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Benjamin Bristow

Benjamin Helm Bristow (June 20, 1832 – June 22, 1896) was an American lawyer and politician who served as the 30th U.S. Treasury Secretary and the first Solicitor General.

Benjamin Bristow
30th United States Secretary of the Treasury
In office
June 4, 1874 – June 20, 1876
PresidentUlysses S. Grant
Preceded byWilliam Richardson
Succeeded byLot M. Morrill
1st Solicitor General of the United States
In office
October 1, 1870 – November 12, 1872
PresidentUlysses S. Grant
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded bySamuel F. Phillips
Personal details
Born
Benjamin Helm Bristow

(1832-06-20)June 20, 1832
Elkton, Kentucky, U.S.
DiedJune 22, 1896(1896-06-22) (aged 64)
New York City, U.S.
Political partyWhig (Before 1860)
Republican (1860–1896)
EducationWashington and Jefferson College (BA)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Army
Years of service1861–1863
Rank Colonel
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War
 • Battle of Shiloh

A Union military officer, Bristow was a Republican Party reformer and civil rights advocate. During his tenure as Secretary of the Treasury, he is primarily known for breaking up and prosecuting the Whiskey Ring at the behest of President Grant, a corrupt tax evasion profiteering ring that depleted the national treasury. Additionally, Bristow promoted gold standard currency rather than paper money. Bristow was one of Grant's most popular Cabinet members among reformers. Bristow supported Grant's Resumption of Specie Act of 1875, that helped stabilize the economy during the Panic of 1873. As the United States' first solicitor general, Bristow aided President Ulysses S. Grant and Attorney General Amos T. Akerman's vigorous and thorough prosecution and destruction of the Ku Klux Klan in the Reconstructed South.[1] Solicitor General Bristow advocated for African American citizens in Kentucky to be allowed to testify in a white man's court case. He also advocated education for all races to be paid for by public funding.

A native of Kentucky, Bristow was the son of a prominent Whig Unionist and attorney. Having graduated Jefferson College in Pennsylvania in 1851, Bristow studied law and passed the bar in 1853, working as an attorney until the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861. Fighting for the Union, Bristow served in the army during the American Civil War and was promoted to colonel. Wounded at the Battle of Shiloh, Bristow recuperated and was promoted to lieutenant colonel. In 1863, Bristow was elected Kentucky state Senator, serving only one term. At the end of the Civil War, Bristow was appointed assistant to the U.S. District Attorney serving in the Louisville area. In 1866, Bristow was appointed U.S. District attorney, serving in the Louisville area.

In 1870, Bristow was appointed the United States' first U.S. Solicitor General, who aided the U.S. Attorney General by arguing cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. In 1874, Bristow was appointed U.S. Secretary of the Treasury by President Ulysses S. Grant. Initially Grant gave Bristow his full support during Bristow's popular prosecution of the Whiskey Ring. However, when Bristow and Grant's Attorney General Edwards Pierrepont, another reforming Cabinet member, uncovered that Orville Babcock, Grant's personal secretary, was involved in the ring, Grant's relationship with Bristow cooled. In June 1876, due to friction over Bristow's zealous prosecution of the Whiskey Ring and rumor that Bristow was interested in running for the U.S. presidency, Bristow resigned from President Grant's Cabinet on his 44th birthday. During the 1876 United States presidential election, Bristow made an unsuccessful attempt at gaining the Republican presidential ticket, running as a Republican reformer. The Republicans, however, chose Rutherford B. Hayes. After the 1876 presidential election, Bristow returned to private practice in New York. He formed a successful law practice in 1878, often arguing cases before the U.S. Supreme Court until his death in 1896.

Bristow was credited, by historian Jean Edward Smith, as one of Grant's best cabinet choices. Reformers were generally pleased by Secretary Bristow's overall prosecution of the Whiskey Ring, and looked to him for cleaning up government corruption. Historians have also given credit for Bristow, America's first Solicitor General, for prosecuting the Ku Klux Klan. Bristow, however, had an ambitious, contentious nature, and at times this led to various feuds with Grant cabinet members. Bristow, a native of Kentucky, represented the Southern United States on Grant's cabinet, during Grant's second term.

Early life edit

 
Bristow's birthplace, Edwards Hall

Benjamin Helm Bristow was born in Edwards Hall on June 20, 1832, in Elkton, Kentucky, United States.[2][3] Bristow was the son of Francis M. Bristow and his wife Emily Helm.[4][2] Francis was a prominent lawyer and Whig member of Congress in 1854–1855 and 1859–1861.[4][2] Edwards Hall was the home of his late grandfather, Benjamin Edwards.[3] Bristow graduated at Jefferson College, Washington, Pennsylvania, in 1851, studied law under his father, and was admitted to the Kentucky bar in 1853.[4] For a while Bristow worked as a law partner for his father.[2] His father later became a strong anti-slavery Unionist.[2] His father's political anti-slavery and Whig views strongly influenced Bristow's own political outlook.[2]

Marriage and family edit

On November 21, 1854, aged 22, Bristow married Abbie S. Briscoe.[2] Benjamin and Abbie had two children one son, William A. Bristow, and one daughter Nannie Bristow.[5] William was an attorney who worked in Bristow's New York law firm Bristow, Opdyke, & Willcox.[5] In June 1896 William was in London recovering from typhoid fever.[5] Nannie married Eben S. Sumner a Massachusetts textile businessman and politician.[5]

Kentucky law practice (1858–1861) edit

In 1858, Bristow and his wife Abbie moved to Hopkinsville, Kentucky.[2] Bristow practiced law until the outbreak of the Civil War.[1][2]

American Civil War (1861–1863) edit

 
Battle of Shiloh

In December 1860, after Abraham Lincoln was elected, the South seceded from the Union and formed the Confederacy (1861), primarily to protect the institution of slavery, profitable cotton plantations, and resistance to black integration and citizenship.[6][7] President James Buchanan, sympathetic to the South, did virtually nothing to contain Southern secession, prior to Lincoln's March 4, 1861, Inauguration. At the beginning of the Civil War in 1861, Bristow, an ardent Unionist, joined the Union Army, and mustered the 25th Kentucky Infantry . On September 21, 1861, Bristow was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 25th Kentucky Infantry.[2] Bristow fought under General Ulysses S. Grant and served bravely at three battles, Fort Henry, Fort Donelson, and Shiloh, at the latter he was injured.[8]

In April 1862, General Grant and most of his Union Army were encamped at Pittsburg Landing, and had planned to attack Corinth, a Confederate stronghold. The Confederates, however attacked in full force, that surprised Grant's unentrenched Union Army. Grant and his men were able to hold off the Confederate Army, although one Union division was captured. The next day, after Grant received reinforcements, the Union Army attacked the Confederates in full force and pushed the Southern Army back to Corinth. At this two day Battle of Shiloh in Tennessee, Bristow was severely wounded by an exploding shell over his head and temporarily forced to retire from field duty in order to recover from his injury.[1] The force and noise of the explosion left Bristow deaf and unconscious, unable to command. Bristow was replaced by Major William B. Wall. After his recuperation, Bristow returned to field service during the summer of 1862 and helped recruit the 8th Kentucky Cavalry.[8]

On September 8, 1862, Bristow was commissioned lieutenant colonel over the 8th Kentucky Cavalry. Bristow assumed command of the 8th Kentucky Cavalry in January 1863 after Col. James M. Shackleford, the previous commander, was promoted brigadier general. On April 1, 1863, Bristow was promoted to colonel and continued his command over the 8th Kentucky Cavalry. In July 1863 Col. Bristow and the Kentucky 8th Cavalry assisted in the capture of John Hunt Morgan during his July 1863 raid through Indiana and Ohio.[8]

Kentucky state senator (1863–1865) edit

On September 23, 1863, Bristow was honorably discharged from service in the Union Army; having been elected Kentucky State Senator by Christian County. Bristow had not known he had been elected and served one term as State Senator until 1865, having resigned office.[1] Bristow supported all Union war effort legislation, the presidential election of Abraham Lincoln in 1864, and the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment that outlawed slavery.[1]

U.S. District Attorney (1866–1870) edit

In 1865, Bristow was appointed assistant to the United States Attorney. In 1866, Bristow was appointed district attorney for the Louisville, Kentucky district. As district attorney, he was renowned for his vigor in enforcing the 1866 U.S. Civil Rights Act. Bristow served as district attorney until 1870 and spent a few months practicing law in partnership with future United States Supreme Court Justice John Harlan.

