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Al Smith

Alfred Emanuel Smith (December 30, 1873 – October 4, 1944) was an American politician who served four terms as the 42nd governor of New York and was the Democratic Party's presidential nominee in 1928.

Al Smith
Smith c. 1920s
42nd Governor of New York
In office
January 1, 1923 – December 31, 1928
LieutenantGeorge R. Lunn
Seymour Lowman
Edwin Corning
Preceded byNathan L. Miller
Succeeded byFranklin D. Roosevelt
In office
January 1, 1919 – December 31, 1920
LieutenantHarry C. Walker
Preceded byCharles S. Whitman
Succeeded byNathan L. Miller
8th President of the New York City Board of Aldermen
In office
January 1, 1917 – December 31, 1918
Preceded byFrank Dowling
Succeeded byRobert L. Moran
Sheriff of New York County
In office
January 1, 1916 – January 1, 1917
Preceded byMax Samuel Grifenhagen
Succeeded byDavid H. Knott
Member of the New York State Assembly
from New York County's 2nd district
In office
January 1, 1904 – December 31, 1915
Preceded byJoseph Bourke
Succeeded byPeter J. Hamill
Personal details
Born
Alfred Emanuel Smith

(1873-12-30)December 30, 1873
New York City, U.S.
DiedOctober 4, 1944(1944-10-04) (aged 70)
New York City, U.S.
Resting placeCalvary Cemetery
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
Catherine Dunn
(m. 1900; died 1944)
Children5

The son of an Irish-American mother and a Civil War–veteran Italian-American father, Smith was raised on the Lower East Side of Manhattan near the Brooklyn Bridge. He resided in that neighborhood for his entire life. Although Smith remained personally untarnished by corruption, he—like many other New York Democrats—was linked to the notorious Tammany Hall political machine that controlled New York City politics during his era.[1] Smith served in the New York State Assembly from 1904 to 1915 and held the position of Speaker of the Assembly in 1913. Smith also served as sheriff of New York County from 1916 to 1917. He was first elected governor of New York in 1918, lost his 1920 bid for re-election, and was elected governor again in 1922, 1924, and 1926. Smith was the foremost urban leader of the Efficiency Movement in the United States and was noted for achieving a wide range of reforms as the New York governor in the 1920s.

Smith was the first Roman Catholic to be nominated for president of the United States by a major party. His 1928 presidential candidacy mobilized both Catholic and anti-Catholic voters.[2] Many Protestants (including German Lutherans and Southern Baptists) feared his candidacy, believing that the Pope in Rome would dictate his policies. Smith was also a committed "wet", which was a term used for opponents of Prohibition; as New York governor, he had repealed the state's prohibition law. As a "wet", Smith attracted voters who wanted beer, wine and liquor and did not like dealing with criminal bootleggers, along with voters who were outraged that new criminal gangs had taken over the streets in most large and medium-sized cities.[3] Incumbent Republican Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover was aided by national prosperity, the absence of American involvement in war and anti-Catholic bigotry, and he defeated Smith in a landslide in 1928.

Smith sought the 1932 Democratic presidential nomination but was defeated by Franklin D. Roosevelt, his former ally and successor as governor of New York. Smith then entered business in New York City, became involved in the construction and promotion of the Empire State Building, and became an increasingly vocal opponent of Roosevelt's New Deal.

Early life edit

 
Al Smith attended St. James school through the eighth grade, his only formal education.

Smith was born at 174 South Street and raised in the Fourth Ward on the Lower East Side of Manhattan; he resided there for his entire life.[4] His mother, Catherine (née Mulvihill), was the daughter of Maria Marsh and Thomas Mulvihill, who were immigrants from County Westmeath, Ireland.[5] His father, baptised Joseph Alfred Smith in 1839, was the son of Emanuel Smith, an Italian marinaro.[citation needed] The elder Alfred Smith (Anglicized name for Alfredo Emanuele Ferraro) was the son of Italian and German[6][7] immigrants. He served with the 11th New York Fire Zouaves in the opening months of the Civil War.

Smith grew up with his family struggling financially in the Gilded Age; New York City matured and completed major infrastructure projects. The Brooklyn Bridge was being constructed nearby. "The Brooklyn Bridge and I grew up together", Smith would later recall.[8] His four grandparents were Irish, German, Italian, and Anglo-Irish,[9] but Smith identified with the Irish-American community and became its leading spokesman in the 1920s.

His father Alfred owned a small trucking firm, but died when Smith was 13. Aged 14, Smith had to drop out of St. James parochial school to help support the family, and worked at a fish market for seven years. Prior to dropping out of school, he served as an altar boy, and was strongly influenced by the Catholic priests he worked with.[10] He never attended high school or college, and claimed he learned about people by studying them at the Fulton Fish Market, where he worked for $12 per week. His acting skills made him a success on the amateur theater circuit. He became widely known, and developed the smooth oratorical style that characterized his political career. On May 6, 1900, Al Smith married Catherine Ann Dunn, with whom he had five children.[1]

Political career edit

 
Charles F. Murphy and Smith in 1915

In his political career, Smith built on his working-class beginnings, identifying himself with immigrants and campaigning as a man of the people. Although indebted to the Tammany Hall political machine (and particularly to its boss, "Silent" Charlie Murphy), he remained untarnished by corruption and worked for the passage of progressive legislation.[1][better source needed] It was during his early unofficial jobs with Tammany Hall that he gained renown as an orator.[11] Smith's first political job was in 1895, as an investigator in the office of the Commissioner of Jurors as appointed by Tammany Hall.

State legislature edit

 
Smith at his desk in the New York Assembly in 1913

Smith was first elected to the New York State Assembly (New York Co., 2nd D.) in 1904, and was repeatedly elected to office, serving through 1915.[10] After being approached by Frances Perkins, an activist to improve labor practices, Smith sought to improve the conditions of factory workers.

Smith served as vice chairman of the state commission appointed to investigate factory conditions after 146 workers died in the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. Meeting the families of the deceased Triangle factory workers left a strong impression on him. Together with Perkins and Robert F. Wagner, Smith crusaded against dangerous and unhealthy workplace conditions and championed corrective legislation.[11][12]

The Commission, chaired by State Senator Robert F. Wagner, held a series of widely publicized investigations around the state, interviewing 222 witnesses and taking 3,500 pages of testimony. They hired field agents to do on-site inspections of factories. Starting with the issue of fire safety, they studied broader issues of the risks of injury in the factory environment. Their findings led to thirty-eight new laws regulating labor in New York State, and gave each of them a reputation as leading progressive reformers working on behalf of the working class. In the process, they changed Tammany's reputation from mere corruption to progressive endeavors to help the workers.[13] New York City's Fire Chief John Kenlon told the investigators that his department had identified more than 200 factories where conditions resulted in risk of a fire like that at the Triangle Factory.[14]

The State Commission's reports led to the modernization of the state's labor laws, making New York State "one of the most progressive states in terms of labor reform."[15][16] New laws mandated better building access and egress, fireproofing requirements, the availability of fire extinguishers, the installation of alarm systems and automatic sprinklers, better eating and toilet facilities for workers, and limited the number of hours that women and children could work. In the years from 1911 to 1913, sixty of the sixty-four new laws recommended by the Commission were legislated with the support of Governor William Sulzer.[17]

In 1911, the Democrats obtained a majority of seats in the State Assembly, and Smith became Majority Leader and Chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means. The following year, following the loss of the majority, he became the Minority Leader. When the Democrats reclaimed the majority after the next election, he was elected Speaker for the 1913 session. He became Minority Leader again in 1914 and 1915. In November 1915, he was elected Sheriff of New York County, New York. By now he was a leader of the Progressive movement in New York City and state. His campaign manager and top aide was Belle Moskowitz, a daughter of Jewish immigrants.[1]

Governor (1919–1920, 1923–1928) edit

 
Gubernatorial portrait of Al Smith by Douglas Volk

After serving in the patronage-rich job of Sheriff of New York County, Smith was elected President of the Board of Aldermen of the City of New York in 1917. Smith was elected Governor of New York at the New York State election of 1918 with the help of Murphy and James A. Farley, who brought Smith the upstate vote.[citation needed]

In 1919, Smith gave the famous speech "A man as low and mean as I can picture",[18] making a drastic break with publisher William Randolph Hearst. Hearst, known for his notoriously sensationalist and largely left-wing position in the state Democratic Party, was the leader of its populist wing in the city. He had combined with Tammany Hall in electing the local administration, and had attacked Smith for starving children by not reducing the cost of milk.[19]

Smith lost his bid for re-election in the 1920 New York gubernatorial election, but was again elected governor in 1922, 1924 and 1926, with Farley managing his campaign. In his 1922 re-election, he embraced his position as an anti-prohibitionist. Smith offered alcohol to guests at the Executive Mansion in Albany, and repealed the state's Prohibition enforcement statute, the Mullan-Gage law.[20]

As governor, Smith became known nationally as a progressive who sought to make government more efficient and more effective in meeting social needs. Smith's young assistant Robert Moses built the nation's first state park system and reformed the civil service, later gaining appointment as Secretary of State of New York. During Smith's time in office, New York strengthened laws governing workers' compensation, women's pensions and children and women's labor with the help of Frances Perkins, soon to be President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Labor Secretary.

 
Time cover, July 13, 1925

1924 presidential election edit

In 1924, Smith unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination for president, advancing the cause of civil liberty by decrying lynching and racial violence. Roosevelt delivered the nominating speech for Smith at the 1924 Democratic National Convention in which he saluted Smith as "the Happy Warrior of the political battlefield."[1] Smith represented the urban, east coast wing of the party as an anti-prohibition "wet" candidate, while his main rival for the nomination, President Woodrow Wilson's son-in-law William Gibbs McAdoo, a former Secretary of the Treasury, stood for the more rural tradition and prohibition "dry" candidacy.[21] The party was hopelessly split between the two. An increasingly chaotic convention balloted 100 times before both men accepted that neither would be able to win the required two-thirds of the votes, and so each withdrew. On the 103rd ballot, the exhausted party nominated the little-known candidate John W. Davis of West Virginia, a former congressman and United States Ambassador to Great Britain who had been a dark horse presidential candidate in 1920. Davis lost the election by a landslide to the Republican Calvin Coolidge, who won in part because of the prosperous times.

Undeterred, Smith returned to fight a determined campaign for the party's nomination in 1928. He was aided by the endorsement of Philip La Follette,[22] son of 1924 Progressive Party presidential candidate Robert M. La Follette, who died in 1925 seven months after receiving 16.62 percent of the popular vote—the fifth-highest proportion for any third-party presidential candidate.[note 1]

1928 presidential election edit

Reporter Frederick William Wile made the oft-repeated observation that Smith was defeated by "the three P's: Prohibition, Prejudice and Prosperity".[23] The Republican Party was still benefiting from an economic boom, as well as a failure to reapportion Congress and the electoral college following the 1920 census,[24] which had registered a 15 percent increase in the urban population. The party was biased toward small-town and rural areas. Its presidential candidate Herbert Hoover, who headed the Census of 1920, did little to alter this state of affairs.

