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1899 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania

An election for the United States Senate was held by the Pennsylvania General Assembly beginning on January 17, 1899, to fill the seat then held by Matthew Quay for a six-year term beginning March 4, 1899. Quay was a candidate for re-election, but was damaged by a pending indictment for involvement in financial irregularities with state money; his trial took place during the three months that the legislature attempted to resolve the Senate deadlock, and he was acquitted the day it adjourned, having failed to elect a senator. Quay was appointed to the Senate seat by the governor, but the Senate refused to seat him on the grounds that the governor lacked the constitutional authority to make the selection, and the seat remained vacant until the next meeting of the legislature, in 1901, when Quay was elected.

1899 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania

← 1893 January 17, 1899 (1899-01-17) − April 19, 1899 (1899-04-19) 1901 (special) →

Statistics for the 79th and final vote, April 19, 1899
124 votes needed to win
 
Nominee Matthew Quay George A. Jenks Benjamin F. Jones
Party Republican Democratic Republican
Leg. vote 93 85 69
Percentage 37.65% 34.41% 27.94%

U.S. senator before election

Matthew Quay
Republican

Elected U.S. Senator

none

Quay was Pennsylvania's Republican political boss, and had served two terms in the Senate. Dissident Republicans and reformers were determined to defeat him for a third term, and sought to elect candidates in the 1898 elections for the legislature. Prominent among the anti-Quay forces was Philadelphia businessman John Wanamaker, who had been defeated for the Republican nominations for senator in 1897 and governor in 1898 through Quay's influence. Wanamaker made speeches against Quay during the 1898 campaign, though he refused to seek the Senate seat himself.

Although Republicans had an ample majority in the legislature, enough were anti-Quay to deny the senator the majority he needed for re-election. Democrats and anti-Quay Republicans refused to join together to elect another candidate, though they had a majority between them. Democrats supported their 1898 gubernatorial candidate, George A. Jenks, while the dissident Republicans voted for several candidates before settling on Benjamin F. Jones. The legislature voted once a day during the session of over three months; no compromise was reached, and the session ended on April 20 without the election of a senator.

After the session and Quay's acquittal, Governor William A. Stone appointed Quay to the vacancy, but the Senate refused to seat him by one vote, and the senatorship remained vacant until 1901. Quay blamed his fellow Republican political boss, Mark Hanna of Ohio, for the defeat in the Senate, and gained revenge at the 1900 Republican National Convention by supporting Thomas C. Platt's scheme to politically sideline Governor Theodore Roosevelt of New York by making him vice president, over Hanna's strong objection. After Quay's return to the Senate in 1901, he served there until his death in 1904, when control of Quay's political machine passed to his fellow Pennsylvania senator, Boies Penrose.

Background

In drafting the Constitution, the members of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 agreed that United States Senators would be chosen by state legislatures, not by the people.[1] Federal law prescribed that the senatorial election was to take place beginning on the second Tuesday after the two houses of the legislature which would be in office when the senatorial term expired, convened and chose legislative officers. On the designated day, balloting for senator would take place in each of the two chambers of the legislature. If a majority of each house voted for the same candidate, then at the joint assembly held the following day at noon, the candidate would be declared elected. Otherwise, there would be a roll-call vote of all legislators, with a majority of those present needed to elect. In the event that no senator was elected, the legislature was required to hold at least one vote in joint assembly each day until it ended the session or a senator was elected.[2] If a vacancy occurred when the legislature was not in session, the governor could make a temporary appointment to serve until lawmakers convened.[3] This system was prone to deadlock if legislators could not agree; in the 1890s and 1900s, eight states failed to fill Senate seats for periods ranging from 10 months to four years; from 1901 to 1903, Delaware went unrepresented in the Senate.[4]

Matthew Quay was born September 30, 1833, in Dillsburg, Pennsylvania. After completing his education, he became a lawyer in 1854, practicing in Beaver, Pennsylvania, and became prothonotary of Beaver County in 1856. He served as an officer in the Union Army,[5] and was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his actions at the 1862 Battle of Fredericksburg. Quay was elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, taking office in 1865,[5] and became part of the political machine of U.S. Senator Simon Cameron.[6] Beginning in 1872, Quay served as Cameron's lieutenant.[7] By the mid-1880s, Quay had seized control of the state Republican Party from Cameron's son, Senator Don Cameron,[8] and in 1887 was himself elected to the Senate, with re-election in 1893.[5] Money and patronage were Quay's weapons in gaining and maintaining power; he freely raided the state treasury, dispensing loans to those he favored and using state money to buy votes or the opinions of newspapers. He recognized the importance of this resource, himself serving as Pennsylvania State Treasurer from 1885 to 1887, and once said, "I don't mind losing the governorship or a legislature now and then, but I always need the state treasuryship."[5][9]

Opposition to Quay and indictment

 
John Wanamaker opposed Quay in his quest for a third term in the Senate.