First U.S. Solicitor General (1870–1872) edit

Prosecuted Ku Klux Klan edit

 
Bristow, America's first Solicitor General, federally prosecuted the Ku Klux Klan 1871

In 1870, Congress created the U.S. Department of Justice, in part, to aid in the enforcement of U.S. Congressional Reconstruction laws and U.S. Constitutional amendments. On October 4, 1870, Bristow was appointed the first incumbent U.S. Solicitor General by President Ulysses S. Grant and served until November 12, 1872, having resigned the office.[9][8] Bristow and U.S. Attorney General Amos Akerman prosecuted thousands of Klansmen that resulted in a brief two-year quiet period during the turbulent Reconstruction Era in the South. In 1873 President Grant nominated him Attorney General of the United States in case then Attorney General George H. Williams was confirmed as Chief Justice of the United States, a contingency which did not arise.[4]

Feud with Akerman edit

On the verge of prosecuting the Ku Klux Klan in mid-September 1871, Bristow in Washington launched a treacherous attack on his boss Akerman's reputation, while Akerman was fighting lawlessness in the South.[10] After Grant returned from a trip to Dayton, Ohio, Bristow, wanting Akerman's cabinet post, told Grant that Akerman was "too small" for the job of Attorney General and he was not respected "by the Court & the profession generally". Bristow went so far as to call Akerman a "dead weight on the administration". Grant was shocked at Bristow's view of Akerman and surprised that Bristow had prodded Grant to get him fired by Grant. Grant refused to consider firing Akerman, telling Bristow that Akerman was thoroughly honest and an earnest man. Grant kept Akerman on the cabinet while Bristow retained his job of Solicitor General.[11]

Civil rights speech edit

In 1871, Bristow traveled to his native Kentucky state and in a speech advocated African American civil rights. Bristow advocated that blacks be given the right to testify in juries. At this time Kentucky law forbade the 225,000 black U.S. citizens from testifying in any civil or criminal case involving a white man. He stated the Kentucky law that denied African Americans the right to testify in a white man's case had roots in slavery and was a "monstrous and grievous wrong to both races." Bristow stated that the Ku Klux Klan Act and the previous Civil Rights acts passed by the U.S. Congress were designed to protect the "humblest citizens" from lawbreakers. Bristow stated he would "tax the rich man's property to educate his poor neighbor's child", and he would "tax the white man's property to educate the black man's child." Bristow advocated free universal education and all property in Kentucky be taxed to pay for schools.[12]

Secretary of the Treasury (1874–1876) edit

 
Benjamin Bristow
Secretary of Treasury
Bureau of Engraving and Printing

On June 3, 1874, President Grant appointed Bristow Secretary of the Treasury after William A. Richardson was removed in light of the Sanborn incident that involved Treasury contract scandals.[13] Bristow was hailed by the press as a much needed reformer.[14] Bristow took control of the Treasury during the Long Depression, that was started by the Panic of 1873. The Republican Party at this time was divided over currency. Bristow supported the hard money North Eastern Republicans and favored a resumption of species (coin money) to replace greenbacks (paper money). President Grant had vetoed the Inflation Bill, on April 22, that would have increased paper money into the collapsed economy. Bristow's support of Grant's veto helped him get nominated for the Treasury by Grant.[15] Sixteen days after Bristow took office, on June 20, Bristow's 42nd birthday, Grant signed a compromise act that legalized $26 million greenbacks released by previous Treasury Secretary Richardson, allowed a maximum of $382 million greenbacks, and authorized a redistribution of $55 million national banknotes. The act had little affect to alleve the devastated economy.[16]

Internal reforms made edit

Fulfilling the press's reformer expectation, Bristow immediately went to work.[14] He drastically reorganized the Treasury Department,[14] abolished the corrupt office of supervising architect made famous by Alfred B. Mullett, and[14] dismissed the second-comptroller and his subordinates for inefficiency. Bristow shook up the detective force and consolidated collection districts in the Customs and Internal Revenue Services.[14] He dismissed over 700 people and implemented civil service rules in the Treasury Department.[17]

Feud with Robeson edit

Within a few months after Grant appointed Bristow to run the Treasury, Bristow developed a feud with Grant's appointed Secretary of Navy George M. Robeson. The controversy centered around Robeson wanting to have Senator A.G. Cattell appointed financial agent in London to negotiate a bond issue. Cattell had performed a similar service in 1873 under previous Secretary Richardson. Bristow refused to make the appointment and believed a Treasury appointee could do the job. Bristow lobbied Grant to appoint John Bigelow, head of the Treasury Department's Loan Division. Grant accepted Bristow's choice of Bigelow, but he warned Bristow that Bigelow had a previous episode of drunkness.[18] Bristow went further to undercut Robeson's influence in the Grant cabinet. Bristow told Grant that Robeson's Navy Department was financially mismanaged, and was under the control of former treasury secretary Hugh McCulloch's banking house.[18] Bristow's advisers told Bristow to cool things off, and take a less confrontational approach.[19]

Feud with Williams edit

Grant's appointed Attorney General George Williams position on the cabinet was not secure, after Williams nomination was withdrawn by Grant for Supreme Court Justice. His personal reputation and that of his wife, Kate Williams, was under public scrutiny.[20] To defend her husband and herself, Kate sent out anonymous letters to slander Grant's cabinet, and others, including alleging sexual misconduct. Cabinet members who had received letters included Secretary of War William Belknap and Secretary of Navy George M. Robeson. Treasury department solicitor, Bluford Wilson, hired H.C. Whitely to investigate Kate and the letters. Wilson, Belknap, and Robeson agreed that Williams had to go. Bristow, supporting Wilson, urged Grant to fire Williams. Secretary of State Hamilton Fish told Grant that Kate had received a bribe of $30,000 from Pratt & Boyd for the Justice Department to drop a case against the company. Grant finally fired Williams, and replaced him with New York reformer Edwards Pierrepont, who cleaned up the Department of Justice.[21]

Feud with Delano edit

 
Columbus Delano
Bristow called Delano a "very mean dog".

Columbus Delano was Grant's Secretary of Interior, who allowed corruption in the vast Interior Department. Bristow, a reformer, wanted Delano out of office, believing Delano's departure would establish integrity in the Republican Party.[22] Also, Bristow believed Delano was plotting to remove Bristow from the Interior. Bristow called Delano a "very mean dog" and said Delano deserved the "execration of every honest man." Bristow hired Frank Wolcott to investigate Delano's department, that was ripe with corruption. Wolcott discovered that surveyor general of Wyoming, Silas Reed, had been making contracts with corrupt surveyors who shared enormous profits with silent-partners.