Historians agree that prosperity, along with widespread anti-Catholic sentiment against Smith, made Hoover's election inevitable.[25] He defeated Smith by a landslide in the 1928 United States presidential election, carrying five Southern states via crossover voting by conservative white Democrats.[note 2]

 
Political cartoon suggesting the Pope was the force behind Al Smith. The Good Citizen, November 1926. Publisher: Pillar of Fire Church, New Jersey.

The fact that Smith was Catholic and the descendant of Catholic immigrants was instrumental in his loss of the election of 1928.[10] Historical hostilities between Protestants and Catholics had been carried by national groups to the United States by immigrants, and centuries of Protestant domination allowed myths and superstitions about Catholicism to flourish. Long-established Protestants had viewed the waves of Catholic immigrants from Ireland, Italy and Eastern Europe since the mid-19th century with suspicion. In addition, many Protestants carried old fears related to extravagant claims of one religion against the other which dated back to the European wars of religion. They feared that Smith would answer to the Pope rather than the United States Constitution.

Scott Farris notes that the anti-Catholicism of the American society was the sole reason behind Smith's defeat, as even contemporary Prohibition activists would admit that their main problem with the Democratic candidate was his faith and not any political view. Bob Jones Sr., a prominent Protestant pastor in South Carolina, said:

I'll tell you, brother, that the big issue we've got to face ain't the liquor question. I'd rather see a saloon on every corner of the South than see the foreigners elect Al Smith president.[26]

A Methodist newspaper in Georgia called Catholicism "a degenerate type of Christianity," while Southern Baptist churches ordered their followers to vote against Smith, claiming that he would close down Protestant churches, end freedom of worship and prohibit reading the Bible. Charles Hillman Fountain, a Protestant writer, insisted that Catholics should be barred from holding any office. Farris states that "More disturbing than the ridiculous and the dangerous was the respectable anti-Catholicism", as contemporary newspapers and Protestant churches tried to mask their anti-Catholicism as genuine concern. Protestant activists insisted that Catholicism represents an alien culture and medieval mentality, claiming that Catholicism is incompatible with American democracy and institutions.

Catholics were portrayed as reactionary despite being more left-wing than mainstream American Protestant congregations at the time.[26] William Allen White, a renowned newspaper editor, warned that Catholicism would erode the moral standards of America, saying that "the whole Puritan civilization which has built a sturdy, orderly nation is threatened by Smith." While Herbert Hoover avoided raising the issue of Catholicism on the campaign trail, he defended the Protestant actions in a private letter:

There are many people of intense Protestant faith to whom Catholicism is a grievous sin, and they have as much right to vote against a man for public office because of that belief. That is not persecution.[26]

White rural conservatives in the South also believed that Smith's close association with Tammany Hall, the Democratic machine in Manhattan, showed that he tolerated corruption in government, while they overlooked their own brands of it. Another major controversial issue was the continuation of Prohibition, the enforcement of which was widely considered problematic. Smith personally favored the relaxation or repeal of Prohibition laws because they had given rise to more criminality. The Democratic Party split North and South on the issue, with the more rural South continuing to favor Prohibition. During the campaign, Smith tried to duck the issue with non-committal statements.[27]

Smith was an articulate proponent of good government and efficiency, as was Hoover. Smith swept the entire Catholic vote, which in 1920 and 1924 had been split between the parties; he attracted millions of Catholics, generally ethnic whites, to the polls for the first time, especially women, who were first allowed to vote in 1920. He lost important Democratic constituencies in the rural North as well as in Southern cities and suburbs. Smith did retain the loyalty of the Deep South, thanks in part to the appeal of his running mate, Senator Joseph Robinson from Arkansas, but lost five states of the Rim South to Hoover. Smith carried the popular vote in each of America's ten most populous cities, an indication of the rising power of the urban areas and their new demographics.

Smith was not a very good campaigner. His campaign theme song, "The Sidewalks of New York", had little appeal among rural Americans, who also found his 'city' accent slightly foreign when heard on radio. Smith narrowly lost his home state; New York's electors were biased in favor of rural upstate and largely Protestant districts. However, in 1928 his fellow Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt (a Protestant of Dutch old-line stock) was elected to replace him as governor of New York.[28] Farley left Smith's camp to run Roosevelt's successful campaign for governor in 1928, and then Roosevelt's successful campaigns for the Presidency in 1932 and 1936.

Voter realignment edit

 
Al Smith giving a speech

Some political scientists believe that the 1928 election started a voter realignment that helped develop Roosevelt's New Deal coalition.[29] One political scientist said, "...not until 1928, with the nomination of Al Smith, a northeastern reformer, did Democrats make gains among the urban, blue-collar and Catholic voters who were later to become core components of the New Deal coalition and break the pattern of minimal class polarization that had characterized the Fourth Party System."[30] However, historian Allan Lichtman's quantitative analysis suggests that the 1928 results were based largely on religion and are not a useful barometer of the voting patterns of the New Deal era.[31]

Lichtman notes that the sole defining issue of the election was anti-Catholicism, which radically realigned states' voting patterns. States that had never voted Republican after Reconstruction such as Texas, Florida, North Carolina, and Virginia voted for Hoover, while Smith carried Massachusetts and Rhode Island—states that had never voted Democratic before save for 1912. Lichtman further proves this by pointing out that Smith and Hoover had very similar political views save for religion and Prohibition, and yet the 1928 election had a turnout of 57%, despite previous 1920s American elections having their turnouts below 50%.[26]

Christopher M. Finan (2003) says Smith is an underestimated symbol of the changing nature of American politics in the first half of the last century. He represented the rising ambitions of urban, industrial America at a time when the hegemony of rural, agrarian America was in decline, although many states had legislatures and congressional delegations biased toward rural areas because of lack of redistricting after censuses. Smith was connected to the hopes and aspirations of immigrants, especially Catholics and Jews from eastern and southern Europe. Smith was a devout Catholic, but his struggles against religious bigotry were often misinterpreted when he fought the religiously inspired Protestant morality imposed by prohibitionists.

The 1928 election initiated a complete voter realignment of African-Americans, who overwhelmingly supported the Republican Party prior to 1928.[32] Hoover sought "Southern Strategy" for the election, and sided with the segregationist lily-white Republicans at the expense of the pro-civil rights black and tans.[33] Prominent African Americans were removed from positions of leadership in the Republican Party and replaced with lily-white Republicans in order to appeal to the segregationist South, and Hoover's spokesmen in the South spoke of his commitment to white supremacy.[34] Allan Lichtman wrote that Hoover "sought a permanent reorganization of southern Republicanism under the leadership of white racists."[33] This action was taken to exploit the unpopularity of Smith in the South, as Hoover and his cabinet were "convinced that white Southern votes were more essential to a Hoover win than black ones".[34] Hoover assured Southern voters that he "had no intention of appointing colored men" and pledged that he had "no intention—party platform notwithstanding—of foisting off an anti-lynch law on the white South";[34] at the same time, Hoover heavily emphasized "his rural-Protestant roots" and appealed to the white voters' anti-urban and anti-Catholic sentiments, while also portraying Smith as a pro-civil rights candidate.[34] According to Phylon, apart from the Catholics' perceived allegiance to the Pope over United States, American anti-Catholicism was also racially motivated, as Southern Protestants "strongly opposed the church's liberal policies—particularly its uncompromising position against social and political segregation."[34]

Al Smith was supportive of racial equality and appointed African Americans to the New York City school system and civil service commission.[34] Major black newspapers throughout the United States such as The Chicago Defender, Baltimore Afro-American and Norfolk Journal and Guide endorsed Smith for president,[33] and prominent members of the NAACP supported Smith, with Walter Francis White writing that "Governor Smith is by far the best man available for the Presidency" and arguing that Smith's "nomination and election would be the greatest blow at bigotry that has ever been struck."[33] Smith attracted the attention of disheartened African-American voters, as he was unpopular in the South, faced prejudice as a Roman Catholic, and had a reputation of a "spokesman for ethnic minorities in Northern cities".[33] As such, Smith's candidacy, coupled with Hoover's Southern concession, initiated abandonment of loyalty to the Republicans and embrace of the Democratic Party by African-American voters. Samuel O'Dell wrote in Phylon that 1928 black voters "bolted to the Democratic party in unprecedented numbers."[33]

Opposition to Roosevelt and the New Deal edit

 
Franklin D. Roosevelt (left) and Al Smith (right) in Albany, New York

Smith felt slighted by Roosevelt during the latter's governorship. They became rivals in the 1932 Democratic Party presidential primaries after Smith decided to run for the nomination against Roosevelt, the presumed favorite. At the convention, Smith's animosity toward Roosevelt was so great that he put aside longstanding rivalries to work with McAdoo and Hearst to block FDR's nomination for several ballots. That coalition fell apart when Smith refused to work on finding a compromise candidate; instead, he maneuvered to become the nominee. After losing the nomination, Smith eventually campaigned for Roosevelt in 1932, giving a particularly important speech on behalf of the Democratic nominee at Boston on October 27 in which he "pulled out all the stops."[35]

Smith became highly critical of Roosevelt's New Deal policies, which he deemed a betrayal of good-government progressive ideals and ran counter to the goal of close cooperation with business. Smith joined the American Liberty League, an organization founded by conservative Democrats who disapproved of Roosevelt's New Deal measures and tried to rally public opinion against the New Deal. The League published pamphlets and sponsored radio programs, arguing that the New Deal was destroying personal liberty. However, the League failed to gain support in the 1934 or 1936 elections and rapidly declined in influence. It was officially dissolved in 1940.[36][37] Smith's antipathy to Roosevelt and his policies was so great that he supported Republican presidential nominees Alf Landon in the 1936 election and Wendell Willkie in the 1940 election.[1]

Although personal resentment was one factor in Smith's break with Roosevelt and the New Deal, Christopher Finan (2003) argues that Smith was consistent in his beliefs and politics—suggesting that Smith always believed in social mobility, economic opportunity, religious tolerance, and individualism. Despite the break between the men, Smith and Eleanor Roosevelt remained close. In 1936, while Smith was in Washington making a vehement radio attack on the President, she invited him to stay at the White House. To avoid embarrassing the Roosevelts, he declined. Historian Robert Slayton notes that Smith and Franklin Roosevelt did not reconcile until a brief meeting in June 1941, and he also suggests that during the early 1940s the antipathy which Smith held toward his former ally had waned.[38] Upon the death of Smith's wife Katie in May 1944, FDR sent Smith a note of personal condolence. Smith's grandchildren later recalled that he was greatly touched by it.[39]

Business life and later years edit

 
Smith golfing with baseball great Babe Ruth in Coral Gables, Florida, in 1930.

After the 1928 election, Smith became the president of Empire State, Inc., the corporation that built and operated the Empire State Building. Construction for the building symbolically began on March 17, 1930, St. Patrick's Day, per Smith's instructions. Smith's grandchildren cut the ribbon when the world's tallest skyscraper opened on May 1, 1931, which was May Day, an international labor celebration. Its construction had been completed in only 13 months, a record for such a large project.

