of warfare with the Government, and it died in 1727. James Franklin then went to Rhode Island in quest of greater liberty — as Roger Williams had done — and started The Gazette, at Newport, in 1732. New York's first paper was The New York Gazette, issued by the illustrious 688 NEWSPAPERS AND JOURNALISM. William Bradford on October 23, 1725. Boston's fourth paper, The New England Weekly Journal, appeared on March 20, 1727, and enjoyed the edi- torial inspiration of Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield. The Mary- land Gazette appeared at Annapolis in 1727. The South Carolina Gazette at Charleston, in 1731, and The Virginia Gazette at Williamsburg, in 1736. The first American paper in a foreign language was a German journal printed at Germantown, Pa., in 1739. The first libel suit in the history of American journalism occurred in 1734- 35, and commands our interested attention. John Peter Zenger, who had been in the employ of William Bradford, began on November 5, 1733, publishing The New York Weekly Journal as a rival to Bradford's New York Gazette. It became the organ of the political party opposed to the Colonial Government, and was vigorous and outspoken in its criticisms. This warfare culminated, on November 17, 1734, in Zenger's arrest on the charge of libel. The eloquent Andrew Hamilton, of Philadelphia, was engaged to defend him, and a most exciting and impressive trial ensued. Finally, in August, 1735, Zenger was triumphantly acquitted. He and Hamilton were loaded with honors by the sympathetic public, and the principle of the freedom of the press was estab- lished. Reference has already been made to Benjamin Franklin, who was preemi- nently the most commanding figure in American journalism in the last century. He was born in Boston in 1 706 and died in 1 790, and his history, as a patriot, diplomat, statesman, moralist, and man of letters, is familiar to the world. His first work was done for his brother, in Boston. He soon, however, made his way to Philadelphia, entering that city a penniless young man. For a time he worked for Bradford and for Samuel Keimer. The latter had a paper called The Universal Instructor in All the Arts and Sciences, and Pennsylvania Gazette, which languished on the verge of dissolution. He sold it in 1729, to Franklin, who at once reduced its portentous title to The Pennsylvania Gazette, and in- stilled into it so much editorial vigor that it quickly became the most noteworthy and most noted journal in America. Scholarly, enterprising, and progressive, Franklin did more than any and all of his contemporaries for the advancement of journalism and of printing in general, and has ever been fittingly regarded as the " patron saint " of typography in America. Patriotism early found voice in the press. At the beginning of 1 748 The Independent Advertiser, of Boston, spoke boldly for freedom from British rule, and its printer, Daniel Fowle, was imprisoned therefor, though the writers of the revolutionary articles, Samuel Adams and Jonathan Mayhew, escaped. On regaining his liberty Fowle went to Portsmouth, and in 1756 founded The New Hampshire Gazette. Isaiah Thomas, of Worcester, Mass., on May 3, 1774, began publishing a revolutionary sheet. So Whig papers were started in many FAMOUS EDITORS. 689 places throughout the colonies, and gave incalculable aid to the cause of Ameri- can Independence. The Hartford Courant dates from 1764, The New Haven Journal from 1767, The Salem Gazette from 1768, The Worcester Spy from 1770, The Baltimore American from 1773, and The American! Advertiser, of Philadel- phia, the first daily in the country, from 1 784. We may close the record of the colonial and revolutionary press with the statement that in 1 789, in the whole United States, the gross number of papers printed every month was 298,000. In later years the daily issue of a single journal has exceeded those figures ! With the beginning of our national life, territorial expansion and industrial growth set in at an amazing pace, and the multiplication of newspapers did not lag behind. In 1810 the State of New York had sixty-six papers, fourteen of them being in New York city. Of the latter, two are still in existence, The Commercial Advertiser, founded in 1794, and The Evening Post, 1801. In 1827 The Journal of Commerce was started in that city, and it is still published. The Coitrier and Enquirer appeared in the same year, and, after running a brilliant course under the editorship of James Watson Webb, was merged into The World -when that paper was established, in i860. In 1833 The Sun was started, in 1835 The Herald, in 1841 The Tribune, and in 1851 The Times, thus estab- lishing the present era in metropolitan journalism. The simple mention of these papers recalls the entire history of the past half century, starred with a galaxy of illustrious names. When newspapers were first issued in England they were the object of all the scorn and contempt that literary men could pour upon them. Ben Jonson, Fletcher, and others made them the target for their most envenomed shafts. But now the foremost men of letters were glad to seek the favor of the press, to contribute to its columns, to be known as editors. The name of William Cullen * Bryant is only one on a long roll of the best in American literature, of men and women who have been identified with the newspaper press, and to it have given the best efforts of their lives. In the past generation of editors, it is not invidious to say, two great names stand forth preeminent. They are those of James Gordon Bennett and Horace Greeley, the founders and editors respectively of The New York Herald and The Neiv York Tribune. The former was the incarnation of the news-gathering instinct. He sought to make his paper the completest possible record of daily events in all parts of the globe. His reporters and corres- pondents seemed literally ubiquitous. No labor or expense was spared in getting the fullest possible accounts of every event, at the earliest possible moment, and in placing it before the readers of The Herald in the most attract- ive, and often most sensational, form. The ruling passion of the great man, and the dominant note of his great organ, was " News ! News ! News ! " Gree- ley was in many respects the antithesis of Bennett. Coming to New York a penniless youth, strikingly like Franklin in Philadelphia, he worked as a jour- 690 NEWSPAPERS AND JOURNALISM. neyman