One of those silent-partners was Delano's son John, who had no survey training or work experience. Wolcott sent Bristow damaging evidence against Delano, while Bristow shrewdly turned the documents over to Grant. Although the silent-partner contracts were technically legal, the scandal would embolden the Democrats. By April 1875, Delano had to go, but Grant delayed his resignation for several months.[23] Delano fought back, by revealing information that other cabinet officers wanted Delano to stay in office, in addition to having made a false charge against Bristow. In October 1875, Grant finally replaced Delano with reformer Zachariah Chandler, who cleaned up corruption the Interior Department.[24]

Broke the Whiskey Ring edit

In the Spring of 1875, Bristow began an anti-corruption campaign that would put him in the national spotlight.[25] Bristow's greatest work in the Treasury Department came in prosecution and break up of the notorious Whiskey Ring headquartered in St. Louis[26] The Whiskey Ring was powerful and corrupt machine started by western distillers and their allies in the Internal Revenue Service; it profiteered by evading the collection of taxes on whiskey production.[26] Distillers tended to bribe revenue agents, rather than pay excessive levies on alcohol. Past efforts to uncover the Whiskey Ring were unsuccessful, because ring members in Washington D.C. alerted other ring members of pending investigations.[25] A November 1872 investigation, by three revenue investigators, into St. Louis distilleries, had found significant irregularities, but one agent who was bribed, submitted a whitewashed version of corruption.[27] Despite Washington rumors of its existence, the ring seemed to be impregnable to prosecution.[26]

Investigation edit

In the Fall of 1874 Bristow received a $125,000 (~$3.04 million in 2023) appropriation from Congress to investigate the Whiskey Ring.[28] In December 1874, Bristow convinced Internal Revenue Supervisor J.W. Douglas to send a new investigation team, but Grant's private Secretary at the White House, Orville E. Babcock, convinced Douglas to revoke his order.[25] An effort to transfer revenue supervisors, proposed by Douglas, to new locations, to dismantle the ring, was defeated when, out of political objection, Grant suspended the order on February 4, 1875.[29] Grant desired to "detect frauds" that had already been committed by the Whiskey Ring, rather than transfer the supervisors. Bristow, and Grant appointed Treasury Solicitor Bluford Wilson, lost faith in Douglas' willingness to go after the ring, and launched a covert investigation by independent undercover investigators, suggested by revenue agent Homer Yaryan.[30]

 
Probe Away !
Thomas Nast
Harper's Weekly, March 1876

Political journalist, George W. Fishback, owner of the St. Louis Democrat advised Bristow and Wilson, on how to expose the ring and to bypass any corrupt federal appointees who would tip other ring partners of a federal investigation.[31] Washington correspondent, Henry V. Boynton, also aided Bristow and Wilson in their investigation. Monitored by Wilson, incorruptible investigative agents, that included Yaryan, obtained a vast supply of evidence in St. Louis of frauds committed by the ring.[32] Bristow, in order to secure the enormity of the Whiskey Ring corruption, audited railroad and steamboat cargo receipts for accurate figures of the shipment of liquor in St. Louis and other key cities.[33] To keep the investigation secret from the ring, Bristow gave the agents a cipher different from the Treasury code, while messages were relayed through Fishback and Boynton.[32] Similar investigative work was done in Chicago and Milwaukee.[14] Evidence of fraudulent activity was quickly obtained, into a profiteering scheme, that involved corrupt distillers and revenue agents.[34] To escape taxes, the Whiskey Ring shipped whiskey labelled vinegar, listed whiskey at a lower proof, or illegally used revenue stamps multiple times.[34] As a result, millions of dollars were depleted from the treasury in tax revenues.[34]

Bristow's investigation revealed that Grant appointment, General John McDonald, St. Louis Collector of Internal Revenue, who controlled seven states, was the ring leader.[28] In April 1875, McDonald was called to Bristow's Washington office and confronted by Bristow and showed massive evidence against McDonald, who confessed to being the ring leader. However, after McDonald left Bristow's office, knowing he would be indicted, he unsuccessfully asked Wilson for indemnity from prosecution, and that the corrupt distilleries not be raided. McDonald pleaded that prosecution of the Whiskey Ring would hurt the Republican Party in Missouri. Wilson said later that he would have had McDonald fired on the spot, had he had the authority to do so.[28]

Prosecution edit

On May 7, 1875, Bristow gave Grant the investigation findings of corruption by the Whiskey Ring and stressed the need for immediate prosecution.[35] Without hesitation Grant gave Bristow permission to go after the ring, and told Bristow to move relentlessly against all those who were culpable.[36] Three days later, on May 10, Bristow struck hard shattering the ring at one blow.[14] Treasury agents raided and shut down distilleries, rectifying houses, and bottling plants in St. Louis, Chicago, Milwaukee, and six other Mid-Western states.[37] Internal Revenue offices were placed under custody of the Treasury, while thirty-two installations were taken over.[33] Books, papers, and tax receipts were confiscated, that proved and identified individual ring members guilt.[37] Overwhelming evidence against the ring was collected, while federal grand juries produced over 350 indictments.[33]

A Republican Party patronage boss in Wisconsin was linked to corruption found in Milwaukee.[33] Evidence suggested almost every Republican office holder in Chicago profited from illegal distilling.[33] St. Louis proved to be the kingpin city of the Whiskey Ring. In the past six months, $1,650,000 in taxes was evaded, while over two years the tax evasion number reached $4,000,000.[33] Bristow instituted almost 250 federal civil and criminal lawsuits against ring members, and within a year, Bristow, recovered $3,150,000 in unpaid taxes, and obtained 110 convictions on 176 indicted ring members.[14] Chief clerk of the Treasury, Willam Avery, St. Louis revenue collector General John McDonald, and St. Louis deputy collector, John A. Joyce, were indicted and convicted.[38]

Babcock's St. Louis trial edit

Bristow's investigation extended into the White House, as evidence suggested Grant's private Secretary, Orville E. Babcock, was a secret and paid informer of the Whiskey Ring. Bristow found two incriminating and cryptic letters signed "Sylph", believed to have been Babcock's handwriting. The first was dated December 10, 1874, that said, "I have succeeded. They will not go. I will write you." The other letter was dated February 3, 1875, that said, "We have official information that the enemy weakens. Push things." In October 1875, Bristow brought the two letters to Grant's cabinet meeting. Babcock was brought in and confronted by both Bristow and Grant's Attorney General Edwards Pierrepont. Babcock said that the messages had to do with the building of the St. Louis Eads Bridge and Missouri politics. Grant accepted Babcock's explanation over the letters. In December 1875, nonetheless, Babcock was formerly indicted in the Whiskey Ring and his trial was set for February 1876 in St. Louis. During the trial President Grant, who believed Babcock was innocent, took a deposition at the White House that defended Babcock, and it was read to the jury in St. Louis. Babcock was acquitted by the jury and he returned to Washington, D.C.[39]

Resignation edit

In the aftermath of the Whiskey Ring prosecutions, including Babcock's trial, and an upcoming 1876 presidential election, Bristow's position on Grant's cabinet became untenable. Grant was grieved at Bristow's prosecution of Babcock, whom Grant maintained was innocent. Also, rumors swirled that Bristow prosecuted the Whiskey Ring, to get the Republican nomination, that caused Grant to feel betrayed by Bristow. Largely owing to friction between himself and the president, Bristow resigned his portfolio in June 1876; as Secretary of the Treasury he advocated the resumption of specie payments and at least a partial retirement of "greenbacks"; and he was also an advocate of civil service reform.[4] With his resignation, unlike other Grant appointed cabinet members, such as Ebenezer R. Hoar (Attorney General), Amos T. Akerman (Attorney General), and Marshall Jewell (Postmaster General), Bristow avoided the harsher reality of direct dismissal by Grant.

