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First impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson

The first impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson was launched by a vote of the United States House of Representatives on January 7, 1867 to investigate the potential impeachment of the President of the United States, Andrew Johnson. It was run by the House Committee on the Judiciary.

First impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson
AccusedAndrew Johnson (president of the United States)
DateJanuary 7– November 25, 1867 (10 months, 2 weeks and 5 days)
OutcomeImpeachment inquiry completed; House Committee on the Judiciary recommended impeachment; recommendation rejected by full House vote
Charges
Congressional votes
House vote authorizing the inquiry
Votes in favor108
Votes against39
ResultApproved
First vote by the House Judiciary Committee an impeachment resolution
Votes in favor4
Votes against5
ResultRejected
Final vote by the House Judiciary Committee on the impeachment resolution
Votes in favor5
Votes against4
ResultApproved
Subsequent House vote on the impeachment resolution
Votes in favor57
Votes against108
ResultRejected

The vote authorizing the inquiry was viewed as giving Republicans an opportunity to register their distain for Johnson without formally impeaching him. Most congressmen had expected that the sentiments in House Committee on the Judiciary would side against impeachment. However, surprising many, the committee voted 5–4 on November 25, 1867 to recommend impeachment (after having held a preliminary vote against it months prior). Despite this recommendation, the House voted 57–108 on December 7, 1867 against impeaching Johnson, with more Republicans voting against impeachment than for it.

This impeachment inquiry preceded the second impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson (launched in January 1868), which played a role in the lead up to the February 24, 1868 impeachment of Johnson.

Background

Some Radical Republicans had entertained the thought of impeaching President Andrew Johnson since as early as 1866.[1] However, the Republican Party was divided on the prospect of impeachment, with moderates in the party, who held a plurality, widely opposing it at this point.[1] The radicals were more in favor of impeachment, as their plans for strong reform in reconstruction were greatly imperiled by Johnson.[1] Among of the first Radical Republicans to explore impeachment was House Territories Committee chairman James Mitchell Ashley. Ashley was convinced of a baseless conspiracy theory that faulted Johnson for involvement in conspiring in the assassination of Lincoln. Thus, Ashley had strong personal motivation for wanting to remove Johnson from office.[1] Ashley quietly began researching impeachment.[1] Federal impeachment was rare in the United States.[2]

Several attempts were made by Radical Republicans to initiate impeachment, but these were successfully rebuffed by moderate Republicans in party leadership.[1] After the December 1866 meeting of the House Republican caucus, in an effort to block any further efforts to impeach Johnson, the moderate Republicans leading the party's caucus passed a rule for the Republican caucus which required that both a majority of House Republicans and a majority of members on the House Committee on the Judiciary would be required to approve any measure regarding impeachment in party caucus prior to it being considered in the House.[1][3] Radical Republicans continued to seek Johnson's impeachment.[1] They disobeyed the rule put in place for the Republican caucus.[3] Radicals proposed a number of impeachment resolutions, which the moderate Republicans often stifled by referring to committees.[3]

By the start of the year 1867, on a daily basis, Congress was receiving petitions demanding the removal of Johnson. These petitions came primarily from the midwestern states. The petitions were the result of an organized campaign to demand Johnson's removal. The number of signatures on these petitions varied, as some had as few as three signatures, while other petitions had as many as three hundred signatures.[4]

By the December 1866 start of the lame-duck third session of the 39th Congress, a number of Radical Republicans were demanding the creation of a select committee to investigate the prospect of impeaching Johnson, but this still faced resistance within the Republican Party caucus.[4] On December 17, 1866, James Mitchell Ashley attempted to open a house impeachment inquiry, but his motion to suspend the rules to consider his resolution saw a vote of 88–49, which was short of the needed two-thirds majority to suspend the rules.[1][5] Nevertheless, Ashley agreed with Thaddeus Stevens to again bring an impeachment resolution before the full House.[4]

House passage of the resolution authorizing the inquiry

 
The resolution authorizing the impeachment inquiry was authored by James Mitchell Ashley

On January 7, 1867, Benjamin F. Loan, John R. Kelso, and James Mitchell Ashley each introduced three separate impeachment resolutions against Johnson. The House refused to hold debate or vote on either Loan or Kelso's resolutions.[1] However, they did allow a vote on Ashley's impeachment-related resolution.[1] Unlike the other two impeachment bills introduced that day (which would have outright impeached Johnson), Ashley's bill offered a specific outline of how an impeachment process would proceed, and it did not start with an immediate impeachment. Rather than going to a direct vote on impeaching the president, his resolution would instruct the Judiciary Committee to "inquire into the official conduct of Andrew Johnson", investigating what it called Johnson's "corruptly used" powers and "usurpation of power", including Johnson's political appointments, use of his pardon powers (alluding to his pardons for ex-Confederates), vetoes of legislation, selling of confiscated property, and alleged interference with elections.[1][6][7][4] While it gave the general charge of "high crimes and misdemeanors" and named numerous instances of alleged corruption, Ashley's resolution did not specify what the high crimes and misdemeanors Johnson had committed were.[8] The grievances listed in the resolution amounted largely to political grievances which Ashley had against Johnson.[9]

The resolution read,

I do impeach Andrew Johnson, Vice President and acting President of the United States, of high crimes and misdemeanors:
I charge him with a usurpation of power and violation of law:
In that he has corruptly used the appointing power;
In that he has corruptly used the pardoning power;
In that he has corruptly used the veto power;
In that he has corruptly disposed of public property of the United States;
In that he has corruptly interfered in elections, and committed acts which, in contemplation of the Constitution, are high crimes and misdemeanors:
Therefore,
Be it resolved, That the Committee on the Judiciary be, and they are hereby, authorized to inquire into the official conduct of Andrew Johnson, Vice President of the United States, discharging the powers and duties of the office of President of the United States, and to report to this House, whether, in their opinion, the said Andrew Johnson, while in said office, has been guilty of acts which are designed or calculated to overthrow, subvert, or corrupt the Government of the United States, or any department or office thereof; and whether the said Andrew Johnson has been guilty of any act, or has conspired with others to do acts, which, in contemplation of the Constitution, are high crimes and misdemeanors, requiring the interposition of the constitutional power of this House; and that said committee have power to send for persons and papers, and to administer the customary oath to witnesses.[8][10]

The resolution passed in the House 108–39.[1][10][11] It was seen as offering Republicans a chance to register their displeasure with Johnson, without actually formally impeaching him.[1] Many Republicans believed that, in the Judiciary Committee, any impeachment resolution would die a quiet death.[2] Of the 108 members of the House that voted in favor of the resolution, 1 was a Democrat, 99 were Republicans, and 7 were Unconditional Unionists, 1 was an independent Republican. Of the 6 to vote against it, 25 were Democrats, 6 were Republicans, 3 were Unconditional Unionists, and 5 were Unionists.[11] 44 members of congress were absent (14 Democrats, 28 Republicans, 2 and Unconditional Unionists). Additionally, Speaker Schuyler Colfax (a Republican) did not vote,[11] as House rules do not require the speaker to vote during ordinary legislative proceedings, unless their vote would be decisive or if the vote is being cast by ballot.[12]

The official record shows Democrat John Winthrop Chanler as voting in favor of the resolution (thus, this article lists him as having voted as such).[11] However, the New-York Tribune, following the vote, strongly suspected that this was a clerical error.[13]

Vote on the impeachment inquiry resolution[10][11]
January 7, 1867 Party Total votes
Democratic Republican Unconditional Union Unionists Independent Republican
Yea  Y 1 99 7 0 1 108
Nay 25 6 3 5 0 39
Comparative bar chart
Vote Vote total
"Yea" votes
108
"Nay" votes
39
Absent/not voting
45
Full list of votes[11]
District Member Party Vote
Massachusetts 6 John B. Alley Republican Yea
Iowa 3 William B. Allison Republican Yea
Massachusetts 2 Oakes Ames Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 8 Sydenham Elnathan Ancona Democrat Nay
Missouri 9 George Washington Anderson Republican Absent
Tennessee 6 Samuel Mayes Arnell Unconditional Unionist Yea
Nevada at-large Delos R. Ashley Republican Yea
Ohio 10 James Mitchell Ashley Republican Yea
Illinois 12 Jehu Baker Republican Yea
Massachusetts 8 John Denison Baldwin Republican Yea
Massachusetts 5 Nathaniel P. Banks Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 17 Abraham Andrews Barker Republican Yea
Vermont 3 Portus Baxter Republican Yea
Michigan 1 Fernando C. Beaman Republican Yea
Missouri 8 John F. Benjamin Republican Yea
New York 2 Teunis G. Bergen Democrat Nay
California 3 John Bidwell Republican Yea
Ohio 16 John Bingham Republican Yea
Maine 3 James G. Blaine Republican Yea
Missouri 2 Henry Taylor Blow Republican Absent
Massachusetts 7 George S. Boutwell Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 6 Benjamin Markley Boyer Democrat Absent
Connecticut 3 Augustus Brandegee Republican Yea
Illinois 7 Henry P. H. Bromwell Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 7 John Martin Broomall Republican Yea
Ohio 9 Ralph Pomeroy Buckland Republican Yea
Ohio 11 Hezekiah S. Bundy Republican Yea
Tennessee 5 William B. Campbell Unionist Nay
New York 7 John Winthrop Chanler Democrat Yea
Ohio 6 Reader W. Clarke Republican Yea
Kansas at-large Sidney Clarke Republican Yea
Wisconsin 3 Amasa Cobb Republican Yea
New York 21 Roscoe Conkling Republican Absent
Indiana 9 Schuyler Colfax Republican Did not vote (speaker)α
Illinois 6 Burton C. Cook Republican Yea
Tennessee 4 Edmund Cooper Unionist Nay
Illinois 8 Shelby Moore Cullom Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 20 Charles Vernon Culver Republican Yea
New York 9 William Augustus Darling Republican Yea
New York 23 Thomas Treadwell Davis Republican Nay
Massachusetts 10 Henry Dawes Republican Absent
Pennsylvania 21 John Littleton Dawson Democrat Nay
Indiana 10 Joseph H. Defrees Republican Yea
Ohio 13 Columbus Delano Republican Yea
Connecticut 1 Henry Deming Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 12 Charles Denison Democrat Absent
Rhode Island 2 Nathan F. Dixon II Republican Yea
New York 8 William E. Dodge Republican Nay
Minnesota 2 Ignatius L. Donnelly Republican Yea
Michigan 6 John F. Driggs Republican Yea
Indiana 6 John F. Driggs Republican Absent
Ohio 17 Ephraim R. Eckley Republican Yea
Ohio 1 Benjamin Eggleston Republican Absent
Wisconsin 4 Charles A. Eldredge Democrat Nay
Massachusetts 1 Thomas D. Eliot Republican Absent
Illinois 2 John F. Farnsworth Republican Yea
Indiana 4 John Hanson Farquhar Republican Yea
Michigan 4 Thomas W. Ferry Republican Yea
Ohio 12 William E. Finck Democrat Nay
Ohio 19 James A. Garfield Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 15 Adam John Glossbrenner Democrat Nay
New York 14 Charles Goodyear Democrat Absent
Iowa 4 Josiah Bushnell Grinnell Republican Yea
New York 15 John Augustus Griswold Republican Absent
New York 16 Robert S. Hale Republican Absent
Kentucky 4 Aaron Harding Democrat Nay
Illinois 4 Abner C. Harding Republican Yea
Maryland 5 Benjamin Gwinn Harris Democrat Absent
New York 28 Roswell Hart Republican Yea
Tennessee 7 Isaac Roberts Hawkins Unionist Nay
Ohio 2 Rutherford B. Hayes Republican Yea
Oregon at-large James Henry Dickey Henderson Republican Yea
California 2 William Higby Republican Yea
Indiana 3 Ralph Hill Republican Yea
Kentucky 3 Elijah Hise Democrat Nay
Missouri 1 John Hogan Democrat Nay
New York 22 Sidney Holmes Republican Yea
Massachusetts 4 Samuel Hooper Republican Yea
New York 26 Giles Hotchkiss Republican Absent
Iowa 6 Asahel W. Hubbard Republican Absent
West Virginia 1 Chester D. Hubbard Unconditional Unionist Yea
New York 19 Demas Hubbard Jr. Republican Absent
Connecticut 4 John Henry Hubbard Republican Yea
New York 13 Edwin N. Hubbell Democrat Absent
Ohio 8 James Randolph Hubbell Republican Nay
New York 17 Calvin T. Hulburd Republican Absent
New York 30 James M. Humphrey Democrat Nay
New York 3 John W. Hunter Democrat Nay
Illinois 5 Ebon C. Ingersoll Republican Yea
Rhode Island 1 Thomas Jenckes Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 11 Philip Johnson Democrat Absent
New York 4 Morgan Jones Democrat Absent
Indiana 5 George Washington Julian Republican Yea
Iowa 5 John A. Kasson Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 4 William D. Kelley Republican Yea
Missouri 4 John R. Kelso Independent Republican Yea
Indiana 2 Michael C. Kerr Democrat Nay
New York 12 John H. Ketcham Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 16 William Koontz Republican Absent
Illinois 13 Andrew J. Kuykendall Republican Yea
New York 20 Addison H. Laflin Republican Absent
West Virginia 2 George R. Latham Unconditional Unionist Nay
Pennsylvania 24 George Van Eman Lawrence Republican Yea
Ohio 4 William Lawrence Republican Yea
Ohio 5 Francis Celeste Le Blond Democrat Absent
Tennessee 8 John W. Leftwich Unionist Nay
Missouri 7 Benjamin F. Loan Republican Yea
Michigan 3 John W. Longyear Republican Yea
Maine 1 John Lynch Republican Yea
Illinois 11 Samuel S. Marshall Democrat Absent
New Hampshire 1 Gilman Marston Republican Yea
New York 18 James M. Marvin Republican Yea
Tennessee 2 Horace Maynard Unconditional Unionist Yea
Missouri 5 Joseph W. McClurg Republican Yea
Maryland 1 Hiram McCullough Democrat Nay
Wisconsin 6 Walter D. McIndoe Republican Absent
Kentucky 9 Samuel McKee Unconditional Unionist Yea
California 1 Donald C. McRuer Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 13 Ulysses Mercur Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 14 George Funston Miller Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 22 James K. Moorhead Republican Yea
Vermont 2 Justin Smith Morrill Republican Yea
New York 25 Daniel Morris Republican Absent
Illinois at-large Samuel Wheeler Moulton Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 3 Leonard Myers Republican Yea
New Jersey 2 William A. Newell Republican Absent
Indiana 1 William E. Niblack Democrat Nay
Delaware at-large John A. Nicholson Democrat Nay
Missouri 3 Thomas E. Noell Republican Nay
Pennsylvania 2 Charles O'Neill Republican Yea
Indiana 8 Godlove Stein Orth Republican Yea
Wisconsin 1 Halbert E. Paine Republican Yea
New Hampshire 3 James W. Patterson Republican Yea
Maine 2 Sidney Perham Republican Yea
Maryland 3 Charles E. Phelps Unconditional Unionist Nay
Maine 5 Frederick Augustus Pike Republican Yea
Ohio 15 Tobias A. Plants Republican Absent
New York 24 Theodore M. Pomeroy Republican Absent
Iowa 2 Hiram Price Republican Yea
New York 10 William Radford Democrat Absent
Pennsylvania 1 Samuel J. Randall Democrat Nay
Kentucky 8 William H. Randall Unconditional Unionist Yea
New York 6 Henry Jarvis Raymond Republican Nay
Massachusetts 3 Alexander H. Rice Republican Yea
Maine 4 John H. Rice Republican Yea
Kentucky 2 Burwell Ritter Democrat Nay
New Jersey 4 Andrew J. Rogers Democrat Absent
New Hampshire 2 Edward H. Rollins Republican Absent
Illinois 9 Lewis W. Ross Democrat Nay
Kentucky 5 Lovell Rousseau Unconditional Unionist Yea
Wisconsin 5 Philetus Sawyer Republican Yea
Ohio 3 Robert C. Schenck Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 19 Glenni William Scofield Republican Yea
Kentucky 7 George S. Shanklin Democrat Nay
Ohio 7 Samuel Shellabarger Republican Absent
New Jersey 3 Charles Sitgreaves Democrat Absent
Wisconsin 2 Ithamar Sloan Republican Absent
Ohio 18 Rufus P. Spalding Republican Nay
New Jersey 1 John F. Starr Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 9 Thaddeus Stevens Republican Yea
Indiana 11 Thomas N. Stilwell Republican Absent
Tennessee 3 William Brickly Stokes Unconditional Unionist Yea
Pennsylvania 10 Myer Strouse Democrat Nay
New York 1 Stephen Taber Democrat Nay
Tennessee 1 Nathaniel Green Taylor Unionist Nay
New York 5 Nelson Taylor Democrat Nay
Pennsylvania 4 Martin Russell Thayer Republican Yea
Maryland 4 Francis Thomas Unconditional Unionist Yea
Maryland 2 John Lewis Thomas Jr. Unconditional Unionist Yea
Illinois 10 Anthony Thornton Democrat Absent
Kentucky 1 Lawrence S. Trimble Democrat Nay
Michigan 5 Rowland E. Trowbridge Republican Yea
Michigan 2 Charles Upson Republican Yea
New York 31 Henry Van Aernam Republican Yea
New York 29 Burt Van Horn Republican Absent
Missouri 6 Robert T. Van Horn Republican Absent
Kentucky 6 Andrew H. Ward Democrat Nay
New York 27 Hamilton Ward Republican Yea
Connecticut 2 Samuel L. Warner Republican Yea
Indiana 7 Henry D. Washburn Republican Yea
Massachusetts 9 William B. Washburn Republican Absent
Illinois 3 Elihu B. Washburne Republican Yea
Ohio 14 Martin Welker Republican Yea
Illinois 1 John Wentworth Republican Yea
West Virginia 3 Kellian Whaley Unconditional Unionist Nay
Pennsylvania 23 Thomas Williams Republican Yea
Iowa 1 James F. Wilson Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 18 Stephen Fowler Wilson Republican Yea
Minnesota 1 William Windom Republican Yea
New York 11 Charles H. Winfield Democrat Nay
Vermont 1 Frederick E. Woodbridge Republican Absent
New Jersey 5 Edwin R. V. Wright Democrat Absent
Notes:
Schuyler Colfax was serving as Speaker of the House. Per House rules, "the Speaker is not required to vote in ordinary legislative proceedings, except when such vote would be decisive or when the House is engaged in voting by ballot."[12]

Inquiry

The resulting inquiry lasted eleven months, saw 89 witnesses interviewed, and saw 1,200 pages of testimony compiled.[14] Among those that appeared before the House Committee on the Judiciary as part of the inquiry were John Covode (who urged impeachment)[15] Joseph Scott Fullerton,[2][16] Joseph S. Fowler, Edwin Stanton, Lafayette C. Baker,[8] William Barclay Napton, Rufus Saxton, and Thomas W. Conway,[2] and Jeremiah S. Black.[17] Included among those interviewed were men pardoned by Johnson and men he had fired.[2] John Evans and Jerome B. Chaffee gave testimony related to Johnson's veto of a bill for the admission of Colorado as a state.[18]

President Johnson was reported to have been angered by the authorization of the inquiry.[2] He kept secret tabs on the inquiry through the Pinkerton Detective Agency.[1] Per the findings of Hinds’ Precedents of the House of Representatives, it does not appear that Johnson sought to be represented by counsel before the committee during the inquiry.[19]

Members of House Committee on the Judiciary during the inquiry

39th Congress

In the 39th Congress the House Committee on the Judiciary consisted of seven Republicans, one Democrat, and one Unconditional Unionist.