printer until he was able, on a most meagre capital, to start The Tribune. From the outset his idea was to appeal to the intellect of the people, to make his paper the organ of thought, of principle, of literature, science, and invention. He would not neglect the news, but he would devote most attention to editorial comment and discussion. While Bennett sought to record history in The Herald, Greeley strove to make history in The Tribune. While as a news-gatherer, business man, and managing editor, Greeley was far inferior not only to the colossal genius of Bennett, but to the majority of his contemporaries, as an editorial writer and political controversialist he was abso- lutely and incomparably supreme. By the sole virtue of its editorial columns he made The Tribune the greatest journalistic force of the times. In the early years of these great papers, when steamboats and railroads were new and few, the telegraph in embryo, and the submarine cable scarcely dreamed of, news-gathering was far different from what it is to-day. Perhaps the competition between rival papers was even keener than now. Certainly it was more picturesque. Special swift-sailing boats were chartered, pony expresses and mounted couriers, carrier-pigeons, signal flags, and beacon fires — all were impressed into the service. One of many classic incidents may be cited. Two rival correspondents went to a town far distant from the railroad to report some momentous occurrence. Their work done, they hired a man to convey them back to the railroad with his horse and wagon, just in time to catch the last train to the city. On the way, in a spot remote from any house, one slyly bargained with the driver for the purchase of the horse, closed the bargain on the spot, unhitched, mounted and galloped off to the railroad, leav- ing his discomfited rival hopelessly stranded ! All European news came by steamer, of course, and " Four Days Later from Europe " was a familiar caption over a column or two of gleanings from English papers just received. After a time the principal New York papers agreed to unite in the general work of news-gathering, dividing among themselves the cost of telegraph tolls, and cable tolls when the Atlantic cable was laid, and using the news received in common. Thus the Associated Press was formed, a combination of The Courier and Enquirer, The Herald, The Sun, The Tribune, The Times, The Express, and The Journal of Commerce. The first named was afterward succeeded by The World, and The Express by The Mail and Express. And thus was formed the greatest news-gathering corporation in the world. The papers still, of course, employed many special correspondents, and these became more numerous as, year by year, the cost of telegraphing became less. Volumes of authentic stories of the enterprise and adventure of these correspondents, in peace and war, might be told, surpassing in thrilling or amusing interest most tales of fiction. The competition between them has been most keen. A very important event, for example, was to be reported at a dis- PRIMITIVE PRINTING PRESSES. tant country town where there was only one telegraph operator, and he a slow one, who would only be able, during the whole evening, to send the "copy " of one of the half-dozen correspondents. So the one who first got him at work on his manuscript and kept him busy would "have a beat" on all the others. And one of them did so. Hours before the event occurred and the news could be written, he gave the operator a Bible and told him to telegraph it to his paper. The operator obeyed, and sent chapter after chapter of Genesis over the wires until the shrewd correspondent could get his manuscript ready and substitute it for the sacred volume. When the Atlantic cable came into use the cost of telegraphing was so great that the papers employed it very sparingly. But during the Franco-German war of 1870-71, The Tribune (New York) startled the world and opened a new era in journalism by receiving by cable from its correspondents column after column of news, at a cost of thou- sands of dollars. Fully commensurate with the growth of the newspaper press in numbers and influence has been the progress made in the me- chanical equipment of the offices. The superiority of the telegraph over the mail coach as a news carrier is no more marked than that of the composing and press rooms of to-day over those of Franklin's time. The first paper mill in America was established at Philadel- phia more than a century ago, and soon after printing ink was made and type was cast equal to any in the world. The primitive hand-press was, however, still in use. That on which Franklin first worked is yet preserved in Boston. It was brought from England, and was like those used by the Bradfords, Keimer, and others in those days. It consisted of a horizontal table, on which the "form" of type was placed. Ink was spread on the type with a cabbage-shaped " ball," the sheet of paper was laid on, a blanket placed over it, and then, by means of a lever, a heavy iron plate was brought down upon it, pressing the paper evenly upon the inked type and printing one side of the sheet. The paper was then taken off, and another sheet used in the same way, and so on. By this tedious and laborious method only a few hundred impres- sions, at best, could be made in an hour. Ramage, a Philadelphia press-maker, and Clymer, his business rival, designed new presses at the beginning of the PATENT SINGLE SMALL CYLINDER PRESS. 