There had, since 1882, always been some opposition to Quay within the Pennsylvania Republican Party, but it had always been beaten.[10] Pennsylvania's senior senator, Don Cameron, announced he would retire at the end of his term in 1897. Philadelphia businessman and former United States Postmaster General John Wanamaker wanted the seat, which would be filled by the General Assembly in early 1897. Since most Republican legislators were beholden to Quay, his choice of nominee was usually accepted by the Republican legislative caucus, and Quay supported Boies Penrose. Wanamaker entered the race anyway, making speeches demonizing Quay, and making alliances with reformers in the legislature. Nevertheless, Penrose easily won the vote in the Republican legislative caucus in early 1897, and was elected.[11] Wanamaker continued his anti-Quay campaigning through his effort to gain the Republican nomination for governor in early 1898, and even though he failed, continued to give speeches against the senator, hoping to generate enough opposition to prevent his re-election by the legislature in early 1899.[12] His speeches brought the issue of bossism home to the voters of Pennsylvania, and helped elect Democrats or anti-Quay Republicans.[10]

On October 3, 1898, Quay was arrested for conspiracy to defraud the People's Bank of Philadelphia. Quay had arranged in 1896 for $1,000,000 of state funds (equivalent to $32,572,000 in 2021) to be deposited in it and had persuaded John S. Hopkins, cashier and manager of the bank, that the funds be invested in the Metropolitan Traction Company of New York, sending a telegram: "If you buy and carry a thousand Met for me I will shake the plum tree", believed by investigators to mean that funds from the state treasury would be used to cover the speculation.[13][14] The stock collapsed, the bank failed, and Hopkins fatally shot himself.[10][15] It was alleged that the bank was paying the interest on state funds not to the state treasury, but to Quay.[16] The information had been available for months; according to Quay biographer James Kehl, the indictment was timed to have had the greatest effect on the upcoming elections.[13] In spite of the allegations, Quay's hand-picked gubernatorial candidate, William A. Stone, was victorious by over 110,000 votes.[17]

Also indicted was Quay's son Richard and state treasurer Benjamin Haywood, though Richard Quay's indictment was withdrawn and Haywood would die before the verdict.[17] The anti-Quay political forces did their best to capitalize on the claims of corruption against Quay and his associates, attempting to deny him re-election while appearing to remain loyal Republicans in the public eye.[18] The trial was repeatedly delayed in late 1898, leading Quay to appeal to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania to get a judge assigned, wanting the matter disposed of before the legislative balloting for Senate began in January.[19] Instead a trial was set for late February.[20]

Caucus and early balloting

 
Quay campaign headquarters in Harrisburg

The legislature that was to convene in January 1899 consisted of 164 Republicans, 84 Democrats and 6 Fusionists,[21] the last being elected across party lines by an anti-Quay coalition.[22] On January 3, 1899, the Republican legislators convened in caucus to choose a candidate for senator. Under the conventions of the time, anyone who attended would be bound by the outcome, and only 109 Republicans showed up, of whom 98 voted for Quay, an outcome which was made unanimous. Since there were 254 legislators in full, Quay needed 128 votes in the joint assembly to be elected, and even if the dissenting attendees could be counted in, he was 19 votes short of election. Nevertheless, his supporters cited the outcome as a triumph, and predicted the senator would easily pick up the remaining necessary votes.[23] The Democrats refused to join with the dissident Republicans to elect a senator, but decided on former congressman George A. Jenks, who had been their nominee for governor the previous year, as their candidate for Senate, while the Republicans who refused to support Quay initially had no single candidate, as Wanamaker had refused to run.[24] Confident of re-election, Quay made $40,000 (equivalent to $1,302,880 in 2021) available to bribe wavering legislators into supporting him.[17]

 
Cartoon from the Pittsburgh Press, January 25, 1899, decrying the Senate deadlock

The initial voting in the two houses of the legislature took place in the state capital of Harrisburg on January 17. Quay received 27 votes in the Senate and 85 in the House, for a total of 112. Since there were a number of absentees and vacancies, 124 votes would be needed for election in the joint assembly, which put Quay 12 votes short. The Democratic candidate, Jenks, received 12 votes in the Senate and 70 in the House, and the leading other contender was John Dalzell, a Republican congressman from Pittsburgh, with 16 votes. This gave Quay a majority in the Senate but not in the House, necessitating balloting in joint assembly.[25]

By the rules of the joint assembly, there was to be one vote each day unless legislators decided otherwise.[26] Quay received a plurality on almost each vote, and sometimes a majority, but only on days a quorum was not present.[27] Congressman Joseph C. Sibley, a Democrat, was working for Quay and urged the Pennsylvania Democratic legislators to vote for Quay. Instead, the Democrats continued to support Jenks.[28] On February 27, the prosecution in the criminal case against Quay asked for more time; the matter was postponed until April as the senator's supporters claimed the case had collapsed.[29] On March 3, angered when John R. Farr, Speaker of the state House of Representatives, adjourned that body in a manner the Democrats and dissident Republicans considered arbitrary, they remained on the floor and announced they would elect their own Speaker, but they did not have enough for a quorum, and after the effort was denounced by a former Democratic Speaker, it collapsed.[30] That night, Quay's term in the Senate expired, and the seat became vacant; only Penrose represented Pennsylvania in the upper house.[5][31]

Later voting and deadlock

 
Philadelphia Inquirer editorial cartoon from April 19, 1899, depicting the Quay forces nailing their colors to the mast, meaning they will not consider a compromise candidate

On March 15, The New York Times reported that the deadlock was likely to persist to the end of the session, and that the Pennsylvania Senate seat would likely go unfilled when Congress next convened in December, even by a gubernatorial appointee, as the Senate had usually rejected attempts to fill a seat by appointment when a state legislature had failed to choose.[32] The balloting continued, once per day excepting Sundays, with Quay never getting close to a majority with a quorum.[27] The anti-Quay Republicans offered to meet with his supporters, but Quay's manager, state senator John C. Grady, was slow to accept, and it was clear the Quay Republicans would rather have deadlock than find a compromise candidate. This was along the lines that Quay urged in a letter to his supporters, "To temporize with those persons who for three months have prevented the election of a Senator in Pennsylvania would extricate them from the abyss into which they have plunged. Instead of making their treason to the party odious, their treason would be made respectable, and treason made respectable would become fashionable."[33] The Democrats refused to reach across the aisle to the anti-Quay Republicans to elect a compromise candidate, remaining loyal to Jenks.[34]