Members of the House Committee on the Judiciary during the 39th United States Congress[8][20]
Republican Party Democratic Party Unconditional Union Party

40th Congress

In the 40th Congress, the House Committee on the Judiciary consisted of seven Republicans and two Democrats. All of the committee members from the previous Congress returned to the committee for the 40th Congress, with the two exceptions of Democrat Sydenham Elnathan Ancona and Republican Daniel Morris, who had both departed the United States House of Representatives. In their place were two new committee members, Democrat Charles A. Eldredge and Samuel S. Marshall and Republican John C. Churchill. Committee member Francis Thomas, who had been elected to the previous congress as a member of the Unconditional Union Party, was now elected to the 40th Congress as a member of the Republican Party.

Members of the House Committee on the Judiciary during the 40th United States Congress[19]
Republican Party Democratic Party

Initial investigation during the 39th Congress

In order to comply with Ashley's impeachment resolution, the Judiciary Committee began to slowly conduct an impeachment inquiry, gathering evidence from witnesses in closed sessions.[1][2][21]

On January 14, 1867, the resolution that had been proposed by Benjamin F. Loan on the inquiry was established was finally debated by the full House. Loan gave a long speech to the House in which he used language that was largely interpreted as accusing Johnson of complicity in the assassination of President Lincoln, and which further accused him of participation in a conspiracy to capture the United States Government in the interest of those involved in the southern secession. The resolution was again considered on January 28 and February 4 due to a motion by Thomas Jenckes to refer the resolution to the Committee on the Judiciary. This motion to refer Loan's resolution to the committee already tasked with addressing a prospective impeachment was ultimately agreed to by the House.[19][22]

The allegations of misconduct given in the testimony taken by the committee was largely unsupported by evidence. The committee investigated a myriad of allegations against Johnson. Among the matters investigated and for which testimony was taken was the question of whether Johnson played a role in the removal of eighteen missing pages from Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth's personal journal.[4][2] It was speculated whether these pages might have implicated Johnson in the conspiracy behind the assassination. Another allegation investigated was that Johnson had used intimidation or patronage appointments as influence to prevent the admission of the Colorado territory as a state. The committee also investigated whether Johnson had provided pardons to deserters from West Virginia. It also investigated whether or not the commission for the United States' minister to Sweden had been correctly issued. Another matter investigated was the New Orleans massacre of 1866. Also investigated were allegations of fraud in New York City related to import taxes. One allegation investigated (that Johnson had asked the attorney general of the United States whether he believed the Congress was perhaps illegitimate due to the lack of representation for unreconstructed southern states) turned out to be a story fabricated by a journalist.[4]

The early hearings by the Judiciary Committee were an outlandish affair and were unsuccessful in providing substantive testimony of malfeasance.[23] The Judiciary Committee's first closed-door hearings had been held February 6, 1867, with testimony from Detective Lafayette C. Baker. Baker was famous for having tracked John Wilkes Booth down after Booth assassinated President Lincoln. Baker's testimony set the tone for the series of evidence-devoid allegations that would be delivered in various testimonies, with Baker implication Johnson in several crimes without providing any evidence. He first implicated Johnson in treason, testifying of a wartime letter that he claimed he had once came into possession of on a date he could not recall (but no longer held possession of) which he alleged had been sent from Johnson to Confederate President Jefferson Davis. Baker did not know the contents of the letter. He also declined to disclose who he had received the letter from. However, he testified that he believed that the letter's existence implied that Johnson would "go with" the Confederates. Baker next implicated Johnson with, among other things, involvement with prostitution and bribery. Baker testified about Lucy Cobb, "a disreputable woman, or, in other words, woman of the town" (prostitute), who he had prevented from visiting the White House the previous year. He testified that had disclosed to him that Johnson had secret methods for communicating with "his friends in the South" and that she was herself involved in a trade of selling presidential pardons to confederates.[4][23]

The committee investigated whether Johnson had improper connections to southerners that had been sold back railroad assets that had been seized by the Union Army during the Civil War. The possibility that corrupt personal favoritism by Johnson had been involved in these sales was explored. However, Secretary of War Edwin Stanton (well-regarded by Radical Republicans) took responsibility for these sales. Stanton told the committee that he believed the sales were justified because the federal government did not have the know-how needed to successfully run the railroads and the nation's post-war economic recovery required that the railroads be placed into the management of individuals who had the knowledge to successfully operate them.[4]

The Judiciary Committee ran out of time to complete its inquiry, with the 39th Congress expiring, However, the committee ruled that they had received “sufficient testimony” to continue their investigation in the new 40th Congress.[1] March 2, 1867, two days before the end of the 39th congress, the committee recommended that the matter be further reviewed in the next congress, with committee member James F. Wilson presenting this recommendation to the whole of congress.[7][24] The full House was then read the committee's majority report which argued that, in the expiring hours of the 39th congress, no affirmative report could be properly considered, and opined that it was "inexpedient to submit any conclusion," with the committee having not fully investigated all charges against the president.[8] This report had been approved by the committee's Republican chairman James F. Wilson, as well as Republican committee members George S. Boutwell, Burton C. Cook, William Lawrence, Daniel Morris, Thomas Williams, and Frederick E. Woodbridge and Unconditional Unionist committee member Francis Thomas.[8][20] The sole Democratic committee member, Sydenham Elnathan Ancona, submitted a minority report against a continuation of the inquiry. Both reports were ordered printed and laid on the table.[8]

40th Congress' renewal of the inquiry

The 40th Congress consented to the recommendation that the Judiciary Committee made near the end of the 39th Congress, and ordered the committee to continue its inquiry.[25] At the start of the 40th Congress, Congressman Benjamin Buter unsuccessfully urged the Republican caucus to create a special panel to continue the impeachment inquiry. But Congressman James Mitchell Ashley managed to successfully have the inquiry continue in the Judiciary Committee.[4]

On March 7, 1867, the third day of the 40th Congress, Ashley introduced a resolution calling for the impeachment investigation by the Judiciary Committee to be continue.[7][19][26][27]

The resolution read,

Whereas the House of Representatives of the thirty-ninth Congress adopted on 7th of January, 1867, a resolution authorizing an inquiry into certain charges preferred against the President of the United States; and whereas the Judiciary Committee, to whom said resolution and charges were referred, with authority to investigate the same, were unable for want of time to complete said investigation before the expiration of the thirty-ninth Congress; and whereas in the report submitted by said Judiciary Committe on the 2d of March, they declared that the evidence taken is of such a character as to justify and demand a continuation of the investigation by this Congress: Therefore,
Be it resolved by the House of Representatives, That the Judiciary Committee, when appointed, be, and they are hereby, instructed to continue the investigation authorized in said resolution of January 7, 1867, and that they have power to sent for persons and papers, and to administer the customary oath to witnesses, and that the committee shall have authority to sit during the sessions of the House, and during any recess which Congress or this House may take.
Resolved, that the Speaker of the House be requested to appoint the Committee on the Judiciary forthwith and that the committee so appointed be directed to take charge of the testimony taken by the committee of the last Congress; and that said committee have power to appoint a clerk at a compensation not to exceed six dollars per day, and employ the necessary stenographer.
Resolved further, That the Clerk of the House of Representatives be directed to pay out of the contingent fund of the House, on the order of the committee on the Judiciary, such sum or sums of money as may be required to enable the said committee to prosecute the investigation above directed, and such other investigations as it may be ordered to make.[26][27]

John Covode proposed an amendment to the resolution that was understood to have been authored by Benjamin Butler. The amendment would have instead had the continuation of the inquiry be run by a select committee of thirteen members on which the seven members of the Judiciary Committee would all serve. John F. Farnsworth argued against this, arguing that the inquiry should continue to be run through the Judiciary Committee. Citing precedents in the Parliament of the United Kingdom, and declaring that no insult was intended to the Judiciary Committee, Butler argued in favor of a special committee overseeing the inquiry. James G. Blaine argued against moving the inquiry to a special committee, arguing that doing so would be considered a rebuke to the Judiciary Committee. John Martin Broomall voiced similar opposition. John A. Logan voiced support for a special committee, arguing that the Judiciary Committee had no prescriptive right to be handling the matter. John Bingham countered Logan's argument by claiming that, in the eight precedents of federal impeachment cases in the United States, all but one had seen the matter referred to the Judiciary Committee, and that the one exception had led to a ridiculous blunder. After this debate, an overwhelming majority voted to reject the proposed amendment.[28][29]

The House adopted Ashley's resolution to renew the investigation without any opposition after both debate and the defeat (by 33–119) of a motion to table it.[7][19][26][27]

Right after the 40th Congress voted to reauthorize the impeachment inquiry, Speaker Colfax appointed the membership of a number of House committees, including the Committee on the Judiciary.[27] Butler, a strong proponent of impeachment, unsuccessfully requested to be added to the Judiciary Committee, but John Bingham strongly objected to this.[2]

Continued investigation in the 40th Congress

The 40th Congress' House Committee on the Judiciary resumed the inquiry started by the committee in the previous congress.[1] They held month of closed-door hearings.[1]

Johnson and his allies grew more and more frustrated with the impeachment inquiry, which kept expanding in scope.[4] When the committee began investigating Johnson's finances, Johnson irately reacted,

I have had a son killed, a son-in-law die during the last battle at Nashville, another son has thrown himself away, a second son-in law is in no better condition. I think I have sorrow enough without having my bank account examined by a committee of Congress."[2]

In March 1867, Radical Republicans, dissatisfied with the slow pace of the inquiry, attempted to bypass that process outlined in Ashley's resolution and instead secure Republican caucus approval for immediate impeachment.[3] John Bingham and James F. Wilson (the chairman of the House Committee on the Judiciary) killed this effort by the Radical Republicans.[3][21] By mid-1867, impeachment was regularly promoted by chief opponents of Johnson in Congress.[30]

Judiciary Committe vote against impeachment (June 1867)

On June 3, 1867, in a 5–4 vote, the committee voted against sending an impeachment resolution to the full House, with three moderate Republican members joining two Democratic members of the committee in voting against doing so.[1][6] They, however, also voted in support of censuring Johnson.[2] On July 10, 1867, James F. Wilson reported verbally on behalf of the committee, by its direction, that they anticipated being able to report on or after October 16. He also stated that, as it then stood, five members were of the opinion that high crimes and misdemeanors warranting impeachment had not occurred, while the remaining four members believed that they had.[19] It appeared that Johnson had successfully avoided impeachment.[23]

House Judiciary Committee vote sending on an impeachment resolution to the full House[1][19]
June 3, 1867 Party Total votes
Democratic Republican
Yea 0 4 4
Nay  Y 2 3 5
Vote by member
District Member Party Vote
Massachusetts 7 George S. Boutwell Republican Yea
New York 22 John C. Churchill Republican Nay
Wisconsin 4 Charles A. Eldredge Democrat Nay
Ohio 4 William Lawrence Republican Yea
Illinois 11 Samuel S. Marshall Democrat Nay
Maryland 4 Francis Thomas Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 23 Thomas Williams Republican Yea
Vermont 1 Frederick E. Woodbridge Republican Nay
Iowa 1 James F. Wilson Republican Nay

Inquiry resumed, Johnson antagonizes Republicans

The House Committee on the Judiciary had not delivered a report to the full congress, meaning that they had not yet formally closed their inquiry.[6][21][31] Johnson would undertake actions that further antagonized Republicans. This would ultimately cause increased Republican anxiety over Johnson's obstruction and lead to the Judiciary Committee reversing their majority stance on impeachment.[23] The first of these actions came when Henry Stanbery (the attorney general of the United States) issued at the request of Johnson a legal opinion which, combined with an earlier opinion issued at the request of Johnson in March, put forth an interoperation of the law that decreased the power of military district commanders in the South. The Reconstruction Acts that had been passed over the vetoes of Johnson had created five military districts in the South and had given broad powers to the commanders of those districts to enforce the Reconstruction Acts. However, the attorney general's legal opinions found that the commanders had no power to remove local officials who acted against congressional policies. The legal opinion also undermined restrictions on former confederates voting.[23]

The committee would resume collecting evidence for the impeachment inquiry.[23] On July 17, 1867, the House agreed to an amended version of a resolution by John Covode that instructed the House Committee on the Judiciary to, in their investigation, inquire into new a charge levied against the president. The new charge was that Johnson had, allegedly at the request of Lincoln assassination conspirator John Surratt's counsel, given a full pardon to Confederate Stephen F. Cameron. The resolution instructed the committee to look into this action, which it declared would demonstrate Johnson's "sympathy with the men who murdered the President" if true. The resolution also instructed the committee to, in the first week of the second session of the 40th Congress, report evidence to the House on this together with the testimony already collected in the impeachment inquiry.[19] The second session of the 40th Congress would begin on December 2, 1867.[32]

Over the 1867 summer congressional recess (which lasted from July 21 through November 20, 1867[32]), sentiments among Republicans shifted further with more Republicans coming to side in favor of impeachment due to continued acts by Johnson that antagonized Republicans. One such act was Johnson's suspension of Secretary of War Edwin Stanton and replacement of him with Ulysses S. Grant as secretary of war ad interim on August 12, 1867, taking advantage of a loophole in the Tenure of Office Act created by the Senate being in recess.[31] Another act was Johnson's subsequent firing of Generals Philip Sheridan (who had been in charge of Texas and Louisiana), which was soon followed by his August 12, 1867 firing of Daniel Sickles (who had been in charge of North Carolina and South Carolina), which further contributed to Republican furor.[21][31] Johnson had fired them against Grant's advice. Both Sheridan and Sickles had acted in their offices to protect policies extending civil rights to African Americans.[31]

During an 1867 summer meeting, held in response to provocative actions taken by Johnson, more conservative Republicans were able to kill an effort by Radical Republicans to call for an October session of congress dealing with impeachment.[3] This effort, led by Radical Republican Representatives George S. Boutwell, Benjamin Butler, and Thaddeus Stevens and Senators Charles D. Drake and Charles Sumner would have ended the 1867 summer congressional recess. The promoters of this hoped that they could act against intrigue by Johnson and continue to push for his impeachment in the special session. However, Conservative Republicans, led by Representatives John Bingham and James G. Blaine and Senators Lyman Trumbull and William P. Fessenden succeeded in blocking this effort.[21]

In October 1867, rumors had been published in newspapers that the committee's stance on impeachment had changed. The rumors were characterized as baseless by two of the three moderate Republicans that had previously voted against impeachment.[33] Rumors particularly focused on Churchill and Wilson as individuals that had changed their positions. These were fueled by pro-impeachment committee member William Lawrence claiming to the press that it was true that two non-specified members had switched their positions to now favor impeachment.[34] However, on October 25, John C. Churchill released a statement in which he denied have shared with anyone anything that indicated that he had changed his mind.[33] On October 31, James F. Wilson denied rumors that he had written a correspondence declaring favor for sending an impeachment resolution to the full House. However, Wilson did not indicate his position.[35] Because the Judiciary Committee left its proceedings confidential, when Congress reconvened after the recess, most congressmen were still under the belief that the pending majority report would be against impeachment, just as the committee had previously sided in their earlier July vote.[36]

Judiciary Committee vote in favor of impeachment (November 1867)

 
John C. Churchill's change of vote moved the Judiciary Committee 5–4 in favor of impeachment

Despite having stated in October that he had given nobody any indication of a change of mind, in actuality, John C. Churchill had indeed changed his mind in favor of impeachment by the time Congress' recess ended in November. Consequentially, on November 25, 1867, the House Committee on the Judiciary voted in a 5–4 vote to recommend impeachment proceedings, and to submit its report to the House.[6][31] The majority approved a resolution which read, "Resolved, That Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, be impeached of high crimes and misdemeanors."[19][37] The minority on the committee that opposed impeachment had instead proposed ending the inquiry without an impeachment resolution by sending instead the House a resolution that would have read, "Resolved, That the Committee on the Judiciary be discharged from the further consideration of the proposed impeachment of the President of the United States, and that the subject be laid upon the table."[19]

House Judiciary Committee vote on recommending impeachment and sending an impeachment resolution to the full House[1][19]
November 25, 1867 Party Total votes
Democratic Republican
Yea  Y 0 5 5
Nay 2 2 4
Vote by member
District Member Party Vote
Massachusetts 7 George S. Boutwell Republican Yea
New York 22 John C. Churchill Republican Yea
Wisconsin 4 Charles A. Eldredge Democrat Nay
Ohio 4 William Lawrence Republican Yea
Illinois 11 Samuel S. Marshall Democrat Nay
Maryland 4 Francis Thomas Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 23 Thomas Williams Republican Yea
Vermont 1 Frederick E. Woodbridge Republican Nay
Iowa 1 James F. Wilson Republican Nay

After the committee vote became public, Churchill published a lengthy letter in The New York Times explaining the reason for his change of mind,[31] writing in part,

The President in the exercise of his constitutional powers, by such changes of military commanders, or such withdrawal of troops from the reconstructed States, or such other acts as should destroy the confidence of loyalists and freedmen in prompt military protection in the exercise of their suffrage, at any time before the new State Governments shall have been established, and shall have set in operation a machinery of their own for the protection of their citizens, would make it impossible to carry a single Southern State in accordance with the views of a majority of Congress.[31]

Committee reports

The committee submitted three reports to the full House, a majority report and two dissenting minority reports.[31]

Majority report

 
Thomas Williams wrote the committee's majority report in favor of impeachment

The majority report in favor of impeachment was written by Radical Republican committee member Thomas Williams and listed seventeen instances in which he argued Johnson had reached the threshold of impeachment. The report wrote that the primary issue to fault Johnson with was, "the great salient point of accusation, standing out in the foreground, and challenging the attention of the country, is the usurpation of power, which involves, of course, a violation of law." He argued that Johnson had undermined Congress.[31]

The majority report was poorly written, with an unfocused and rambling style that undermined what valid points it made. Harper's Weekly opined that it did not, "inspire general confidence". The Chicago Tribune, which was sympathetic to the Radical Republican cause, even opined that the charges made in it were, "inferential and circumstantial". The New York Times believed that the report actually helped the president by debunking persistent rumors that he had been involved in the conspiracy to assassinate Lincoln.[4]

The report characterized Johnson as having undermined the United States Congress with the intent of empowering the former Southern rebels. In the Report, Williams wrote that Johnson had been acting in the interest of,

The one great the purpose of reconstructing the shattered governments of the Rebel states in accordance with his own will, in the interests of the great criminals who carried them into the rebellion, and in such a way as to deprive the people of the loyal States of all chances of indemnity for the past or security for the future.[31][38]

The report alleged that Johnson had acted in the interest of empowering the former Southern rebels,

By pardoning their offenses, resorting lands, and bringing them back, their hearts unrepentant, and their hands yet red with the blood of our people, into a condition where they could once more embarrass and defy, if not absolutely rule the government in which they had vainly endeavored to destroy.[31][38]

The report characterized the alleged intent of Johnson to empower the former Southern rebels in such a manner as being, "the great master-key which unlocks and interprets all of....[Johnson's] special acts of mal-administration."[31][38]

The report levied the following seventeen charges against Johnson:

  1. That Johnson, "assuming it to be his duty to execute the constitutional guaranty," had worked to (without the consent of the legislature) provide new governments for the former Confederate states as he pleased, and sought, "to force them into the Union against the will of Congress and the people of the loyal States, by the authority and patronage of his high office."[19]
  2. That Johnson had committed malfeasance by,
    1. Creating offices not provisioned for under the law, and appointing "men who were notoriously disqualified to take the test oath" to those offices without the advice and consent of the United States Senate.[19]
    2. Acting, "in clear violation of law," by using funds belonging to the United States Department of War to pay for the expenses of his own work and for salaries (at rates he had decided upon) of the holders of aforementioned non-provisioned offices.[19]
  3. That Johnson had ordered those he appointed to positions that he created to appropriate government property and to levy taxes, "from the conquered people" in order to pay expenses related to their offices.[19]
  4. That Johnson had "without equivalent" returned railroads and rolling stock that the Union Army had captured to their former Confederate stockholders and had, at great government expense, constructed and renovated Southern railroads.[19]
  5. That Johnson had,
    1. "Without authority of law", sold the aforementioned railroad stockholders "at a private valuation, and on a long credit, without any security whatever" a large amount of rolling stock and machinery that had been purchased by and belonged to the United States government.[19]
    2. Following numerous defaults by those he had sold this rolling stock and machinery to, helped to allow them to pay debt they owed to other creditors by postponing their debt due to the United States government.[19]
    3. Issued arrears of interest on a large amount of bonds of the companies guaranteed by the State of Tennessee, which Johnson himself held a large amount of.[19]
  6. That Johnson had,
    1. Given back former Confederate owners large amounts of cotton and other property that had been seized by the United States Treasury[19]
    2. Worked to pay back proceeds of actual sales of such property, "in utter contempt of the law" by directing the Treasury to make such payments and by directing the aggrieved parties to seek remedy in the Courts, thereby violating "the true meaning and spirit" of the Constitutional clause containing the language that, "no money shall be drawn from the treasury but in consequences of appropriations made by law."[19]
  7. That Johnson had "to the great detriment of the public" abused his pardon powers by releasing "the most active and formidable" leaders of the Confederacy, and had sought to restore to them their property and means of influence in the hopes of receiving their assistance in furthering his policy. Also that, Johnson had also been "substantially delegating that power for the same objects to his provisional governors."[19]
  8. The Johnson had abused his pardon powers in issuing the simultaneous full pardons of 193 deserters, and the restoring of their "justly forfeited claims" to arrears of pay from the Government, and that Johnson had done this without proper inquiry or sufficient evidence.[19]
  9. That Johnson had,
    1. "Refused to enforce the laws passed by Congress for the suppression of the rebellion, and punishment of those who gave it comfort and support," in directing proceedings against delinquents and their property[19]
    2. Completely "obstructed the course of public justice," by either prohibiting the start of such legal proceedings or (if they had already commenced) staying them indefinitely or ordering the absolute discontinuance of such proceedings.[19]
  10. That Johnson had, "further obstructed the course of public imprisonment" for Clement Claiborne Clay ("an important state prisoner"), had forbidden Clay's arrest in proceedings instituted against him for treason and conspiracy in the State of Alabama, and had ordered property that had been seized from Clay by a United States district attorney to be restored to him.[19]
  11. That Johnson had abused his Constitutional appointment power by,
    1. Removing, "on system and to the great prejudice of public," a large number of "meritorious public officers" solely because they refused to support Johnson's claim that he had a right to reorganize and restore the former Confederate states on his own terms, and because they had instead favored honoring, "the jurisdiction and authority of Congress" on such matters.[19]
    2. Making recess appointments of people that he had previously nominated for office, and whose previous nominations been rejected by the United States Senate.[19]
  12. That Johnson had, against the law, exercised powers to dispense by commissioning individuals who were "notoriously disqualified by their participation in the rebellion from taking the oath of office required by act of Congress" as revenue officers and to offices that had not been legislatively provided for, and had allowed them to take such offices and exercise their duties, and paid them salaries for their work.[19]
  13. That Johnson had, in accordance with his public declaration that he, "would veto all measures whenever they came to him", systematically vetoed, "all important measures of Congress looking to the reorganization and restoration of rebel States." That he had done so with, "no other reasons than a determination to prevent the exercise of the undoubted power and jurisdiction of Congress over a question that was cognizable exclusively by them."[19]
  14. That Johnson had, "brought the patronage of his office into conflict the with freedom of elections," by permitting and encouraging his official retainers to travel the nation, attending political convention and addressing crowds instead of performing the jobs they were receiving "high salaries" for.[19]
  15. That Johnson had, "exerted all the influence of his position" to prevent the residents of the former Confederate states from accepting terms that Congress had offered them, and had "neutralized to a large extend the effects of the national victory by impressing them with the opinion that the Congress of the United States was bloodthirsty and implacable and that their only hope was in adhering to him."[19]
  16. That Johnson had,
    1. Through his, "undue tenderness and transparent partiality" to Confederates caused widespread, "oppression and bloodshed".[19]
    2. Encouraged New Orleans massacre of 1866 ("the murder of loyal citizens in New Orleans by a Confederate mob pretending to act as a police") through hireling correspondence with its leaders.[19]
    3. Encouraged the New Orleans massacre of 1866 by denouncing "the exercise of the constitutional right of a political convention to assemble peacefully in that city" as being an act of treason for which violent suppression was justified
    4. Encouraged the New Orleans massacre of 1866 by commanding the military to assist in forcing the dispersal of those attending the convention, rather than preventing the forced dispersal of convention attendees.[19]
  17. That Johnson was, "guilty of acts calculated, if not intended, to subvert the Government of the United States by denying that the Thirty-ninth Congress was a constitutional body and fostering a spirit of disaffection and disobedience to the law and rebellion against its authority by endeavoring. in public speeches, to bring it to odium and contempt."[19]

Minority reports

One minority report was agreed to by the two Democratic members (Marshall and Eldredge), while the other was agreed to by the two moderate Republicans that had voted against recommending impeachment (Woodbridge and Wilson).[19][31][18]

The Democratic minority report, was written by Marshall, and dissented from all criticism of Johnson.[19][18] The Republican minority report, written by Wilson, wrote that, while they were against impeachment, they believed Johnson, "deserves the censure and condemnation of every well-disposed citizen." It argued that the Congress should wait and let Americans remove Johnson from office in the 1868 presidential election.[19][31][18] It declared that Johnson, "has disappointed the hopes and expectations of those who placed him in power. He had betrayed their confidence and joined hands with their enemies." However it also declared, "judge him politically, we must condemn him. But the day of political impeachments would be a sad one for this country.".[19] In the report, Wilson also wrote that, "political unfitness and incapacity must be tried at the ballot box, not in the high court of impeachment."[4][18]

The Republican minority report argued that impeachment required a criminal offense and that, in impeachment trials, the Senate acted as a court, "of special criminal jurisdiction," and therefore needed to follow legal forms. He argued that impeachment trials were not to be political procedures. Without evidence, he argued that judicial rules of evidence were required to be applied in Senate impeachment trials and that, in such trials, the Senate could only be able to try offenses, "known to the Constitution, or to the laws of the United States." Wilson made weak arguments in support of this, often using incomplete logic.[4][18] Wilson's Republican majority report also gave effective rebuttals of the factual charges issued in the majority report.[4]

While the majority report had found American precedents to support its position that impeachment did not require a legal crime to be committed, Wilson argued the practical considerations of this theory in the Republican minority report. He voiced concern that, if impeachment were entirely a political process, it might mean that a president could be impeached merely for policies that are unpopular with their opponents.[4]

Impeachment resolution, majority and minority reports, and testimony reported to the House

Later on November 25, 1867, on behalf of the committee, Boutwell submitted to the House the majority report and the impeachment resolution.[8][39] It was only then that those not on the committee learned that the committee had decided to support impeachment.[31][36] The impeachment resolution reported by the committee simply read, "Resolved, That Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, be impeached of high crimes and misdemeanors."[39]

Boutwell then submitted to the House the testimony taken by the committee in its inquiry. After this, the minority reports were submitted by James F. Wilson and Samuel S. Marshall[39] The House then approved a motion by Boutwell to have the reports printed together and to postpone further consideration of the subject of impeachment until December 4, 1867.[39] It was only after the reports were published that those not on the committee on found out that the change of vote in the House Committee on the Judiciary was due to Churchill having changed his stance on impeachment.[31][36]

House defeat of impeachment resolution

On December 5, 1867, the House brought the Committee on the Judiciary's impeachment recommendation to the floor for consideration, and discussion was thereafter held on the impeachment resolution reported by the Judiciary Committee, with George S. Boutwell presenting a case for impeachment and James F. Wilson presenting a case against it.[40][41]

While conservative Republicans were confident that they would defeat impeachment, Radical Republicans were confident that they could succeed in securing impeachment.[36] However, in the Judiciary Committee's vote, two of the committee's seven Republican members (each being two of the committee's three moderate Republicans) had opposed impeachment. This underscored the reality that Republicans remained divided on whether Johnson had committed conduct worthy of impeachment, with many moderate Republicans still having little appetite for an impeachment.[31]

At the time, there was a disagreement between Radical Republicans and conservative Republicans as to what constituted a "high crime and misdemeanor", which, along with treason and bribery constituted the sole grounds for which impeachment was allowed under the United States Constitution. Conservatives supported the theory put forth by the defense in a number of earlier federal impeachments that government officials only could be impeached for what constituted an indictable violation of criminal statutes or common law. Their support for this theory at that time largely arose from fears for the institutional and political effects impeachment would have on the nation's stability. Radical Republicans, on the other hand, believed in a more broad view on what "high crimes and misdemeanors" encompassed, believing that the nation's framers had intended for "malfeasance, nonfeasance, and, in some cases, misfeasance," to be the subject of impeachment.[21] They cited English precedents, earlier American impeachments, and a great consensus among most early nineteenth-century American constitutional commentators to support this view. They also cited the views of the likes of early American legal scholars such as William Duer, James Kent, William Rawle, and Joseph Story, as well as the authors of The Federalist Papers.[21]

George S. Boutwell's argument in support of impeachment

 
George S. Boutwell delivered the argument in favor of impeachment

The House Committee on the Judiciary's Radical Republicans selected, from their ranks, to have George S. Boutwell argue the case for impeachment to the house. He made a four hour presentation, stretched over two legislative days (December 5 and 6, 1867), which historian Michael Les Benedict later described as, "the clearest, most eloquent, and most convincing argument for the liberal view of the impeachment power".[40] His speech largely focused on the question of whether the president's activities were legally impeachable.[36] The speech lasted two hours.[42]

Boutwell argued that there needed to be a broad interpretation of impeachment powers. He assailed the notion that impeachment required a clear violation of the law in order to be applied. Instead, citing British precedent and debates from the Constitutional Convention, he argued that impeachment was intended to be used in instances where public trust had been violated, and that impeachment was to be used when an officer refused to "faithfully execute" their office. He argued that America could not wait until the next presidential election to remove an unsuitable president.[40] Boutwell argued that impeachment power, "is subject to no revision or control", but is rather solely to be guided by the judgement of the House of Representatives.[36]

Boutwell also argued that Johnson had committed flagrant misdeeds that approached criminality in his subversion of the law and refusal to uphold the law, and therefore, his actions had been clearly impeachable.[40] He cited Johnson's veto of the Reconstruction Acts which the congress had overwhelmingly passed.[40] He cited Johnson's urging for southern states under federal control to refuse to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.[40] He also cited Johnson's creation of provisional governorships without authorization, and appointment of provisional governors that Boutwell claimed were ineligible to take official loyalty oaths due to their participation in the Confederacy.[40] Citing these and other actions, Boutwell alleged that Johnsons actions were intended to return Confederates to power in the state and national governments against the judgement of Congress. Boutwell argued, "can there be any doubt as to his purpose, or doubt as to the criminality of his purpose and his respojnsibility under the Constitution?"[36]

Boutwell also framed a portion of his argument around the notion that impeachment could stop Johnson from interfering in the southern states during the 1868 presidential election, citing specific concerns that Johnson could suppress the vote of African Americans.[40]

Boutwell argued,

"To this House is given under the Constitution the sole power of impeachment; and this power of impeachment furnishes the only means by which we can secure the execution of the laws, and those of our fellow-citizens who desire the administration of the law ought to sustain this House while it executes the great law which is in its hands and which is nowhere else, while it is performing a high and solemn duty resting upon it by which that man who has been the chief violator of the law shall be removed, and without which there can be no execution of the law anywhere.....If we neglect or refuse to use our powers when the case arises demanding decisive action, the Government ceases to be a Government of laws and becomes a Government of men."[40]

James F. Wilson's argument against impeachment

 
House Committee on the Judiciary Chairman James F. Wilson delivered the argument against impeachment

After Boutwell's presentation, James F. Wilson, chairman of the House Committee on the Judiciary took to the floor to argue against impeachment. Wilson argued that while Johnson was the "worst of presidents", his opposition to the positions of the Republican Party was not illegal. Wilson argued that, despite Boutwell's assertion that it did, the House did not have lone authority to determine what constitutes an "impeachable offense".[40] Wilson warned the that a broad interpretation of impeachment powers, as Boutwell championed, in theory could allow the House to effectively dictate the policy of presidents.[40] He spent half of his speech arguing that impeachment was only reserved for indictable crimes, and the other half attacking those who opposed this position.[36]

Wilson characterized the part of Boutwell's argument that had argued impeachment could stop Johnson from interfering in the southern states during the 1868 presidential election as Boutwell effectively arguing the House should be allowed to impeach Johnson for something he could do, rather than some thing he had done. Wilson argued, "this would lead us even beyond the conscience of this house."[9][40]

Wilson also argued that much of Boutwell's argument was inconsistent with the majority committee report. Indeed, Boutwell’s speech had a number of inconsistencies with the case made in the majority report. Boutwell's speech, at one point, had dismissed English precedents as irrelevant to impeachment under the United States constitution, despite the fact that the majority report cited English precedents. Boutwell had also argued against the minority's stance by characterizing their view as one under which an officer who committed murder in such a manner that they would be outside of United States court jurisdiction would be immune to impeachment. However, the majority report had explicitly stated a belief that murder would not be an impeachable offense, as it would not directly relate to officeholding. Michael Les Benedict has opined, "Wilson's blunt analysis of the inconstancies between Boutwell's brilliant speech and William's mediocre report did tremendous damage to the impeachers' case."[36][42]

In his closing remarks, Wilson asked, "if we cannot arraign the president for a specific crime, for what are we to proceed against him?...If we cannot state upon paper a specific crime, how are we to carry this case to the Senate for a trial?"[9]

House vote on the impeachment resolution

 
A copy of a record recording the vote

After finishing his speech on December 6, 1867, Wilson motioned to lay the resolution on the table.[36][42] This motion angered the many Radical Republicans that had prepared speeches of their own on the question of impeachment and felt that a successful motion to table would allow Republicans to evade the question of impeachment, going without a direct vote on the matter. Several Radical Republicans filibustered the motion. On December 7, 1867 Radical Republicans reached a quid pro quo agreement with Wilson in which they would end their filibuster and he would withdraw his motion to table the resolution in return for the House proceeding immediately to a vote on the resolution, rather than allowing further debate.[42] As a result of this, general debate was not permitted on the resolution before it was voted on, with debate instead being limited to the speeches that had been delivered by Boutwell and Wilson.[19][42]

On December 7, the House voted against impeachment by a margin of 57–108, with 66 Republicans, 39 Democrats, and one member congressmen of other party affiliations voting against impeachment; and with all votes for impeachment coming from Republicans.[36][40][43] 22 members of congress were absent (17 Republicans, 4 Democrats, and 1 independent Republican). Speaker Schuyler Colfax (a Republican) did not vote,[43] as House rules do not require the speaker to vote during ordinary legislative proceedings, unless their vote would be decisive or if the vote is being cast by ballot.[12]

One motivating factor for Republicans' decision to vote against impeachment may have been the successes Democrats had in the 1867 elections, including winning control of the Ohio General Assembly, as well as other 1867 election outcomes, such as voters in Connecticut, Minnesota, New York, and Ohio turning down propositions to grant African Americans suffrage by large margins.[31][44][45][46] Other concerning election results included the very narrow margin-of-victory with which the Republican nominee won the 1867 Ohio gubernatorial election.[36] Only in the states of Michigan and Kentucky did Republicans improve upon their 1866 election performances in 1867, while the remaining eighteen states with elections saw Republicans lose sizable ground over the previous elections.[36] Michael Les Benedict has suggested that, as a result of these election results, in the Republican caucus, "the centrists, who might have favored impeachment had the elections demonstrated radical strength," were left, "divided, most of them opposing impeachment."[36]

Michael Les Benedict's analysis shows correlation between congressmen's votes in this impeachment vote and voting records in the 40th Congress votes on the matter of currency expansion, as well as voting records on Reconstruction issues during the 39th Congress.[36]