692 NEWSPAPERS AND JOURNALISM. present century, which differed from the former only in having a sliding bed for the type to rest on, so that it could be brought out from under the platen for inking and laying on the paper. But steam-power soon came into use, and inventors began to meditate its application to the printing of newspapers. The first power-press in America was made by Daniel Treadwell, of Boston, in 1822. Like the old hand-presses, it had a fiat type bed and a fiat platen coming down upon it. But a new principle, that of the cylinder press, had been conceived by English machinists, and it soon found its way hither. Richard M. Hoe, in 1828, first put into operation in America a successful cylinder press. In it the type lay on a fiat sliding bed, while the paper was pressed upon it by a large cylinder revolving above the type, the ink being put upon the type by rollers. This single cylinder press would turn off a thousand impressions an hour. In impi-oved form it is at the present day one of the most widely used of presses ^for book and job work and small newspaper offices. Two years later Mr. Hoe ^brought out a double cylinder press, working on the same general principle, but with two small cylinders instead of one large one, and capable of doing twice as much work. Another still more striking innovation appeared in 1846 — the most important improvement that had yet been made in presses. Mr. Hoe brought out a " four cylinder type-revolving " printing machine. In it the forms of type, instead of lying on a flat bed, were fastened on the outside of a huge revolving cylinder, while four small cylinders pressed the sheets of paper against it. Thus four sheets were running through the press at once. Its capacity was 8000 sheets, printed on one side, an hour. The Philadelphia. Ledger bought and used the first one, and soon other great papers in America and Europe adopted this press. But with that Mr. Hoe was not content. He developed the same principle, adding more feed rollers, till at last he constructed a mammoth ten-cylinder press. This was operated by eleven men, and printed 20,000 sheets an hour, on one side. The New York Tribune bought the first one, in 1855, and The London Times sent to America for two more in 1857. It was supposed that this marvelous engine represented the highest possible achievement of inventive skill in that direction. And then, when machines for folding the printed sheets were also invented, men thought the perfection of newspaper making had been attained. Not all men thought so, however. William A. Bullock, of Philadelphia, did not. Already stereotype plates were used on the great cylinders instead of the forms of type. Mr. Bullock determined to do away with the feeders, also. He put the stereotype plates on the surfaces of small cylinders, made his paper in a continuous strip a mile or so long, and passed it continuously over the inked plates ; and thus the web-perfecting press of to-day came into being. • In this ingenious machine, as now used, there are two cylinders covered with stereotype plates, one for each side of the sheet. The huge roll of paper, THE ACME OF PRINTING MACHINES. 693 moistened with water beforehand while being unwound from one spindle and wound upon another, is put in place at one end of the press. The machinery is started. The paper unwinds and enters the press. Sheet by sheet is cut off with mathematical accuracy by a knife worked by the press. The sheet passes over one cylinder and is printed on one side, then under the other and is printed on the other side. Then it is cut into two, the two halves pasted together at the centre, folded into convenient form, and delivered at the other end of the press ready for the newsboy ! The machine does all this automatically, at the rate of from fifteen to twenty thousand copies an hour, the pressman having THE BULLOCK HUE PERFECTING PRESS. nothing to do after starting the press, but to sit in his easy chair and watch it work, and to put in a new roll of paper when the first three-mile roll is exhausted. The patents on this press were purchased by Mr. Hoe, and he became perhaps the best known maker of it. There are various other modifi- cations of the same ingenious principle, in the Walter, "Victory," Campbell, Scott, Marinoni, Derriery, and other web-perfecting presses. In the latest Hoe presses rolls of paper five miles long are used, the sheets are printed on both sides before they are cut off, four duplicate sets of stereotype plates are used, and fifty thousand papers an hour have been turned out. For many years the composing-room lagged far behind the press-room. 694 NEWSPAPERS AND JOURNALISM. Many attempts were made to set type by machinery, but without great success, and down to a dozen years ago the old system generally prevailed. A separ- ate metal type was used for each character, and these types were picked by hand, one by one, from compartments in a tray, and placed in a composing-stick, thence to be transferred to the galley and the form. But about 1880 a Mr. Mergenthaler, of Baltimore, brought into practical working an entirely new device, which did away with ordinary types altogether. The operator of this machine sits at and works upon a key-board, which has one key for each char- acter used. When a key is touched there drops from a tube a brass plate with the character, engraved on one of its edges. These plates fall side by side in a trough, with spacings between the words. When enough are in place to fill a line they are passed by the, machine underneath a tank of melted metal and a thin bar cast, with the impression from the brass matrices in raised letters upon one edge of it. It is, in fact, a line of type cast in one solid piece, and it takes its place in the galley and in the form, and from a page-form, thus made up, a stereotype plate is made. These machines, and others of similar construction, are rapidly coming into general use. Their saving in labor, time, and expense over the old system of hand type-setting is enormous. The cost of type-found- ing is dispensed with ; so is the labor of redistribution of type, for the machine automatically returns the brass matrices to their proper receptacles as soon as the casting of the line is completed ; the metal is remelted and used over and over again, the type-bars being always new and clean ; and in making up the forms the bars are much easier to handle than separate types, and there is prac- tically no danger of "pi." The operations of the stereotyping-room are so simple as scarcely to need mention here. The form, or page, of type is placed on an iron table ; sheets of damp paper are spread upon it and thoroughly beaten down upon it with huge brushes, so as to take an exact impression of the face of the type ; then the form, with the paper lying on it, is placed in a drying machine ; when dry, the paper is taken from the type and is found to have become a single heavy sheet of card-board, with a deep, sharp impression of the type on one side ; it is put into a mould, curved to fit the press cylinders, and melted type-metal poured in ; this makes the plate, and when cool it is taken out, trimmed, and sent to the press-room. The entire operation takes only four or five minutes. In the morning the reporters and correspondents begin the work of observing events and collecting news. All day long they are busy ; and the editorial writers also are busy, writing their articles. During the evening the news pours in, reporters come into the office to write their "stories," and other matter comes by mail, by messenger, by telegraph, by telephone. The news editors receive it, correct it, cut it down according to the exigencies of space, and send it to the composing-room. There it is put in type, and the forms are one by one made SUNDAY AND WEEKLY ISSUES. 