As with the Brooklyn Bridge, which Smith had seen being built from his Lower East Side boyhood home, the Empire State Building was both a vision and an achievement that had been constructed by combining the interests of all, rather than being divided by the interests of a few. Smith continued to promote the Empire State Building, which was derided as the "Empty State Building" due to a lack of tenants, in the years following its construction.[40][41]

In 1929, Smith was awarded the Laetare Medal by the University of Notre Dame, considered the most prestigious award for American Catholics.[42]

 
Al Smith (right) in December 1929 during his time as director of Empire State, Inc.

In 1929 Smith was elected President of the Board of Trustees of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University.[43] Knowing his fondness for animals, in 1934 Robert Moses made Al Smith the Honorary Night Zookeeper of the newly-renovated Central Park Zoo. Though a ceremonial title, Smith was given keys to the zoo and often took guests to see the animals after hours.[44]

Smith was an early and vocal critic of the Nazi regime in Germany. He supported the Anti-Nazi boycott of 1933 and addressed a mass-meeting at Madison Square Garden against Nazism that March.[45] His speech was included in the 1934 anthology Nazism: An Assault on Civilization.[46] In 1938, Smith took to the airwaves to denounce Nazi brutality in the wake of Kristallnacht. His words were published in The New York Times article "Text of the Catholic Protest Broadcast" of November 17, 1938.[47][48]

Like most New York City businessmen, Smith enthusiastically supported American military involvement in World War II. Although he was not asked by Roosevelt to play any role in the war effort, Smith was an active and vocal proponent of FDR's attempts to amend the Neutrality Act in order to allow "Cash and Carry" sales of war equipment to be made to the British. Smith spoke on behalf of the policy in October 1939, to which FDR responded directly: "Very many thanks. You were grand."[49]

In 1939 Smith was appointed a Papal Chamberlain of the Sword and Cape, one of the highest honors which the Papacy bestowed on a layman.

Smith died at the Rockefeller Institute Hospital on October 4, 1944, of a heart attack, at the age of 70. He had been broken-hearted over the death of his wife from cancer five months earlier, on May 4, 1944.[50] He is interred at Calvary Cemetery.[51]

 
The gravesite of Governor Smith at Calvary Cemetery

Legacy edit

Buildings and other landmarks named after Smith include the following:

Landmarks named after Al Smith
 
Alfred E. Smith Memorial Building at St. Vincent's Hospital Manhattan
 
The Alfred Smith School, PS 163
 
Alfred E. Smith Career and Technical Education High School in the South Bronx
 
The Alfred E. Smith Building in Albany, New York
 
Governor Alfred E. Smith Sunken Meadow State Park in Suffolk County

Popular culture references edit

  • Smith and Franklin D. Roosevelt were filmed by Lee de Forest in his DeForest Phonofilm sound-on-film process during the 1924 Democratic National Convention, which ran from June 21 to July 9. This film is now in the Maurice Zouary collection at the Library of Congress.[52]
  • In Sinclair Lewis' 1928 novel The Man Who Knew Coolidge, Smith is cited as an example of the opportunities "in this new and increasingly practical America for any bright fellow today!" [53]
  • In Harry Turtledove's alternate history Southern Victory series, in which the Confederate States of America wins the American Civil War in 1862, Al Smith is elected President of the United States in 1936 on the Socialist Party ticket, defeating Democratic incumbent Herbert Hoover. As per the Richmond Agreement with Confederate President Jake Featherston, he allowed plebiscites to be held in the states of Kentucky, Sequoyah and Houston on re-admittance to the Confederacy; the rejection of readmittance in Sequoyah serves as a casus belli for the Second Great War in North America (1941–1944). Smith serves until 1942, when he is killed in a bombing raid on the Powel House in Philadelphia and is succeeded by his Vice President Charles W. La Follette (the fictional son of Robert M. La Follette).
  • Smith was portrayed by Alan Bunce in the 1960 film Sunrise at Campobello, and by Wilbur Fitzgerald in HBO's 2005 TV-movie Warm Springs. Both of these movies focus on Franklin D. Roosevelt's struggle with polio.[54]

Electoral history edit

New York gubernatorial elections, 1918–1926 edit

1918 General election results[55]
Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular Vote
Alfred E. Smith Harry C. Walker Democratic 1,009,936 (47.37%)
Charles S. Whitman Edward Schoeneck (Republican),
Mamie W. Colvin (Prohibition)
Republican,
Prohibition
995,094 (46.68%)
Charles Wesley Ervin Ella Reeve Bloor Socialist 121,705 (5.71%)
Olive M. Johnson August Gillhaus Socialist Labor 5,183 (0.24%)

1920 General election results
Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular Vote
Nathan L. Miller Jeremiah Wood Republican 1,335,878 (46.58%)
Alfred E. Smith George R. Fitts Democratic 1,261,812 (44.00%)
Joseph D. Cannon Jessie Wallace Hughan Socialist 159,804 (5.57%)
Dudley Field Malone Farmer-Labor 69,908 (2.44%)
George F. Thompson Edward G. Deltrich Prohibition 35,509 (1.24%)
John P. Quinn Socialist Labor 5,015 (0.17%)

1922 General election results
Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular Vote
Alfred E. Smith George R. Lunn Democratic 1,397,670 (55.21%)
Nathan L. Miller William J. Donovan Republican 1,011,725 (39.97%)
Edward F. Cassidy Theresa B. Wiley Socialist,
Farmer-Labor
109,119 (4.31%)
George K. Hinds William C. Ramsdell Prohibition 9,499 (0.38%)
Jeremiah D. Crowley John E. DeLee Socialist Labor 9,499 (0.38%)

1924 General election results
Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular Vote
Alfred E. Smith George R. Lunn Democratic 1,627,111 (49.96%)
Theodore Roosevelt Jr. Seymour Lowman Republican 1,518,552 (46.63%)
Norman Mattoon Thomas Charles Solomon Socialist 99,854 (3.07%)
James P. Cannon Franklin P. Brill Workers 6,395 (0.20%)
Frank E. Passonno Milton Weinberger Socialist Labor 4,931 (0.15%)

1926 General election results
Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular Vote
Alfred E. Smith Edwin Corning Democratic 1,523,813 (52.13%)
Ogden L. Mills Seymour Lowman Republican 1,276,137 (43.80%)
Jacob Panken August Claessens Socialist 83,481 (2.87%)
Charles E. Manierre Ella McCarthy Prohibition 21,285 (0.73%)
Benjamin Gitlow Franklin P. Brill Workers 5,507 (0.19%)
Jeremiah D. Crowley John E. DeLee Socialist Labor 3,553 (0.12%)

United States presidential election, 1928 edit

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoral
vote
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote
Herbert Hoover Republican California 21,427,123 58.2% 444 Charles Curtis Kansas 444
Alfred E. Smith Democratic New York 15,015,464 40.8% 87 Joseph Taylor Robinson Arkansas 87
Norman Thomas Socialist New York 267,478 0.7% 0 James H. Maurer Pennsylvania 0
William Z. Foster Communist Illinois 48,551 0.1% 0 Benjamin Gitlow New York 0
Other 48,396 0.1% Other
Total 36,807,012 100% 531 531
Needed to win 266 266
  • Source (Popular Vote): Leip, David. "1928 Presidential Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved July 28, 2005.
  • Source (Electoral Vote): "Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved July 28, 2005.