According to historian James A. Kehl:

The deliberations of the legislature tried men's patience and tired their minds. To those directly involved, the frantic efforts to make successful combinations or convert individual legislators turned the protracted struggle into a reign of terror—physically, mentally and morally. The tension was heightened by Quay's success in having his case brought to trial in Philadelphia ... The prosecution obviously had a weak case that had been patched together primarily to discredit Quay in political circles. He may have been guilty, but [Philadelphia district attorney Peter F.] Rothermel had neither the documents nor the witnesses to prove it.[19]

On April 17, Quay lost some support when Pittsburgh political boss and state senator Christopher Magee informed the Quay caucus he would no longer support the ex-senator. Magee and others attended a meeting of perhaps 15 to 20 legislators the following morning in the state senate's chamber. At the meeting they passed a resolution stating that Quay could not be elected, and Magee nominated Benjamin F. Jones, former chairman of the Republican National Committee, for senator. When the joint assembly convened, Jones received 69 votes to 85 for Jenks and 93 for Quay. It had been speculated that Magee could take at least 20 votes with him, but in the end only 14 legislators defected.[35] The final vote, on April 19, saw the same tally as the day before.[27] On the final ballot, four legislators were paired and state senator Alexander L. Hawkins was absent, as he was serving with his regiment in the Philippines.[36] The dissidents had hoped the Democrats would join with them to elect Jones, but they refused.[37] The following day, the legislature formally adjourned, leaving the Senate seat empty, and in a Philadelphia courtroom, Quay was acquitted of the charges.[17] To commemorate the acquittal, many Quay supporters planted plum trees; one in Gettysburg planted 50 and invited Quay to visit in a few years and shake all of them.[38]

Appointment

 
Philadelphia Inquirer editorial cartoon from April 22, 1899, showing Quay vindicated by Lady Justice

On April 21, Governor Stone appointed Quay to fill the vacancy in the Senate.[39] There had been speculation he might do that, or call a special session of the legislature; he had refused to announce his plans.[36] Stone stated that he believed Quay's trial had been political persecution, and wanted to raise the issue now rather than later. There was much discussion as to whether the Senate would seat Quay, given that the legislature had had the opportunity to fill the seat but had not done so. In a similar 1893 case involving a Montana Senate seat, it had refused to seat the appointee.[40] According to Kehl, Stone would have been better advised to recall the legislature into special session in the hope the acquittal would cause them to reach a decision, but the governor wanted to rebuke Wanamaker and endorse Quay.[38] Wanamaker mounted a campaign to get the Senate to refuse to seat Quay when the new congressional session began in December 1899.[41] In this, he was joined by some newspapers who warned Republican senators to avoid giving the Democrats ammunition for the 1900 elections by having the Republican Senate accept someone rejected by his own state legislature.[42]

When Congress convened on December 4, 1899, Quay's credentials were referred to the Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections, as was a petition signed by 78 members of the Pennsylvania legislature, urging the Senate not to seat Quay.[43] On January 4, 1900, George Hoar of Massachusetts, a Republican member of the committee, told the Senate that he was daily receiving many letters urging him to oppose Quay's seating, in common, he believed, with other members of the Senate.[44]

On January 23, 1900, the committee reported back,[44] and recommended that Quay not be seated, by a 5–4 vote,[34] with Hoar voting in the minority.[45] It held that governors lacked the constitutional authority to make appointments when legislatures deadlocked,[46] and that governors could only appoint when a vacancy began during the recess of the legislature.[47] One Republican joined four Democrats to produce the majority, with the remaining four Republicans in the minority.[48]

Quay's seating was debated intermittently over the following three months by the Senate,[45] which at last voted on April 24, 1900.[49] Wanamaker got former president Benjamin Harrison, who had appointed him postmaster general, to use his influence to defeat Quay. Harrison convinced Republican senators from his home state, Indiana, as well as those former members of his administration who were in the Senate, to vote against seating Quay.[41] The Senate refused to seat Quay by a vote of 33–32 in a vote that cut across party lines, with the Republicans against Quay including his fellow political boss, Ohio's Mark Hanna.[49][50] Hanna, in addition to being a senator, was President William McKinley's closest advisor, and had run his 1896 campaign for the presidency.[51]

Quay would revenge himself on Hanna by assisting New York's Thomas C. Platt at the 1900 Republican National Convention. Platt wanted to politically sideline his state's governor, Theodore Roosevelt, by making him vice president. Despite Hanna's strong opposition, Platt and Quay got the nomination for Roosevelt.[52] According to historian Lewis L. Gould, while Quay desired to gratify his old friend and co-worker, Platt, it was "more especially to embarrass and defeat if possible the wishes of Senator Hanna, who had opposed his being seated in the Senate of the United States upon the certificate of the Governor of Pennsylvania".[52] As Hanna's biographer, William H. Horner, put it, "[Early Hanna biographer Herbert] Croly observed that if not for Platt's desire to get Roosevelt out of New York and Quay's desire to get his revenge upon Hanna, Roosevelt would never have been vice president,"[53] an office from which he succeeded to the presidency with the assassination of President McKinley in September 1901.[54]

Aftermath

The fact that he was instrumental in the nomination of Roosevelt, seen as a war hero and reformer, boosted Quay, according to Kehl, "rebuild[ing] his tarnished image in the Keystone State".[55] Quay spent the 1900 campaign season giving speeches for legislative candidates who would vote for his election when the legislature convened again in 1901.[17] The results, though, favored Wanamaker's reformers.[17] When the legislature convened, Quay was able to secure, possibly through bribery, the votes of one Democrat and seven Republicans previously pledged against him to gain a slim majority. Quay was elected for the remainder of the six-year term.[56]