695 up and sent to the stereotyping-room. The plates are cast and sent down to the press-room, where they are put on the cylinders, and the vast rolls of paper are moistened ready for printing. An hour or so after midnight the last dispatch is put in type, the last form made up, the plate cast, sent down, and put on the press. The pressman pulls a lever, the cylinders revolve, and the printed record of the world's latest day, compiled by a hundred historians, is reeled off at the rate of tens of thousands of copies an hour. Printing has been called the art preservative of arts. It is also the art to which all others are tributary. Steam and electricity have been brought to the service of the newspaper. So, too, has photography, of late years, in a wonder- ful manner. Formerly, illustrations were used in books and magazines, engraved by slow and costly processes. A few weekly papers used them, but daily papers almost never. The first attempts at illustrations in the daily press were rude and uncouth in the extreme. Some efforts were made to publish distinct- ively illustrated daily papers, but their success was not great. If the pictures were cheaply made, they were unattractive ; if they were well made, they were too costly. But with the development of photography, new, cheap, and admirable processes of engraving came forward. Instead of laboriously sketching a scene with pencil and paper, the artist now secures it in an instant with his camera ; the plate is developed in a few minutes, printed, and engraved. And thus the event of one day is photographed, engraved, and the picture printed in the next morning's daily paper in much better style than many book illustrations could boast a generation ago. The Sunday newspaper is another "modern improvement." It became a popular institution during the War of the Rebellion, when the public insisted on having a newspaper every day of the week. Year by year since then it has been elaborated and improved, until now it is one of the literary wonders of the world. It is much larger than the daily issue, consisting of from sixteen to thirty-six or forty pages. Besides the news of the day, it contains special correspondence, criticisms, reviews, sketches, biographies, fiction, departments of science and art, and, indeed, a whole magazine of varied literature. There are, probably, special contributions from half a dozen of the most eminent writers in the world ; all sold for five cents ! These sheets, however, with their hundreds of thousands of circulation, have by no means driven the magazines and weekly papers from the field. On the contrary, these latter enjoy a constantly increasing prosperity. The great illustrated weeklies enjoy vast patronage, and merit it by producing pages that, in respect of matter and mechanical execution, rival the best book-work. The world has seen no finer specimens of illustrated weekly journalism than such periodicals as Harper s Weekly, Frank Leslie's, and The Illustrated American. The non-illustrated periodicals, too, have attained an enviable rank. Many 696 NEWSPAPERS AND JOURNALISM. members of the religious and semi-religious press, such as The Independent, The Christian Union, The Congregationalist, The Interior, The Christian at Work, The Examiner, The Evangelist, The Churchman, etc., present each week not merely ephemeral notes and comments, but a great mass of permanent, original literature, of the highest class, from the best minds of the age. Every religious sect now has its organ ; most of them several. Every trade and business calling, every profession, every department of human activity and interest, has its periodical. The result is such a minute and detailed preserva- tion, in paper and type, of the records of the world, and such an interchange of thought and diffusion of information, as without the press never could have been approximated to and never would have been dreamed of. How great a part all this has played and is playing in the colossal drama of human progress is scarcely to be estimated. No estimate can seem extrava- gant, not even that of Wendell Phillips when he said : " The newspaper is parent, school, college, pulpit, theatre, example, counselor, all in one. Every drop of our blood is colored by it. Let me make the newspapers, and I care not who makes the religion or the laws." The magnitude of this institution is now almost beyond appreciation. In 1814 the whole United States contained only 280 weekly, thirty semi-weekly, eighteen tri-weekly, and twenty-eight daily papers, with an aggregate yearly issue of 23,000,000 copies. To-day New York alone far surpasses those figures, and any single one of a number of daily papers far exceeds in aggregate yearly issue the whole list of those named above. Our paper mills produce a quarter of a million tons of stock each year. A single newspaper in New York City uses every week a strip of paper five feet three inches wide and more than a thousand miles long. More than a thousand daily papers are printed in the United States, with a gross circulation of four million copies a day, and the people pay for them, in cents to newsboys, and in larger sums for monthly or yearly subscriptions, more than $30,000,000 a year. New York still leads the country in the number and importance of its periodicals, but a dozen other cities have great dailies rivaling in size and ability those of the metropolis ; while every city and large town has at least one daily, and almost every village and hamlet its weekly paper. Whatever work is to be done, whatever reform wrought, be it the exploration of an unknown land, the reorganization of the country's fiscal system or the righting of great social wrongs, the building of a new political party or the crushing of a corrupt political ring — it is the press that takes the initiative, it is through the press that the task is accomplished. HARRIET BEECHER STOWE, AUTHOR OK THE MOST POPULAR AMERICAN NOVEL. EW names are more indelibly written upon our country's history than