House vote on the impeachment resolution[43][47]
December 7, 1867 Party Total votes
Democratic Republican Conservatives Conservative Republicans Independent Republicans
Yea 0 57 0 0 0 57
Nay  Y 39 66 1 1 1 108
Comparative bar chart
Vote Vote total
"Yea" votes
57
"Nay" votes
108
Absent/not voting
23
Vote by member[43]
District Member Party Vote
Kentucky 8 George Madison Adams Democrat Nay
Iowa 3 William B. Allison Republican Nay
Massachusetts 2 Oakes Ames Republican Nay
Missouri 9 George Washington Anderson Republican Yea
Maryland 2 Stevenson Archer Democrat Nay
Tennessee 6 Samuel Mayes Arnell Republican Yea
Nevada at-large Delos R. Ashley Republican Nay
Ohio 10 James Mitchell Ashley Republican Yea
California 1 Samuel Beach Axtell Democrat Nay
New York 21 Alexander H. Bailey Republican Nay
Illinois 12 Jehu Baker Republican Nay
Massachusetts 8 John Denison Baldwin Republican Nay
Massachusetts 6 Nathaniel P. Banks Republican Nay
New York 2 Demas Barnes Democrat Absent
Connecticut 4 William Henry Barnum Democrat Nay
Michigan 1 Fernando C. Beaman Republican Nay
Kentucky 7 James B. Beck Democrat Nay
Missouri 8 John F. Benjamin Republican Nay
New Hampshire 3 Jacob Benton Republican Nay
Ohio 16 John Bingham Republican Nay
Maine 3 James G. Blaine Republican Nay
Michigan 3 Austin Blair Republican Absent
Massachusetts 7 George S. Boutwell Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 6 Benjamin Markley Boyer Democrat Nay
Illinois 7 Henry P. H. Bromwell Republican Yea
New York 8 James Brooks Democrat Nay
Pennsylvania 7 John Martin Broomall Republican Yea
Ohio 9 Ralph Pomeroy Buckland Republican Nay
Illinois 10 Albert G. Burr Democrat Nay
Massachusetts 5 Benjamin Butler Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 10 Henry L. Cake Republican Absent
Ohio 2 Samuel Fenton Cary Independent Republican Nay
New York 7 John Winthrop Chanler Democrat Nay
New York 22 John C. Churchill Republican Yea
Ohio 6 Reader W. Clarke Republican Yea
Kansas at-large Sidney Clarke Republican Yea
Wisconsin 3 Amasa Cobb Republican Yea
Indiana 6 John Coburn Republican Yea
Indiana 9 Schuyler Colfax Republican Did not vote (speaker)α
Illinois 6 Burton C. Cook Republican Nay
New York 13 Thomas Cornell Republican Absent
Pennsylvania 21 John Covode Republican Yea
Illinois 8 Shelby Moore Cullom Republican Yea
Massachusetts 10 Henry L. Dawes Republican Nay
Rhode Island 2 Nathan F. Dixon II Republican Nay
Iowa 5 Grenville M. Dodge Republican Nay
Minnesota 2 Ignatius L. Donnelly Republican Yea
Michigan 6 John F. Driggs Republican Nay
Ohio 17 Ephraim R. Eckley Republican Yea
Ohio 1 Benjamin Eggleston Republican Nay
New Hampshire 1 Jacob Hart Ela Republican Yea
Wisconsin 4 Charles A. Eldredge Democrat Nay
Massachusetts 1 Thomas D. Eliot Republican Nay
Illinois 2 John F. Farnsworth Republican Yea
New York 16 Orange Ferriss Republican Nay
Michigan 4 Thomas W. Ferry Republican Nay
New York 19 William C. Fields Republican Nay
Pennsylvania 20 Darwin Abel Finney Republican Absent
New York 4 John Fox Democrat Absent
Ohio 19 James A. Garfield Republican Nay
Pennsylvania 8 James Lawrence Getz Democrat Nay
Pennsylvania 15 Adam John Glossbrenner Democrat Nay
Kentucky 3 Jacob Golladay Democrat Nay
Missouri 4 Joseph J. Gravely Republican Yea
New York 15 John Augustus Griswold Republican Nay
Kentucky 5 Asa Grover Democrat Nay
New Jersey 2 Charles Haight Democrat Nay
New Jersey 5 George A. Halsey Republican Nay
Ohio 8 Cornelius S. Hamilton Republican Nay
Illinois 4 Abner C. Harding Republican Yea
Tennessee 7 Isaac Roberts Hawkins Republican Nay
California 2 William Higby Republican Yea
New Jersey 4 John Hill Republican Nay
Indiana 4 William S. Holman Democrat Nay
Massachusetts 4 Samuel Hooper Republican Nay
Wisconsin 2 Benjamin F. Hopkins Republican Yea
Connecticut 2 Julius Hotchkiss Democrat Nay
Iowa 6 Asahel W. Hubbard Republican Nay
West Virginia 1 Chester D. Hubbard Republican Nay
Connecticut 1 Richard D. Hubbard Democrat Nay
New York 17 Calvin T. Hulburd Republican Nay
New York 30 James M. Humphrey Democrat Nay
Indiana 3 Morton C. Hunter Republican Yea
Illinois 5 Ebon C. Ingersoll Republican Nay
Rhode Island 1 Thomas Jenckes Republican Absent
California 3 James A. Johnson Democrat Nay
Kentucky 6 Thomas Laurens Jones Democrat Nay
Illinois 1 Norman B. Judd Republican Yea
Indiana 5 George Washington Julian Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 4 William D. Kelley Republican Yea
New York 25 William H. Kelsey Republican Yea
Indiana 2 Michael C. Kerr Democrat Nay
New York 12 John H. Ketcham Republican Nay
West Virginia 2 Bethuel Kitchen Republican Absent
Kentucky 4 J. Proctor Knott Democrat Nay
Pennsylvania 16 William Henry Koontz Republican Nay
New York 20 Addison H. Laflin Republican Nay
Pennsylvania 24 George Van Eman Lawrence Republican Nay
Ohio 4 William Lawrence Republican Yea
Missouri 7 Benjamin F. Loan Republican Yea
New York 26 William S. Lincoln Republican Nay
Illinois at-large John A. Logan Republican Yea
Iowa 4 William Loughridge Republican Yea
Maine 1 John Lynch Republican Yea
Oregon at-large Rufus Mallory Republican Absent
Illinois 11 Samuel S. Marshall Democrat Nay
New York 18 James M. Marvin Republican Nay
Tennessee 2 Horace Maynard Republican Yea
New York 23 Dennis McCarthy Republican Nay
Missouri 5 Joseph W. McClurg Republican Yea
Maryland 1 Hiram McCullough Democrat Nay
Pennsylvania 13 Ulysses Mercur Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 14 George Funston Miller Republican Nay
New Jersey 1 William Moore Republican Absent
Pennsylvania 22 James K. Moorhead Republican Nay
Ohio 13 George W. Morgan Democrat Nay
Pennsylvania 17 Daniel Johnson Morrell Republican Absent
New York 5 John Morrissey Democrat Absent
Tennessee 4 James Mullins Republican Yea
Ohio 5 William Mungen Democrat Nay
Pennsylvania 3 Leonard Myers Republican Yea
Missouri 2 Carman A. Newcomb Republican Yea
Indiana 1 William E. Niblack Democrat Nay
Delaware at-large John A. Nicholson Democrat Nay
Tennessee 8 David Alexander Nunn Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 2 Charles O'Neill Republican Yea
Indiana 8 Godlove Stein Orth Republican Yea
Wisconsin 1 Halbert E. Paine Republican Yea
Maine 2 Sidney Perham Republican Nay
Maine 4 John A. Peters Republican Nay
Maryland 3 Charles E. Phelps Conservative Nay
Maine 5 Frederick Augustus Pike Republican Nay
Missouri 1 William A. Pile Republican Yea
Ohio 15 Tobias A. Plants Republican Nay
Vermont 2 Luke P. Poland Republican Nay
West Virginia 3 Daniel Polsley Republican Nay
New York 24 Theodore M. Pomeroy Republican Absent
Iowa 2 Hiram Price Republican Yea
New York 14 John V. L. Pruyn Democrat Nay
Pennsylvania 1 Samuel J. Randall Democrat Nay
Illinois 13 Green Berry Raum Republican Absent
New York 10 William H. Robertson Republican Nay
New York 3 William Erigena Robinson Democrat Nay
Illinois 9 Lewis W. Ross Democrat Nay
Wisconsin 5 Philetus Sawyer Republican Nay
Ohio 3 Robert C. Schenck Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 19 Glenni William Scofield Republican Absent
New York 28 Lewis Selye Independent Republican Absent
Indiana 11 John P. C. Shanks Republican Yea
Ohio 7 Samuel Shellabarger Republican Absent
New Jersey 3 Charles Sitgreaves Democrat Nay
Vermont 3 Worthington Curtis Smith Republican Nay
Ohio 18 Rufus P. Spalding Republican Nay
Connecticut 3 Henry H. Starkweather Republican Nay
New Hampshire 2 Aaron Fletcher Stevens Republican Yea
Pennsylvania 9 Thaddeus Stevens Republican Yea
New York 6 Thomas E. Stewart Conservative Republican Nay
Tennessee 3 William Brickly Stokes Republican Yea
Maryland 5 Frederick Stone Democrat Nay
New York 1 Stephen Taber Democrat Nay
Nebraska at-large John Taffe Republican Absent
Pennsylvania 5 Caleb Newbold Taylor Republican Nay
Maryland 4 Francis Thomas Republican Yea
Tennessee 5 John Trimble Republican Yea
Michigan 5 Rowland E. Trowbridge Republican Yea
Massachusetts 3 Ginery Twichell Republican Absent
Michigan 2 Charles Upson Republican Nay
New York 31 Henry Van Aernam Republican Nay
Pennsylvania 11 Daniel Myers Van Auken Democrat Nay
New York 29 Burt Van Horn Republican Absent
Missouri 6 Robert T. Van Horn Republican Yea
Ohio 12 Philadelph Van Trump Democrat Nay
New York 11 Charles Van Wyck Republican Nay
New York 27 Hamilton Ward Republican Yea
Wisconsin 6 Cadwallader C. Washburn Republican Nay
Indiana 7 Henry D. Washburn Republican Nay
Massachusetts 9 William B. Washburn Republican Nay
Illinois 3 Elihu B. Washburne Republican Nay
Ohio 14 Martin Welker Republican Nay
Pennsylvania 23 Thomas Williams Republican Yea
Indiana 10 William Williams Republican Yea
Iowa 1 James F. Wilson Republican Nay
Ohio 11 John Thomas Wilson Republican Nay
Pennsylvania 18 Stephen Fowler Wilson Republican Yea
Minnesota 1 William Windom Republican Absent
New York 9 Fernando Wood Democrat Absent
Vermont 1 Frederick E. Woodbridge Republican Nay
Pennsylvania 12 George Washington Woodward Democrat Nay
Notes:
Schuyler Colfax was serving as Speaker of the House. Per House rules, "the Speaker is not required to vote in ordinary legislative proceedings, except when such vote would be decisive or when the House is engaged in voting by ballot."[12]

Aftermath

Radical furor over the conservative and moderate Republicans' votes against impeachment threatened a schism in the Republican Party. Two days after the failed impeachment vote, Radicals met at Thaddeus Stevens' residence to discuss creating a separate congressional organization for Radicals, separate from the Republican Party.[21]

On December 13, 1867, members of the House availed themselves of freedom of debate in the Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union, and several members discussed the failed impeachment resolution at length.[19]

With Johnson feeling liberated from the threat of impeachment, he began acting even more aggressively. He made moves that, combined with earlier actions, made it so every reconstructed state was being overseen by officers more sympathetic to former rebels than Southern loyalists to the union. On December 28, 1867, he removed John Pope from his position of command over Georgia and Alabama and Edward Ord from his position of command over Arkansas and Mississippi, replacing them respectively with the more conservative George Meade and the immensely conservative Alvan Cullem Gillem.[21] He also substituted Meade's subordinante, Wager Swayne (who Meade had been delegating authority over Alabama to).[21]

On January 22, 1868, the House approved by a vote of 99–31 a resolution to launch a second impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson, this time run by the House Select Committee on Reconstruction.[48] At a February 13, 1868 committee meeting, a vote on a motion to table consideration of a resolution proposed by Stevens to impeach Johnson had effectively signaled that five of the committee's members still stood opposed to impeachment, unchanged in their position since the December 1867 vote. After the February 13 vote, it momentarily appeared that the prospect of impeachment was dead.[49][50]

Impeachment of Johnson in 1868

While impeachment appeared to be a dead issue after the February 13, 1868 vote by the Committee on Reconstruction, the prospect of impeachment would receive new life days later. On February 21, 1868, Johnson, in violation of the Tenure of Office Act that had been passed by Congress in March 1867 over Johnson's veto, attempted to remove Edwin Stanton, the secretary of war who the act was largely designed to protect, from office.[51] On February 10, the House voted to move any further responsibility over impeachment away from the Committee on the Judiciary and to the Select Committee on Reconstruction.[52] On February 21, 1868, Thaddeus Stevens submitted a resolution to the House resolving for the evidence taken on impeachment by first impeachment inquiry into Johnson be referred to the Select Committee on Reconstruction (who were conducting the second impeachment inquiry), and that the Committee on Reconstruction "have leave to report at any time". This resolution was approved by the House.[19] On February 22, the Select Committee on Reconstruction submitted to the House an impeachment resolution and a report that recommended Johnson be impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors.[19][53] On February 24, 1868, the United States House of Representatives voted 126–47 to impeach Johnson for "high crimes and misdemeanors", which were detailed in eleven articles of impeachment passed in separate votes held roughly a week after the impeachment resolution was adopted.[52][54]

The primary charge presented against Johnson in the articles of impeachment that were adopted was that he had violated the Tenure of Office Act by removing Stanton from office.[52] It was decided by the committee tasked with drafting the articles of impeachment that they would not include any of the charges that had been recommended by Thomas Williams' Judiciary Committee majority report in the first impeachment inquiry against Johnson. The New York Times reported that inclusion of those claims would be seen as fatally harming the, "moral and legal effect of the prosecution" in Johnson's impeachment.[4] The articles of impeachment that were ultimately produced by the committee were narrow in their focus and were legalistic and molded on criminal indictment, likely in direct reaction to the failure of the broad allegations cited in the 1867 effort to persuade the House members.[4][22]

Johnson was narrowly acquitted in his Senate trial, with the Senate voting 35 to 19 votes in favor of conviction, one vote short of the two-thirds majority needed to convict.[55]

See also

External links

  • Majority and minority reports of the United States House Committee on the Judiciary (printed November 25, 1867)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v "Building the Case for Impeachment, December 1866 to June 1867 | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives". history.house.gov. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Wineapple, Brenda (2019). "Twelve: Tenure of Office". The impeachers : The Trial of Andrew Johnson and The Dream of a Just Nation (First ed.). New York. ISBN 9780812998368.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Benedict, Michael Les (1998). "From Our Archives: A New Look at the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson" (PDF). Political Science Quarterly. 113 (3): 493–511. doi:10.2307/2658078. ISSN 0032-3195. JSTOR 2658078. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Stewart, David O. (2009). Impeached: The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Licoln's Legacy. Simon and Schuster. pp. 83–98, 92–98, 105–112, 154, 156. ISBN 978-1416547495.
  5. ^ "Current Gossip". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 18 December 1866. Retrieved 31 July 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ a b c d "Impeachment Efforts Against President Andrew Johnson | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives". history.house.gov. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d Stathis, Stephen W.; Huckabee, David C. (September 16, 1998). "Congressional Resolutions on Presidential Impeachment: A Historical Overview" (PDF). sgp.fas.org. Congressional Research Service. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Ross, Edmond G. (1868). "Chapter IV. - First Attempt to Impeach the President". History of the Impeachment Of Andrew Johnson President Of The United States. Project Gutenberg.
  9. ^ a b c Stathis, Stephen W. (1994). "Impeachment and Trial of President Andrew Johnson: A View from the Iowa Congressional Delegation". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 24 (1): 29–47. ISSN 0360-4918. JSTOR 27551191. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  10. ^ a b c Journal of the United States House of Representatives Being The Second Session of the Thirty-Ninth Congress; Begun and Held at the City of Washington, D. C. December 3, 1866 in the Ninety-First Year of the Independence of the United States. voteview.com. Government Printy Office. 1867. pp. 121–122. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d e f "TO PASS A RESOLUTION TO IMPEACH THE PRESIDENT. (P. 320-2, … -- House Vote #418 -- Jan 7, 1867". GovTrack.us. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  12. ^ a b c d "Rules of the House of Representatives, with Notes and Annotations" (PDF). www.govinfo.gov.
  13. ^ "XXXIX Congress-Second Session". Newspapers.com. New-York Tribune. January 8, 1867. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  14. ^ Osborne, John. "The Fortieth Congress strongly rejects its Judiciary Committee's recommendation to President Johnson. | House Divided". hd.housedivided.dickinson.edu. House Divided: The Civil War Research Engine at Dickinson College. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  15. ^ Dodds, A. John. "HONEST JOHN COVODE". Retrieved 12 March 2021.
  16. ^ "IMPEACHMENT INVESTIGRATION". Newspapers.com. Chicago Tribune. 30 Mar 1867. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  17. ^ Dunning, William A. (1906). "More Light on Andrew Johnson". The American Historical Review. 11 (3): 574–594. doi:10.2307/1836023. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 1836023. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  18. ^ a b c d e f United States Congress House Committee on the Judiciary (1867). Impeachment of the President. U.S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar Hinds, Asher C. (4 March 1907). "HINDS' PRECEDENTS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES INCLUDING REFERENCES TO PROVISIONS OF THE CONSTITUTION, THE LAWS, AND DECISIONS OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE" (PDF). United States Congress. pp. 824–831, 843, 845–846. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  20. ^ a b "49th Congress (1865-1867) > Representatives". www.voteview.com. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Benedict, Michael Les (1998). "From Our Archives: A New Look at the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson" (PDF). Political Science Quarterly. 113 (3): 493–511. doi:10.2307/2658078. ISSN 0032-3195. JSTOR 2658078.
  22. ^ a b "The House Impeaches Andrew Johnson". Washington, D.C.: Office of the Historian and the Clerk of the House's Office of Art and Archives. Retrieved January 13, 2021.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Meacham, Jon; Naftali, Timothy; Baker, Peter; Engel, Jeffrey A. (2018). "Ch. 1, Andrew Johnson (by John Meachem)". Impeachment : an American history (2018 Modern Library ed.). New York. pp. 62–64. ISBN 978-1984853783.
  24. ^ The Congressional Globe Vol. 37. United States Congress. 1867. pp. 1754 and 1755. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  25. ^ "Johnson's Impeachment | House Divided". hd.housedivided.dickinson.edu. House Divided: The Civil War Research Engine at Dickinson College. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  26. ^ a b c The Congressional Globe 1867-03-04. Superintendent of Government Documents. 4 March 1867. pp. 18–25.
  27. ^ a b c d Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States: Being the First Session of the Fortieth Congress; Begun and Held at the City of Washington, March 4, 1867, In the Ninety-First Year of the Independence of the United States. Government Printing Office. 1867. pp. 19–21.
  28. ^ "By the Cable". Newspapers.com. The Wheeling Daily Intelligencer. March 8, 1867. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  29. ^ "1st Edition". Newspapers.com. Chicago Evening Post. March 7, 1867. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  30. ^ "U.S. Senate: Impeachment Trial of President Andrew Johnson, 1868". www.senate.gov. United States Senate. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Impeachment Rejected, November to December 1867 | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives". history.house.gov. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  32. ^ a b "Session Dates of Congress 40th to 49th Congresses (1867–1887) | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives". history.house.gov. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  33. ^ a b "The Impeachment Question". Newspapers.com. Chicago Tribune. October 25, 1867. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  34. ^ "Impeachment Again - Complexion of the Judiciary Committee - Opinions and Assertations of Judge Lawrence - Interesting Statements". Newspapers.com. The Charleston Mercury. October 22, 1867. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  35. ^ "Mr. Wilson and Impeachment". Newspapers.com. The Philadelphia Inquirer. November 1, 1867. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Benedict, Michael Les (1973). "3. The Politics of Impeachment". The impeachment and trial of Andrew Johnson ([1st] ed.). New York: Norton. ISBN 0-393-05473-X.
  37. ^ "The Lancaster Examiner Wednesday, November 27, 1867". The Lancaster Examiner. November 27, 1867. Retrieved 22 July 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  38. ^ a b c "The Majority Report". Harrisburg Telegraph. November 27, 1867. Retrieved 22 July 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  39. ^ a b c d Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States: Being the First Session of the Fortieth Congress; Begun and Held at the City of Washington, March 4, 1867, In the Ninety-First Year of the Independence of the United States. Government Printing Office. 1867. pp. 265–266.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "The Case for Impeachment, December 1867 | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives". history.house.gov. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  41. ^ Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States: Being the Second Session of the Fortieth Congress; Begun and Held at the City of Washington, December 2, 1867, In the Ninety-First Year of the Independence of the United States. Government Printing Office. 1868. p. 42.
  42. ^ a b c d e Domer, Thomas (1976). "The Role of George S. Boutwell in the Impeachment and Trial of Andrew Johnson". The New England Quarterly. 49 (4): 596–617. doi:10.2307/364736. ISSN 0028-4866. JSTOR 364736. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  43. ^ a b c d "TO PASS THE IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT RESOLUTION. -- House Vote #119 -- Dec 7, 1867". GovTrack.us.
  44. ^ Levine, Robert S. (2021). The failed promise: Reconstruction, Frederick Douglass, and the impeachment of Andrew Johnson (First ed.). New York, NY. pp. 179–180. ISBN 9781324004752.
  45. ^ Stewart, David O. (2009). Impeached: the Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln's Legacy. New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 95–97. ISBN 978-1-4165-4749-5.
  46. ^ Castel, Albert E. (1979). The Presidency of Andrew Johnson. American Presidency. Lawrence, Kan.: The Regents Press of Kansas. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-7006-0190-5.
  47. ^ Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States: Being the Second Session of the Fortieth Congress; Begun and Held at the City of Washington, December 2, 1867, In the Ninety-First Year of the Independence of the United States. United States House of Representatives. 1868. p. 53. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  48. ^ "Journal of the United States House of Representatives (40th Congress, second session) pages 259–262". voteview.com. United States House of Representatives. 1868. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  49. ^ "Washington". Newspapers.com. Chicago Evening Post. February 13, 1868. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  50. ^ "Staunton Spectator Tuesday, February 18, 1868". Staunton Spectator. February 18, 1868. Retrieved 22 July 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  51. ^ Trefousse, Hans L. (1989). Andrew Johnson: A Biography. New York City: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 306. ISBN 978-0-393-31742-8.
  52. ^ a b c "Johnson Impeached, February to March 1868 | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives". history.house.gov. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  53. ^ "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774 - 1875". memory.loc.gov. Library of Congress. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  54. ^   This article incorporates public domain material from Stephen W. Stathis and David C. Huckabee. Congressional Resolutions on Presidential Impeachment: A Historical Overview (PDF). Congressional Research Service. Retrieved December 31, 2019.
  55. ^ "Impeached but Not Removed, March to May 1868 | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives". history.house.gov. United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 2 March 2021.