Works edit

  • Campaign Addresses of Governor Alfred E. Smith, Democratic Candidate for President 1928. Washington, DC: Democratic National Committee, 1929.
  • Progressive Democracy: Addresses & State Papers. 1928.
  • Up to Now: An Autobiography (The Viking Press, 1929)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The four higher proportions are Know Nothing former President Millard Fillmore in 1856 (21.54 percent), Southern Democrat and incumbent Vice-President John C. Breckinridge in 1860 (18.20 percent), "Bull Moose" former President Theodore Roosevelt in 1912 (27.39 percent), and independent Ross Perot in 1992 (18.91 percent).
  2. ^ Since the disenfranchisement of blacks in the South at the turn of the century, whites had dominated voting in that region.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Slayton 2001, ch 1–4
  2. ^ Neal R. Pierce, The Deep South States of America: People, Politics, and Power in the Seven States of the Deep South (1974), pp 123–61
  3. ^ Daniel Okrent, Last Call, 2010.
  4. ^ MacAdam, George (January 1920). "Governor Smith of New York". The World's Work. Vol. XXXIX, no. 3. New York: Doubleday, Page & Co. p. 237. Retrieved September 1, 2010.
  5. ^ Slayton, Robert A. (2001). Empire Statesman: The Rise and Redemption of Al Smith. New York: Simon and Schuster. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-684-86302-3.
  6. ^ Barkan, Elliott Robert (2001). Making it in America: a sourcebook on eminent ethnic Americans. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. p. 350. ISBN 978-1-57607-098-7.
  7. ^ "New York State Census, 1855; pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1942-25847-12175-45". FamilySearch.
  8. ^ Slayton (2001), p. 16
  9. ^ Josephsons 1969
  10. ^ a b c Burner, David. "Al Smith". American National Biography. Retrieved March 24, 2013.
  11. ^ a b Von Drehle, David (2003). Triangle: The Fire That Changed America. New York, NY: Grove Press New York. pp. 204–210. ISBN 0-8021-4151-X.
  12. ^ "Obama, the Triangle Fire and the Real Father of the New Deal". Salon.com. Retrieved March 25, 2011.
  13. ^ Robert Ferdinand Wagner" in Dictionary of American Biography (1977)
  14. ^ The New York Times: "Factory Firetraps Found by Hundreds," October 14, 1911,
  15. ^ Richard A. Greenwald, The Triangle Fire, the Protocols of Peace, and Industrial Democracy in Progressive Era New York (2005), 128
  16. ^ The Economist, "Triangle Shirtwaist: The Birth of the New Deal", March 19, 2011, p. 39.
  17. ^ Slayton, Empire Statesman (2001) pp 92–92
  18. ^ MacArthur, Brian (May 1, 2000). The Penguin Book of 20th-Century Speeches. Penguin (Non-Classics). ISBN 0-14-028500-8.
  19. ^ Procter, Ben H. (2007). William Randolph Hearst. Oxford University Press US. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-19-532534-8.
  20. ^ Lerner, Michael (2007). Dry Manhattan: Prohibition in New York City. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 239–240. ISBN 978-0-674-03057-2.
  21. ^ "Al Smitator h". Encyclopædia Britannica Online Academic Edition. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved March 26, 2013.
  22. ^ Glad, Paul W. (2013). The History of Wisconsin – Volume V: War, a New Era, and Depression, 1914–1940. Wisconsin Historical Society. p. 321. ISBN 978-0870206320.
  23. ^ reprinted 1977, John A. Ryan, "Religion in the Election of 1928," Current History, December 1928; reprinted in Ryan, Questions of the Day (Ayer Publishing, 1977) p.91
  24. ^ Prewitt, Kenneth (July 13, 2017). "The 1920 Census Broke Constitutional Norms—Let's Not Repeat That in 2020". Social Science Research Council. Retrieved December 8, 2020.
  25. ^ William E. Leuchtenburg, The Perils of Prosperity, 1914–32 (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1958) pp. 225–240.
  26. ^ a b c d Farris, Scott (2012). Almost President: The Men Who Lost The Race But Changed The Nation. Ottawa: Lyons Press. ISBN 9780762763788.
  27. ^ Lichtman (1979);Slayton 2001
  28. ^ Slayton 2001; Lichtman (1979)
  29. ^ Degler (1964)
  30. ^ Lawrence (1996) p 34.
  31. ^ Lichtman (1976)
  32. ^ Topping, Simon (2008). Lincoln's Lost Legacy: The Republican Party and the African American Vote, 1928–1952. University Press of Florida. pp. 11, 14–16. ISBN 978-0813032283.
  33. ^ a b c d e f O'Dell, Samuel (1987). "Blacks, the Democratic Party, and the Presidential Election of 1928: A Mild Rejoinder". Phylon. Clark Atlanta University. 48 (1): 1–11. doi:10.2307/274997. JSTOR 274997.
  34. ^ a b c d e f McCarthy, G. Michael (1978). "Smith vs. Hoover: The Politics of Race in West Tennessee". Phylon. Clark Atlanta University. 39 (2): 154–168. doi:10.2307/274510. JSTOR 274510.
  35. ^ J. Joseph Huthmacher, Massachusetts People and Politics: The Transition from Republican to Democratic Dominance and Its National Implications (1973), p. 248.
  36. ^ George Wolfskill. The Revolt of the Conservatives: A History of the American Liberty League, 1934–1940. (Houghton Mifflin, 1962).
  37. ^ Jordan A. Schwarz, "Al Smith in the Thirties," New York History (1964): 316–330. in JSTOR
  38. ^ Slayton, Empire Statesman, pp. 397–398.
  39. ^ Slayton, Empire Statesman, pp. 399–400.
  40. ^ . The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 19, 2010. Retrieved October 11, 2010.
  41. ^ Smith, Adam (August 18, 2008). . Time. Archived from the original on August 19, 2008. Retrieved July 10, 2010.
  42. ^ "Recipients". The Laetare Medal. University of Notre Dame. Retrieved July 31, 2020.
  43. ^ Reznikoff, Charles, ed. 1957. Louis Marshall: Champion of Liberty. Selected Papers and Addresses. Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society of America, p. 1123.
  44. ^ Caro, Robert (1974). The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York. New York: Knopf. ISBN 978-0-394-48076-3. OCLC 834874.
  45. ^ Staff. "35,000 JAM STREETS OUTSIDE THE GARDEN; Solid Lines of Police Hard Pressed to Keep Overflow Crowds From Hall. AREA BARRED TO TRAFFIC Mulrooney Takes Command to Avoid Roughness – 3,000 at Columbus Circle Meeting. 35,000 IN STREETS OUTSIDE GARDEN", The New York Times, March 28, 1933. Accessed June 7, 2017.
  46. ^ Pierre van Paasen and James Waterman Wise, eds., Nazism: An Assault on Civilization (New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1934), pp. 306–310.
  47. ^ David M. Kennedy, Freedom from Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929–1945 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999) ISBN 9780199743827
  48. ^ Slayton, Empire Statesman, p. 391.
  49. ^ Slayton, Empire Statesman, pp. 391–392.
  50. ^ "Alfred E. Smith Dies Here at 70; 4 Times Governor—End Comes After a Sudden Relapse Following Earlier Turn for the Better—Ran For President in '28—His Rise From Newsboy and Fishmonger Had No Exact Parallel in U.S. History". The New York Times. October 4, 1944. p. 1. Retrieved July 28, 2011.
  51. ^ . dol.gov. Archived from the original on February 17, 2011. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
  52. ^ Bradley, Edwin M. (June 14, 2015). The First Hollywood Sound Shorts, 1926–1931. McFarland. p. 16. ISBN 9781476606842.
  53. ^ Lewis, Sinclair (1928). The Man who Knew Coolidge: Being the Soul of Lowell Schmaltz, Constructive and Nordic Citizen. Harcourt, Brace. pp. 269.
  54. ^ Crowther, Bosley (September 29, 1960). "Review 1 – No Title:' Sunrise at Campobello' Opens at the Palace". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  55. ^ "Election result", The New York Times, 31 December 1918

Further reading edit

  • BAUMAN, MARK K. “Prohibition and Politics: Warren Candler and Al Smith’s 1928 Campaign.” The Mississippi Quarterly 31, no. 1 (1977): 109–17. http://www.jstor.org/stable/26474327.
  • Bornet, Vaughn Davis. Labor Politics in a Democratic Republic: Moderation, Division, and Disruption in the Presidential Election of 1928 (1964) online edition
  • Chiles, Robert. "School Reform As Progressive Statecraft: Education Policy In New York Under Governor Alfred E. Smith, 1919–1928." Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 15.4 (2016): 379-398.
  • Chiles, Robert. "Working-Class Conservationism in New York: Governor Alfred E. Smith and 'The Property of the People of the State'" Environmental History (2013) 18#1 pp: 157–183.
  • Chiles, Robert. 2018. The Revolution of '28: Al Smith, American Progressivism, and the Coming of the New Deal. Cornell University Press.
  • Colburn, David R. "Governor Alfred E. Smith and the Red Scare, 1919–20," Political Science Quarterly, vol. 88, no. 3 (Sept. 1973), pp. 423–444. In JSTOR.
  • Craig, Douglas B. After Wilson: The Struggle for Control of the Democratic Party, 1920–1934 (1992) online edition see Chap. 6 "The Problem of Al Smith" and Chap. 8 "'Wall Street Likes Al Smith': The Election of 1928"
  • Curtis, Finbarr. “The Fundamental Faith of Every True American: Secularity and Institutional Loyalty in Al Smith’s 1928 Presidential Campaign.” The Journal of Religion 91, no. 4 (2011): 519–44. https://doi.org/10.1086/660925.
  • Degler, Carl N. (1964). "American Political Parties and the Rise of the City: An Interpretation". Journal of American History. 51 (1): 41–59. doi:10.2307/1917933. JSTOR 1917933.
  • Eldot, Paula (1983). Governor Alfred E. Smith: The Politician as Reformer. Garland. ISBN 0-8240-4855-5.
  • Finan, Christopher M. (2003). Alfred E. Smith: The Happy Warrior. Hill and Wang. ISBN 0-8090-3033-0.
  • Garrett, Charles. (1961). The La Guardia Years: Machine and Reform Politics in New York City. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
  • Handlin, Oscar (1958). Al Smith and His America. Little, Brown.
  • Hostetler, Michael J. (1998). "Gov. Al Smith Confronts the Catholic Question: The Rhetorical Legacy of the 1928 Campaign". Communication Quarterly. 46: 12–24. doi:10.1080/01463379809370081.
  • Josephson, Matthew and Hannah (1969). Al Smith: Hero of the Cities. Houghton Mifflin.
  • Lawrence, David G. (1996). The Collapse of the Democratic Presidential Majority: Realignment, Dealignment, and Electoral Change from Franklin Roosevelt to Bill Clinton. Westview Press. ISBN 0-8133-8984-4.
  • Lichtman, Allan J. (1979). Prejudice and the old politics: The Presidential election of 1928. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-1358-3. OCLC 4492475.
  • Lichtman, Allan (1976). "Critical Election Theory and the Reality of American Presidential Politics, 1916–40". The American Historical Review. 81 (2): 317–351. doi:10.2307/1851173. JSTOR 1851173.
  • Madaras, Lawrence H. “THEODORE ROOSEVELT, JR. VERSUS AL SMITH: THE NEW YORK GUBERNATORIAL ELECTION OF 1924.” New York History 47, no. 4 (1966): 372–90. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23162551.
  • Carter, Paul A. (1980). "Deja Vu; Or, Back to the Drawing Board with Alfred E. Smith". Reviews in American History. 8 (2): 272–276. doi:10.2307/2701129. JSTOR 2701129. S2CID 146565621.; review of Lichtman
  • Moore, Edmund A. (1956). A Catholic Runs for President: The Campaign of 1928. OCLC 475746. online edition
  • Neal, Donn C. (1983). The World beyond the Hudson: Alfred E. Smith and National Politics, 1918–1928. New York: Garland. p. 308. ISBN 978-0-8240-5658-2.
  • Neal, Donn C. (1984). "What If Al Smith Had Been Elected?". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 14 (2): 242–248.
  • Perry, Elisabeth Israels (1987). Belle Moskowitz: Feminine Politics and the Exercise of Power in the Age of Alfred E. Smith. Oxford University Press. p. 280. ISBN 0-19-504426-6.
  • "Smith to Talk Oct. 23". New York Times. 1940. p. 17.
  • "Smith Says Roosevelt Aroused Spirit of Class Hatred in Nation". New York Times. 1940. pp. 1, 18.
  • Rulli, Daniel F. "Campaigning in 1928: Chickens in Pots and Cars in Backyards," Teaching History: A Journal of Methods, Vol. 31#1 pp 42+ (2006) online version with lesson plans for class
  • Schwarz, Jordan A. "Al Smith in the Thirties." New York History (1964): 316–330. in JSTOR
  • Slayton, Robert A. (2001). Empire Statesman: The Rise and Redemption of Al Smith. Free Press. p. 480. ISBN 978-0-684-86302-3., the standard scholarly biography
  • Stonecash, Jeffrey M., et al. "Politics, Alfred Smith, and Increasing the Power of the New York Governor's Office." New York History (2004): 149–179. in JSTOR
  • Sweeney, James R. "Rum, Romanism, and Virginia Democrats: The Party Leaders and the Campaign of 1928." Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 90 (October 1982): 403–31.