that of Harriet Beecher Stowe. " No book," says George William Curtis, " was ever more a historical event than 'Uncle Tom's Cabin.' ... It is the great happiness of Mrs. Stowe not only to have written many delightful books, but to have written one book which will always be famous not only as the most vivid picture of an extinct evil system, but as one of the most powerful influences in overthrowing it. . . . If all whom she has charmed and quickened should unite to sing her praises, the birds of summer would be outdone." Harriet Beecher Stowe was the sixth child of Reverend Lyman Beecher, — the great head of that great family which has left so deep an impress upon the heart and mind of the American people. She was born in Litchfield, Connecticut, in June, 1811, — just two years before her next younger brother, Henry Ward Beecher. Her father was pastor of the Congregational Church in Litchfield, and her girlhood was passed there and at Hartford, where she attended the excellent seminary kept by her elder sister, Catharine E. Beecher. In 1832 her father accepted a call to the presidency of Lane Theological Seminary, at Cincinnati, and moved thither with his family. Catharine Beecher went also, and established there a new school, under the name of the Western Female Institute, in which Harriet assisted. In 1833 Mrs. Stowe first had the subject of slavery brought to her personal notice by taking a trip across the river from Cincinnati into Kentucky in company with Miss Dutton, one of the associate teachers in the Western Institute. They visited the estate that afterward figured as that of Mr. Shelby, in " Uncle Tom's Cabin," and here the young authoress first came into personal contact with the slaves of the South. In speaking, many years afterward, of this visit, Miss Dutton said: " Harriet did not seem to notice anything in particular that hap- pened, but sat much of the time as though abstracted in thought. When the negroes did funny things, and cut up capers, she did not seem to pay the 699 700 HARRIET B EEC HER STOWE. slightest attention to them. Afterward, however, in reading 'Uncle Tom,' I recognized scene after scene of that visit portrayed with the most minute fidelity, and knew at once where the material for that portion of the story had been gathered." Harriet Beecher's life in Cincinnati was such as to bring out all that was best and noblest in her character. Where her father's family was, she could not lack good society, for all that was best intellectually and socially always gath- NEGRO VILLAGE IN Georgia. ered naturally around that centre. Among the professors in Lane Seminary was Calvin E. Stowe, whose wife, a dear friend of Miss Beecher, died soon after Dr. Beecher's removal to Cincinnati. In 1836 Professor Stowe and Har- riet Beecher were married. They were admirably suited to each other. Pro- fessor Stowe was a typical man of letters, — a learned, amiable, unpractical philosopher, whose philosophy was like that described by Shakespeare asJ;'an excellent horse in the stable, but an arrant jade on a journey." Her practical SECURING A SLAVE'S FREEDOM. 701 ability and cheerful, inspiring courage were the unfailing support of her hus- band. Soon after their marriage he sailed for Europe to purchase books for Lane Seminary, and in a characteristic letter given to him at parting, not to be opened until he was at sea, she charges him, "Set your face like a flint against the ' cultivation of indigo,' as Elizabeth calls it, in any way or shape. . . . Seriously, dear one, you must give more way to hope than to memory. ■ You are going to a new scene now, and one that I hope will be full of enjoyment to you. I want you to take the good of it." In 1839 Mrs. Stowe received into her family as a servant a colored girl from Kentucky. By the laws of Ohio she was free, having been brought into the State and left there by her mistress. In spite of this, Professor Stowe received word, after she had lived with them some months, that the girl's master was in the city looking for her, and that if she were not careful she would be seized and taken back into slavery. Finding that this could be accomplished by bold- ness, perjury, and the connivance of some unscrupulous justice of the peace, Professor Stowe determined to remove the girl to some place of security where she might remain until the search for her should be given up. Accordingly, he and his brother-in-law, Henry Ward Beecher, both armed, drove the fugitive, in a covered wagon, at night, by unfrequented roads, twelve miles back into the country, and left her in safety with the family of old John Van Zandt, the fugi- tive's friend. It is from this incident of real life and personal experience that Mrs. Stowe conceived the thrilling episode of Eliza's escape from Tom Loker and Marks, in " Uncle Tom's Cabin." In the spring of 1832 Mrs. Stowe visited Hartford, taking her six-year-old daughter Hatty with her. In writing from there to her husband she confides some of her literary plans and aspirations to him, and he answers : — " My dear, you must be a literary woman. It is so written in the book of fate. Make all your calculations accordingly. Get up a good stock of health, and brush up your mind. Drop the E out of your name. It only encumbers it and interferes with the flow and euphony. Write yourself fully and always Harriet Beecher Stowe, which is a name euphonious, flowing, and full of mean- ing. Then, my word for it, your husband will lift up his head in the gates, and your children will rise up and call you blessed." The letter closes with a characteristic appeal : — "And now, my dear wife, I want you to come home as quick as you can. The fact is I can- not live without you, and if we were not so prodigious poor I would come for you at once. There is no woman like you in this wide world. Who else has so much talent, with so little self-conceit ; so much reputation, with so little affectation ; so much literature with so little nonsense, so much enterprise with so little extravagance, so much tongue with so little scold, so much sweetness with so little softness, so much of so many things and so little of so many other things? " 702 HARRIET BEECHER STOIVE. That Professor Stowe's devoted admiration for his wife was reciprocated, and that a most perfect sympathy of feeling existed between the husband and wife, is shown by a line in one of Mrs. Stowe's letters from Hartford, in which she says : " I was