first, impeachment, inquiry, against, andrew, johnson, first, impeachment, inquiry, against, andrew, johnson, launched, vote, united, states, house, representatives, january, 1867, investigate, potential, impeachment, president, united, states, andrew, johnson. The first impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson was launched by a vote of the United States House of Representatives on January 7 1867 to investigate the potential impeachment of the President of the United States Andrew Johnson It was run by the House Committee on the Judiciary First impeachment inquiry against Andrew JohnsonAccusedAndrew Johnson president of the United States DateJanuary 7 November 25 1867 10 months 2 weeks and 5 days OutcomeImpeachment inquiry completed House Committee on the Judiciary recommended impeachment recommendation rejected by full House voteChargesHigh crimes and misdemeanorsCongressional votesHouse vote authorizing the inquiryVotes in favor108Votes against39ResultApprovedFirst vote by the House Judiciary Committee an impeachment resolutionVotes in favor4Votes against5ResultRejectedFinal vote by the House Judiciary Committee on the impeachment resolutionVotes in favor5Votes against4ResultApprovedSubsequent House vote on the impeachment resolutionVotes in favor57Votes against108ResultRejectedThe vote authorizing the inquiry was viewed as giving Republicans an opportunity to register their distain for Johnson without formally impeaching him Most congressmen had expected that the sentiments in House Committee on the Judiciary would side against impeachment However surprising many the committee voted 5 4 on November 25 1867 to recommend impeachment after having held a preliminary vote against it months prior Despite this recommendation the House voted 57 108 on December 7 1867 against impeaching Johnson with more Republicans voting against impeachment than for it This impeachment inquiry preceded the second impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson launched in January 1868 which played a role in the lead up to the February 24 1868 impeachment of Johnson Contents 1 Background 2 House passage of the resolution authorizing the inquiry 3 Inquiry 3 1 Members of House Committee on the Judiciary during the inquiry 3 1 1 39th Congress 3 1 2 40th Congress 3 2 Initial investigation during the 39th Congress 3 3 40th Congress renewal of the inquiry 3 4 Continued investigation in the 40th Congress 3 5 Judiciary Committe vote against impeachment June 1867 3 6 Inquiry resumed Johnson antagonizes Republicans 3 7 Judiciary Committee vote in favor of impeachment November 1867 3 8 Committee reports 3 8 1 Majority report 3 8 2 Minority reports 3 9 Impeachment resolution majority and minority reports and testimony reported to the House 4 House defeat of impeachment resolution 4 1 George S Boutwell s argument in support of impeachment 4 2 James F Wilson s argument against impeachment 4 3 House vote on the impeachment resolution 5 Aftermath 5 1 Impeachment of Johnson in 1868 6 See also 7 External links 8 ReferencesBackground EditMain article Efforts to impeach Andrew Johnson Some Radical Republicans had entertained the thought of impeaching President Andrew Johnson since as early as 1866 1 However the Republican Party was divided on the prospect of impeachment with moderates in the party who held a plurality widely opposing it at this point 1 The radicals were more in favor of impeachment as their plans for strong reform in reconstruction were greatly imperiled by Johnson 1 Among of the first Radical Republicans to explore impeachment was House Territories Committee chairman James Mitchell Ashley Ashley was convinced of a baseless conspiracy theory that faulted Johnson for involvement in conspiring in the assassination of Lincoln Thus Ashley had strong personal motivation for wanting to remove Johnson from office 1 Ashley quietly began researching impeachment 1 Federal impeachment was rare in the United States 2 Several attempts were made by Radical Republicans to initiate impeachment but these were successfully rebuffed by moderate Republicans in party leadership 1 After the December 1866 meeting of the House Republican caucus in an effort to block any further efforts to impeach Johnson the moderate Republicans leading the party s caucus passed a rule for the Republican caucus which required that both a majority of House Republicans and a majority of members on the House Committee on the Judiciary would be required to approve any measure regarding impeachment in party caucus prior to it being considered in the House 1 3 Radical Republicans continued to seek Johnson s impeachment 1 They disobeyed the rule put in place for the Republican caucus 3 Radicals proposed a number of impeachment resolutions which the moderate Republicans often stifled by referring to committees 3 By the start of the year 1867 on a daily basis Congress was receiving petitions demanding the removal of Johnson These petitions came primarily from the midwestern states The petitions were the result of an organized campaign to demand Johnson s removal The number of signatures on these petitions varied as some had as few as three signatures while other petitions had as many as three hundred signatures 4 By the December 1866 start of the lame duck third session of the 39th Congress a number of Radical Republicans were demanding the creation of a select committee to investigate the prospect of impeaching Johnson but this still faced resistance within the Republican Party caucus 4 On December 17 1866 James Mitchell Ashley attempted to open a house impeachment inquiry but his motion to suspend the rules to consider his resolution saw a vote of 88 49 which was short of the needed two thirds majority to suspend the rules 1 5 Nevertheless Ashley agreed with Thaddeus Stevens to again bring an impeachment resolution before the full House 4 House passage of the resolution authorizing the inquiry Edit The resolution authorizing the impeachment inquiry was authored by James Mitchell Ashley On January 7 1867 Benjamin F Loan John R Kelso and James Mitchell Ashley each introduced three separate impeachment resolutions against Johnson The House refused to hold debate or vote on either Loan or Kelso s resolutions 1 However they did allow a vote on Ashley s impeachment related resolution 1 Unlike the other two impeachment bills introduced that day which would have outright impeached Johnson Ashley s bill offered a specific outline of how an impeachment process would proceed and it did not start with an immediate impeachment Rather than going to a direct vote on impeaching the president his resolution would instruct the Judiciary Committee to inquire into the official conduct of Andrew Johnson investigating what it called Johnson s corruptly used powers and usurpation of power including Johnson s political appointments use of his pardon powers alluding to his pardons for ex Confederates vetoes of legislation selling of confiscated property and alleged interference with elections 1 6 7 4 While it gave the general charge of high crimes and misdemeanors and named numerous instances of alleged corruption Ashley s resolution did not specify what the high crimes and misdemeanors Johnson had committed were 8 The grievances listed in the resolution amounted largely to political grievances which Ashley had against Johnson 9 The resolution read I do impeach Andrew Johnson Vice President and acting President of the United States of high crimes and misdemeanors I charge him with a usurpation of power and violation of law In that he has corruptly used the appointing power In that he has corruptly used the pardoning power In that he has corruptly used the veto power In that he has corruptly disposed of public property of the United States In that he has corruptly interfered in elections and committed acts which in contemplation of the Constitution are high crimes and misdemeanors Therefore Be it resolved That the Committee on the Judiciary be and they are hereby authorized to inquire into the official conduct of Andrew Johnson Vice President of the United States discharging the powers and duties of the office of President of the United States and to report to this House whether in their opinion the said Andrew Johnson while in said office has been guilty of acts which are designed or calculated to overthrow subvert or corrupt the Government of the United States or any department or office thereof and whether the said Andrew Johnson has been guilty of any act or has conspired with others to do acts which in contemplation of the Constitution are high crimes and misdemeanors requiring the interposition of the constitutional power of this House and that said committee have power to send for persons and papers and to administer the customary oath to witnesses 8 10 The resolution passed in the House 108 39 1 10 11 It was seen as offering Republicans a chance to register their displeasure with Johnson without actually formally impeaching him 1 Many Republicans believed that in the Judiciary Committee any impeachment resolution would die a quiet death 2 Of the 108 members of the House that voted in favor of the resolution 1 was a Democrat 99 were Republicans and 7 were Unconditional Unionists 1 was an independent Republican Of the 6 to vote against it 25 were Democrats 6 were Republicans 3 were Unconditional Unionists and 5 were Unionists 11 44 members of congress were absent 14 Democrats 28 Republicans 2 and Unconditional Unionists Additionally Speaker Schuyler Colfax a Republican did not vote 11 as House rules do not require the speaker to vote during ordinary legislative proceedings unless their vote would be decisive or if the vote is being cast by ballot 12 The official record shows Democrat John Winthrop Chanler as voting in favor of the resolution thus this article lists him as having voted as such 11 However the New York Tribune following the vote strongly suspected that this was a clerical error 13 Vote on the impeachment inquiry resolution 10 11 January 7 1867 Party Total votesDemocratic Republican Unconditional Union Unionists Independent RepublicanYea Y 1 99 7 0 1 108Nay 25 6 3 5 0 39Comparative bar chart Vote Vote total Yea votes 108 Nay votes 39Absent not voting 45Full list of votes 11 District Member Party VoteMassachusetts 6 John B Alley Republican YeaIowa 3 William B Allison Republican YeaMassachusetts 2 Oakes Ames Republican YeaPennsylvania 8 Sydenham Elnathan Ancona Democrat NayMissouri 9 George Washington Anderson Republican AbsentTennessee 6 Samuel Mayes Arnell Unconditional Unionist YeaNevada at large Delos R Ashley Republican YeaOhio 10 James Mitchell Ashley Republican YeaIllinois 12 Jehu Baker Republican YeaMassachusetts 8 John Denison Baldwin Republican YeaMassachusetts 5 Nathaniel P Banks Republican YeaPennsylvania 17 Abraham Andrews Barker Republican YeaVermont 3 Portus Baxter Republican YeaMichigan 1 Fernando C Beaman Republican YeaMissouri 8 John F Benjamin Republican YeaNew York 2 Teunis G Bergen Democrat NayCalifornia 3 John Bidwell Republican YeaOhio 16 John Bingham Republican YeaMaine 3 James G Blaine Republican YeaMissouri 2 Henry Taylor Blow Republican AbsentMassachusetts 7 George S Boutwell Republican YeaPennsylvania 6 Benjamin Markley Boyer Democrat AbsentConnecticut 3 Augustus Brandegee Republican YeaIllinois 7 Henry P H Bromwell Republican YeaPennsylvania 7 John Martin Broomall Republican YeaOhio 9 Ralph Pomeroy Buckland Republican YeaOhio 11 Hezekiah S Bundy Republican YeaTennessee 5 William B Campbell Unionist NayNew York 7 John Winthrop Chanler Democrat YeaOhio 6 Reader W Clarke Republican YeaKansas at large Sidney Clarke Republican YeaWisconsin 3 Amasa Cobb Republican YeaNew York 21 Roscoe Conkling Republican AbsentIndiana 9 Schuyler Colfax Republican Did not vote speaker aIllinois 6 Burton C Cook Republican YeaTennessee 4 Edmund Cooper Unionist NayIllinois 8 Shelby Moore Cullom Republican YeaPennsylvania 20 Charles Vernon Culver Republican YeaNew York 9 William Augustus Darling Republican YeaNew York 23 Thomas Treadwell Davis Republican NayMassachusetts 10 Henry Dawes Republican AbsentPennsylvania 21 John Littleton Dawson Democrat NayIndiana 10 Joseph H Defrees Republican YeaOhio 13 Columbus Delano Republican YeaConnecticut 1 Henry Deming Republican YeaPennsylvania 12 Charles Denison Democrat AbsentRhode Island 2 Nathan F Dixon II Republican YeaNew York 8 William E Dodge Republican NayMinnesota 2 Ignatius L Donnelly Republican YeaMichigan 6 John F Driggs Republican YeaIndiana 6 John F Driggs Republican AbsentOhio 17 Ephraim R Eckley Republican YeaOhio 1 Benjamin Eggleston Republican AbsentWisconsin 4 Charles A Eldredge Democrat NayMassachusetts 1 Thomas D Eliot Republican AbsentIllinois 2 John F Farnsworth Republican YeaIndiana 4 John Hanson Farquhar Republican YeaMichigan 4 Thomas W Ferry Republican YeaOhio 12 William E Finck Democrat NayOhio 19 James A Garfield Republican YeaPennsylvania 15 Adam John Glossbrenner Democrat NayNew York 14 Charles Goodyear Democrat AbsentIowa 4 Josiah Bushnell Grinnell Republican YeaNew York 15 John Augustus Griswold Republican AbsentNew York 16 Robert S Hale Republican AbsentKentucky 4 Aaron Harding Democrat NayIllinois 4 Abner C Harding Republican YeaMaryland 5 Benjamin Gwinn Harris Democrat AbsentNew York 28 Roswell Hart Republican YeaTennessee 7 Isaac Roberts Hawkins Unionist NayOhio 2 Rutherford B Hayes Republican YeaOregon at large James Henry Dickey Henderson Republican YeaCalifornia 2 William Higby Republican YeaIndiana 3 Ralph Hill Republican YeaKentucky 3 Elijah Hise Democrat NayMissouri 1 John Hogan Democrat NayNew York 22 Sidney Holmes Republican YeaMassachusetts 4 Samuel Hooper Republican YeaNew York 26 Giles Hotchkiss Republican AbsentIowa 6 Asahel W Hubbard Republican AbsentWest Virginia 1 Chester D Hubbard Unconditional Unionist YeaNew York 19 Demas Hubbard Jr Republican AbsentConnecticut 4 John Henry Hubbard Republican YeaNew York 13 Edwin N Hubbell Democrat AbsentOhio 8 James Randolph Hubbell Republican NayNew York 17 Calvin T Hulburd Republican AbsentNew York 30 James M Humphrey Democrat NayNew York 3 John W Hunter Democrat NayIllinois 5 Ebon C Ingersoll Republican YeaRhode Island 1 Thomas Jenckes Republican YeaPennsylvania 11 Philip Johnson Democrat AbsentNew York 4 Morgan Jones Democrat AbsentIndiana 5 George Washington Julian Republican YeaIowa 5 John A Kasson Republican YeaPennsylvania 4 William D Kelley Republican YeaMissouri 4 John R Kelso Independent Republican YeaIndiana 2 Michael C Kerr Democrat NayNew York 12 John H Ketcham Republican YeaPennsylvania 16 William Koontz Republican AbsentIllinois 13 Andrew J Kuykendall Republican YeaNew York 20 Addison H Laflin Republican AbsentWest Virginia 2 George R Latham Unconditional Unionist NayPennsylvania 24 George Van Eman Lawrence Republican YeaOhio 4 William Lawrence Republican YeaOhio 5 Francis Celeste Le Blond Democrat AbsentTennessee 8 John W Leftwich Unionist NayMissouri 7 Benjamin F Loan Republican YeaMichigan 3 John W Longyear Republican YeaMaine 1 John Lynch Republican YeaIllinois 11 Samuel S Marshall Democrat AbsentNew Hampshire 1 Gilman Marston Republican YeaNew York 18 James M Marvin Republican YeaTennessee 2 Horace Maynard Unconditional Unionist YeaMissouri 5 Joseph W McClurg Republican YeaMaryland 1 Hiram McCullough Democrat NayWisconsin 6 Walter D McIndoe Republican AbsentKentucky 9 Samuel McKee Unconditional Unionist YeaCalifornia 1 Donald C McRuer Republican YeaPennsylvania 13 Ulysses Mercur Republican YeaPennsylvania 14 George Funston Miller Republican YeaPennsylvania 22 James K Moorhead Republican YeaVermont 2 Justin Smith Morrill Republican YeaNew York 25 Daniel Morris Republican AbsentIllinois at large Samuel Wheeler Moulton Republican YeaPennsylvania 3 Leonard Myers Republican YeaNew Jersey 2 William A Newell Republican AbsentIndiana 1 William E Niblack Democrat NayDelaware at large John A Nicholson Democrat NayMissouri 3 Thomas E Noell Republican NayPennsylvania 2 Charles O Neill Republican YeaIndiana 8 Godlove Stein Orth Republican YeaWisconsin 1 Halbert E Paine Republican YeaNew Hampshire 3 James W Patterson Republican YeaMaine 2 Sidney Perham Republican YeaMaryland 3 Charles E Phelps Unconditional Unionist NayMaine 5 Frederick Augustus Pike Republican YeaOhio 15 Tobias A Plants Republican AbsentNew York 24 Theodore M Pomeroy Republican AbsentIowa 2 Hiram Price Republican YeaNew York 10 William Radford Democrat AbsentPennsylvania 1 Samuel J Randall Democrat NayKentucky 8 William H Randall Unconditional Unionist YeaNew York 6 Henry Jarvis Raymond Republican NayMassachusetts 3 Alexander H Rice Republican YeaMaine 4 John H Rice Republican YeaKentucky 2 Burwell Ritter Democrat NayNew Jersey 4 Andrew J Rogers Democrat AbsentNew Hampshire 2 Edward H Rollins Republican AbsentIllinois 9 Lewis W Ross Democrat NayKentucky 5 Lovell Rousseau Unconditional Unionist YeaWisconsin 5 Philetus Sawyer Republican YeaOhio 3 Robert C Schenck Republican YeaPennsylvania 19 Glenni William Scofield Republican YeaKentucky 7 George S Shanklin Democrat NayOhio 7 Samuel Shellabarger Republican AbsentNew Jersey 3 Charles Sitgreaves Democrat AbsentWisconsin 2 Ithamar Sloan Republican AbsentOhio 18 Rufus P Spalding Republican NayNew Jersey 1 John F Starr Republican YeaPennsylvania 9 Thaddeus Stevens Republican YeaIndiana 11 Thomas N Stilwell Republican AbsentTennessee 3 William Brickly Stokes Unconditional Unionist YeaPennsylvania 10 Myer Strouse Democrat NayNew York 1 Stephen Taber Democrat NayTennessee 1 Nathaniel Green Taylor Unionist NayNew York 5 Nelson Taylor Democrat NayPennsylvania 4 Martin Russell Thayer Republican YeaMaryland 4 Francis Thomas Unconditional Unionist YeaMaryland 2 John Lewis Thomas Jr Unconditional Unionist YeaIllinois 10 Anthony Thornton Democrat AbsentKentucky 1 Lawrence S Trimble Democrat NayMichigan 5 Rowland E Trowbridge Republican YeaMichigan 2 Charles Upson Republican YeaNew York 31 Henry Van Aernam Republican YeaNew York 29 Burt Van Horn Republican AbsentMissouri 6 Robert T Van Horn Republican AbsentKentucky 6 Andrew H Ward Democrat NayNew York 27 Hamilton Ward Republican YeaConnecticut 2 Samuel L Warner Republican YeaIndiana 7 Henry D Washburn Republican YeaMassachusetts 9 William B Washburn Republican AbsentIllinois 3 Elihu B Washburne Republican YeaOhio 14 Martin Welker Republican YeaIllinois 1 John Wentworth Republican YeaWest Virginia 3 Kellian Whaley Unconditional Unionist NayPennsylvania 23 Thomas Williams Republican YeaIowa 1 James F Wilson Republican YeaPennsylvania 18 Stephen Fowler Wilson Republican YeaMinnesota 1 William Windom Republican YeaNew York 11 Charles H Winfield Democrat NayVermont 1 Frederick E Woodbridge Republican AbsentNew Jersey 5 Edwin R V Wright Democrat AbsentNotes a Schuyler Colfax was serving as Speaker of the House Per House rules the Speaker is not required to vote in ordinary legislative proceedings except when such vote would be decisive or when the House is engaged in voting by ballot 12 Inquiry EditThe resulting inquiry lasted eleven months saw 89 witnesses interviewed and saw 1 200 pages of testimony compiled 14 Among those that appeared before the House Committee on the Judiciary as part of the inquiry were John Covode who urged impeachment 15 Joseph Scott Fullerton 2 16 Joseph S Fowler Edwin Stanton Lafayette C Baker 8 William Barclay Napton Rufus Saxton and Thomas W Conway 2 and Jeremiah S Black 17 Included among those interviewed were men pardoned by Johnson and men he had fired 2 John Evans and Jerome B Chaffee gave testimony related to Johnson s veto of a bill for the admission of Colorado as a state 18 President Johnson was reported to have been angered by the authorization of the inquiry 2 He kept secret tabs on the inquiry through the Pinkerton Detective Agency 1 Per the findings of Hinds Precedents of the House of Representatives it does not appear that Johnson sought to be represented by counsel before the committee during the inquiry 19 Members of House Committee on the Judiciary during the inquiry Edit 39th Congress Edit In the 39th Congress the House Committee on the Judiciary consisted of seven Republicans one Democrat and one Unconditional Unionist Members of the House Committee on the Judiciary during the 39th United States Congress 8 20 Republican Party Democratic Party Unconditional Union PartyJames F Wilson Iowa committee chair George S Boutwell Massachusetts Burton C Cook Illinois William Lawrence Ohio Daniel Morris New York Thomas Williams Pennsylvania Frederick E Woodbridge Vermont Sydenham Elnathan Ancona Pennsylvania Francis Thomas Maryland40th Congress Edit In the 40th Congress the House Committee on the Judiciary consisted of seven Republicans and two Democrats All of the committee members from the previous Congress returned to the committee for the 40th Congress with the two exceptions of Democrat Sydenham Elnathan Ancona and Republican Daniel Morris who had both departed the United States House of Representatives In their place were two new committee members Democrat Charles A Eldredge and Samuel S Marshall and Republican John C Churchill Committee member Francis Thomas who had been elected to the previous congress as a member of the Unconditional Union Party was now elected to the 40th Congress as a member of the Republican Party Members of the House Committee on the Judiciary during the 40th United States Congress 19 Republican Party Democratic PartyJames F Wilson Iowa committee chair George S Boutwell Massachusetts John C Churchill New York William Lawrence Ohio Francis Thomas Maryland Thomas Williams Pennsylvania Frederick E Woodbridge Vermont Charles A Eldredge Wisconsin Samuel S Marshall IllinoisInitial investigation during the 39th Congress Edit In order to comply with Ashley s impeachment resolution the Judiciary Committee began to slowly conduct an impeachment inquiry gathering evidence from witnesses in closed sessions 1 2 21 On January 14 1867 the resolution that had been proposed by Benjamin F Loan on the inquiry was established was finally debated by the full House Loan gave a long