The election of Quay dispirited Wanamaker, who lost interest in politics.[57] Nevertheless, according to the businessman's biographer, Herbert Adams Gibbons, Quay's prestige "was irretrievably lost. The mantle of Republican boss soon passed to the shoulders of Penrose."[58] Quay died in 1904, still in office; Penrose controlled the state Republican Party until his own death in 1921 put an end to the Cameron-Quay-Penrose machine, one of the longest-lived and most powerful in the nation.[46] Public dismay at what was seen as a corrupt means of choosing federal lawmakers, and one that sometimes led to deadlock, was a major factor in the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913, which took responsibility for electing senators from state legislators, and gave it to the people.[59]

References

  1. ^ Bybee, p. 510.
  2. ^ Schiller & Stewart, pp. 43–44.
  3. ^ Article I, Clause 2, Section 3 of the Constitution of the United States (1787)
  4. ^ Bybee, pp. 541–542.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Quay, Matthew Stanley". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. United States Congress. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  6. ^ Blair, pp. 77–78.
  7. ^ Schiller & Stewart, p. 197.
  8. ^ Blair, p. 84.
  9. ^ Blair, pp. 77–80.
  10. ^ a b c Kehl, p. 214.
  11. ^ Ershkowitz, pp. 249–254.
  12. ^ Ershkowitz, p. 264.
  13. ^ a b Kehl, p. 215.
  14. ^ Blair, pp. 80–81.
  15. ^ Blair, p. 81.
  16. ^ Schiller & Stewart, p. 205.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Beers, p. 47.
  18. ^ Schiller & Stewart, pp. 206–207.
  19. ^ a b Kehl, p. 216.
  20. ^ Schiller & Stewart, pp. 212–213.
  21. ^ Annual Report of the American Historical Association for the Year 1901. Vol. 1. American Historical Association. 1902. p. 533.
  22. ^ Gibbons, p. 362.
  23. ^ Schiller & Stewart, pp. 207–208.
  24. ^ Schiller & Stewart, p. 210.
  25. ^ "Quay's strong showing". The Philadelphia Inquirer. January 18, 1899. pp. 1, 6. Page 6 image here
  26. ^ "Quay in the lead". Harrisburg Telegraph. January 19, 1899. p. 1.
  27. ^ a b c "U.S. Senate Election - 1899" (PDF). Pennsylvania Election Statistics, 1682–2006. Wilkes University. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  28. ^ "Points in State Politics". The Times-Leader. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. February 28, 1899. p. 4.
  29. ^ Schiller & Stewart, pp. 211–212.
  30. ^ Schiller & Stewart, p. 212.
  31. ^ "Pennsylvania senatorial election returns". Pennsylvania Election Statistics, 1682–2006. Wilkes University. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  32. ^ "Standing of the Senate". The New York Times. March 15, 1899. p. 2.
  33. ^ "Another Break in Quay's Ranks". Chattanooga Daily Times. April 17, 1899. p. 1.
  34. ^ a b Schiller & Stewart, p. 214.
  35. ^ "It was a very feeble bolt". The Pittsburgh Press. April 18, 1899. p. 1.
  36. ^ a b "Last Ballot Cast". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. April 20, 1899. p. 1.
  37. ^ Schiller & Stewart, p. 213.
  38. ^ a b Kehl, p. 218.
  39. ^ Taft, p. 109.
  40. ^ "Col. Quay is Acquitted". Adams County Independent. April 29, 1899. p. 8.
  41. ^ a b Ershkowitz, pp. 271–272.
  42. ^ Gibbons, pp. 363–364.
  43. ^ "Congressional Record, Vol. 33, December 4, 1899, p. 1" (PDF).
  44. ^ a b Taft, p. 108.
  45. ^ a b Taft, p. 125.
  46. ^ a b Schiller & Stewart, p. 215.
  47. ^ Taft, p. 118.
  48. ^ Kehl, p. 220.
  49. ^ a b Taft, p. 142.
  50. ^ Kehl, pp. 219–221.
  51. ^ "Marcus A. Hanna: A featured biography". United States Senate. Retrieved August 15, 2022.
  52. ^ a b Gould, p. 368.
  53. ^ Horner, p. 263.
  54. ^ "William McKinley Assassination: Topics in Chronicling America". Library of Congress. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  55. ^ Kehl, p. 229.
  56. ^ Beers, p. 49.
  57. ^ Ershkowitz, p. 274.
  58. ^ Gibbons, p. 364.
  59. ^ Bybee, pp. 538–540.

Bibliography

  • Beers, Paul B. (2010). Pennsylvania Politics Today and Yesterday: The Tolerable Accommodation. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0-271-04498-9.
  • Blair, William Alan (April 1989). "A Practical Politician: The Boss Tactics of Matthew Stanley Quay". Pennsylvania History. 56 (2): 78–89.
  • Bybee, Jay S. (Winter 1997). "Ulysses at the Mast: Democracy, Federalism, and the Sirens' Song of the Seventeenth Amendment". Northwestern University Law Review. 91 (2): 500–572. Retrieved July 24, 2012.
  • Ershkowitz, Herbert (1999). John Wanamaker: Philadelphia Merchant (eBook ed.). Combined Publishing. ISBN 978-1-58097-004-4.
  • Gibbons, Herbert Adams (1926). John Wanamaker. Vol. 1. Harper & Brothers. OCLC 162856645.
  • Gould, Lewis L. (December 1981). "Charles Warren Fairbanks and the Republican National Convention of 1900: A Memoir". Indiana Magazine of History. 77 (4): 358–372. JSTOR 27790562.
  • Horner, William T. (2010). Ohio's Kingmaker: Mark Hanna, Man and Myth. Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0-8214-1894-9.
  • Kehl, James A. (1981). Boss Rule in the Gilded Age: Matt Quay of Pennsylvania. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0-8229-3426-4.
  • Schiller, Wendy J.; Stewart III, Charles (2015). Electing the Senate : Indirect Democracy Before the Seventeenth Amendment (eBook ed.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-16316-1.
  • Taft, George S. (1903) [1885]. Compilation of Senate Election Cases from 1789 to 1885, continued to March 3, 1903. United States Government Printing Office. OCLC 1042405215.