External links edit

  • Works by Alfred E. Smith at Faded Page (Canada)
  • "Alfred E. Smith Dies Here at 70; 4 Times Governor". The New York Times. October 4, 1944.
  • "Happy Warrior Playground". New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.
  • "Governor Alfred E. Smith Park". New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.
  • "Al Smith". Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site.
  • Murphy, Kevin C. "Lost Warrior: Al Smith and the Fall of Tammany".
  • A film clip "Al Smith Hails End of Dry Law, 1933/11/13 (1933)" is available for viewing at the Internet Archive
  • Booknotes interview with Robert Slayton on Empire Statesman: The Rise and Redemption of Al Smith, May 13, 2001.
  • "Al Smith, Presidential Contender" from C-SPAN's The Contenders
  • Finding aid for the Alfred E. Smith Papers at the Museum of the City of New York October 31, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  • Alfred E. Smith – The People's Politician? from the Museum of the City of New York Collections blog
  • Newspaper clippings about Al Smith in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
New York State Assembly
Preceded by
Joseph P. Bourke
Member of the New York Assembly
from New York County's 2nd district

1904–1915
Succeeded by
Preceded by Majority Leader of the New York Assembly
1912
Succeeded by
Minority Leader of the New York Assembly
1912
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minority Leader of the New York Assembly
1914–1915
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the New York Assembly
1913
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Frank Dowling
President of the New York City Board of Aldermen
1917–1918
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of New York
1919–1920
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of New York
1923–1928
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of New York
1918, 1920, 1922, 1924, 1926
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for President of the United States
1928