telling Belle yesterday that I did not know till I came away how much I was dependent upon you for information. There are a thousand favorite subjects on which I could talk with you better than with any one else. If you were not already my dearly loved husband I should certainly fall in love with you." The years from 1845 to 1 §5° were a time of severe trial to Mrs. Stowe. She and her husband both suffered from ill health, and the family was separated. Professor Stowe was struggling with poverty, and endeavoring at the same time to lift the Theological Seminary out of financial difficulties. In 1849, while Pro- fessor Stowe was ill at a water-cure establishment in Vermont, their youngest child died of cholera, which was then raging in Cincinnati. In 1850 it was decided to remove to Brunswick, Maine, the seat of Bowdoin College, where Professor Stowe was offered a position ; and in April Mrs. Stowe, with three of her five children, started on the long and toilsome journey, leaving her hus- band with the other two to follow a few months later. Their household goods were shipped at the same time, and Mrs. Stowe, under the pressure of poverty and in delicate health, undertook all the labor and responsibility of establishing their new home. Early in the summer her husband joined her, and in July her son- Charles was born. In a letter written about this time she says : — "Sarah, when I look back, I wonder at myself, not that I forget any one thing that I should remember, but that I have remembered anything. From the time that I left Cincinnati with my children to come forth to a country that I knew not of, almost to the present time, it seemed as if I could scarcely breathe, I was so pressed with care. My head dizzy with the whirl of railroads and steamboats ; then ten days' sojourn in Boston, and a constant toil and hurry in buying my furniture and equipments ; then landing in Brunswick in the midst of a drizzly, inexorable northeast storm, and beginning the work of getting in order a deserted, dreary, damp old house. . . . " Then comes a letter from my husband saying he is sick abed, and all but dead ; don't ever expect to see his family again ; wants to know how I shall manage in case I am left a widow ; knows we shall get in debt and never get out ; wonders at my courage, thinks I am very sanguine, wants me to be prudent, as there won't be much to live on in case of his death, etc.. etc., etc. I read the letter and poke it into the stove, and proceed.". . . Few women under such circumstances would think of undertaking literary work ; yet it was in the midst of these events that the great work of Mrs. Stowe's life began to take definite shape in her mind. The year 1850 is memorable in the history of the conflict with slavery. It was the year of Clay's compromise measures, as they were called, which sought to satisfy the North by the admission of California as a free State, and to pro- pitiate the South by the notorious " Fugitive Slave Law." The slave power was at its height, and seemed to hold all things under its feet ; yet in truth it THE ORIGIN OF "UNCLE TOM'S CABIN" 703 had entered upon the last stage of its existence, and the forces were fast gathering for its final overthrow. EFFECTS OF THE FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW. After the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act, letter after letter was received by Mrs. Stowe, in Brunswick, from Mrs. Edward Beecher and other friends, describing the heart-rending scenes which were the inevitable results of the enforcement of this terrible law. Cities were more available for capturing escaped slaves than the country, and Boston, which claimed the "cradle of liberty," Faneuil Hall, opened her doors to the slave-hunters. The sorrow and anguish caused thereby no pen could describe. Families of colored people were broken up. Some hid in garrets and cellars. Some fled to the wharves and embarked in ships and sailed for Europe. Others went to Canada. One poor fellow, who was doing good business as a crockery merchant, and supporting his family well, when he got notice that his master, whom he had left many years before, was after him, set out for Canada in midwinter on foot, as he did not dare to take a public conveyance. He froze both feet on the journey, and they had to be amputated. Mrs. Edward Beecher, in a letter to Mrs. Stowe's son/writing of this period, says: — " I had been nourishing an anti-slavery spirit since Lovejoy was murdered for publishing in his paper articles against slavery and intemperance, when our home was in Illinois. These terrible things which were going on in Boston were well calculated to rouse up this spirit. What can I do? I thought. Not much myself, but I know one who can. So I wrote several letters to your mother, telling her of various heart-rending events caused by the enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Law. I remember distinctly saying in one of them, ' Now, Hattie, if I could use a pen as you can, I would write something that would make this whole nation feel what an accursed thing slavery is.' " When we lived in Boston your mother often visited us. . . . Several numbers of ' Uncle Tom's Cabin ' were written in your Uncle Edward's study at these times and read to us from manuscripts." A member of Mrs. Stowe's family well remembers the scene in the little parlor in Brunswick when the letter alluded to was received. Mrs. Stowe her- self read it aloud to the assembled family, and when she came to the passage, " I would write something that would make this whole nation feel what an accursed thing slavery is," Mrs. Stowe rose from her chair, crushing the letter in her hand, and with an expression on her face that stamped itself on the mind of her child, said : "I will write something. I will, if I live." This was the origin of " Uncle Tom's Cabin." Professor Cairnes and others said truly, " The Fugitive Slave Law has been to the slave power a questionable gain. Among its first fruits was 'Uncle Tom's Cabin.' " It was in the month of February after these words were written that Mrs. .Stowe was seated at the communion service in the college church at Brunswick. Suddenly, like the unrolling of a picture, the scene of the death of Uncle Tom 7°4 HARRIET BEECH ER STOWE. passed before her mind. So strongly was she affected that it was with difficulty she could keep from weeping aloud. Immediately on returning home she took pen