Presidential run (1876) edit

 
Republican National Convention
Cincinnati, Ohio
Exposition Hall 1876

Bristow was a prominent reforming candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in 1876 (see U.S. presidential election, 1876). He was defeated at the Republican convention; Rutherford B. Hayes received the nomination. During the 1876 Republican Presidential Convention, Stalwart members of the Republican party, friends of President Grant, believed Bristow had been disloyal to Grant during the Whiskey Ring prosecutions, by going after Babcock. Rumor spread that Bristow had prosecuted the Whiskey Ring in an attempt to gain the 1876 Presidential Republican nomination. Bristow, however, proved to be a loyal statesman and had desired to keep President Grant and the nation from scandal. When Sec. Bristow testified in front of a congressional committee on the Whiskey Ring, he would not give any specific information regarding his conversations with President Grant, having claimed executive privilege.

The 1876 Republican National Convention, was held at Exposition Hall, in Cincinnati, Ohio. On the first Presidential Ballot, Bristow was third, at 113 votes, while James G. Blaine received 285 votes, followed by Oliver P. Morton, at 124 votes. On the fourth Presidential Ballot, Bristow finished second, at 126 votes, his highest number, while Blaine was first, at 292 votes. On the seventh and final Presidential Ballot, Bristow received only 21 votes. Rutherford B. Hayes, was elected the Republican presidential candidate, at 384 votes. Blaine finished a close second at 351 votes.

New York attorney edit

 
Benjamin Bristow
Elder statesman

Bristow was upset over not winning the Republican presidential nomination and over the rumor he had been disloyal to President Grant. Bristow retired from politics, never again to run for political office.[1] After 1878, he practiced law in New York City[4] and on October 16, aged 46, he established the law partnership of Bristow, Peet, Burnett, & Opdyke.[1] Bristow was a prominent leader of the Eastern bar and was elected the second president of the American Bar Association in 1879. Having remained an advocate of civil service reform, Bristow was vice president of the Civil Service Reform Association.[1] Bristow often ably argued in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.[1]

Death and burial edit

In 1896, Bristow suffered appendicitis and died at his home in New York City on June 22, just two days after his 64th birthday.[1] He was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York.

Historical reputation edit

Historians primarily admire Bristow's prosecution and shutting down the Whiskey Ring during his term as Grant's Secretary of Treasury.[40] Although a lawyer by trade and having no financial training, he was able to rid the Internal Revenue Department of corruption.[40] Bristow demonstrated his ability and in striking down the Whiskey Ring that was supported by powerful political forces.[40] Bristow's zeal for reform, while he was Grant's appointed Secretary of Treasury, was in part motivated by a sincere belief to clean up the Republican Party from corruption, and in part, an ambition to run for the presidency, and be nominated on the 1876 Republican presidential ticket.[41] His prosecutions offended the social and political Republican Party stalwarts who supported patronage, forcing him out of office.[40] As the first Solicitor General Bristow aided in prosecuting the Ku Klux Klan that enabled African Americans in the South to vote freely without fear of violent retaliation. He was born a Southerner in Kentucky, but he lived the remaining years of his life in New York.[40]

Historian Jean Edward Smith said Bristow's appointment to Secretary of Treasury was "one of Grant's best." Smith said Bristow "brought a reforming zeal to the Grant administration, reinforced by a heady dose of ambition that was not out of place for a man in his early forties."[17]

Historian Charles W. Calhoun, had a less positive view of Bristow. Calhoun said Bristow was "ambitious" and had a "contentious nature".[18]

Historian Ronald C. White said Bristow, as Secretary of Treasury, "brought honesty to the position".[42]

Historian Ron Chernow said Bristow was "honest and competent", and: "A zealous advocate of civil service reform".[43]

Historian William S. McFeely said Grant's appointment of Bristow to run the Treasury was "reluctant", and "the department passed into the impeccably clean hands of Benjamin Bristow, a sound money man."[44]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Department of Justice, Benjamin Bristow
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Nevins 1929, p. 55.
  3. ^ a b Boone, George Street. National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Edwards Hall. National Park Service, 1973-07-10, 3.
  4. ^ a b c d e f   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bristow, Benjamin Helm". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 582. This work in turn cites:
    • Willcox, David (1897). Memorial of Benjamin Helm Bristow. Cambridge, Mass: privately printed.
    • Whiskey Frauds, 44th Congress, 1st Session, Mis. Doc. No. 186.
    • McDonald, John, Secrets of the Great Whiskey Ring, Chicago, 1880. A book by one concerned and to be considered in that light: John McDonald was supervisor of internal revenue at St Louis for nearly six years.
  5. ^ a b c d New York Times (June 23, 1896).
  6. ^ Gallagher, Gary (February 21, 2011). Remembering the Civil War (Speech). Sesquicentennial of the Start of the Civil War. Miller Center of Public Affairs UV: C-Span. Retrieved August 29, 2017. Issues related to the institution of slavery precipitated secession... It was not states' rights. It was not a tariff. It was not unhappiness with manner and customs that led to secession and eventually to war. It was a cluster of issues profoundly dividing the nation along a fault line delineated by the institution of slavery.
  7. ^ Chadwick, French Esnor. Causes of the civil war, 1859–1861 (1906) p. 8
  8. ^ a b c d Biographical Dictionary of America 1906.
  9. ^ Willcox 1897, pp. 9–10.
  10. ^ Calhoun 2017, p. 322.
  11. ^ Calhoun 2017, pp. 322–323.
  12. ^ New York Times (June 16, 1876), Nomination of Benjamin H. Bristow
  13. ^ Willcox 1897, p. 10; Nevins 1929, p. 56.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h Nevins 1929, p. 56.
  15. ^ Calhoun 2017, p. 447.
  16. ^ Calhoun 2017, pp. 445–446.
  17. ^ a b Smith 2001, p. 583.
  18. ^ a b c Calhoun 2017, pp. 447–448.
  19. ^ Calhoun 2017, p. 449.
  20. ^ Calhoun 2017, p. 488.
  21. ^ Calhoun 2017, pp. 489–490.
  22. ^ Calhoun 2017, p. 492.
  23. ^ Calhoun 2017, pp. 492–493.
  24. ^ Calhoun 2017, p. 493.
  25. ^ a b c Calhoun 2017, p. 494.
  26. ^ a b c Nevins 1929, p. 56; Calhoun 2017, p. 494.
  27. ^ Calhoun 2017, p. 469.
  28. ^ a b c McFeely 1981, p. 406.
  29. ^ Calhoun 2017, pp. 494–495.
  30. ^ Calhoun 2017, pp. 495–496.
  31. ^ Nevins 1929, p. 56; Calhoun 2017, pp. 495–496.
  32. ^ a b Nevins 1929, p. 56; Calhoun 2017, p. 496.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Smith 2001, p. 584.
  34. ^ a b c Calhoun 2017, p. 496.
  35. ^ Calhoun 2017, p. 496; Smith 2001, p. 584.
  36. ^ Calhoun 2017, p. 584; Smith 2001, p. 584.
  37. ^ a b Nevins 1929, p. 56; Smith 2001, p. 584.
  38. ^ Smith 2001, p. 590.
  39. ^ White 2016, pp. 563–564; Smith 2001, pp. 590–593.
  40. ^ a b c d e Engineering and Mining Journal 1896, p. 623.
  41. ^ Calhoun 2017, pp. 448–449.
  42. ^ White 2016, p. 557.
  43. ^ Chernow 2017, p. 782.
  44. ^ McFeely 1981, pp. 397–398.

Sources edit

Books edit

Journals edit

  • "Late News". Engineering and Mining Journal. 61: 623. June 27, 1896.

New York Times edit

  • "Benjamin Helm Bristow" (PDF). New York Times. New York. June 23, 1896.

Further reading edit

  • vEncyclopedia of Kentucky. New York City, New York: Somerset Publishers. 1987. pp. 125–127. ISBN 0-403-09981-1.
  • Webb, Ross A., Benjamin Helm Bristow, border state politician, University Press of Kentucky (1969).