speech to the House in which he used language that was largely interpreted as accusing Johnson of complicity in the assassination of President Lincoln and which further accused him of participation in a conspiracy to capture the United States Government in the interest of those involved in the southern secession The resolution was again considered on January 28 and February 4 due to a motion by Thomas Jenckes to refer the resolution to the Committee on the Judiciary This motion to refer Loan s resolution to the committee already tasked with addressing a prospective impeachment was ultimately agreed to by the House 19 22 The allegations of misconduct given in the testimony taken by the committee was largely unsupported by evidence The committee investigated a myriad of allegations against Johnson Among the matters investigated and for which testimony was taken was the question of whether Johnson played a role in the removal of eighteen missing pages from Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth s personal journal 4 2 It was speculated whether these pages might have implicated Johnson in the conspiracy behind the assassination Another allegation investigated was that Johnson had used intimidation or patronage appointments as influence to prevent the admission of the Colorado territory as a state The committee also investigated whether Johnson had provided pardons to deserters from West Virginia It also investigated whether or not the commission for the United States minister to Sweden had been correctly issued Another matter investigated was the New Orleans massacre of 1866 Also investigated were allegations of fraud in New York City related to import taxes One allegation investigated that Johnson had asked the attorney general of the United States whether he believed the Congress was perhaps illegitimate due to the lack of representation for unreconstructed southern states turned out to be a story fabricated by a journalist 4 The early hearings by the Judiciary Committee were an outlandish affair and were unsuccessful in providing substantive testimony of malfeasance 23 The Judiciary Committee s first closed door hearings had been held February 6 1867 with testimony from Detective Lafayette C Baker Baker was famous for having tracked John Wilkes Booth down after Booth assassinated President Lincoln Baker s testimony set the tone for the series of evidence devoid allegations that would be delivered in various testimonies with Baker implication Johnson in several crimes without providing any evidence He first implicated Johnson in treason testifying of a wartime letter that he claimed he had once came into possession of on a date he could not recall but no longer held possession of which he alleged had been sent from Johnson to Confederate President Jefferson Davis Baker did not know the contents of the letter He also declined to disclose who he had received the letter from However he testified that he believed that the letter s existence implied that Johnson would go with the Confederates Baker next implicated Johnson with among other things involvement with prostitution and bribery Baker testified about Lucy Cobb a disreputable woman or in other words woman of the town prostitute who he had prevented from visiting the White House the previous year He testified that had disclosed to him that Johnson had secret methods for communicating with his friends in the South and that she was herself involved in a trade of selling presidential pardons to confederates 4 23 The committee investigated whether Johnson had improper connections to southerners that had been sold back railroad assets that had been seized by the Union Army during the Civil War The possibility that corrupt personal favoritism by Johnson had been involved in these sales was explored However Secretary of War Edwin Stanton well regarded by Radical Republicans took responsibility for these sales Stanton told the committee that he believed the sales were justified because the federal government did not have the know how needed to successfully run the railroads and the nation s post war economic recovery required that the railroads be placed into the management of individuals who had the knowledge to successfully operate them 4 The Judiciary Committee ran out of time to complete its inquiry with the 39th Congress expiring However the committee ruled that they had received sufficient testimony to continue their investigation in the new 40th Congress 1 March 2 1867 two days before the end of the 39th congress the committee recommended that the matter be further reviewed in the next congress with committee member James F Wilson presenting this recommendation to the whole of congress 7 24 The full House was then read the committee s majority report which argued that in the expiring hours of the 39th congress no affirmative report could be properly considered and opined that it was inexpedient to submit any conclusion with the committee having not fully investigated all charges against the president 8 This report had been approved by the committee s Republican chairman James F Wilson as well as Republican committee members George S Boutwell Burton C Cook William Lawrence Daniel Morris Thomas Williams and Frederick E Woodbridge and Unconditional Unionist committee member Francis Thomas 8 20 The sole Democratic committee member Sydenham Elnathan Ancona submitted a minority report against a continuation of the inquiry Both reports were ordered printed and laid on the table 8 40th Congress renewal of the inquiry Edit The 40th Congress consented to the recommendation that the Judiciary Committee made near the end of the 39th Congress and ordered the committee to continue its inquiry 25 At the start of the 40th Congress Congressman Benjamin Buter unsuccessfully urged the Republican caucus to create a special panel to continue the impeachment inquiry But Congressman James Mitchell Ashley managed to successfully have the inquiry continue in the Judiciary Committee 4 On March 7 1867 the third day of the 40th Congress Ashley introduced a resolution calling for the impeachment investigation by the Judiciary Committee to be continue 7 19 26 27 The resolution read Whereas the House of Representatives of the thirty ninth Congress adopted on 7th of January 1867 a resolution authorizing an inquiry into certain charges preferred against the President of the United States and whereas the Judiciary Committee to whom said resolution and charges were referred with authority to investigate the same were unable for want of time to complete said investigation before the expiration of the thirty ninth Congress and whereas in the report submitted by said Judiciary Committe on the 2d of March they declared that the evidence taken is of such a character as to justify and demand a continuation of the investigation by this Congress Therefore Be it resolved by the House of Representatives That the Judiciary Committee when appointed be and they are hereby instructed to continue the investigation authorized in said resolution of January 7 1867 and that they have power to sent for persons and papers and to administer the customary oath to witnesses and that the committee shall have authority to sit during the sessions of the House and during any recess which Congress or this House may take Resolved that the Speaker of the House be requested to appoint the Committee on the Judiciary forthwith and that the committee so appointed be directed to take charge of the testimony taken by the committee of the last Congress and that said committee have power to appoint a clerk at a compensation not to exceed six dollars per day and employ the necessary stenographer Resolved further That the Clerk of the House of Representatives be directed to pay out of the contingent fund of the House on the order of the committee on the Judiciary such sum or sums of money as may be required to enable the said committee to prosecute the investigation above directed and such other investigations as it may be ordered to make 26 27 John Covode proposed an amendment to the resolution that was understood to have been authored by Benjamin Butler The amendment would have instead had the continuation of the inquiry be run by a select committee of thirteen members on which the seven members of the Judiciary Committee would all serve John F Farnsworth argued against this arguing that the inquiry should continue to be run through the Judiciary Committee Citing precedents in the Parliament of the United Kingdom and declaring that no insult was intended to the Judiciary Committee Butler argued in favor of a special committee overseeing the inquiry James G Blaine argued against moving the inquiry to a special committee arguing that doing so would be considered a rebuke to the Judiciary Committee John Martin Broomall voiced similar opposition John A Logan voiced support for a special committee arguing that the Judiciary Committee had no prescriptive right to be handling the matter John Bingham countered Logan s argument by claiming that in the eight precedents of federal impeachment cases in the United States all but one had seen the matter referred to the Judiciary Committee and that the one exception had led to a ridiculous blunder After this debate an overwhelming majority voted to reject the proposed amendment 28 29 The House adopted Ashley s resolution to renew the investigation without any opposition after both debate and the defeat by 33 119 of a motion to table it 7 19 26 27 Right after the 40th Congress voted to reauthorize the impeachment inquiry Speaker Colfax appointed the membership of a number of House committees including the Committee on the Judiciary 27 Butler a strong proponent of impeachment unsuccessfully requested to be added to the Judiciary Committee but John Bingham strongly objected to this 2 Continued investigation in the 40th Congress Edit The 40th Congress House Committee on the Judiciary resumed the inquiry started by the committee in the previous congress 1 They held month of closed door hearings 1 Johnson and his allies grew more and more frustrated with the impeachment inquiry which kept expanding in scope 4 When the committee began investigating Johnson s finances Johnson irately reacted I have had a son killed a son in law die during the last battle at Nashville another son has thrown himself away a second son in law is in no better condition I think I have sorrow enough without having my bank account examined by a committee of Congress 2 In March 1867 Radical Republicans dissatisfied with the slow pace of the inquiry attempted to bypass that process outlined in Ashley s resolution and instead secure Republican caucus approval for immediate impeachment 3 John Bingham and James F Wilson the chairman of the House Committee on the Judiciary killed this effort by the Radical Republicans 3 21 By mid 1867 impeachment was regularly promoted by chief opponents of Johnson in Congress 30 Judiciary Committe vote against impeachment June 1867 Edit On June 3 1867 in a 5 4 vote the committee voted against sending an impeachment resolution to the full House with three moderate Republican members joining two Democratic members of the committee in voting against doing so 1 6 They however also voted in support of censuring Johnson 2 On July 10 1867 James F Wilson reported verbally on behalf of the committee by its direction that they anticipated being able to report on or after October 16 He also stated that as it then stood five members were of the opinion that high crimes and misdemeanors warranting impeachment had not occurred while the remaining four members believed that they had 19 It appeared that Johnson had successfully avoided impeachment 23 House Judiciary Committee vote sending on an impeachment resolution to the full House 1 19 June 3 1867 Party Total votesDemocratic RepublicanYea 0 4 4Nay Y 2 3 5Vote by member District Member Party VoteMassachusetts 7 George S Boutwell Republican YeaNew York 22 John C Churchill Republican NayWisconsin 4 Charles A Eldredge Democrat NayOhio 4 William Lawrence Republican YeaIllinois 11 Samuel S Marshall Democrat NayMaryland 4 Francis Thomas Republican YeaPennsylvania 23 Thomas Williams Republican YeaVermont 1 Frederick E Woodbridge Republican NayIowa 1 James F Wilson Republican NayInquiry resumed Johnson antagonizes Republicans Edit The House Committee on the Judiciary had not delivered a report to the full congress meaning that they had not yet formally closed their inquiry 6 21 31 Johnson would undertake actions that further antagonized Republicans This would ultimately cause increased Republican anxiety over Johnson s obstruction and lead to the Judiciary Committee reversing their majority stance on impeachment 23 The first of these actions came when Henry Stanbery the attorney general of the United States issued at the request of Johnson a legal opinion which combined with an earlier opinion issued at the request of Johnson in March put forth an interoperation of the law that decreased the power of military district commanders in the South The Reconstruction Acts that had been passed over the vetoes of Johnson had created five military districts in the South and had given broad powers to the commanders of those districts to enforce the Reconstruction Acts However the attorney general s legal opinions found that the commanders had no power to remove local officials who acted against congressional policies The legal opinion also undermined restrictions on former confederates voting 23 The committee would resume collecting evidence for the impeachment inquiry 23 On July 17 1867 the House agreed to an amended version of a resolution by John Covode that instructed the House Committee on the Judiciary to in their investigation inquire into new a charge levied against the president The new charge was that Johnson had allegedly at the request of Lincoln assassination conspirator John Surratt s counsel given a full pardon to Confederate Stephen F Cameron The resolution instructed the committee to look into this action which it declared would demonstrate Johnson s sympathy with the men who murdered the President if true The resolution also instructed the committee to in the first week of the second session of the 40th Congress report evidence to the House on this together with the testimony already collected in the impeachment inquiry 19 The second session of the 40th Congress would begin on December 2 1867 32 Over the 1867 summer congressional recess which lasted from July 21 through November 20 1867 32 sentiments among Republicans shifted further with more Republicans coming to side in favor of impeachment due to continued acts by Johnson that antagonized Republicans One such act was Johnson s suspension of Secretary of War Edwin Stanton and replacement of him with Ulysses S Grant as secretary of war ad interim on August 12 1867 taking advantage of a loophole in the Tenure of Office Act created by the Senate being in recess 31 Another act was Johnson s subsequent firing of Generals Philip Sheridan who had been in charge of Texas and Louisiana which was soon followed by his August 12 1867 firing of Daniel Sickles who had been in charge of North Carolina and South Carolina which further contributed to Republican furor 21 31 Johnson had fired them against Grant s advice Both Sheridan and Sickles had acted in their offices to protect policies extending civil rights to African Americans 31 During an 1867 summer meeting held in response to provocative actions taken by Johnson more conservative Republicans were able to kill an effort by Radical Republicans to call for an October session of congress dealing with impeachment 3 This effort led by Radical Republican Representatives George S Boutwell Benjamin Butler and Thaddeus Stevens and Senators Charles D Drake and Charles Sumner would have ended the 1867 summer congressional recess The promoters of this hoped that they could act against intrigue by Johnson and continue to push for his impeachment in the special session However Conservative Republicans led by Representatives John Bingham and James G Blaine and Senators Lyman Trumbull and William P Fessenden succeeded in blocking this effort 21 In October 1867 rumors had been published in newspapers that the committee s stance on impeachment had changed The rumors were characterized as baseless by two of the three moderate Republicans that had previously voted against impeachment 33 Rumors particularly focused on Churchill and Wilson as individuals that had changed their positions These were fueled by pro impeachment committee member William Lawrence claiming to the press that it was true that two non specified members had switched their positions to now favor impeachment 34 However on October 25 John C Churchill released a statement in which he denied have shared with anyone anything that indicated that he had changed his mind 33 On October 31 James F Wilson denied rumors that he had written a correspondence declaring favor for sending an impeachment resolution to the full House However Wilson did not indicate his position 35 Because the Judiciary Committee left its proceedings confidential when Congress reconvened after the recess most congressmen were still under the belief that the pending majority report would be against impeachment just as the committee had previously sided in their earlier July vote 36 Judiciary Committee vote in favor of impeachment November 1867 Edit John C Churchill s change of vote moved the Judiciary Committee 5 4 in favor of impeachment Despite having stated in October that he had given nobody any indication of a change of mind in actuality John C Churchill had indeed changed his mind in favor of impeachment by the time Congress recess ended in November Consequentially on November 25 1867 the House Committee on the Judiciary voted in a 5 4 vote to recommend impeachment proceedings and to submit its report to the House 6 31 The majority approved a resolution which read Resolved That Andrew Johnson President of the United States be impeached of high crimes and misdemeanors 19 37 The minority on the committee that opposed impeachment had instead proposed ending the inquiry without an impeachment resolution by sending instead the House a resolution that would have read Resolved That the Committee on the Judiciary be discharged from the further consideration of the proposed impeachment of the President of the United States and that the subject be laid upon the table 19 House Judiciary Committee vote on recommending impeachment and sending an impeachment resolution to the full House 1 19 November 25 1867 Party Total votesDemocratic RepublicanYea Y 0 5 5Nay 2 2 4Vote by member District Member Party VoteMassachusetts 7 George S Boutwell Republican YeaNew York 22 John C Churchill Republican YeaWisconsin 4 Charles A Eldredge Democrat NayOhio 4 William Lawrence Republican YeaIllinois 11 Samuel S Marshall Democrat NayMaryland 4 Francis Thomas Republican YeaPennsylvania 23 Thomas Williams Republican YeaVermont 1 Frederick E Woodbridge Republican NayIowa 1 James F Wilson Republican NayAfter the committee vote became public Churchill published a lengthy letter in The New York Times explaining the reason for his change of mind 31 writing in part The President in the exercise of his constitutional powers by such changes of military commanders or such withdrawal of troops from the reconstructed States or such other acts as should destroy the confidence of loyalists and freedmen in prompt military protection in the exercise of their suffrage at any time before the new State Governments shall have been established and shall have set in operation a machinery of their own for the protection of their citizens would make it impossible to carry a single Southern State in accordance with the views of a majority of Congress 31 Committee reports Edit The committee submitted three reports to the full House a majority report and two dissenting minority reports 31 Majority report Edit Thomas Williams wrote the committee s majority report in favor of impeachment The majority report in favor of impeachment was written by Radical Republican committee member Thomas Williams and listed seventeen instances in which he argued Johnson had reached the threshold of impeachment The report wrote that the primary issue to fault Johnson with was the great salient point of accusation standing out in the foreground and challenging the attention of the country is the usurpation of power which involves of course a violation of law He argued that Johnson had undermined Congress 31 The majority report was poorly written with an unfocused and rambling style that undermined what valid points it made Harper s Weekly opined that it did not inspire general confidence The Chicago Tribune which was sympathetic to the Radical Republican cause even opined that the charges made in it were inferential and circumstantial The New York Times believed that the report actually helped the president by debunking persistent rumors that he had been involved in the conspiracy to assassinate Lincoln 4 The report characterized Johnson as having undermined the United States Congress with the intent of empowering the former Southern rebels In the Report Williams wrote that Johnson had been acting in the interest of The one great the purpose of reconstructing the shattered governments of the Rebel states in accordance with his own will in the interests of the great criminals who carried them into the rebellion and in such a way as to deprive the people of the loyal States of all chances of indemnity for the past or security for the future 31 38 The report alleged that Johnson had acted in the interest of empowering the former Southern rebels By pardoning their offenses resorting lands and bringing them back their hearts unrepentant and their hands yet red with the blood of our people into a condition where they could once more embarrass and defy if not absolutely rule the government in which they had vainly endeavored to destroy 31 38 The report characterized the alleged