Further reading

  • Chapman, Elizabeth Ann (1924). Matthew S. Quay and the Republican Machine in Pennsylvania (Thesis). University of Wisconsin.

1899, united, states, senate, election, pennsylvania, election, united, states, senate, held, pennsylvania, general, assembly, beginning, january, 1899, fill, seat, then, held, matthew, quay, year, term, beginning, march, 1899, quay, candidate, election, damag. An election for the United States Senate was held by the Pennsylvania General Assembly beginning on January 17 1899 to fill the seat then held by Matthew Quay for a six year term beginning March 4 1899 Quay was a candidate for re election but was damaged by a pending indictment for involvement in financial irregularities with state money his trial took place during the three months that the legislature attempted to resolve the Senate deadlock and he was acquitted the day it adjourned having failed to elect a senator Quay was appointed to the Senate seat by the governor but the Senate refused to seat him on the grounds that the governor lacked the constitutional authority to make the selection and the seat remained vacant until the next meeting of the legislature in 1901 when Quay was elected 1899 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania 1893 January 17 1899 1899 01 17 April 19 1899 1899 04 19 1901 special Statistics for the 79th and final vote April 19 1899124 votes needed to win Nominee Matthew Quay George A Jenks Benjamin F JonesParty Republican Democratic RepublicanLeg vote 93 85 69Percentage 37 65 34 41 27 94 U S senator before electionMatthew QuayRepublican Elected U S Senator noneQuay was Pennsylvania s Republican political boss and had served two terms in the Senate Dissident Republicans and reformers were determined to defeat him for a third term and sought to elect candidates in the 1898 elections for the legislature Prominent among the anti Quay forces was Philadelphia businessman John Wanamaker who had been defeated for the Republican nominations for senator in 1897 and governor in 1898 through Quay s influence Wanamaker made speeches against Quay during the 1898 campaign though he refused to seek the Senate seat himself Although Republicans had an ample majority in the legislature enough were anti Quay to deny the senator the majority he needed for re election Democrats and anti Quay Republicans refused to join together to elect another candidate though they had a majority between them Democrats supported their 1898 gubernatorial candidate George A Jenks while the dissident Republicans voted for several candidates before settling on Benjamin F Jones The legislature voted once a day during the session of over three months no compromise was reached and the session ended on April 20 without the election of a senator After the session and Quay s acquittal Governor William A Stone appointed Quay to the vacancy but the Senate refused to seat him by one vote and the senatorship remained vacant until 1901 Quay blamed his fellow Republican political boss Mark Hanna of Ohio for the defeat in the Senate and gained revenge at the 1900 Republican National Convention by supporting Thomas C Platt s scheme to politically sideline Governor Theodore Roosevelt of New York by making him vice president over Hanna s strong objection After Quay s return to the Senate in 1901 he served there until his death in 1904 when control of Quay s political machine passed to his fellow Pennsylvania senator Boies Penrose Contents 1 Background 2 Opposition to Quay and indictment 3 Caucus and early balloting 4 Later voting and deadlock 5 Appointment 6 Aftermath 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further readingBackground EditIn drafting the Constitution the members of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 agreed that United States Senators would be chosen by state legislatures not by the people 1 Federal law prescribed that the senatorial election was to take place beginning on the second Tuesday after the two houses of the legislature which would be in office when the senatorial term expired convened and chose legislative officers On the designated day balloting for senator would take place in each of the two chambers of the legislature If a majority of each house voted for the same candidate then at the joint assembly held the following day at noon the candidate would be declared elected Otherwise there would be a roll call vote of all legislators with a majority of those present needed to elect In the event that no senator was elected the legislature was required to hold at least one vote in joint assembly each day until it ended the session or a senator was elected 2 If a vacancy occurred when the legislature was not in session the governor could make a temporary appointment to serve until lawmakers convened 3 This system was prone to deadlock if legislators could not agree in the 1890s and 1900s eight states failed to fill Senate seats for periods ranging from 10 months to four years from 1901 to 1903 Delaware went unrepresented in the Senate 4 Matthew Quay was born September 30 1833 in Dillsburg Pennsylvania After completing his education he became a lawyer in 1854 practicing in Beaver Pennsylvania and became prothonotary of Beaver County in 1856 He served as an officer in the Union Army 5 and was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his actions at the 1862 Battle of Fredericksburg Quay was elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives taking office in 1865 5 and became part of the political machine of U S Senator Simon Cameron 6 Beginning in 1872 Quay served as Cameron s lieutenant 7 By the mid 1880s Quay had seized control of the state Republican Party from Cameron s son Senator Don Cameron 8 and in 1887 was himself elected to the Senate with re election in 1893 5 Money and patronage were Quay s weapons in gaining and maintaining power he freely raided the state treasury dispensing loans to those he favored and using state money to buy votes or the opinions of newspapers He recognized the importance of this resource himself serving as Pennsylvania State Treasurer from 1885 to 1887 and once said I don t mind losing the governorship or a legislature now and then but I always need the state treasuryship 5 9 Opposition to Quay and indictment EditSee also 1897 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania John Wanamaker opposed Quay in his quest for a third term in the Senate There had since 1882 always been some opposition to Quay within the Pennsylvania Republican Party but it had always been beaten 10 Pennsylvania s senior senator Don Cameron announced he would retire at the end of his term in 1897 Philadelphia businessman and former United States Postmaster General John Wanamaker wanted the seat which would be filled by the General Assembly in early 1897 Since most Republican legislators were beholden to Quay his choice of nominee was usually accepted by the Republican legislative caucus and Quay supported Boies Penrose Wanamaker entered the race anyway making speeches demonizing Quay and making alliances with reformers in the legislature Nevertheless Penrose easily won the vote in the Republican legislative caucus in early 1897 and was elected 11 Wanamaker continued his anti Quay campaigning through his effort to gain the Republican nomination for governor in early 1898 and even though he failed continued to give speeches against the senator hoping to generate enough opposition to prevent his re election by the legislature in early 1899 12 His speeches brought the issue of bossism home to the voters of Pennsylvania and helped elect Democrats or anti Quay Republicans 10 On October 3 1898 Quay was arrested for conspiracy to defraud the People s Bank of Philadelphia Quay had arranged in 1896 for 1 000 000 of state funds equivalent to 32 572 000 in 2021 to be deposited in it and had persuaded John S Hopkins cashier and manager of the bank that the funds be invested in the Metropolitan Traction Company of New York sending a telegram If you buy and carry a thousand Met for me I will shake the plum tree believed by investigators to mean that funds from the state treasury would be used to cover the speculation 13 14 The stock collapsed the bank failed and Hopkins fatally shot himself 10 15 It was alleged that the bank was paying the interest on state funds not to the state treasury but to Quay 16 The information had been available for months according to Quay biographer James Kehl the indictment was timed to have had the greatest effect on the upcoming elections 13 In spite of the allegations Quay s hand picked gubernatorial candidate William A Stone was victorious by over 110 000 votes 17 Also indicted was Quay s son Richard and state treasurer Benjamin Haywood though Richard Quay s indictment was withdrawn and Haywood would die before the verdict 17 The anti Quay political forces did their best to capitalize on the claims of corruption against Quay and his associates attempting to deny him re election while appearing to remain loyal Republicans in the public eye 18 The trial was repeatedly delayed in late 1898 leading Quay to appeal to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania to get a judge assigned wanting the matter disposed of before the legislative balloting for Senate began in January 19 Instead a trial was set for late February 20 Caucus and early balloting Edit Quay campaign headquarters in Harrisburg The legislature that was to convene in January 1899 consisted of 164 Republicans 84 Democrats and 6 Fusionists 21 the last being elected across party lines by an anti Quay coalition 22 On January 3 1899 the Republican legislators convened in caucus to choose a candidate for senator Under the conventions of the time anyone who attended would be bound by the outcome and only 109 Republicans showed up of whom 98 voted for Quay an outcome which was made unanimous Since there were 254 legislators in full Quay needed 128 votes in the joint assembly to be elected and even if the dissenting attendees could be counted in he was 19 votes short of election Nevertheless his supporters cited the outcome as a triumph and predicted the senator would easily pick up the remaining necessary votes 23 The Democrats refused to join with the dissident Republicans to elect a senator but decided on former congressman George A Jenks who had been their nominee for governor the previous year as their candidate for Senate while the Republicans who refused to support Quay initially had no single candidate as Wanamaker had refused to run 24 Confident of re election Quay made 40 000 equivalent to 1 302 880 in 2021 available to bribe wavering legislators into supporting him 17 Cartoon from the Pittsburgh Press January 25 1899 decrying the Senate deadlock The initial voting in the two houses of the legislature took place in the state capital of Harrisburg on January 17 Quay received 27 votes in the Senate and 85 in the House for a total of 112 Since there were a number of absentees and vacancies 124 votes would be needed for election in the joint assembly which put Quay 12 votes short The Democratic candidate Jenks received 12 votes in the Senate and 70 in the House and the leading other contender was John Dalzell a Republican congressman from Pittsburgh with 16 votes This gave Quay a majority in the Senate but not in the House necessitating balloting in joint assembly 25 By the rules of the joint assembly there was to be one vote each day unless legislators decided otherwise 26 Quay received a plurality on almost each vote and sometimes a majority but only on days a quorum was not present 27 Congressman Joseph C Sibley a Democrat was working for Quay and urged the Pennsylvania Democratic legislators to vote for Quay Instead the Democrats continued to support Jenks 28 On February 27 the prosecution in the criminal case against Quay asked for more time the matter was postponed until April as the senator s supporters claimed the case had collapsed 29 On March 3 angered when John R Farr Speaker of the state House of Representatives adjourned that body in a manner the Democrats and dissident Republicans considered arbitrary they remained on the floor and announced they would elect their own Speaker but they did not have enough for a quorum and after the effort was denounced by a former Democratic Speaker it collapsed 30 That night Quay s term in the Senate expired and the seat became vacant only Penrose represented Pennsylvania in the upper house 5 31 Later voting and deadlock Edit Philadelphia Inquirer editorial cartoon from April 19 1899 depicting the Quay forces nailing their colors to the mast meaning they will not consider a compromise candidate On March 15 The New