External links edit

  •   Media related to Benjamin Bristow at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Works by or about Benjamin Helm Bristow at Wikisource
Legal offices
New title Solicitor General of the United States
1870–1872
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
Served under: Ulysses S. Grant

1874–1876
Succeeded by

benjamin, bristow, benjamin, helm, bristow, june, 1832, june, 1896, american, lawyer, politician, served, 30th, treasury, secretary, first, solicitor, general, 30th, united, states, secretary, treasuryin, office, june, 1874, june, 1876presidentulysses, grantpr. Benjamin Helm Bristow June 20 1832 June 22 1896 was an American lawyer and politician who served as the 30th U S Treasury Secretary and the first Solicitor General Benjamin Bristow30th United States Secretary of the TreasuryIn office June 4 1874 June 20 1876PresidentUlysses S GrantPreceded byWilliam RichardsonSucceeded byLot M Morrill1st Solicitor General of the United StatesIn office October 1 1870 November 12 1872PresidentUlysses S GrantPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded bySamuel F PhillipsPersonal detailsBornBenjamin Helm Bristow 1832 06 20 June 20 1832Elkton Kentucky U S DiedJune 22 1896 1896 06 22 aged 64 New York City U S Political partyWhig Before 1860 Republican 1860 1896 EducationWashington and Jefferson College BA Military serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch service United States ArmyYears of service1861 1863RankColonelBattles warsAmerican Civil War Battle of Shiloh A Union military officer Bristow was a Republican Party reformer and civil rights advocate During his tenure as Secretary of the Treasury he is primarily known for breaking up and prosecuting the Whiskey Ring at the behest of President Grant a corrupt tax evasion profiteering ring that depleted the national treasury Additionally Bristow promoted gold standard currency rather than paper money Bristow was one of Grant s most popular Cabinet members among reformers Bristow supported Grant s Resumption of Specie Act of 1875 that helped stabilize the economy during the Panic of 1873 As the United States first solicitor general Bristow aided President Ulysses S Grant and Attorney General Amos T Akerman s vigorous and thorough prosecution and destruction of the Ku Klux Klan in the Reconstructed South 1 Solicitor General Bristow advocated for African American citizens in Kentucky to be allowed to testify in a white man s court case He also advocated education for all races to be paid for by public funding A native of Kentucky Bristow was the son of a prominent Whig Unionist and attorney Having graduated Jefferson College in Pennsylvania in 1851 Bristow studied law and passed the bar in 1853 working as an attorney until the outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861 Fighting for the Union Bristow served in the army during the American Civil War and was promoted to colonel Wounded at the Battle of Shiloh Bristow recuperated and was promoted to lieutenant colonel In 1863 Bristow was elected Kentucky state Senator serving only one term At the end of the Civil War Bristow was appointed assistant to the U S District Attorney serving in the Louisville area In 1866 Bristow was appointed U S District attorney serving in the Louisville area In 1870 Bristow was appointed the United States first U S Solicitor General who aided the U S Attorney General by arguing cases before the U S Supreme Court In 1874 Bristow was appointed U S Secretary of the Treasury by President Ulysses S Grant Initially Grant gave Bristow his full support during Bristow s popular prosecution of the Whiskey Ring However when Bristow and Grant s Attorney General Edwards Pierrepont another reforming Cabinet member uncovered that Orville Babcock Grant s personal secretary was involved in the ring Grant s relationship with Bristow cooled In June 1876 due to friction over Bristow s zealous prosecution of the Whiskey Ring and rumor that Bristow was interested in running for the U S presidency Bristow resigned from President Grant s Cabinet on his 44th birthday During the 1876 United States presidential election Bristow made an unsuccessful attempt at gaining the Republican presidential ticket running as a Republican reformer The Republicans however chose Rutherford B Hayes After the 1876 presidential election Bristow returned to private practice in New York He formed a successful law practice in 1878 often arguing cases before the U S Supreme Court until his death in 1896 Bristow was credited by historian Jean Edward Smith as one of Grant s best cabinet choices Reformers were generally pleased by Secretary Bristow s overall prosecution of the Whiskey Ring and looked to him for cleaning up government corruption Historians have also given credit for Bristow America s first Solicitor General for prosecuting the Ku Klux Klan Bristow however had an ambitious contentious nature and at times this led to various feuds with Grant cabinet members Bristow a native of Kentucky represented the Southern United States on Grant s cabinet during Grant s second term Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage and family 3 Kentucky law practice 1858 1861 4 American Civil War 1861 1863 5 Kentucky state senator 1863 1865 6 U S District Attorney 1866 1870 7 First U S Solicitor General 1870 1872 7 1 Prosecuted Ku Klux Klan 7 2 Feud with Akerman 7 3 Civil rights speech 8 Secretary of the Treasury 1874 1876 8 1 Internal reforms made 8 2 Feud with Robeson 8 3 Feud with Williams 8 4 Feud with Delano 8 5 Broke the Whiskey Ring 8 5 1 Investigation 8 5 2 Prosecution 8 5 3 Babcock s St Louis trial 8 6 Resignation 9 Presidential run 1876 10 New York attorney 11 Death and burial 12 Historical reputation 13 References 14 Sources 14 1 Books 14 2 Journals 14 3 New York Times 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Bristow s birthplace Edwards Hall Benjamin Helm Bristow was born in Edwards Hall on June 20 1832 in Elkton Kentucky United States 2 3 Bristow was the son of Francis M Bristow and his wife Emily Helm 4 2 Francis was a prominent lawyer and Whig member of Congress in 1854 1855 and 1859 1861 4 2 Edwards Hall was the home of his late grandfather Benjamin Edwards 3 Bristow graduated at Jefferson College Washington Pennsylvania in 1851 studied law under his father and was admitted to the Kentucky bar in 1853 4 For a while Bristow worked as a law partner for his father 2 His father later became a strong anti slavery Unionist 2 His father s political anti slavery and Whig views strongly influenced Bristow s own political outlook 2 Marriage and family editOn November 21 1854 aged 22 Bristow married Abbie S Briscoe 2 Benjamin and Abbie had two children one son William A Bristow and one daughter Nannie Bristow 5 William was an attorney who worked in Bristow s New York law firm Bristow Opdyke amp Willcox 5 In June 1896 William was in London recovering from typhoid fever 5 Nannie married Eben S Sumner a Massachusetts textile businessman and politician 5 Kentucky law practice 1858 1861 editIn 1858 Bristow and his wife Abbie moved to Hopkinsville Kentucky 2 Bristow practiced law until the outbreak of the Civil War 1 2 American Civil War 1861 1863 editMain articles Battle of Fort Henry Battle of Fort Donelson and Battle of Shiloh nbsp Battle of Shiloh In December 1860 after Abraham Lincoln was elected the South seceded from the Union and formed the Confederacy 1861 primarily to protect the institution of slavery profitable cotton plantations and resistance to black integration and citizenship 6 7 President James Buchanan sympathetic to the South did virtually nothing to contain Southern secession prior to Lincoln s March 4 1861 Inauguration At the beginning of the Civil War in 1861 Bristow an ardent Unionist joined the Union Army and mustered the 25th Kentucky Infantry On September 21 1861 Bristow was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 25th Kentucky Infantry 2 Bristow fought under General Ulysses S Grant and served bravely at three battles Fort Henry Fort Donelson and Shiloh at the latter he was injured 8 In April 1862 General Grant and most of his Union Army were encamped at Pittsburg Landing and had planned to attack Corinth a Confederate stronghold The Confederates however attacked in full force that surprised Grant s unentrenched Union Army Grant and his men were able to hold off the Confederate Army although one Union division was captured The next day after Grant received reinforcements the Union Army attacked the Confederates in full force and pushed the Southern Army back to Corinth At this two day Battle of Shiloh in Tennessee Bristow was severely wounded by an exploding shell over his head and temporarily forced to retire from field duty in order to recover from