smith, alfred, smith, redirects, here, great, grandson, stockbroker, philanthropist, alfred, smith, other, uses, disambiguation, alfred, emanuel, smith, december, 1873, october, 1944, american, politician, served, four, terms, 42nd, governor, york, democratic,. Alfred E Smith redirects here For his great grandson the stockbroker and philanthropist see Alfred E Smith IV For other uses see Al Smith disambiguation Alfred Emanuel Smith December 30 1873 October 4 1944 was an American politician who served four terms as the 42nd governor of New York and was the Democratic Party s presidential nominee in 1928 Al SmithSmith c 1920s42nd Governor of New YorkIn office January 1 1923 December 31 1928LieutenantGeorge R LunnSeymour LowmanEdwin CorningPreceded byNathan L MillerSucceeded byFranklin D RooseveltIn office January 1 1919 December 31 1920LieutenantHarry C WalkerPreceded byCharles S WhitmanSucceeded byNathan L Miller8th President of the New York City Board of AldermenIn office January 1 1917 December 31 1918Preceded byFrank DowlingSucceeded byRobert L MoranSheriff of New York CountyIn office January 1 1916 January 1 1917Preceded byMax Samuel GrifenhagenSucceeded byDavid H KnottMember of the New York State Assemblyfrom New York County s 2nd districtIn office January 1 1904 December 31 1915Preceded byJoseph BourkeSucceeded byPeter J HamillPersonal detailsBornAlfred Emanuel Smith 1873 12 30 December 30 1873New York City U S DiedOctober 4 1944 1944 10 04 aged 70 New York City U S Resting placeCalvary CemeteryPolitical partyDemocraticSpouseCatherine Dunn m 1900 died 1944 wbr Children5The son of an Irish American mother and a Civil War veteran Italian American father Smith was raised on the Lower East Side of Manhattan near the Brooklyn Bridge He resided in that neighborhood for his entire life Although Smith remained personally untarnished by corruption he like many other New York Democrats was linked to the notorious Tammany Hall political machine that controlled New York City politics during his era 1 Smith served in the New York State Assembly from 1904 to 1915 and held the position of Speaker of the Assembly in 1913 Smith also served as sheriff of New York County from 1916 to 1917 He was first elected governor of New York in 1918 lost his 1920 bid for re election and was elected governor again in 1922 1924 and 1926 Smith was the foremost urban leader of the Efficiency Movement in the United States and was noted for achieving a wide range of reforms as the New York governor in the 1920s Smith was the first Roman Catholic to be nominated for president of the United States by a major party His 1928 presidential candidacy mobilized both Catholic and anti Catholic voters 2 Many Protestants including German Lutherans and Southern Baptists feared his candidacy believing that the Pope in Rome would dictate his policies Smith was also a committed wet which was a term used for opponents of Prohibition as New York governor he had repealed the state s prohibition law As a wet Smith attracted voters who wanted beer wine and liquor and did not like dealing with criminal bootleggers along with voters who were outraged that new criminal gangs had taken over the streets in most large and medium sized cities 3 Incumbent Republican Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover was aided by national prosperity the absence of American involvement in war and anti Catholic bigotry and he defeated Smith in a landslide in 1928 Smith sought the 1932 Democratic presidential nomination but was defeated by Franklin D Roosevelt his former ally and successor as governor of New York Smith then entered business in New York City became involved in the construction and promotion of the Empire State Building and became an increasingly vocal opponent of Roosevelt s New Deal Contents 1 Early life 2 Political career 2 1 State legislature 2 2 Governor 1919 1920 1923 1928 2 3 1924 presidential election 2 4 1928 presidential election 2 4 1 Voter realignment 2 5 Opposition to Roosevelt and the New Deal 3 Business life and later years 4 Legacy 4 1 Popular culture references 5 Electoral history 5 1 New York gubernatorial elections 1918 1926 5 2 United States presidential election 1928 6 Works 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Al Smith attended St James school through the eighth grade his only formal education Smith was born at 174 South Street and raised in the Fourth Ward on the Lower East Side of Manhattan he resided there for his entire life 4 His mother Catherine nee Mulvihill was the daughter of Maria Marsh and Thomas Mulvihill who were immigrants from County Westmeath Ireland 5 His father baptised Joseph Alfred Smith in 1839 was the son of Emanuel Smith an Italian marinaro citation needed The elder Alfred Smith Anglicized name for Alfredo Emanuele Ferraro was the son of Italian and German 6 7 immigrants He served with the 11th New York Fire Zouaves in the opening months of the Civil War Smith grew up with his family struggling financially in the Gilded Age New York City matured and completed major infrastructure projects The Brooklyn Bridge was being constructed nearby The Brooklyn Bridge and I grew up together Smith would later recall 8 His four grandparents were Irish German Italian and Anglo Irish 9 but Smith identified with the Irish American community and became its leading spokesman in the 1920s His father Alfred owned a small trucking firm but died when Smith was 13 Aged 14 Smith had to drop out of St James parochial school to help support the family and worked at a fish market for seven years Prior to dropping out of school he served as an altar boy and was strongly influenced by the Catholic priests he worked with 10 He never attended high school or college and claimed he learned about people by studying them at the Fulton Fish Market where he worked for 12 per week His acting skills made him a success on the amateur theater circuit He became widely known and developed the smooth oratorical style that characterized his political career On May 6 1900 Al Smith married Catherine Ann Dunn with whom he had five children 1 Political career edit nbsp Charles F Murphy and Smith in 1915In his political career Smith built on his working class beginnings identifying himself with immigrants and campaigning as a man of the people Although indebted to the Tammany Hall political machine and particularly to its boss Silent Charlie Murphy he remained untarnished by corruption and worked for the passage of progressive legislation 1 better source needed It was during his early unofficial jobs with Tammany Hall that he gained renown as an orator 11 Smith s first political job was in 1895 as an investigator in the office of the Commissioner of Jurors as appointed by Tammany Hall State legislature edit nbsp Smith at his desk in the New York Assembly in 1913Smith was first elected to the New York State Assembly New York Co 2nd D in 1904 and was repeatedly elected to office serving through 1915 10 After being approached by Frances Perkins an activist to improve labor practices Smith sought to improve the conditions of factory workers Smith served as vice chairman of the state commission appointed to investigate factory conditions after 146 workers died in the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire Meeting the families of the deceased Triangle factory workers left a strong impression on him Together with Perkins and Robert F Wagner Smith crusaded against dangerous and unhealthy workplace conditions and championed corrective legislation 11 12 The Commission chaired by State Senator Robert F Wagner held a series of widely publicized investigations around the state interviewing 222 witnesses and taking 3 500 pages of testimony They hired field agents to do on site inspections of factories Starting with the issue of fire safety they studied broader issues of the risks of injury in the factory environment Their findings led to thirty eight new laws regulating labor in New York State and gave each of them a reputation as leading progressive reformers working on behalf of the working class In the process they changed Tammany s reputation from mere corruption to progressive endeavors to help the workers 13 New York City s Fire Chief John Kenlon told the investigators that his department had identified more than 200 factories where conditions resulted in risk of a fire like that at the Triangle Factory 14 The State Commission s reports led to the modernization of the state s labor laws making New York State one of the most progressive states in terms of labor reform 15 16 New laws mandated better building access and egress fireproofing requirements the availability of fire extinguishers the installation of alarm systems and automatic sprinklers better eating and toilet facilities for workers and limited the number of hours that women and children could work In the years from 1911 to 1913 sixty of the sixty four new laws recommended by the Commission were legislated with the support of Governor William Sulzer 17 In 1911 the Democrats obtained a majority of seats in the State Assembly and Smith became Majority Leader and Chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means The following year following the loss of the majority he became the Minority Leader When the Democrats reclaimed the majority after the next election he was elected Speaker for the 1913 session He became Minority Leader again in 1914 and 1915 In November 1915 he was elected Sheriff of New York County New York By now he was a leader of the Progressive movement in New York City and state His campaign manager and top aide was Belle Moskowitz a daughter of Jewish immigrants 1 Governor 1919 1920 1923 1928 edit nbsp Gubernatorial portrait of Al Smith by Douglas VolkAfter serving in the patronage rich job of Sheriff of New York County Smith was elected President of the Board of Aldermen of the City of New York in 1917 Smith was elected Governor of New York at the New York State election of 1918 with the help of Murphy and James A Farley who brought Smith the upstate vote citation needed In 1919 Smith gave the famous speech A man as low and mean as I can picture 18 making a drastic break with publisher William Randolph Hearst Hearst known for his notoriously sensationalist and largely left wing position in the state Democratic Party was the leader of its populist wing in the city He had combined with Tammany Hall in electing the local administration and had attacked Smith for starving children by not reducing the cost of milk 19 Smith lost his bid for re election in the 1920 New York gubernatorial election but was again elected governor in 1922 1924 and 1926 with Farley managing his campaign In his 1922 re election he embraced his position as an anti prohibitionist Smith offered alcohol to guests at the Executive Mansion in Albany and repealed the state s Prohibition enforcement statute the Mullan Gage law 20 As governor Smith became known nationally as a progressive who sought to make government more efficient and more effective in meeting social needs Smith s young assistant Robert Moses built the nation s first state park system and reformed the civil service later gaining appointment as Secretary of State of New York During Smith s time in office New York strengthened laws governing workers compensation women s pensions and children and women s labor with the help of Frances Perkins soon to be President Franklin D Roosevelt s Labor Secretary nbsp Time cover July 13 19251924 presidential election edit In 1924 Smith unsuccessfully sought the Democratic nomination for president advancing the cause of civil liberty by decrying lynching and racial violence Roosevelt delivered the nominating speech for Smith at the 1924 Democratic National Convention in which he saluted Smith as the Happy Warrior of the political battlefield 1 Smith represented the urban east coast wing of the party as an anti prohibition wet candidate while his main rival for the nomination President Woodrow Wilson s son in law William Gibbs McAdoo a former Secretary of the Treasury stood for the more rural tradition and prohibition dry candidacy 21 The party was hopelessly split between the two An increasingly chaotic convention balloted 100 times before both men accepted that neither would be able to win the required two thirds of the votes and so each withdrew On the 103rd ballot the exhausted party nominated the little known candidate John W Davis of West Virginia a former congressman and United States Ambassador to Great Britain who had been a dark horse presidential candidate in 1920 Davis lost the election by a landslide to the Republican Calvin Coolidge who won in part because of the prosperous times Undeterred Smith returned to fight a determined campaign for the party s nomination in 1928 He was aided by the endorsement of Philip La Follette 22 son of 1924 Progressive Party presidential candidate Robert M La Follette who died in 1925 seven months after receiving 16 62 percent of the popular vote the fifth highest proportion for any third party presidential candidate note 1 1928 presidential election edit Main article Al Smith 1928 presidential campaign Reporter Frederick William Wile made the oft repeated observation that Smith was defeated by the three P s Prohibition Prejudice and Prosperity 23 The Republican Party was still benefiting from an economic boom as well as a failure to reapportion Congress and the electoral college following the 1920 census 24 which had registered a 15 percent increase in the urban population The party was biased toward small town and rural areas Its presidential candidate Herbert Hoover who headed the Census of 1920 did little to alter this state of affairs Historians agree that prosperity along with widespread anti Catholic sentiment against Smith made Hoover s election inevitable 25 He defeated Smith by a landslide in the 1928 United States presidential election carrying five Southern states via crossover voting by conservative white Democrats note 2 nbsp Political cartoon suggesting the Pope was the force behind Al Smith The Good Citizen November 1926 Publisher Pillar of Fire Church New Jersey The fact that Smith was Catholic and the descendant of Catholic immigrants was instrumental in his loss of the election of 1928 10 Historical hostilities between Protestants and Catholics had been carried by national groups to the United States by immigrants and centuries of Protestant domination allowed myths and superstitions about Catholicism to flourish Long established Protestants had viewed the waves of Catholic immigrants from Ireland Italy and Eastern Europe since the mid 19th century with suspicion In addition many Protestants carried old fears related to extravagant claims of one religion against the other which dated back to the European wars of religion They feared that Smith would answer to the Pope rather than the United States Constitution Scott Farris notes that the anti Catholicism of the American society was the sole reason behind Smith s defeat as even contemporary Prohibition activists would admit that their main problem with the Democratic candidate was his faith and not any political view Bob Jones Sr a prominent Protestant pastor in South Carolina said I ll tell you brother that the big issue we ve got to face ain t the liquor question I d rather see a saloon on every corner of the South than see the foreigners elect Al Smith president 26 A Methodist newspaper in Georgia called Catholicism a degenerate type of Christianity while Southern Baptist churches ordered their followers to vote against Smith claiming that he would close down Protestant churches end freedom of worship and prohibit reading the Bible Charles Hillman Fountain a Protestant writer insisted that Catholics should be barred from holding any office Farris states that More disturbing than the ridiculous and the dangerous was the respectable anti Catholicism as contemporary newspapers and Protestant churches tried to mask their anti Catholicism as genuine concern Protestant activists insisted that Catholicism represents an alien culture and medieval mentality claiming that Catholicism is incompatible with American democracy and institutions Catholics were portrayed as reactionary despite being more left wing than mainstream American Protestant congregations at the time 26 William Allen