and paper and wrote out the vision which had been as it were blown into her mind "as by the rushing of a mighty wind." Gathering her little family about her, she read what she had written. Her two little ones of ten and twelve years of age broke into convulsions of weeping, one of them saying through his sobs, " Oh, mamma ! slavery is the most cruel thing in the world." Thus "Uncle Tom" was ushered into the world. It was a cry, an immediate, invol- untary expression of deep, impas- sioned feeling. Twenty-five years afterward Mrs. Stowe wrote, in a letter to one of her children, of this period of her life : " I well remember the winter you were a baby, and I was writing ' Uncle Tom's Cabin.' My heart was bursting with the anguish excited by the cruelty and injustice our nation was showing to the slave, | and praying God to let me do a little, and to cause my cry for them to be heard. I remember many a night weeping over you as you lay sleeping beside me, and thought of the slave mothers whose babes were torn from them." The story was begun as a serial in the National Era, June 5, 185 1, and was announced to run for about three months, but it was not completed in that paper until April 1, 1852. It had been contemplated as a mere magazine tale of perhaps a dozen chapters, but once begun it could no more be controlled than the waters of the swollen Mississippi, bursting through a crevasse in its levees. The intense interest excited by the story, the demands made upon the author for more facts, the unmeasured words of encouragement to keep on in her good work that poured in from all sides, and, above all, the ever-growing conviction that she had been intrusted with a great and holy mission, compelled her to keep on until the humble tale had assumed the proportions of a large volume. Mrs. Stowe repeatedly said, "I could not control the story, it wrote itself; " and, " I the author of ' Uncle Tom's Cabin ' ? JOHN BROWN, WHO WAS HANGED IN 1S59 FOR AN ATTEMPT TO LIBERATE THE SLAVES. PRAISE AND ABUSE. 705 No, indeed. The Lord himself wrote it, and I was but the humblest of instru- ments in his hand. To him alone should be given all the praise." For the story as a serial the author received $300. In the meantime, how- ever, it had attracted the attention of Mr. John P. Jewett, a Boston publisher, who promptly made overtures for its publication in book form. He offered Mr. and Mrs. Stowe a half share in the profits, provided they would share with him the expense of publication. This was refused by the Professor, who said he was altogether too poor to assume any such risk ; and the agreement finally made was that the author should receive a ten per cent, royalty upon all sales. SUCCESS OF "UNCLE TOM'S CABIN." In the meantime the fears of the author as to whether or not her book would be read were quickly dispelled. Three thousand copies were sold the very first day, a second edition was issued the following week, a third a few days later ; and within a year one hundred and twenty editions, or over three hundred thousand copies, of the book had been issued and sold in this country. Almost in a day the poor professor's wife had become the most talked-of woman in the world ; her influence for good was spreading to its remotest corners, and henceforth she was to be a public character, whose every movement would be watched with interest, and whose every word would be quoted. The long, weary struggle with poverty was to be hers no longer ; for, in seeking to aid the oppressed, she had also so aided herself that within four months from the time her book was published it had yielded her $10,000 in royalties. The poet Whittier wrote at this time to William Lloyd Garrison : — " What a glorious work Harriet Beecher Stowe has wrought. Thanks for the Fugitive Slave Law ! Better would it be for slavery if that law had never been enacted ; for it gave occasion for ' Uncle Tom's Cabin.' " Garrison wrote to Mrs. Stowe : — " I estimate the value of anti-slavery writing by the abuse it brings. Now all the defenders of slavery have let me alone and are abusing you." It is true that with congratulatory and commendatory letters came hosts of others, threatening and insulting, from the Haleys and the Legrees of the country. Of them Mrs. Stowe said : " They are so curiously compounded of blasphemy, cruelty, and obscenity that their like could only be expressed by John Bunyan's account of the speech of Apollyon : ' He spake as a dragon.' " The feeling toward the book in the South is well described in a letter written by Mrs. Stowe to the Earl of Shaftesbury : — " There is nothing that Southern political leaders and capitalists so dread as anti-slavery feel- ing among themselves. All the force of lynch law is employed to smother discussion and blind conscience on this question. The question is not allowed to be discussed, and he who sells a book or publishes a tract makes himself liable to fine and imprisonment. 706 HARRIET BEECHER STOWE. " My book is, therefore, as much under an interdict in some parts of the South as the Bible is in Italy. It is not allowed in the bookstores, and the greater part of the people hear of it and me only through grossly caricatured representations in the papers, with garbled extracts from the book. " A cousin residing in Georgia this winter says that the prejudice against my name is so strong that she dares not have it appear on the outside of her letters, and that very amiable and excellent people have asked her if such as I could be received into reputable society at the North." The popularity of " Uncle Tom's Cabin " abroad was as remarkable as its success at home. A statement made by Clarke & Company, who published the first English edition, is as follows :— " An early copy was sent from America in April to Mr. Bogue, the publisher, and was offered by him to Mr. Gilpin, late of Bishopsgate street. Being declined by Mr. Gilpin, Mr. Bogue offered A NEW ENGLAND COTTON MILL OF MRS. STOWE S TIME. it to Mr. Henry Vizetelly, and by the latter gentleman it was eventually purchased for us. Before printing it, however, as there was one night allowed for decision, one volume was taken home to be read by Mr. Vizetelly, and the other by Mr. Salisbury, the printer, of Bouverie street. The report of the latter gentleman the following morning, to quote his own words, was: ' I sat up till four in the morning reading- the book, and the interest I felt in it was expressed one moment by laughter and another by tears. Thinking it might be weakness and not the power of the author that affected me, I resolved to try the effect on my wife (a rather strong-minded woman). I accordingly woke her and read a few chapters to her. Finding that her interest in the story kept her awake, and that she, too, laughed and cried, I settled in my mind that it was a book that ought to, and might with safety, be printed.' " Mr. Vizetelly's opinion coincided with that of Mr. Salisbury, and to the latter gentleman HER NUMEROUS BOOKS. 