intent of Johnson to empower the former Southern rebels in such a manner as being the great master key which unlocks and interprets all of Johnson s special acts of mal administration 31 38 The report levied the following seventeen charges against Johnson That Johnson assuming it to be his duty to execute the constitutional guaranty had worked to without the consent of the legislature provide new governments for the former Confederate states as he pleased and sought to force them into the Union against the will of Congress and the people of the loyal States by the authority and patronage of his high office 19 That Johnson had committed malfeasance by Creating offices not provisioned for under the law and appointing men who were notoriously disqualified to take the test oath to those offices without the advice and consent of the United States Senate 19 Acting in clear violation of law by using funds belonging to the United States Department of War to pay for the expenses of his own work and for salaries at rates he had decided upon of the holders of aforementioned non provisioned offices 19 That Johnson had ordered those he appointed to positions that he created to appropriate government property and to levy taxes from the conquered people in order to pay expenses related to their offices 19 That Johnson had without equivalent returned railroads and rolling stock that the Union Army had captured to their former Confederate stockholders and had at great government expense constructed and renovated Southern railroads 19 That Johnson had Without authority of law sold the aforementioned railroad stockholders at a private valuation and on a long credit without any security whatever a large amount of rolling stock and machinery that had been purchased by and belonged to the United States government 19 Following numerous defaults by those he had sold this rolling stock and machinery to helped to allow them to pay debt they owed to other creditors by postponing their debt due to the United States government 19 Issued arrears of interest on a large amount of bonds of the companies guaranteed by the State of Tennessee which Johnson himself held a large amount of 19 That Johnson had Given back former Confederate owners large amounts of cotton and other property that had been seized by the United States Treasury 19 Worked to pay back proceeds of actual sales of such property in utter contempt of the law by directing the Treasury to make such payments and by directing the aggrieved parties to seek remedy in the Courts thereby violating the true meaning and spirit of the Constitutional clause containing the language that no money shall be drawn from the treasury but in consequences of appropriations made by law 19 That Johnson had to the great detriment of the public abused his pardon powers by releasing the most active and formidable leaders of the Confederacy and had sought to restore to them their property and means of influence in the hopes of receiving their assistance in furthering his policy Also that Johnson had also been substantially delegating that power for the same objects to his provisional governors 19 The Johnson had abused his pardon powers in issuing the simultaneous full pardons of 193 deserters and the restoring of their justly forfeited claims to arrears of pay from the Government and that Johnson had done this without proper inquiry or sufficient evidence 19 That Johnson had Refused to enforce the laws passed by Congress for the suppression of the rebellion and punishment of those who gave it comfort and support in directing proceedings against delinquents and their property 19 Completely obstructed the course of public justice by either prohibiting the start of such legal proceedings or if they had already commenced staying them indefinitely or ordering the absolute discontinuance of such proceedings 19 That Johnson had further obstructed the course of public imprisonment for Clement Claiborne Clay an important state prisoner had forbidden Clay s arrest in proceedings instituted against him for treason and conspiracy in the State of Alabama and had ordered property that had been seized from Clay by a United States district attorney to be restored to him 19 That Johnson had abused his Constitutional appointment power by Removing on system and to the great prejudice of public a large number of meritorious public officers solely because they refused to support Johnson s claim that he had a right to reorganize and restore the former Confederate states on his own terms and because they had instead favored honoring the jurisdiction and authority of Congress on such matters 19 Making recess appointments of people that he had previously nominated for office and whose previous nominations been rejected by the United States Senate 19 That Johnson had against the law exercised powers to dispense by commissioning individuals who were notoriously disqualified by their participation in the rebellion from taking the oath of office required by act of Congress as revenue officers and to offices that had not been legislatively provided for and had allowed them to take such offices and exercise their duties and paid them salaries for their work 19 That Johnson had in accordance with his public declaration that he would veto all measures whenever they came to him systematically vetoed all important measures of Congress looking to the reorganization and restoration of rebel States That he had done so with no other reasons than a determination to prevent the exercise of the undoubted power and jurisdiction of Congress over a question that was cognizable exclusively by them 19 That Johnson had brought the patronage of his office into conflict the with freedom of elections by permitting and encouraging his official retainers to travel the nation attending political convention and addressing crowds instead of performing the jobs they were receiving high salaries for 19 That Johnson had exerted all the influence of his position to prevent the residents of the former Confederate states from accepting terms that Congress had offered them and had neutralized to a large extend the effects of the national victory by impressing them with the opinion that the Congress of the United States was bloodthirsty and implacable and that their only hope was in adhering to him 19 That Johnson had Through his undue tenderness and transparent partiality to Confederates caused widespread oppression and bloodshed 19 Encouraged New Orleans massacre of 1866 the murder of loyal citizens in New Orleans by a Confederate mob pretending to act as a police through hireling correspondence with its leaders 19 Encouraged the New Orleans massacre of 1866 by denouncing the exercise of the constitutional right of a political convention to assemble peacefully in that city as being an act of treason for which violent suppression was justified Encouraged the New Orleans massacre of 1866 by commanding the military to assist in forcing the dispersal of those attending the convention rather than preventing the forced dispersal of convention attendees 19 That Johnson was guilty of acts calculated if not intended to subvert the Government of the United States by denying that the Thirty ninth Congress was a constitutional body and fostering a spirit of disaffection and disobedience to the law and rebellion against its authority by endeavoring in public speeches to bring it to odium and contempt 19 Minority reports Edit One minority report was agreed to by the two Democratic members Marshall and Eldredge while the other was agreed to by the two moderate Republicans that had voted against recommending impeachment Woodbridge and Wilson 19 31 18 The Democratic minority report was written by Marshall and dissented from all criticism of Johnson 19 18 The Republican minority report written by Wilson wrote that while they were against impeachment they believed Johnson deserves the censure and condemnation of every well disposed citizen It argued that the Congress should wait and let Americans remove Johnson from office in the 1868 presidential election 19 31 18 It declared that Johnson has disappointed the hopes and expectations of those who placed him in power He had betrayed their confidence and joined hands with their enemies However it also declared judge him politically we must condemn him But the day of political impeachments would be a sad one for this country 19 In the report Wilson also wrote that political unfitness and incapacity must be tried at the ballot box not in the high court of impeachment 4 18 The Republican minority report argued that impeachment required a criminal offense and that in impeachment trials the Senate acted as a court of special criminal jurisdiction and therefore needed to follow legal forms He argued that impeachment trials were not to be political procedures Without evidence he argued that judicial rules of evidence were required to be applied in Senate impeachment trials and that in such trials the Senate could only be able to try offenses known to the Constitution or to the laws of the United States Wilson made weak arguments in support of this often using incomplete logic 4 18 Wilson s Republican majority report also gave effective rebuttals of the factual charges issued in the majority report 4 While the majority report had found American precedents to support its position that impeachment did not require a legal crime to be committed Wilson argued the practical considerations of this theory in the Republican minority report He voiced concern that if impeachment were entirely a political process it might mean that a president could be impeached merely for policies that are unpopular with their opponents 4 Impeachment resolution majority and minority reports and testimony reported to the House Edit Later on November 25 1867 on behalf of the committee Boutwell submitted to the House the majority report and the impeachment resolution 8 39 It was only then that those not on the committee learned that the committee had decided to support impeachment 31 36 The impeachment resolution reported by the committee simply read Resolved That Andrew Johnson President of the United States be impeached of high crimes and misdemeanors 39 Boutwell then submitted to the House the testimony taken by the committee in its inquiry After this the minority reports were submitted by James F Wilson and Samuel S Marshall 39 The House then approved a motion by Boutwell to have the reports printed together and to postpone further consideration of the subject of impeachment until December 4 1867 39 It was only after the reports were published that those not on the committee on found out that the change of vote in the House Committee on the Judiciary was due to Churchill having changed his stance on impeachment 31 36 House defeat of impeachment resolution EditOn December 5 1867 the House brought the Committee on the Judiciary s impeachment recommendation to the floor for consideration and discussion was thereafter held on the impeachment resolution reported by the Judiciary Committee with George S Boutwell presenting a case for impeachment and James F Wilson presenting a case against it 40 41 While conservative Republicans were confident that they would defeat impeachment Radical Republicans were confident that they could succeed in securing impeachment 36 However in the Judiciary Committee s vote two of the committee s seven Republican members each being two of the committee s three moderate Republicans had opposed impeachment This underscored the reality that Republicans remained divided on whether Johnson had committed conduct worthy of impeachment with many moderate Republicans still having little appetite for an impeachment 31 At the time there was a disagreement between Radical Republicans and conservative Republicans as to what constituted a high crime and misdemeanor which along with treason and bribery constituted the sole grounds for which impeachment was allowed under the United States Constitution Conservatives supported the theory put forth by the defense in a number of earlier federal impeachments that government officials only could be impeached for what constituted an indictable violation of criminal statutes or common law Their support for this theory at that time largely arose from fears for the institutional and political effects impeachment would have on the nation s stability Radical Republicans on the other hand believed in a more broad view on what high crimes and misdemeanors encompassed believing that the nation s framers had intended for malfeasance nonfeasance and in some cases misfeasance to be the subject of impeachment 21 They cited English precedents earlier American impeachments and a great consensus among most early nineteenth century American constitutional commentators to support this view They also cited the views of the likes of early American legal scholars such as William Duer James Kent William Rawle and Joseph Story as well as the authors of The Federalist Papers 21 George S Boutwell s argument in support of impeachment Edit George S Boutwell delivered the argument in favor of impeachment The House Committee on the Judiciary s Radical Republicans selected from their ranks to have George S Boutwell argue the case for impeachment to the house He made a four hour presentation stretched over two legislative days December 5 and 6 1867 which historian Michael Les Benedict later described as the clearest most eloquent and most convincing argument for the liberal view of the impeachment power 40 His speech largely focused on the question of whether the president s activities were legally impeachable 36 The speech lasted two hours 42 Boutwell argued that there needed to be a broad interpretation of impeachment powers He assailed the notion that impeachment required a clear violation of the law in order to be applied Instead citing British precedent and debates from the Constitutional Convention he argued that impeachment was intended to be used in instances where public trust had been violated and that impeachment was to be used when an officer refused to faithfully execute their office He argued that America could not wait until the next presidential election to remove an unsuitable president 40 Boutwell argued that impeachment power is subject to no revision or control but is rather solely to be guided by the judgement of the House of Representatives 36 Boutwell also argued that Johnson had committed flagrant misdeeds that approached criminality in his subversion of the law and refusal to uphold the law and therefore his actions had been clearly impeachable 40 He cited Johnson s veto of the Reconstruction Acts which the congress had overwhelmingly passed 40 He cited Johnson s urging for southern states under federal control to refuse to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution 40 He also cited Johnson s creation of provisional governorships without authorization and appointment of provisional governors that Boutwell claimed were ineligible to take official loyalty oaths due to their participation in the Confederacy 40 Citing these and other actions Boutwell alleged that Johnsons actions were intended to return Confederates to power in the state and national governments against the judgement of Congress Boutwell argued can there be any doubt as to his purpose or doubt as to the criminality of his purpose and his respojnsibility under the Constitution 36 Boutwell also framed a portion of his argument around the notion that impeachment could stop Johnson from interfering in the southern states during the 1868 presidential election citing specific concerns that Johnson could suppress the vote of African Americans 40 Boutwell argued To this House is given under the Constitution the sole power of impeachment and this power of impeachment furnishes the only means by which we can secure the execution of the laws and those of our fellow citizens who desire the administration of the law ought to sustain this House while it executes the great law which is in its hands and which is nowhere else while it is performing a high and solemn duty resting upon it by which that man who has been the chief violator of the law shall be removed and without which there can be no execution of the law anywhere If we neglect or refuse to use our powers when the case arises demanding decisive action the Government ceases to be a Government of laws and becomes a Government of men 40 James F Wilson s argument against impeachment Edit House Committee on the Judiciary Chairman James F Wilson delivered the argument against impeachment After Boutwell s presentation James F Wilson chairman of the House Committee on the Judiciary took to the floor to argue against impeachment Wilson argued that while Johnson was the worst of presidents his opposition to the positions of the Republican Party was not illegal Wilson argued that despite Boutwell s assertion that it did the House did not have lone authority to determine what constitutes an impeachable offense 40 Wilson warned the that a broad interpretation of impeachment powers as Boutwell championed in theory could allow the House to effectively dictate the policy of presidents 40 He spent half of his speech arguing that impeachment was only reserved for indictable crimes and the other half attacking those who opposed this position 36 Wilson characterized the part of Boutwell s argument that had argued impeachment could stop Johnson from interfering in the southern states during the 1868 presidential election as Boutwell effectively arguing the House should be allowed to impeach Johnson for something he could do rather than some thing he had done Wilson argued this would lead us even beyond the conscience of this house 9 40 Wilson also argued that much of Boutwell s argument was inconsistent with the majority committee report Indeed Boutwell s speech had a number of inconsistencies with the case made in the majority report Boutwell s speech at one point had dismissed English precedents as irrelevant to impeachment under the United States constitution despite the fact that the majority report cited English precedents Boutwell had also argued against the minority s stance by characterizing their view as one under which an officer who committed murder in such a manner that they would be outside of United States court jurisdiction would be immune to impeachment However the majority report had explicitly stated a belief that murder would not be an impeachable offense as it would not directly relate to officeholding Michael Les Benedict has opined Wilson s blunt analysis of the inconstancies between Boutwell s brilliant speech and William s mediocre report did tremendous damage to the impeachers case 36 42 In his closing remarks Wilson asked if we cannot arraign the president for a specific crime for what are we to proceed against him If we cannot state upon paper a specific crime how are we to carry this case to the Senate for a trial 9 House vote on the impeachment resolution Edit A copy of a record recording the vote After finishing his speech on December 6 1867 Wilson motioned to lay the resolution on the table 36 42 This motion angered the many Radical Republicans that had prepared speeches of their own on the question of impeachment and felt that a successful motion to table would allow Republicans to evade the question of impeachment going without a direct vote on the matter Several Radical Republicans filibustered the motion On December 7 1867 Radical Republicans reached a quid pro quo agreement with Wilson in which they would end their filibuster and he would withdraw his motion to table the resolution in return for the House proceeding immediately to a vote on the resolution rather than allowing further debate 42 As a result of this general debate was not permitted on the resolution before it was voted on with debate instead being limited to the speeches that had been delivered by Boutwell and Wilson 19 42 On December 7 the House voted against impeachment by a margin of 57 108 with 66 Republicans 39 Democrats and one member congressmen of other party affiliations voting against impeachment and with all votes for impeachment coming from Republicans 36 40 43 22 members of congress were absent 17 Republicans 4 Democrats and 1 independent Republican Speaker Schuyler Colfax a Republican did not vote 43 as House rules do not require the speaker to vote during ordinary legislative proceedings unless their vote would be decisive or if the vote is being cast by ballot 12 One motivating factor for Republicans decision to vote against impeachment may have been the successes Democrats had in the 1867 elections including winning control of the Ohio General Assembly as well as other 1867 election outcomes such as voters in Connecticut Minnesota New York and Ohio turning down propositions to grant African Americans suffrage by large margins 31 44 45 46 Other concerning election results included the very narrow margin of victory with which the Republican nominee won the 1867 Ohio gubernatorial election 36 Only in the states of Michigan and Kentucky did Republicans improve upon their 1866 election performances in 1867 while the remaining eighteen states with elections saw Republicans lose sizable ground over the previous elections 36 Michael Les Benedict has suggested that as a result of these election results in the Republican caucus the centrists who might have favored impeachment had the elections demonstrated radical strength were left divided most of them opposing impeachment 36 Michael Les Benedict s analysis shows correlation between congressmen s votes in this impeachment vote and voting records in the 40th Congress votes on the matter of currency expansion as well as voting records on Reconstruction issues during the 39th Congress 36 House vote on the impeachment resolution 43 47 December 7 1867 Party Total votesDemocratic Republican Conservatives Conservative Republicans Independent RepublicansYea 0 57 0 0 0 57Nay Y 39 66 1 1 1 108Comparative bar chart Vote Vote