York Times reported that the deadlock was likely to persist to the end of the session and that the Pennsylvania Senate seat would likely go unfilled when Congress next convened in December even by a gubernatorial appointee as the Senate had usually rejected attempts to fill a seat by appointment when a state legislature had failed to choose 32 The balloting continued once per day excepting Sundays with Quay never getting close to a majority with a quorum 27 The anti Quay Republicans offered to meet with his supporters but Quay s manager state senator John C Grady was slow to accept and it was clear the Quay Republicans would rather have deadlock than find a compromise candidate This was along the lines that Quay urged in a letter to his supporters To temporize with those persons who for three months have prevented the election of a Senator in Pennsylvania would extricate them from the abyss into which they have plunged Instead of making their treason to the party odious their treason would be made respectable and treason made respectable would become fashionable 33 The Democrats refused to reach across the aisle to the anti Quay Republicans to elect a compromise candidate remaining loyal to Jenks 34 According to historian James A Kehl The deliberations of the legislature tried men s patience and tired their minds To those directly involved the frantic efforts to make successful combinations or convert individual legislators turned the protracted struggle into a reign of terror physically mentally and morally The tension was heightened by Quay s success in having his case brought to trial in Philadelphia The prosecution obviously had a weak case that had been patched together primarily to discredit Quay in political circles He may have been guilty but Philadelphia district attorney Peter F Rothermel had neither the documents nor the witnesses to prove it 19 On April 17 Quay lost some support when Pittsburgh political boss and state senator Christopher Magee informed the Quay caucus he would no longer support the ex senator Magee and others attended a meeting of perhaps 15 to 20 legislators the following morning in the state senate s chamber At the meeting they passed a resolution stating that Quay could not be elected and Magee nominated Benjamin F Jones former chairman of the Republican National Committee for senator When the joint assembly convened Jones received 69 votes to 85 for Jenks and 93 for Quay It had been speculated that Magee could take at least 20 votes with him but in the end only 14 legislators defected 35 The final vote on April 19 saw the same tally as the day before 27 On the final ballot four legislators were paired and state senator Alexander L Hawkins was absent as he was serving with his regiment in the Philippines 36 The dissidents had hoped the Democrats would join with them to elect Jones but they refused 37 The following day the legislature formally adjourned leaving the Senate seat empty and in a Philadelphia courtroom Quay was acquitted of the charges 17 To commemorate the acquittal many Quay supporters planted plum trees one in Gettysburg planted 50 and invited Quay to visit in a few years and shake all of them 38 Appointment Edit Philadelphia Inquirer editorial cartoon from April 22 1899 showing Quay vindicated by Lady Justice On April 21 Governor Stone appointed Quay to fill the vacancy in the Senate 39 There had been speculation he might do that or call a special session of the legislature he had refused to announce his plans 36 Stone stated that he believed Quay s trial had been political persecution and wanted to raise the issue now rather than later There was much discussion as to whether the Senate would seat Quay given that the legislature had had the opportunity to fill the seat but had not done so In a similar 1893 case involving a Montana Senate seat it had refused to seat the appointee 40 According to Kehl Stone would have been better advised to recall the legislature into special session in the hope the acquittal would cause them to reach a decision but the governor wanted to rebuke Wanamaker and endorse Quay 38 Wanamaker mounted a campaign to get the Senate to refuse to seat Quay when the new congressional session began in December 1899 41 In this he was joined by some newspapers who warned Republican senators to avoid giving the Democrats ammunition for the 1900 elections by having the Republican Senate accept someone rejected by his own state legislature 42 When Congress convened on December 4 1899 Quay s credentials were referred to the Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections as was a petition signed by 78 members of the Pennsylvania legislature urging the Senate not to seat Quay 43 On January 4 1900 George Hoar of Massachusetts a Republican member of the committee told the Senate that he was daily receiving many letters urging him to oppose Quay s seating in common he believed with other members of the Senate 44 On January 23 1900 the committee reported back 44 and recommended that Quay not be seated by a 5 4 vote 34 with Hoar voting in the minority 45 It held that governors lacked the constitutional authority to make appointments when legislatures deadlocked 46 and that governors could only appoint when a vacancy began during the recess of the legislature 47 One Republican joined four Democrats to produce the majority with the remaining four Republicans in the minority 48 Quay s seating was debated intermittently over the following three months by the Senate 45 which at last voted on April 24 1900 49 Wanamaker got former president Benjamin Harrison who had appointed him postmaster general to use his influence to defeat Quay Harrison convinced Republican senators from his home state Indiana as well as those former members of his administration who were in the Senate to vote against seating Quay 41 The Senate refused to seat Quay by a vote of 33 32 in a vote that cut across party lines with the Republicans against Quay including his fellow political boss Ohio s Mark Hanna 49 50 Hanna in addition to being a senator was President William McKinley s closest advisor and had run his 1896 campaign for the presidency 51 Quay would revenge himself on Hanna by assisting New York s Thomas C Platt at the 1900 Republican National Convention Platt wanted to politically sideline his state s governor Theodore