his injury 1 The force and noise of the explosion left Bristow deaf and unconscious unable to command Bristow was replaced by Major William B Wall After his recuperation Bristow returned to field service during the summer of 1862 and helped recruit the 8th Kentucky Cavalry 8 On September 8 1862 Bristow was commissioned lieutenant colonel over the 8th Kentucky Cavalry Bristow assumed command of the 8th Kentucky Cavalry in January 1863 after Col James M Shackleford the previous commander was promoted brigadier general On April 1 1863 Bristow was promoted to colonel and continued his command over the 8th Kentucky Cavalry In July 1863 Col Bristow and the Kentucky 8th Cavalry assisted in the capture of John Hunt Morgan during his July 1863 raid through Indiana and Ohio 8 Kentucky state senator 1863 1865 editOn September 23 1863 Bristow was honorably discharged from service in the Union Army having been elected Kentucky State Senator by Christian County Bristow had not known he had been elected and served one term as State Senator until 1865 having resigned office 1 Bristow supported all Union war effort legislation the presidential election of Abraham Lincoln in 1864 and the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment that outlawed slavery 1 U S District Attorney 1866 1870 editIn 1865 Bristow was appointed assistant to the United States Attorney In 1866 Bristow was appointed district attorney for the Louisville Kentucky district As district attorney he was renowned for his vigor in enforcing the 1866 U S Civil Rights Act Bristow served as district attorney until 1870 and spent a few months practicing law in partnership with future United States Supreme Court Justice John Harlan First U S Solicitor General 1870 1872 editFurther information Presidency of Ulysses S Grant and Ulysses S Grant presidential administration scandals Prosecuted Ku Klux Klan edit nbsp Bristow America s first Solicitor General federally prosecuted the Ku Klux Klan 1871 In 1870 Congress created the U S Department of Justice in part to aid in the enforcement of U S Congressional Reconstruction laws and U S Constitutional amendments On October 4 1870 Bristow was appointed the first incumbent U S Solicitor General by President Ulysses S Grant and served until November 12 1872 having resigned the office 9 8 Bristow and U S Attorney General Amos Akerman prosecuted thousands of Klansmen that resulted in a brief two year quiet period during the turbulent Reconstruction Era in the South In 1873 President Grant nominated him Attorney General of the United States in case then Attorney General George H Williams was confirmed as Chief Justice of the United States a contingency which did not arise 4 Feud with Akerman edit On the verge of prosecuting the Ku Klux Klan in mid September 1871 Bristow in Washington launched a treacherous attack on his boss Akerman s reputation while Akerman was fighting lawlessness in the South 10 After Grant returned from a trip to Dayton Ohio Bristow wanting Akerman s cabinet post told Grant that Akerman was too small for the job of Attorney General and he was not respected by the Court amp the profession generally Bristow went so far as to call Akerman a dead weight on the administration Grant was shocked at Bristow s view of Akerman and surprised that Bristow had prodded Grant to get him fired by Grant Grant refused to consider firing Akerman telling Bristow that Akerman was thoroughly honest and an earnest man Grant kept Akerman on the cabinet while Bristow retained his job of Solicitor General 11 Civil rights speech edit In 1871 Bristow traveled to his native Kentucky state and in a speech advocated African American civil rights Bristow advocated that blacks be given the right to testify in juries At this time Kentucky law forbade the 225 000 black U S citizens from testifying in any civil or criminal case involving a white man He stated the Kentucky law that denied African Americans the right to testify in a white man s case had roots in slavery and was a monstrous and grievous wrong to both races Bristow stated that the Ku Klux Klan Act and the previous Civil Rights acts passed by the U S Congress were designed to protect the humblest citizens from lawbreakers Bristow stated he would tax the rich man s property to educate his poor neighbor s child and he would tax the white man s property to educate the black man s child Bristow advocated free universal education and all property in Kentucky be taxed to pay for schools 12 Secretary of the Treasury 1874 1876 edit nbsp Benjamin BristowSecretary of TreasuryBureau of Engraving and Printing Further information Presidency of Ulysses S Grant On June 3 1874 President Grant appointed Bristow Secretary of the Treasury after William A Richardson was removed in light of the Sanborn incident that involved Treasury contract scandals 13 Bristow was hailed by the press as a much needed reformer 14 Bristow took control of the Treasury during the Long Depression that was started by the Panic of 1873 The Republican Party at this time was divided over currency Bristow supported the hard money North Eastern Republicans and favored a resumption of species coin money to replace greenbacks paper money President Grant had vetoed the Inflation Bill on April 22 that would have increased paper money into the collapsed economy Bristow s support of Grant s veto helped him get nominated for the Treasury by Grant 15 Sixteen days after Bristow took office on June 20 Bristow s 42nd birthday Grant signed a compromise act that legalized 26 million greenbacks released by previous Treasury Secretary Richardson allowed a maximum of 382 million greenbacks and authorized a redistribution of 55 million national banknotes The act had little affect to alleve the devastated economy 16 Internal reforms made edit Fulfilling the press s reformer expectation Bristow immediately went to work 14 He drastically reorganized the Treasury Department 14 abolished the corrupt office of supervising architect made famous by Alfred B Mullett and 14 dismissed the second comptroller and his subordinates for inefficiency Bristow shook up the detective force and consolidated collection districts in the Customs and Internal Revenue Services 14 He dismissed over 700 people and implemented civil service rules in the Treasury Department 17 Feud with Robeson edit Within a few months after Grant appointed Bristow to run the Treasury Bristow developed a feud with Grant s appointed Secretary of Navy George M Robeson The controversy centered around Robeson wanting to have Senator A G Cattell appointed financial agent in London to negotiate a bond issue Cattell had performed a similar service in 1873 under previous Secretary Richardson Bristow refused to make the appointment and believed a Treasury appointee could do the job Bristow lobbied Grant to appoint John Bigelow head of the Treasury Department s Loan Division Grant accepted Bristow s choice of Bigelow but he warned Bristow that Bigelow had a previous episode of drunkness 18 Bristow went further to undercut Robeson s influence in the Grant cabinet Bristow told Grant that Robeson s Navy Department was financially mismanaged and was under the control of former treasury secretary Hugh McCulloch s banking house 18 Bristow s advisers told Bristow to cool things off and take a less confrontational approach 19 Feud with Williams edit Grant s appointed Attorney General George Williams position on the cabinet was not secure after Williams nomination was withdrawn by Grant for Supreme Court Justice His personal reputation and that of his wife Kate Williams was under public scrutiny 20 To defend her husband and herself Kate sent out anonymous letters to slander Grant s cabinet and others including alleging sexual misconduct Cabinet members who had received letters included Secretary of War William Belknap and Secretary of Navy George M Robeson Treasury department solicitor Bluford Wilson hired H C Whitely to investigate Kate and the letters Wilson Belknap and Robeson agreed that Williams had to go Bristow supporting Wilson urged Grant to fire Williams Secretary of State Hamilton Fish told Grant that Kate had received a bribe of 30 000 from Pratt amp Boyd for the Justice Department to drop a case against the company Grant finally fired Williams and replaced him with New York reformer Edwards Pierrepont who cleaned up the Department of Justice 21 Feud with Delano edit nbsp Columbus DelanoBristow called Delano a very mean dog Columbus Delano was Grant s Secretary of Interior who allowed corruption in the vast Interior Department Bristow a reformer wanted Delano out of office believing Delano s departure would establish integrity in the Republican Party 22 Also Bristow believed Delano was plotting to remove Bristow from the Interior