White a renowned newspaper editor warned that Catholicism would erode the moral standards of America saying that the whole Puritan civilization which has built a sturdy orderly nation is threatened by Smith While Herbert Hoover avoided raising the issue of Catholicism on the campaign trail he defended the Protestant actions in a private letter There are many people of intense Protestant faith to whom Catholicism is a grievous sin and they have as much right to vote against a man for public office because of that belief That is not persecution 26 White rural conservatives in the South also believed that Smith s close association with Tammany Hall the Democratic machine in Manhattan showed that he tolerated corruption in government while they overlooked their own brands of it Another major controversial issue was the continuation of Prohibition the enforcement of which was widely considered problematic Smith personally favored the relaxation or repeal of Prohibition laws because they had given rise to more criminality The Democratic Party split North and South on the issue with the more rural South continuing to favor Prohibition During the campaign Smith tried to duck the issue with non committal statements 27 Smith was an articulate proponent of good government and efficiency as was Hoover Smith swept the entire Catholic vote which in 1920 and 1924 had been split between the parties he attracted millions of Catholics generally ethnic whites to the polls for the first time especially women who were first allowed to vote in 1920 He lost important Democratic constituencies in the rural North as well as in Southern cities and suburbs Smith did retain the loyalty of the Deep South thanks in part to the appeal of his running mate Senator Joseph Robinson from Arkansas but lost five states of the Rim South to Hoover Smith carried the popular vote in each of America s ten most populous cities an indication of the rising power of the urban areas and their new demographics Smith was not a very good campaigner His campaign theme song The Sidewalks of New York had little appeal among rural Americans who also found his city accent slightly foreign when heard on radio Smith narrowly lost his home state New York s electors were biased in favor of rural upstate and largely Protestant districts However in 1928 his fellow Democrat Franklin D Roosevelt a Protestant of Dutch old line stock was elected to replace him as governor of New York 28 Farley left Smith s camp to run Roosevelt s successful campaign for governor in 1928 and then Roosevelt s successful campaigns for the Presidency in 1932 and 1936 Voter realignment edit nbsp Al Smith giving a speechSome political scientists believe that the 1928 election started a voter realignment that helped develop Roosevelt s New Deal coalition 29 One political scientist said not until 1928 with the nomination of Al Smith a northeastern reformer did Democrats make gains among the urban blue collar and Catholic voters who were later to become core components of the New Deal coalition and break the pattern of minimal class polarization that had characterized the Fourth Party System 30 However historian Allan Lichtman s quantitative analysis suggests that the 1928 results were based largely on religion and are not a useful barometer of the voting patterns of the New Deal era 31 Lichtman notes that the sole defining issue of the election was anti Catholicism which radically realigned states voting patterns States that had never voted Republican after Reconstruction such as Texas Florida North Carolina and Virginia voted for Hoover while Smith carried Massachusetts and Rhode Island states that had never voted Democratic before save for 1912 Lichtman further proves this by pointing out that Smith and Hoover had very similar political views save for religion and Prohibition and yet the 1928 election had a turnout of 57 despite previous 1920s American elections having their turnouts below 50 26 Christopher M Finan 2003 says Smith is an underestimated symbol of the changing nature of American politics in the first half of the last century He represented the rising ambitions of urban industrial America at a time when the hegemony of rural agrarian America was in decline although many states had legislatures and congressional delegations biased toward rural areas because of lack of redistricting after censuses Smith was connected to the hopes and aspirations of immigrants especially Catholics and Jews from eastern and southern Europe Smith was a devout Catholic but his struggles against religious bigotry were often misinterpreted when he fought the religiously inspired Protestant morality imposed by prohibitionists The 1928 election initiated a complete voter realignment of African Americans who overwhelmingly supported the Republican Party prior to 1928 32 Hoover sought Southern Strategy for the election and sided with the segregationist lily white Republicans at the expense of the pro civil rights black and tans 33 Prominent African Americans were removed from positions of leadership in the Republican Party and replaced with lily white Republicans in order to appeal to the segregationist South and Hoover s spokesmen in the South spoke of his commitment to white supremacy 34 Allan Lichtman wrote that Hoover sought a permanent reorganization of southern Republicanism under the leadership of white racists 33 This action was taken to exploit the unpopularity of Smith in the South as Hoover and his cabinet were convinced that white Southern votes were more essential to a Hoover win than black ones 34 Hoover assured Southern voters that he had no intention of appointing colored men and pledged that he had no intention party platform notwithstanding of foisting off an anti lynch law on the white South 34 at the same time Hoover heavily emphasized his rural Protestant roots and appealed to the white voters anti urban and anti Catholic sentiments while also portraying Smith as a pro civil rights candidate 34 According to Phylon apart from the Catholics perceived allegiance to the Pope over United States American anti Catholicism was also racially motivated as Southern Protestants strongly opposed the church s liberal policies particularly its uncompromising position against social and political segregation 34 Al Smith was supportive of racial equality and appointed African Americans to the New York City school system and civil service commission 34 Major black newspapers throughout the United States such as The Chicago Defender Baltimore Afro American and Norfolk Journal and Guide endorsed Smith for president 33 and prominent members of the NAACP supported Smith with Walter Francis White writing that Governor Smith is by far the best man available for the Presidency and arguing that Smith s nomination and election would be the greatest blow at bigotry that has ever been struck 33 Smith attracted the attention of disheartened African American voters as he was unpopular in the South faced prejudice as a Roman Catholic and had a reputation of a spokesman for ethnic minorities in Northern cities 33 As such Smith s candidacy coupled with Hoover s Southern concession initiated abandonment of loyalty to the Republicans and embrace of the Democratic Party by African American voters Samuel O Dell wrote in Phylon that 1928 black voters bolted to the Democratic party in unprecedented numbers 33 Opposition to Roosevelt and the New Deal edit nbsp Franklin D Roosevelt left and Al Smith right in Albany New YorkSmith felt slighted by Roosevelt during the latter s governorship They became rivals in the 1932 Democratic Party presidential primaries after Smith decided to run for the nomination against Roosevelt the presumed favorite At the convention Smith s animosity toward Roosevelt was so great that he put aside longstanding rivalries to work with McAdoo and Hearst to block FDR s nomination for several ballots That coalition fell apart when Smith refused to work on finding a compromise candidate instead he maneuvered to become the nominee After losing the nomination Smith eventually campaigned for Roosevelt in 1932 giving a particularly important speech on behalf of the Democratic nominee at Boston on October 27 in which he pulled out all the stops 35 Smith became highly critical of Roosevelt s New Deal policies which he deemed a betrayal of good government progressive ideals and ran counter to the goal of close cooperation with business Smith joined the American Liberty League an organization founded by conservative Democrats who disapproved of Roosevelt s New Deal measures and tried to rally public opinion against the New Deal The League published pamphlets and sponsored radio programs arguing that the New Deal was destroying personal liberty However the League failed to gain support in the 1934 or 1936 elections and rapidly declined in influence It was officially dissolved in 1940 36 37 Smith s antipathy to Roosevelt and his policies was so great that he supported Republican presidential nominees Alf Landon in the 1936 election and Wendell Willkie in the 1940 election 1 Although personal resentment was one factor in Smith s break with Roosevelt and the New Deal Christopher Finan 2003 argues that Smith was consistent in his beliefs and politics suggesting that Smith always believed in social mobility economic opportunity religious tolerance and individualism Despite the break between the men Smith and Eleanor Roosevelt remained close In 1936 while Smith was in Washington making a vehement radio attack on the President she invited him to stay at the White House To avoid embarrassing the Roosevelts he declined Historian Robert Slayton notes that Smith and Franklin Roosevelt did not reconcile until a brief meeting in June 1941 and he also suggests that during the early 1940s the antipathy which Smith held toward his former ally had waned 38 Upon the death of Smith s wife Katie in May 1944 FDR sent Smith a note of personal condolence Smith s grandchildren later recalled that he was greatly touched by it 39 Business life and later years edit nbsp Smith golfing with baseball great Babe Ruth in Coral Gables Florida in 1930 After the 1928 election Smith became the president of Empire State Inc the corporation that built and operated the Empire State Building Construction for the building symbolically began on March 17 1930 St Patrick s Day per Smith s instructions Smith s grandchildren cut the ribbon when the world s tallest skyscraper opened on May 1 1931 which was May Day an international labor celebration Its construction had been completed in only 13 months a record for such a large project As with the Brooklyn Bridge which Smith had seen being built from his Lower East Side boyhood home the Empire State Building was both a vision and an achievement that had been constructed by combining the interests of all rather than being divided by the interests of a few Smith continued to promote the Empire State Building which was derided as the Empty State Building due to a lack of tenants in the years following its construction 40 41 In 1929 Smith was awarded the Laetare Medal by the University of Notre Dame considered the most prestigious award for American Catholics 42 nbsp Al Smith right in December 1929 during his time as director of Empire State Inc In 1929 Smith was elected President of the Board of Trustees of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University 43 Knowing his fondness for animals in 1934 Robert Moses made Al Smith the Honorary Night Zookeeper of the newly renovated Central Park Zoo Though a ceremonial title Smith was given keys to the zoo and often took guests to see the animals after hours 44 Smith was an early and vocal critic of the Nazi regime in Germany He supported the Anti Nazi boycott of 1933 and addressed a mass meeting at Madison Square Garden against Nazism that March 45 His speech was included in the 1934 anthology Nazism An Assault on Civilization 46 In 1938 Smith took to the airwaves to denounce Nazi brutality in the wake of Kristallnacht His words were published in The New York Times article Text of the Catholic Protest Broadcast of November 17 1938 47 48 Like most New York City businessmen Smith enthusiastically supported American military involvement in World War II Although he was not asked by Roosevelt to play any role in the war effort Smith was an active and vocal proponent of FDR s attempts to amend the Neutrality Act in order to allow Cash and Carry sales of war equipment to be made to the British Smith spoke on behalf of the policy in October 1939 to which FDR responded directly Very many thanks You were grand 49 In 1939 Smith was appointed a Papal Chamberlain of the Sword and Cape one of the highest honors which the Papacy bestowed on a layman Smith died at the Rockefeller Institute Hospital on October 4 1944 of a heart attack at the age of 70 He had been broken hearted over the death of his wife from cancer five months earlier on May 4 1944 50 He is interred at Calvary Cemetery 51 nbsp The gravesite of Governor Smith at Calvary CemeteryLegacy editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Buildings and other landmarks named after Smith include the following Alfred E Smith Building a 1928 skyscraper in Albany New York Governor Alfred E Smith Houses a public housing development in Lower Manhattan near his birthplace Governor Alfred E Smith Park a playground in the Two Bridges neighborhood in Manhattan near his birthplace Governor Alfred E Smith a former front line and current reserve fireboat in the New York City Fire Department fleet Governor Alfred E Smith Sunken Meadow State Park a state park in the Town of Smithtown Suffolk County Alfred E Smith Recreation Center a youth activity center in the Two Bridges neighborhood Manhattan PS 163 Alfred E Smith School a school on the Upper West Side of Manhattan PS 1 Alfred E Smith School a school in Manhattan s Chinatown Alfred E Smith Career and Technical Education High School in the South Bronx Alfred E Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner a fundraiser held for Catholic Charities and a stop on the presidential campaign trail Smith Hall a residence hall at Hinman College Binghamton University Smith Hall a residence hall at Farmingdale State College and Camp Smith a State owned military installation of the New York Army National Guard in Cortlandt Manor near Peekskill NY about 30 miles 48 km north of New York City at the northern border of Westchester County and consists of 1 900 acres 7 7 km2 Landmarks named after Al Smith nbsp Alfred E Smith Memorial Building at St Vincent s Hospital Manhattan nbsp The Alfred Smith School PS 163 nbsp Alfred E Smith Career and Technical Education High School in the South Bronx nbsp The Alfred E Smith Building in Albany New York nbsp Governor Alfred E Smith Sunken Meadow State Park in Suffolk County Popular culture references edit Smith and Franklin D Roosevelt were filmed by Lee de Forest in his DeForest Phonofilm sound on film process during the 1924 Democratic National Convention which ran from June 21 to July 9 This film is now in the Maurice Zouary collection at the Library of Congress 52 In Sinclair Lewis 1928 novel The Man Who Knew Coolidge Smith is cited as an example of the opportunities in this new and increasingly practical America for any bright fellow today 53 In Harry Turtledove s alternate history Southern Victory series in which the Confederate States of America wins the American Civil War in 1862 Al Smith is elected President of the United States in 1936 on the Socialist Party ticket defeating Democratic incumbent Herbert Hoover As per the Richmond Agreement with Confederate President Jake Featherston he allowed plebiscites to be held in the states of Kentucky Sequoyah and Houston on re admittance to the Confederacy the rejection of readmittance in Sequoyah serves as a casus belli for the Second Great War in North America 1941 1944 Smith serves until 1942 when he is killed in a bombing raid on the Powel House in Philadelphia and is succeeded by his Vice President Charles W La Follette the fictional son of Robert M La Follette Smith was portrayed by Alan Bunce in the 1960 film Sunrise at Campobello and by Wilbur Fitzgerald in HBO s 2005 TV movie Warm Springs Both of these movies focus on Franklin D Roosevelt s struggle with polio 54 Electoral history editNew