Roosevelt by making him vice president Despite Hanna s strong opposition Platt and Quay got the nomination for Roosevelt 52 According to historian Lewis L Gould while Quay desired to gratify his old friend and co worker Platt it was more especially to embarrass and defeat if possible the wishes of Senator Hanna who had opposed his being seated in the Senate of the United States upon the certificate of the Governor of Pennsylvania 52 As Hanna s biographer William H Horner put it Early Hanna biographer Herbert Croly observed that if not for Platt s desire to get Roosevelt out of New York and Quay s desire to get his revenge upon Hanna Roosevelt would never have been vice president 53 an office from which he succeeded to the presidency with the assassination of President McKinley in September 1901 54 Aftermath EditMain article 1901 United States Senate special election in Pennsylvania The fact that he was instrumental in the nomination of Roosevelt seen as a war hero and reformer boosted Quay according to Kehl rebuild ing his tarnished image in the Keystone State 55 Quay spent the 1900 campaign season giving speeches for legislative candidates who would vote for his election when the legislature convened again in 1901 17 The results though favored Wanamaker s reformers 17 When the legislature convened Quay was able to secure possibly through bribery the votes of one Democrat and seven Republicans previously pledged against him to gain a slim majority Quay was elected for the remainder of the six year term 56 The election of Quay dispirited Wanamaker who lost interest in politics 57 Nevertheless according to the businessman s biographer Herbert Adams Gibbons Quay s prestige was irretrievably lost The mantle of Republican boss soon passed to the shoulders of Penrose 58 Quay died in 1904 still in office Penrose controlled the state Republican Party until his own death in 1921 put an end to the Cameron Quay Penrose machine one of the longest lived and most powerful in the nation 46 Public dismay at what was seen as a corrupt means of choosing federal lawmakers and one that sometimes led to deadlock was a major factor in the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913 which took responsibility for electing senators from state legislators and gave it to the people 59 References Edit Bybee p 510 Schiller amp Stewart pp 43 44 Article I Clause 2 Section 3 of the Constitution of the United States 1787 Bybee pp 541 542 a b c d e Quay Matthew Stanley Biographical Directory of the United States Congress United States Congress Retrieved August 10 2022 Blair pp 77 78 Schiller amp Stewart p 197 Blair p 84 Blair pp 77 80 a b c Kehl p 214 Ershkowitz pp 249 254 Ershkowitz p 264 a b Kehl p 215 Blair pp 80 81 Blair p 81 Schiller amp Stewart p 205 a b c d e f Beers p 47 Schiller amp Stewart pp 206 207 a b Kehl p 216 Schiller amp Stewart pp 212 213 Annual Report of the American Historical Association for the Year 1901 Vol 1 American Historical Association 1902 p 533 Gibbons p 362 Schiller amp Stewart pp 207 208 Schiller amp Stewart p 210 Quay s strong showing The Philadelphia Inquirer January 18 1899 pp 1 6 Page 6 image here Quay in the lead Harrisburg Telegraph January 19 1899 p 1 a b c U S Senate Election 1899 PDF Pennsylvania Election Statistics 1682 2006 Wilkes University Retrieved August 10 2022 Points in State Politics The Times Leader Wilkes Barre Pa February 28 1899 p 4 Schiller amp Stewart pp 211 212 Schiller amp Stewart p 212 Pennsylvania senatorial election returns Pennsylvania Election Statistics 1682 2006 Wilkes University Retrieved August 10 2022 Standing of the Senate The New York Times March 15 1899 p 2 Another Break in Quay s Ranks Chattanooga Daily Times April 17 1899 p 1 a b Schiller amp Stewart p 214 It was a very feeble bolt The Pittsburgh Press April 18 1899 p 1 a b Last Ballot Cast Pittsburgh Post Gazette April 20 1899 p 1 Schiller amp Stewart p 213 a b Kehl p 218 Taft p 109 Col Quay is Acquitted Adams County Independent April 29 1899 p 8 a b Ershkowitz pp 271 272 Gibbons pp 363 364 Congressional Record Vol 33 December 4 1899 p 1 PDF a b Taft p 108 a b Taft p 125 a b Schiller amp Stewart p 215 Taft p 118 Kehl p 220 a b Taft p 142 Kehl pp 219 221 Marcus A Hanna A featured biography United States Senate Retrieved August 15 2022 a b Gould p 368 Horner p 263 William McKinley Assassination Topics in Chronicling America Library of Congress Retrieved August 10 2022 Kehl p 229 Beers p 49 Ershkowitz p 274 Gibbons p 364 Bybee pp 538 540 Bibliography EditBeers Paul B 2010 Pennsylvania Politics Today and Yesterday The Tolerable Accommodation Penn State Press ISBN 978 0 271 04498 9 Blair William Alan April 1989 A Practical Politician The Boss Tactics of Matthew Stanley Quay Pennsylvania History 56 2 78 89 Bybee Jay S Winter 1997 Ulysses at the Mast Democracy Federalism and the Sirens Song of the Seventeenth Amendment Northwestern University Law Review 91 2 500 572 Retrieved July 24 2012 Ershkowitz Herbert 1999 John Wanamaker Philadelphia Merchant eBook ed Combined Publishing ISBN 978 1 58097 004 4 Gibbons Herbert Adams 1926 John Wanamaker Vol 1 Harper amp Brothers OCLC 162856645 Gould Lewis L December 1981 Charles Warren Fairbanks and the Republican National Convention of 1900 A Memoir Indiana Magazine of History 77 4 358 372 JSTOR 27790562 Horner William T 2010 Ohio s Kingmaker Mark Hanna Man and Myth Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 8214 1894 9 Kehl James A 1981 Boss Rule in the Gilded Age Matt Quay of Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 3426 4 Schiller Wendy J Stewart III Charles 2015 Electing the Senate Indirect Democracy Before the Seventeenth Amendment eBook ed Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16316 1 Taft George S 1903 1885 Compilation of Senate Election Cases from 1789 to 1885 continued to March 3 1903 United States Government Printing Office OCLC 1042405215 Further reading EditChapman Elizabeth Ann 1924 Matthew S Quay and the Republican Machine in Pennsylvania Thesis University of Wisconsin Preceded by1893 Pennsylvania U S Senate election Class I 1899 Succeeded by1901 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1899 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania amp oldid 1134153318, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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