Bristow called Delano a very mean dog and said Delano deserved the execration of every honest man Bristow hired Frank Wolcott to investigate Delano s department that was ripe with corruption Wolcott discovered that surveyor general of Wyoming Silas Reed had been making contracts with corrupt surveyors who shared enormous profits with silent partners One of those silent partners was Delano s son John who had no survey training or work experience Wolcott sent Bristow damaging evidence against Delano while Bristow shrewdly turned the documents over to Grant Although the silent partner contracts were technically legal the scandal would embolden the Democrats By April 1875 Delano had to go but Grant delayed his resignation for several months 23 Delano fought back by revealing information that other cabinet officers wanted Delano to stay in office in addition to having made a false charge against Bristow In October 1875 Grant finally replaced Delano with reformer Zachariah Chandler who cleaned up corruption the Interior Department 24 Broke the Whiskey Ring edit Main article Whiskey Ring In the Spring of 1875 Bristow began an anti corruption campaign that would put him in the national spotlight 25 Bristow s greatest work in the Treasury Department came in prosecution and break up of the notorious Whiskey Ring headquartered in St Louis 26 The Whiskey Ring was powerful and corrupt machine started by western distillers and their allies in the Internal Revenue Service it profiteered by evading the collection of taxes on whiskey production 26 Distillers tended to bribe revenue agents rather than pay excessive levies on alcohol Past efforts to uncover the Whiskey Ring were unsuccessful because ring members in Washington D C alerted other ring members of pending investigations 25 A November 1872 investigation by three revenue investigators into St Louis distilleries had found significant irregularities but one agent who was bribed submitted a whitewashed version of corruption 27 Despite Washington rumors of its existence the ring seemed to be impregnable to prosecution 26 Investigation edit In the Fall of 1874 Bristow received a 125 000 3 04 million in 2023 appropriation from Congress to investigate the Whiskey Ring 28 In December 1874 Bristow convinced Internal Revenue Supervisor J W Douglas to send a new investigation team but Grant s private Secretary at the White House Orville E Babcock convinced Douglas to revoke his order 25 An effort to transfer revenue supervisors proposed by Douglas to new locations to dismantle the ring was defeated when out of political objection Grant suspended the order on February 4 1875 29 Grant desired to detect frauds that had already been committed by the Whiskey Ring rather than transfer the supervisors Bristow and Grant appointed Treasury Solicitor Bluford Wilson lost faith in Douglas willingness to go after the ring and launched a covert investigation by independent undercover investigators suggested by revenue agent Homer Yaryan 30 nbsp Probe Away Thomas NastHarper s Weekly March 1876 Political journalist George W Fishback owner of the St Louis Democrat advised Bristow and Wilson on how to expose the ring and to bypass any corrupt federal appointees who would tip other ring partners of a federal investigation 31 Washington correspondent Henry V Boynton also aided Bristow and Wilson in their investigation Monitored by Wilson incorruptible investigative agents that included Yaryan obtained a vast supply of evidence in St Louis of frauds committed by the ring 32 Bristow in order to secure the enormity of the Whiskey Ring corruption audited railroad and steamboat cargo receipts for accurate figures of the shipment of liquor in St Louis and other key cities 33 To keep the investigation secret from the ring Bristow gave the agents a cipher different from the Treasury code while messages were relayed through Fishback and Boynton 32 Similar investigative work was done in Chicago and Milwaukee 14 Evidence of fraudulent activity was quickly obtained into a profiteering scheme that involved corrupt distillers and revenue agents 34 To escape taxes the Whiskey Ring shipped whiskey labelled vinegar listed whiskey at a lower proof or illegally used revenue stamps multiple times 34 As a result millions of dollars were depleted from the treasury in tax revenues 34 Bristow s investigation revealed that Grant appointment General John McDonald St Louis Collector of Internal Revenue who controlled seven states was the ring leader 28 In April 1875 McDonald was called to Bristow s Washington office and confronted by Bristow and showed massive evidence against McDonald who confessed to being the ring leader However after McDonald left Bristow s office knowing he would be indicted he unsuccessfully asked Wilson for indemnity from prosecution and that the corrupt distilleries not be raided McDonald pleaded that prosecution of the Whiskey Ring would hurt the Republican Party in Missouri Wilson said later that he would have had McDonald fired on the spot had he had the authority to do so 28 Prosecution edit On May 7 1875 Bristow gave Grant the investigation findings of corruption by the Whiskey Ring and stressed the need for immediate prosecution 35 Without hesitation Grant gave Bristow permission to go after the ring and told Bristow to move relentlessly against all those who were culpable 36 Three days later on May 10 Bristow struck hard shattering the ring at one blow 14 Treasury agents raided and shut down distilleries rectifying houses and bottling plants in St Louis Chicago Milwaukee and six other Mid Western states 37 Internal Revenue offices were placed under custody of the Treasury while thirty two installations were taken over 33 Books papers and tax receipts were confiscated that proved and identified individual ring members guilt 37 Overwhelming evidence against the ring was collected while federal grand juries produced over 350 indictments 33 A Republican Party patronage boss in Wisconsin was linked to corruption found in Milwaukee 33 Evidence suggested almost every Republican office holder in Chicago profited from illegal distilling 33 St Louis proved to be the kingpin city of the Whiskey Ring In the past six months 1 650 000 in taxes was evaded while over two years the tax evasion number reached 4 000 000 33 Bristow instituted almost 250 federal civil and criminal lawsuits against ring members and within a year Bristow recovered 3 150 000 in unpaid taxes and obtained 110 convictions on 176 indicted ring members 14 Chief clerk of the Treasury Willam Avery St Louis revenue collector General John McDonald and St Louis deputy collector John A Joyce were indicted and convicted 38 Babcock s St Louis trial edit Further information Orville E Babcock Bristow s investigation extended into the White House as evidence suggested Grant s private Secretary Orville E Babcock was a secret and paid informer of the Whiskey Ring Bristow found two incriminating and cryptic letters signed Sylph believed to have been Babcock s handwriting The first was dated December 10 1874 that said I have succeeded They will not go I will write you The other letter was dated February 3 1875 that said We have official information that the enemy weakens Push things In October 1875 Bristow brought the two letters to Grant s cabinet meeting Babcock was brought in and confronted by both Bristow and Grant s Attorney General Edwards Pierrepont Babcock said that the messages had to do with the building of the St Louis Eads Bridge and Missouri politics Grant accepted Babcock s explanation over the letters In December 1875 nonetheless Babcock was formerly indicted in the Whiskey Ring and his trial was set for February 1876 in St Louis During the trial President Grant who believed Babcock was innocent took a deposition at the White House that defended Babcock and it was read to the jury in St Louis Babcock was acquitted by the jury and he returned to Washington D C 39 Resignation edit In the aftermath of the Whiskey Ring prosecutions including Babcock s trial and an upcoming 1876 presidential election Bristow s position on Grant s cabinet became untenable Grant was grieved at Bristow s prosecution of Babcock whom Grant maintained was innocent Also rumors swirled that Bristow prosecuted the Whiskey Ring to get the Republican nomination that caused Grant to feel betrayed by Bristow Largely owing to friction between himself and the president Bristow resigned his portfolio in June 1876 as Secretary of the Treasury he advocated the resumption of specie payments and at least a partial retirement of greenbacks and he was also an advocate of civil service reform 4 With his resignation unlike other Grant appointed cabinet members such as Ebenezer R Hoar Attorney General Amos T Akerman Attorney