York gubernatorial elections 1918 1926 edit 1918 General election results 55 Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular VoteAlfred E Smith Harry C Walker Democratic 1 009 936 47 37 Charles S Whitman Edward Schoeneck Republican Mamie W Colvin Prohibition Republican Prohibition 995 094 46 68 Charles Wesley Ervin Ella Reeve Bloor Socialist 121 705 5 71 Olive M Johnson August Gillhaus Socialist Labor 5 183 0 24 1920 General election results Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular VoteNathan L Miller Jeremiah Wood Republican 1 335 878 46 58 Alfred E Smith George R Fitts Democratic 1 261 812 44 00 Joseph D Cannon Jessie Wallace Hughan Socialist 159 804 5 57 Dudley Field Malone Farmer Labor 69 908 2 44 George F Thompson Edward G Deltrich Prohibition 35 509 1 24 John P Quinn Socialist Labor 5 015 0 17 List of candidates pdf in The New York Times of September 13 1920 1922 General election results Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular VoteAlfred E Smith George R Lunn Democratic 1 397 670 55 21 Nathan L Miller William J Donovan Republican 1 011 725 39 97 Edward F Cassidy Theresa B Wiley Socialist Farmer Labor 109 119 4 31 George K Hinds William C Ramsdell Prohibition 9 499 0 38 Jeremiah D Crowley John E DeLee Socialist Labor 9 499 0 38 1924 General election results Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular VoteAlfred E Smith George R Lunn Democratic 1 627 111 49 96 Theodore Roosevelt Jr Seymour Lowman Republican 1 518 552 46 63 Norman Mattoon Thomas Charles Solomon Socialist 99 854 3 07 James P Cannon Franklin P Brill Workers 6 395 0 20 Frank E Passonno Milton Weinberger Socialist Labor 4 931 0 15 1926 General election results Governor candidate Running Mate Party Popular VoteAlfred E Smith Edwin Corning Democratic 1 523 813 52 13 Ogden L Mills Seymour Lowman Republican 1 276 137 43 80 Jacob Panken August Claessens Socialist 83 481 2 87 Charles E Manierre Ella McCarthy Prohibition 21 285 0 73 Benjamin Gitlow Franklin P Brill Workers 5 507 0 19 Jeremiah D Crowley John E DeLee Socialist Labor 3 553 0 12 United States presidential election 1928 edit Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoralvote Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral voteHerbert Hoover Republican California 21 427 123 58 2 444 Charles Curtis Kansas 444Alfred E Smith Democratic New York 15 015 464 40 8 87 Joseph Taylor Robinson Arkansas 87Norman Thomas Socialist New York 267 478 0 7 0 James H Maurer Pennsylvania 0William Z Foster Communist Illinois 48 551 0 1 0 Benjamin Gitlow New York 0Other 48 396 0 1 Other Total 36 807 012 100 531 531Needed to win 266 266Source Popular Vote Leip David 1928 Presidential Election Results Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections Retrieved July 28 2005 Source Electoral Vote Electoral College Box Scores 1789 1996 National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved July 28 2005 Works editCampaign Addresses of Governor Alfred E Smith Democratic Candidate for President 1928 Washington DC Democratic National Committee 1929 Progressive Democracy Addresses amp State Papers 1928 Up to Now An Autobiography The Viking Press 1929 See also editAlfred E Smith IV Smith s great grandson List of covers of Time magazine 1920s Al Smith presidential campaign 1928 Al Smith presidential campaign 1932 J Raymond JonesNotes edit The four higher proportions are Know Nothing former President Millard Fillmore in 1856 21 54 percent Southern Democrat and incumbent Vice President John C Breckinridge in 1860 18 20 percent Bull Moose former President Theodore Roosevelt in 1912 27 39 percent and independent Ross Perot in 1992 18 91 percent Since the disenfranchisement of blacks in the South at the turn of the century whites had dominated voting in that region References edit a b c d e f Slayton 2001 ch 1 4 Neal R Pierce The Deep South States of America People Politics and Power in the Seven States of the Deep South 1974 pp 123 61 Daniel Okrent Last Call 2010 MacAdam George January 1920 Governor Smith of New York The World s Work Vol XXXIX no 3 New York Doubleday Page amp Co p 237 Retrieved September 1 2010 Slayton Robert A 2001 Empire Statesman The Rise and Redemption of Al Smith New York Simon and Schuster p 13 ISBN 978 0 684 86302 3 Barkan Elliott Robert 2001 Making it in America a sourcebook on eminent ethnic Americans Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO p 350 ISBN 978 1 57607 098 7 New York State Census 1855 pal MM9 3 1 TH 1942 25847 12175 45 FamilySearch Slayton 2001 p 16 Josephsons 1969 a b c Burner David Al Smith American National Biography Retrieved March 24 2013 a b Von Drehle David 2003 Triangle The Fire That Changed America New York NY Grove Press New York pp 204 210 ISBN 0 8021 4151 X Obama the Triangle Fire and the Real Father of the New Deal Salon com Retrieved March 25 2011 Robert Ferdinand Wagner in Dictionary of American Biography 1977 The New York Times Factory Firetraps Found by Hundreds October 14 1911 Richard A Greenwald The Triangle Fire the Protocols of Peace and Industrial Democracy in Progressive Era New York 2005 128 The Economist Triangle Shirtwaist The Birth of the New Deal March 19 2011 p 39 Slayton Empire Statesman 2001 pp 92 92 MacArthur Brian May 1 2000 The Penguin Book of 20th Century Speeches Penguin Non Classics ISBN 0 14 028500 8 Procter Ben H 2007 William Randolph Hearst Oxford University Press US p 85 ISBN 978 0 19 532534 8 Lerner Michael 2007 Dry Manhattan Prohibition in New York City Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 239 240 ISBN 978 0 674 03057 2 Al Smitator h Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Academic Edition Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved March 26 2013 Glad Paul W 2013 The History of Wisconsin Volume V War a New Era and Depression 1914 1940 Wisconsin Historical Society p 321 ISBN 978 0870206320 reprinted 1977 John A Ryan Religion in the Election of 1928 Current History December 1928 reprinted in Ryan Questions of the Day Ayer Publishing 1977 p 91 Prewitt Kenneth July 13 2017 The 1920 Census Broke Constitutional Norms Let s Not Repeat That in 2020 Social Science Research Council Retrieved December 8 2020 William E Leuchtenburg The Perils of Prosperity 1914 32 Chicago University of Chicago 1958 pp 225 240 a b c d Farris Scott 2012 Almost President The Men Who Lost The Race But Changed The Nation Ottawa Lyons Press ISBN 9780762763788 Lichtman 1979 Slayton 2001 Slayton 2001 Lichtman 1979 Degler 1964 Lawrence 1996 p 34 Lichtman 1976 Topping Simon 2008 Lincoln s Lost Legacy The Republican Party and the African American Vote 1928 1952 University Press of Florida pp 11 14 16 ISBN 978 0813032283 a b c d e f O Dell Samuel 1987 Blacks the Democratic Party and the Presidential Election of 1928 A Mild Rejoinder Phylon Clark Atlanta University 48 1 1 11 doi 10 2307 274997 JSTOR 274997 a b c d e f McCarthy G Michael 1978 Smith vs Hoover The Politics of Race in West Tennessee Phylon Clark Atlanta University 39 2 154 168 doi 10 2307 274510 JSTOR 274510 J Joseph Huthmacher Massachusetts People and Politics The Transition from Republican to Democratic Dominance and Its National Implications 1973 p 248 George Wolfskill The Revolt of the Conservatives A History of the American Liberty League 1934 1940 Houghton Mifflin 1962 Jordan A Schwarz Al Smith in the Thirties New York History 1964 316 330 in JSTOR Slayton Empire Statesman pp 397 398 Slayton Empire Statesman pp 399 400 NYT Travel Empire State Building The New York Times Archived from the original on October 19 2010 Retrieved October 11 2010 Smith Adam August 18 2008 A Renters Market in London Time Archived from the original on August 19 2008 Retrieved July 10 2010 Recipients The Laetare Medal University of Notre Dame Retrieved July 31 2020 Reznikoff Charles ed 1957 Louis Marshall Champion of Liberty Selected Papers and Addresses Philadelphia The Jewish Publication Society of America p 1123 Caro Robert 1974 The Power Broker Robert Moses and the Fall of New York New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 48076 3 OCLC 834874 Staff 35 000 JAM STREETS OUTSIDE THE GARDEN Solid Lines of Police Hard Pressed to Keep Overflow Crowds From Hall AREA BARRED TO TRAFFIC Mulrooney Takes Command to Avoid Roughness 3 000 at Columbus Circle Meeting 35 000 IN STREETS OUTSIDE GARDEN The New York Times March 28 1933 Accessed June 7 2017 Pierre van Paasen and James Waterman Wise eds Nazism An Assault on Civilization New York Harrison Smith and Robert Haas 1934 pp 306 310 David M Kennedy Freedom from Fear The American People in Depression and War 1929 1945 New York Oxford University Press 1999 ISBN 9780199743827 Slayton Empire Statesman p 391 Slayton Empire Statesman pp 391 392 Alfred E Smith Dies Here at 70 4 Times Governor End Comes After a Sudden Relapse Following Earlier Turn for the Better Ran For President in 28 His Rise From Newsboy and Fishmonger Had No Exact Parallel in U S History The New York Times October 4 1944 p 1 Retrieved July 28 2011 U S Department of Labor Labor Hall of Fame Alfred E Smith dol gov Archived from the original on February 17 2011 Retrieved June 17 2010 Bradley Edwin M June 14 2015 The First Hollywood Sound Shorts 1926 1931 McFarland p 16 ISBN 9781476606842 Lewis Sinclair 1928 The Man who Knew Coolidge Being the Soul of Lowell Schmaltz Constructive and Nordic Citizen Harcourt Brace pp 269 Crowther Bosley September 29 1960 Review 1 No Title Sunrise at Campobello Opens at the Palace The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 18 2019 Election result The New York Times 31 December 1918Further reading editBAUMAN MARK K Prohibition and Politics Warren Candler and Al Smith s 1928 Campaign The Mississippi Quarterly 31 no 1 1977 109 17 http www jstor org stable 26474327 Bornet Vaughn Davis Labor Politics in a Democratic Republic Moderation Division and Disruption in the Presidential Election of 1928 1964 online edition Chiles Robert School Reform As Progressive Statecraft Education Policy In New York Under Governor Alfred E Smith 1919 1928 Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 15 4 2016 379 398 Chiles Robert Working Class Conservationism in New York Governor Alfred E Smith and The Property of the People of the State Environmental History 2013 18 1 pp 157 183 Chiles Robert 2018 The Revolution of 28 Al Smith American Progressivism and the Coming of the New Deal Cornell University Press Colburn David R Governor Alfred E Smith and the Red Scare 1919 20 Political Science Quarterly vol 88 no 3 Sept 1973 pp 423 444 In JSTOR Craig Douglas B After Wilson The Struggle for Control of the Democratic Party 1920 1934 1992 online edition see Chap 6 The Problem of Al Smith and Chap 8 Wall Street Likes Al Smith The Election of 1928 Curtis Finbarr The Fundamental Faith of Every True American Secularity and Institutional Loyalty in Al Smith s 1928 Presidential Campaign The Journal of Religion 91 no 4 2011 519 44 https doi org 10 1086 660925 Degler Carl N 1964 American Political Parties and the Rise of the City An Interpretation Journal of American History 51 1 41 59 doi 10 2307 1917933 JSTOR 1917933 Eldot Paula 1983 Governor Alfred E Smith The Politician as Reformer Garland ISBN 0 8240 4855 5 Finan Christopher M 2003 Alfred E Smith The Happy Warrior Hill and Wang ISBN 0 8090 3033 0 Garrett Charles 1961 The La Guardia Years Machine and Reform Politics in New York City New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press Handlin Oscar 1958 Al Smith and His America Little Brown Hostetler Michael J 1998 Gov Al Smith Confronts the Catholic Question The Rhetorical Legacy of the 1928 Campaign Communication Quarterly 46 12 24 doi 10 1080 01463379809370081 Josephson Matthew and Hannah 1969 Al Smith Hero of the Cities Houghton Mifflin Lawrence David G 1996 The Collapse of the Democratic Presidential Majority Realignment Dealignment and Electoral Change from Franklin Roosevelt to Bill Clinton Westview Press ISBN 0 8133 8984 4 Lichtman Allan J 1979 Prejudice and the old politics The Presidential election of 1928 Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 1358 3 OCLC 4492475 Lichtman Allan 1976 Critical Election Theory and the Reality of American Presidential Politics 1916 40 The American Historical Review 81 2 317 351 doi 10 2307 1851173 JSTOR 1851173 Madaras Lawrence H THEODORE ROOSEVELT JR VERSUS AL SMITH THE NEW YORK GUBERNATORIAL ELECTION OF 1924 New York History 47 no 4 1966 372 90 http www jstor org stable 23162551 Carter Paul A 1980 Deja Vu Or Back to the Drawing Board with Alfred E Smith Reviews in American History 8 2 272 276 doi 10 2307 2701129 JSTOR 2701129 S2CID 146565621 review of Lichtman Moore Edmund A 1956 A Catholic Runs for President The Campaign of 1928 OCLC 475746 online edition Neal Donn C 1983 The World beyond the Hudson Alfred E Smith and National Politics 1918 1928 New York Garland p 308 ISBN 978 0 8240 5658 2 Neal Donn C 1984 What If Al Smith Had Been Elected Presidential Studies Quarterly 14 2 242 248 Perry Elisabeth Israels 1987 Belle Moskowitz Feminine Politics and the Exercise of Power in the Age of Alfred E Smith Oxford University Press p 280 ISBN 0 19 504426 6 Smith to Talk Oct 23 New York Times 1940 p 17 Smith Says Roosevelt Aroused Spirit of Class Hatred in Nation New York Times 1940 pp 1 18 Rulli Daniel F Campaigning in 1928 Chickens in Pots and Cars in Backyards Teaching History A Journal of Methods Vol 31 1 pp 42 2006 online version with lesson plans for class Schwarz Jordan A Al Smith in the Thirties New York History 1964 316 330 in JSTOR Slayton Robert A 2001 Empire Statesman The Rise and Redemption of Al Smith Free Press p 480 ISBN 978 0 684 86302 3 the standard scholarly biography Stonecash Jeffrey M et al Politics Alfred Smith and Increasing the Power of the New York Governor s Office New York History 2004 149 179 in JSTOR Sweeney James R Rum Romanism and Virginia Democrats The Party Leaders and the Campaign of 1928 Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 90 October 1982 403 31 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1922 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Al Smith Works by Alfred E Smith at Faded Page Canada Alfred E Smith Dies Here at 70 4 Times Governor The New York Times October 4 1944 Happy Warrior Playground New York City Department of Parks and Recreation Governor Alfred E Smith Park New York City Department of Parks and Recreation Al Smith Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site Murphy Kevin C Lost Warrior Al Smith and the Fall of Tammany A film clip Al Smith Hails End of Dry Law 1933 11 13 1933 is available for viewing at the Internet Archive Booknotes interview with Robert Slayton on Empire Statesman The Rise and Redemption of Al Smith May 13 2001 Al Smith Presidential Contender from C SPAN s The Contenders Finding aid for the Alfred E Smith Papers at the Museum of the City of New York Archived October 31 2019 at the Wayback Machine Alfred E Smith The People s Politician from the Museum of the City of New York Collections blog Newspaper clippings about Al Smith in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWNew York State AssemblyPreceded byJoseph P Bourke Member of the New York Assemblyfrom New York County s 2nd district1904 1915 Succeeded byPeter J HamillPreceded byEdwin Albert Merritt Majority Leader of the New York Assembly1912 Succeeded byFrank L YoungMinority Leader of the New York Assembly1912 Succeeded byHarold J HinmanPreceded byHarold J Hinman Minority Leader of the New York Assembly1914 1915 Succeeded byJoseph M CallahanPolitical officesPreceded byEdwin Albert Merritt Speaker of the New York Assembly1913 Succeeded byThaddeus C SweetPreceded byFrank Dowling President of the New York City Board of Aldermen1917 1918 Succeeded byRobert L MoranPreceded byCharles S Whitman Governor of New York1919 1920 Succeeded byNathan L MillerPreceded byNathan L Miller Governor of New York1923 1928 Succeeded byFranklin D RooseveltParty political officesPreceded bySamuel Seabury Democratic nominee for Governor of New York1918 1920 1922 1924 1926 Succeeded byFranklin D RooseveltPreceded byJohn W Davis Democratic nominee for President of the United States1928 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Smith amp oldid 1195963298, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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