707 it was confided, to be brought out immediately. The week following the book was produced, and one edition of 7000 copies worked off. It made no stir until the middle of June, although we advertised it very extensively. From June it began to make its way, and it sold at the rate of 1000 per week during July. In August the demand became very great, and went on increasing to the 20th, by which time it was perfectly overwhelming. We have now about four hundred people employed in getting out the book, and seventeen printing machines, besides hand presses. Already about 150,000 copies of the book are in the hands of the people, and still the returns of the sales show no decline." In 1852 Professor Stowe received a call to the professorship of Sacred Literature in Andover Theological Seminary, and the family soon removed to their Massachusetts home. They were now relieved from financial pressure ; but Mrs. Stowe's health was still delicate ; and in 1853 she went with her hus- band and brother to England, where she received, much to her surprise, a uni- versal welcome. She made many friends among the most distinguished people in Great Britain, and on the continent as well. On her return she wrote the " Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin," and began " Dred, a Tale of the Dismal Swamp." In fact, her literary career was just beginning. With " Uncle Tom's Cabin " her powers seemed only to be fairly awakened. One work after another came in quick succession. For nearly thirty years after the publication of " Uncle Tom," her pen was never idle. In 1854 she published "Sunny Memories of Foreign Lands," and then, in rapid succession, "The Minister's Wooing," "The Pearl of Orr's Island," "Agnes of Sorrento," "House and Home Papers," " Little Foxes," and " Oldtown Folks." These, however, are but a small part of her works. Besides more than thirty books, she has written magazine articles, short stories, and sketches almost without number. She has entertained, instructed, and inspired a generation born long after the last slave was made free, and to. whom the great question which once convulsed our country is only a name. But her first great work has never been surpassed, and it will never be forgotten. The evil system which produced the story has long since passed away ; but " Uncle Tom " still lives in immortal youth. Our hearts still tremble for Eliza and her child ; they exult over George Harris's defense ; they burn at the words of St. Clare, and they sink within us at Uncle Tom's death. Who can read unmoved the story of Cassy's life, or of poor Topsy hiding away in her bosom the keepsake of her lost Eva ? And what man but can understand the feelings of George Shelby, when, kneeling by the new-made grave of Lmcle Tom, he says, " Witness, eternal God, that from this hour I will do what one man can to drive this curse of slavery from my land ! " After the war which accomplished the abolition of slavery, Mrs. Stowe lived in Hartford, Connecticut, in summer, and spent the winters in Florida, where she bought a luxurious home. Her pen was hardly ever idle ; and the popu- larity of her works seemed to steadily increase. The most noteworthy event of Mrs. Stowe's later years was the celebra- 708 HARRIET BEECH ER STOWE. tion of her seventieth birthday, on June 14, 1882. Her publishers, Houghton, Mifflin & Co., arranged a reception for her in the form of a garden party at the "Old Elms," the home of ex-Governor Claflin of Massachusetts, in one of Boston's most beautiful suburbs. The assembly gathered to do honor to Mrs. Stowe that lovely June afternoon comprised two hundred of the most distin- guished and best known among the literary men and women of the day. As the guests arrived they were presented to Mrs. Stowe by Mr. H. O. Houghton, and then they gathered in groups in the parlors, on the verandas, on the lawn, and in the refreshment room. At five o'clock they assembled in the large tent on the lawn, when Mr. Houghton, as host, addressed to his guest and her friends a few words of congratulation and welcome. Poems written for the occasion by John G. Whittier, Dr. O. W. Holmes, Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney, Miss Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Mr. J. T. Trowbridge, Mrs. Allen (Mrs. Stowe's daughter), Mrs. Annie Fields, and Miss Charlotte F. Bates were also read, and speeches were made by Judge Albion W. Tourgee and others prominent in the literary world. Letters from many noted people who were prevented from being present were read or placed in Mrs. Stowe's hands. The exercises were closed by a few words from Mrs. Stowe herself. As she came to the front of the platform the whole company rose, and remained standing until she had finished. Her address was brief and simple, — a few words of thanksgiving for the great work wrought by God's hand in the abolition of slavery, and of loving trust that "all things work together for good." " If any of you have doubt, or sorrow, or pain, if you doubt about this world, just remember what God has done ; just remem- ber that this great sorrow of slavery has gone, gone by forever. . . . Let us never doubt. Everything that ought to happen is going to happen." The last stanza of Whittier' s beautiful poem may fittingly close this brief sketch : — " Ah, dearer than the praise that stirs The air to-day, our love is hers ! She needs no guaranty of fame Whose own is linked with Freedom's name. Long ages after ours shall keep Her memory living while we sleep ; The waves that wash our gray coast lines, The winds that rock the Southern pines. Shall sing of her ; the unending years Shall tell her tale in unborn ears. And when, with sins and follies past, Are numbered color-hate and caste, White, black, and red shall own as one The noblest work by woman done." Henry Ferris. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS llfl 00114112835