General and Marshall Jewell Postmaster General Bristow avoided the harsher reality of direct dismissal by Grant Presidential run 1876 edit nbsp Republican National ConventionCincinnati OhioExposition Hall 1876 Bristow was a prominent reforming candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in 1876 see U S presidential election 1876 He was defeated at the Republican convention Rutherford B Hayes received the nomination During the 1876 Republican Presidential Convention Stalwart members of the Republican party friends of President Grant believed Bristow had been disloyal to Grant during the Whiskey Ring prosecutions by going after Babcock Rumor spread that Bristow had prosecuted the Whiskey Ring in an attempt to gain the 1876 Presidential Republican nomination Bristow however proved to be a loyal statesman and had desired to keep President Grant and the nation from scandal When Sec Bristow testified in front of a congressional committee on the Whiskey Ring he would not give any specific information regarding his conversations with President Grant having claimed executive privilege The 1876 Republican National Convention was held at Exposition Hall in Cincinnati Ohio On the first Presidential Ballot Bristow was third at 113 votes while James G Blaine received 285 votes followed by Oliver P Morton at 124 votes On the fourth Presidential Ballot Bristow finished second at 126 votes his highest number while Blaine was first at 292 votes On the seventh and final Presidential Ballot Bristow received only 21 votes Rutherford B Hayes was elected the Republican presidential candidate at 384 votes Blaine finished a close second at 351 votes New York attorney edit nbsp Benjamin BristowElder statesman Bristow was upset over not winning the Republican presidential nomination and over the rumor he had been disloyal to President Grant Bristow retired from politics never again to run for political office 1 After 1878 he practiced law in New York City 4 and on October 16 aged 46 he established the law partnership of Bristow Peet Burnett amp Opdyke 1 Bristow was a prominent leader of the Eastern bar and was elected the second president of the American Bar Association in 1879 Having remained an advocate of civil service reform Bristow was vice president of the Civil Service Reform Association 1 Bristow often ably argued in front of the U S Supreme Court 1 Death and burial editIn 1896 Bristow suffered appendicitis and died at his home in New York City on June 22 just two days after his 64th birthday 1 He was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery Bronx New York Historical reputation editHistorians primarily admire Bristow s prosecution and shutting down the Whiskey Ring during his term as Grant s Secretary of Treasury 40 Although a lawyer by trade and having no financial training he was able to rid the Internal Revenue Department of corruption 40 Bristow demonstrated his ability and in striking down the Whiskey Ring that was supported by powerful political forces 40 Bristow s zeal for reform while he was Grant s appointed Secretary of Treasury was in part motivated by a sincere belief to clean up the Republican Party from corruption and in part an ambition to run for the presidency and be nominated on the 1876 Republican presidential ticket 41 His prosecutions offended the social and political Republican Party stalwarts who supported patronage forcing him out of office 40 As the first Solicitor General Bristow aided in prosecuting the Ku Klux Klan that enabled African Americans in the South to vote freely without fear of violent retaliation He was born a Southerner in Kentucky but he lived the remaining years of his life in New York 40 Historian Jean Edward Smith said Bristow s appointment to Secretary of Treasury was one of Grant s best Smith said Bristow brought a reforming zeal to the Grant administration reinforced by a heady dose of ambition that was not out of place for a man in his early forties 17 Historian Charles W Calhoun had a less positive view of Bristow Calhoun said Bristow was ambitious and had a contentious nature 18 Historian Ronald C White said Bristow as Secretary of Treasury brought honesty to the position 42 Historian Ron Chernow said Bristow was honest and competent and A zealous advocate of civil service reform 43 Historian William S McFeely said Grant s appointment of Bristow to run the Treasury was reluctant and the department passed into the impeccably clean hands of Benjamin Bristow a sound money man 44 References edit a b c d e f g h i j Department of Justice Benjamin Bristow a b c d e f g h i j Nevins 1929 p 55 a b Boone George Street National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Edwards Hall National Park Service 1973 07 10 3 a b c d e f nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bristow Benjamin Helm Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 582 This work in turn cites Willcox David 1897 Memorial of Benjamin Helm Bristow Cambridge Mass privately printed Whiskey Frauds 44th Congress 1st Session Mis Doc No 186 McDonald John Secrets of the Great Whiskey Ring Chicago 1880 A book by one concerned and to be considered in that light John McDonald was supervisor of internal revenue at St Louis for nearly six years a b c d New York Times June 23 1896 Gallagher Gary February 21 2011 Remembering the Civil War Speech Sesquicentennial of the Start of the Civil War Miller Center of Public Affairs UV C Span Retrieved August 29 2017 Issues related to the institution of slavery precipitated secession It was not states rights It was not a tariff It was not unhappiness with manner and customs that led to secession and eventually to war It was a cluster of issues profoundly dividing the nation along a fault line delineated by the institution of slavery Chadwick French Esnor Causes of the civil war 1859 1861 1906 p 8 a b c d Biographical Dictionary of America 1906 Willcox 1897 pp 9 10 Calhoun 2017 p 322 Calhoun 2017 pp 322 323 New York Times June 16 1876 Nomination of Benjamin H Bristow Willcox 1897 p 10 Nevins 1929 p 56 a b c d e f g h Nevins 1929 p 56 Calhoun 2017 p 447 Calhoun 2017 pp 445 446 a b Smith 2001 p 583 a b c Calhoun 2017 pp 447 448 Calhoun 2017 p 449 Calhoun 2017 p 488 Calhoun 2017 pp 489 490 Calhoun 2017 p 492 Calhoun 2017 pp 492 493 Calhoun 2017 p 493 a b c Calhoun 2017 p 494 a b c Nevins 1929 p 56 Calhoun 2017 p 494 Calhoun 2017 p 469 a b c McFeely 1981 p 406 Calhoun 2017 pp 494 495 Calhoun 2017 pp 495 496 Nevins 1929 p 56 Calhoun 2017 pp 495 496 a b Nevins 1929 p 56 Calhoun 2017 p 496 a b c d e f Smith 2001 p 584 a b c Calhoun 2017 p 496 Calhoun 2017 p 496 Smith 2001 p 584 Calhoun 2017 p 584 Smith 2001 p 584 a b Nevins 1929 p 56 Smith 2001 p 584 Smith 2001 p 590 White 2016 pp 563 564 Smith 2001 pp 590 593 a b c d e Engineering and Mining Journal 1896 p 623 Calhoun 2017 pp 448 449 White 2016 p 557 Chernow 2017 p 782 McFeely 1981 pp 397 398 nbsp Biography portal nbsp American Civil War portalSources editBooks edit Calhoun Charles W 2017 The Presidency of Ulysses S Grant Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 9780700624843 scholarly review and response by Calhoun at DOI 10 14296 RiH 2014 2270 Chernow Ron 2017 Grant New York Penguin Books pp 751 788 ISBN 978 0143110637 McFeely William S 1981 Grant A Biography Norton ISBN 0 393 01372 3 Nevins Allan 1929 Dictionary of American Biography Bristow Benjamin Helm New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 55 56 Rossiter Johnson ed 1906 Biographical Dictionary of America Bristow Benjamin Helm Boston American Biographical Society Smith Jean Edward 2001 Grant New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 84927 5 White Ronald C 2016 American Ulysses A Life of Ulysses S Grant Random House Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 5883 6992 5 Journals edit Late News Engineering and Mining Journal 61 623 June 27 1896 New York Times edit Benjamin Helm Bristow PDF New York Times New York June 23 1896 Further reading editvEncyclopedia of Kentucky New York City New York Somerset Publishers 1987 pp 125 127 ISBN 0 403 09981 1 Webb Ross A Benjamin Helm Bristow border state politician University Press of Kentucky 1969 External links edit nbsp Media related to Benjamin Bristow at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Works by or about Benjamin Helm Bristow at Wikisource Legal offices New title Solicitor General of the United States1870 1872 Succeeded bySamuel F Phillips Political offices Preceded byWilliam A Richardson U S Secretary of the TreasuryServed under Ulysses S Grant1874 1876 Succeeded byLot M Morrill Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Benjamin Bristow amp oldid 1185469318, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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