total Yea votes 57 Nay votes 108Absent not voting 23Vote by member 43 District Member Party VoteKentucky 8 George Madison Adams Democrat NayIowa 3 William B Allison Republican NayMassachusetts 2 Oakes Ames Republican NayMissouri 9 George Washington Anderson Republican YeaMaryland 2 Stevenson Archer Democrat NayTennessee 6 Samuel Mayes Arnell Republican YeaNevada at large Delos R Ashley Republican NayOhio 10 James Mitchell Ashley Republican YeaCalifornia 1 Samuel Beach Axtell Democrat NayNew York 21 Alexander H Bailey Republican NayIllinois 12 Jehu Baker Republican NayMassachusetts 8 John Denison Baldwin Republican NayMassachusetts 6 Nathaniel P Banks Republican NayNew York 2 Demas Barnes Democrat AbsentConnecticut 4 William Henry Barnum Democrat NayMichigan 1 Fernando C Beaman Republican NayKentucky 7 James B Beck Democrat NayMissouri 8 John F Benjamin Republican NayNew Hampshire 3 Jacob Benton Republican NayOhio 16 John Bingham Republican NayMaine 3 James G Blaine Republican NayMichigan 3 Austin Blair Republican AbsentMassachusetts 7 George S Boutwell Republican YeaPennsylvania 6 Benjamin Markley Boyer Democrat NayIllinois 7 Henry P H Bromwell Republican YeaNew York 8 James Brooks Democrat NayPennsylvania 7 John Martin Broomall Republican YeaOhio 9 Ralph Pomeroy Buckland Republican NayIllinois 10 Albert G Burr Democrat NayMassachusetts 5 Benjamin Butler Republican YeaPennsylvania 10 Henry L Cake Republican AbsentOhio 2 Samuel Fenton Cary Independent Republican NayNew York 7 John Winthrop Chanler Democrat NayNew York 22 John C Churchill Republican YeaOhio 6 Reader W Clarke Republican YeaKansas at large Sidney Clarke Republican YeaWisconsin 3 Amasa Cobb Republican YeaIndiana 6 John Coburn Republican YeaIndiana 9 Schuyler Colfax Republican Did not vote speaker aIllinois 6 Burton C Cook Republican NayNew York 13 Thomas Cornell Republican AbsentPennsylvania 21 John Covode Republican YeaIllinois 8 Shelby Moore Cullom Republican YeaMassachusetts 10 Henry L Dawes Republican NayRhode Island 2 Nathan F Dixon II Republican NayIowa 5 Grenville M Dodge Republican NayMinnesota 2 Ignatius L Donnelly Republican YeaMichigan 6 John F Driggs Republican NayOhio 17 Ephraim R Eckley Republican YeaOhio 1 Benjamin Eggleston Republican NayNew Hampshire 1 Jacob Hart Ela Republican YeaWisconsin 4 Charles A Eldredge Democrat NayMassachusetts 1 Thomas D Eliot Republican NayIllinois 2 John F Farnsworth Republican YeaNew York 16 Orange Ferriss Republican NayMichigan 4 Thomas W Ferry Republican NayNew York 19 William C Fields Republican NayPennsylvania 20 Darwin Abel Finney Republican AbsentNew York 4 John Fox Democrat AbsentOhio 19 James A Garfield Republican NayPennsylvania 8 James Lawrence Getz Democrat NayPennsylvania 15 Adam John Glossbrenner Democrat NayKentucky 3 Jacob Golladay Democrat NayMissouri 4 Joseph J Gravely Republican YeaNew York 15 John Augustus Griswold Republican NayKentucky 5 Asa Grover Democrat NayNew Jersey 2 Charles Haight Democrat NayNew Jersey 5 George A Halsey Republican NayOhio 8 Cornelius S Hamilton Republican NayIllinois 4 Abner C Harding Republican YeaTennessee 7 Isaac Roberts Hawkins Republican NayCalifornia 2 William Higby Republican YeaNew Jersey 4 John Hill Republican NayIndiana 4 William S Holman Democrat NayMassachusetts 4 Samuel Hooper Republican NayWisconsin 2 Benjamin F Hopkins Republican YeaConnecticut 2 Julius Hotchkiss Democrat NayIowa 6 Asahel W Hubbard Republican NayWest Virginia 1 Chester D Hubbard Republican NayConnecticut 1 Richard D Hubbard Democrat NayNew York 17 Calvin T Hulburd Republican NayNew York 30 James M Humphrey Democrat NayIndiana 3 Morton C Hunter Republican YeaIllinois 5 Ebon C Ingersoll Republican NayRhode Island 1 Thomas Jenckes Republican AbsentCalifornia 3 James A Johnson Democrat NayKentucky 6 Thomas Laurens Jones Democrat NayIllinois 1 Norman B Judd Republican YeaIndiana 5 George Washington Julian Republican YeaPennsylvania 4 William D Kelley Republican YeaNew York 25 William H Kelsey Republican YeaIndiana 2 Michael C Kerr Democrat NayNew York 12 John H Ketcham Republican NayWest Virginia 2 Bethuel Kitchen Republican AbsentKentucky 4 J Proctor Knott Democrat NayPennsylvania 16 William Henry Koontz Republican NayNew York 20 Addison H Laflin Republican NayPennsylvania 24 George Van Eman Lawrence Republican NayOhio 4 William Lawrence Republican YeaMissouri 7 Benjamin F Loan Republican YeaNew York 26 William S Lincoln Republican NayIllinois at large John A Logan Republican YeaIowa 4 William Loughridge Republican YeaMaine 1 John Lynch Republican YeaOregon at large Rufus Mallory Republican AbsentIllinois 11 Samuel S Marshall Democrat NayNew York 18 James M Marvin Republican NayTennessee 2 Horace Maynard Republican YeaNew York 23 Dennis McCarthy Republican NayMissouri 5 Joseph W McClurg Republican YeaMaryland 1 Hiram McCullough Democrat NayPennsylvania 13 Ulysses Mercur Republican YeaPennsylvania 14 George Funston Miller Republican NayNew Jersey 1 William Moore Republican AbsentPennsylvania 22 James K Moorhead Republican NayOhio 13 George W Morgan Democrat NayPennsylvania 17 Daniel Johnson Morrell Republican AbsentNew York 5 John Morrissey Democrat AbsentTennessee 4 James Mullins Republican YeaOhio 5 William Mungen Democrat NayPennsylvania 3 Leonard Myers Republican YeaMissouri 2 Carman A Newcomb Republican YeaIndiana 1 William E Niblack Democrat NayDelaware at large John A Nicholson Democrat NayTennessee 8 David Alexander Nunn Republican YeaPennsylvania 2 Charles O Neill Republican YeaIndiana 8 Godlove Stein Orth Republican YeaWisconsin 1 Halbert E Paine Republican YeaMaine 2 Sidney Perham Republican NayMaine 4 John A Peters Republican NayMaryland 3 Charles E Phelps Conservative NayMaine 5 Frederick Augustus Pike Republican NayMissouri 1 William A Pile Republican YeaOhio 15 Tobias A Plants Republican NayVermont 2 Luke P Poland Republican NayWest Virginia 3 Daniel Polsley Republican NayNew York 24 Theodore M Pomeroy Republican AbsentIowa 2 Hiram Price Republican YeaNew York 14 John V L Pruyn Democrat NayPennsylvania 1 Samuel J Randall Democrat NayIllinois 13 Green Berry Raum Republican AbsentNew York 10 William H Robertson Republican NayNew York 3 William Erigena Robinson Democrat NayIllinois 9 Lewis W Ross Democrat NayWisconsin 5 Philetus Sawyer Republican NayOhio 3 Robert C Schenck Republican YeaPennsylvania 19 Glenni William Scofield Republican AbsentNew York 28 Lewis Selye Independent Republican AbsentIndiana 11 John P C Shanks Republican YeaOhio 7 Samuel Shellabarger Republican AbsentNew Jersey 3 Charles Sitgreaves Democrat NayVermont 3 Worthington Curtis Smith Republican NayOhio 18 Rufus P Spalding Republican NayConnecticut 3 Henry H Starkweather Republican NayNew Hampshire 2 Aaron Fletcher Stevens Republican YeaPennsylvania 9 Thaddeus Stevens Republican YeaNew York 6 Thomas E Stewart Conservative Republican NayTennessee 3 William Brickly Stokes Republican YeaMaryland 5 Frederick Stone Democrat NayNew York 1 Stephen Taber Democrat NayNebraska at large John Taffe Republican AbsentPennsylvania 5 Caleb Newbold Taylor Republican NayMaryland 4 Francis Thomas Republican YeaTennessee 5 John Trimble Republican YeaMichigan 5 Rowland E Trowbridge Republican YeaMassachusetts 3 Ginery Twichell Republican AbsentMichigan 2 Charles Upson Republican NayNew York 31 Henry Van Aernam Republican NayPennsylvania 11 Daniel Myers Van Auken Democrat NayNew York 29 Burt Van Horn Republican AbsentMissouri 6 Robert T Van Horn Republican YeaOhio 12 Philadelph Van Trump Democrat NayNew York 11 Charles Van Wyck Republican NayNew York 27 Hamilton Ward Republican YeaWisconsin 6 Cadwallader C Washburn Republican NayIndiana 7 Henry D Washburn Republican NayMassachusetts 9 William B Washburn Republican NayIllinois 3 Elihu B Washburne Republican NayOhio 14 Martin Welker Republican NayPennsylvania 23 Thomas Williams Republican YeaIndiana 10 William Williams Republican YeaIowa 1 James F Wilson Republican NayOhio 11 John Thomas Wilson Republican NayPennsylvania 18 Stephen Fowler Wilson Republican YeaMinnesota 1 William Windom Republican AbsentNew York 9 Fernando Wood Democrat AbsentVermont 1 Frederick E Woodbridge Republican NayPennsylvania 12 George Washington Woodward Democrat NayNotes a Schuyler Colfax was serving as Speaker of the House Per House rules the Speaker is not required to vote in ordinary legislative proceedings except when such vote would be decisive or when the House is engaged in voting by ballot 12 Aftermath EditRadical furor over the conservative and moderate Republicans votes against impeachment threatened a schism in the Republican Party Two days after the failed impeachment vote Radicals met at Thaddeus Stevens residence to discuss creating a separate congressional organization for Radicals separate from the Republican Party 21 On December 13 1867 members of the House availed themselves of freedom of debate in the Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union and several members discussed the failed impeachment resolution at length 19 With Johnson feeling liberated from the threat of impeachment he began acting even more aggressively He made moves that combined with earlier actions made it so every reconstructed state was being overseen by officers more sympathetic to former rebels than Southern loyalists to the union On December 28 1867 he removed John Pope from his position of command over Georgia and Alabama and Edward Ord from his position of command over Arkansas and Mississippi replacing them respectively with the more conservative George Meade and the immensely conservative Alvan Cullem Gillem 21 He also substituted Meade s subordinante Wager Swayne who Meade had been delegating authority over Alabama to 21 On January 22 1868 the House approved by a vote of 99 31 a resolution to launch a second impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson this time run by the House Select Committee on Reconstruction 48 At a February 13 1868 committee meeting a vote on a motion to table consideration of a resolution proposed by Stevens to impeach Johnson had effectively signaled that five of the committee s members still stood opposed to impeachment unchanged in their position since the December 1867 vote After the February 13 vote it momentarily appeared that the prospect of impeachment was dead 49 50 Impeachment of Johnson in 1868 Edit Main articles Impeachment of Andrew Johnson and Impeachment trial of Andrew Johnson While impeachment appeared to be a dead issue after the February 13 1868 vote by the Committee on Reconstruction the prospect of impeachment would receive new life days later On February 21 1868 Johnson in violation of the Tenure of Office Act that had been passed by Congress in March 1867 over Johnson s veto attempted to remove Edwin Stanton the secretary of war who the act was largely designed to protect from office 51 On February 10 the House voted to move any further responsibility over impeachment away from the Committee on the Judiciary and to the Select Committee on Reconstruction 52 On February 21 1868 Thaddeus Stevens submitted a resolution to the House resolving for the evidence taken on impeachment by first impeachment inquiry into Johnson be referred to the Select Committee on Reconstruction who were conducting the second impeachment inquiry and that the Committee on Reconstruction have leave to report at any time This resolution was approved by the House 19 On February 22 the Select Committee on Reconstruction submitted to the House an impeachment resolution and a report that recommended Johnson be impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors 19 53 On February 24 1868 the United States House of Representatives voted 126 47 to impeach Johnson for high crimes and misdemeanors which were detailed in eleven articles of impeachment passed in separate votes held roughly a week after the impeachment resolution was adopted 52 54 The primary charge presented against Johnson in the articles of impeachment that were adopted was that he had violated the Tenure of Office Act by removing Stanton from office 52 It was decided by the committee tasked with drafting the articles of impeachment that they would not include any of the charges that had been recommended by Thomas Williams Judiciary Committee majority report in the first impeachment inquiry against Johnson The New York Times reported that inclusion of those claims would be seen as fatally harming the moral and legal effect of the prosecution in Johnson s impeachment 4 The articles of impeachment that were ultimately produced by the committee were narrow in their focus and were legalistic and molded on criminal indictment likely in direct reaction to the failure of the broad allegations cited in the 1867 effort to persuade the House members 4 22 Johnson was narrowly acquitted in his Senate trial with the Senate voting 35 to 19 votes in favor of conviction one vote short of the two thirds majority needed to convict 55 See also EditTimeline of the impeachment of Andrew JohnsonExternal links Edit Wikisource has The House Judiciary Committee s majority report minority views and impeachment resolution as printed in the New York Times on November 27 1867 s The New York Times 1867 11 27 Washington Reports of the Judiciary Committee on Impeachment Majority and minority reports of the United States House Committee on the Judiciary printed November 25 1867 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Building the Case for Impeachment December 1866 to June 1867 US House of Representatives History Art amp Archives history house gov United States House of Representatives Retrieved 2 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k Wineapple Brenda 2019 Twelve Tenure of Office The impeachers The Trial of Andrew Johnson and The Dream of a Just Nation First ed New York ISBN 9780812998368 a b c d e f Benedict Michael Les 1998 From Our Archives A New Look at the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson PDF Political Science Quarterly 113 3 493 511 doi 10 2307 2658078 ISSN 0032 3195 JSTOR 2658078 Retrieved 2 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Stewart David O 2009 Impeached The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Licoln s Legacy Simon and Schuster pp 83 98 92 98 105 112 154 156 ISBN 978 1416547495 Current Gossip The Brooklyn Daily Eagle 18 December 1866 Retrieved 31 July 2022 via Newspapers com a b c d Impeachment Efforts Against President Andrew Johnson US House of Representatives History Art amp Archives history house gov United States House of Representatives Retrieved 2 March 2021 a b c d Stathis Stephen W Huckabee David C September 16 1998 Congressional Resolutions on Presidential Impeachment A Historical Overview PDF sgp fas org Congressional Research Service Retrieved 20 March 2022 a b c d e f g h Ross Edmond G 1868 Chapter IV First Attempt to Impeach the President History of the Impeachment Of Andrew Johnson President Of The United States Project Gutenberg a b c Stathis Stephen W 1994 Impeachment and Trial of President Andrew Johnson A View from the Iowa Congressional Delegation Presidential Studies Quarterly 24 1 29 47 ISSN 0360 4918 JSTOR 27551191 Retrieved 13 September 2022 a b c Journal of the United States House of Representatives Being The Second Session of the Thirty Ninth Congress Begun and Held at the City of Washington D C December 3 1866 in the Ninety First Year of the Independence of the United States voteview com Government Printy Office 1867 pp 121 122 Retrieved 16 March 2022 a b c d e f TO PASS A RESOLUTION TO IMPEACH THE PRESIDENT P 320 2 House Vote 418 Jan 7 1867 GovTrack us Retrieved 23 March 2022 a b c d Rules of the House of Representatives with Notes and Annotations PDF www govinfo gov XXXIX Congress Second Session Newspapers com New York Tribune January 8 1867 Retrieved 22 July 2022 Osborne John The Fortieth Congress strongly rejects its Judiciary Committee s recommendation to President Johnson House Divided hd housedivided dickinson edu House Divided The Civil War Research Engine at Dickinson College Retrieved 13 March 2021 Dodds A John HONEST JOHN COVODE Retrieved 12 March 2021 IMPEACHMENT INVESTIGRATION Newspapers com Chicago Tribune 30 Mar 1867 Retrieved 2 June 2021 Dunning William A 1906 More Light on Andrew Johnson The American Historical Review 11 3 574 594 doi 10 2307 1836023 ISSN 0002 8762 JSTOR 1836023 Retrieved 14 September 2022 a b c d e f United States Congress House Committee on the Judiciary 1867 Impeachment of the President U S Government Printing Office Retrieved 4 September 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar Hinds Asher C 4 March 1907 HINDS PRECEDENTS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES INCLUDING REFERENCES TO PROVISIONS OF THE CONSTITUTION THE LAWS AND DECISIONS OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE PDF United States Congress pp 824 831 843 845 846 Retrieved 2 March 2021 a b 49th Congress 1865 1867 gt Representatives www voteview com Retrieved 24 March 2022 a b c d e f g h i j Benedict Michael Les 1998 From Our Archives A New Look at the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson PDF Political Science Quarterly 113 3 493 511 doi 10 2307 2658078 ISSN 0032 3195 JSTOR 2658078 a b The House Impeaches Andrew Johnson Washington D C Office of the Historian and the Clerk of the House s Office of Art and Archives Retrieved January 13 2021 a b c d e f Meacham Jon Naftali Timothy Baker Peter Engel Jeffrey A 2018 Ch 1 Andrew Johnson by John Meachem Impeachment an American history 2018 Modern Library ed New York pp 62 64 ISBN 978 1984853783 The Congressional Globe Vol 37 United States Congress 1867 pp 1754 and 1755 Retrieved 22 March 2022 Johnson s Impeachment House Divided hd housedivided dickinson edu House Divided The Civil War Research Engine at Dickinson College Retrieved 13 March 2021 a b c The Congressional Globe 1867 03 04 Superintendent of Government Documents 4 March 1867 pp 18 25 a b c d Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States Being the First Session of the Fortieth Congress Begun and Held at the City of Washington March 4 1867 In the Ninety First Year of the Independence of the United States Government Printing Office 1867 pp 19 21 By the Cable Newspapers com The Wheeling Daily Intelligencer March 8 1867 Retrieved 26 July 2022 1st Edition Newspapers com Chicago Evening Post March 7 1867 Retrieved 26 July 2022 U S Senate Impeachment Trial of President Andrew Johnson 1868 www senate gov United States Senate Retrieved 29 March 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Impeachment Rejected November to December 1867 US House of Representatives History Art amp Archives history house gov United States House of Representatives Retrieved 2 March 2021 a b Session Dates of Congress 40th to 49th Congresses 1867 1887 US House of Representatives History Art amp Archives history house gov United States House of Representatives Retrieved 26 September 2022 a b The Impeachment Question Newspapers com Chicago Tribune October 25 1867 Retrieved 22 July 2022 Impeachment Again Complexion of the Judiciary Committee Opinions and Assertations of Judge Lawrence Interesting Statements Newspapers com The Charleston Mercury October 22 1867 Retrieved 26 July 2022 Mr Wilson and Impeachment Newspapers com The Philadelphia Inquirer November 1 1867 Retrieved 22 July 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Benedict Michael Les 1973 3 The Politics of Impeachment The impeachment and trial of Andrew Johnson 1st ed New York Norton ISBN 0 393 05473 X The Lancaster Examiner Wednesday November 27 1867 The Lancaster Examiner November 27 1867 Retrieved 22 July 2022 via Newspapers com a b c The Majority Report Harrisburg Telegraph November 27 1867 Retrieved 22 July 2022 via Newspapers com a b c d Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States Being the First Session of the Fortieth Congress Begun and Held at the City of Washington March 4 1867 In the Ninety First Year of the Independence of the United States Government Printing Office 1867 pp 265 266 a b c d e f g h i j k l m The Case for Impeachment December 1867 US House of Representatives History Art amp Archives history house gov United States House of Representatives Retrieved 2 March 2021 Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States Being the Second Session of the Fortieth Congress Begun and Held at the City of Washington December 2 1867 In the Ninety First Year of the Independence of the United States Government Printing Office 1868 p 42 a b c d e Domer Thomas 1976 The Role of George S Boutwell in the Impeachment and Trial of Andrew Johnson The New England Quarterly 49 4 596 617 doi 10 2307 364736 ISSN 0028 4866 JSTOR 364736 Retrieved 11 September 2022 a b c d TO PASS THE IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT RESOLUTION House Vote 119 Dec 7 1867 GovTrack us Levine Robert S 2021 The failed promise Reconstruction Frederick Douglass and the impeachment of Andrew Johnson First ed New York NY pp 179 180 ISBN 9781324004752 Stewart David O 2009 Impeached the Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln s Legacy New York Simon and Schuster pp 95 97 ISBN 978 1 4165 4749 5 Castel Albert E 1979 The Presidency of Andrew Johnson American Presidency Lawrence Kan The Regents Press of Kansas p 146 ISBN 978 0 7006 0190 5 Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States Being the Second Session of the Fortieth Congress Begun and Held at the City of Washington December 2 1867 In the Ninety First Year of the Independence of the United States United States House of Representatives 1868 p 53 Retrieved 22 March 2022 Journal of the United States House of Representatives 40th Congress second session pages 259 262 voteview com United States House of Representatives 1868 Retrieved 16 March 2022 Washington Newspapers com Chicago Evening Post February 13 1868 Retrieved 22 July 2022 Staunton Spectator Tuesday February 18 1868 Staunton Spectator February 18 1868 Retrieved 22 July 2022 via Newspapers com Trefousse Hans L 1989 Andrew Johnson A Biography New York City W W Norton amp Company p 306 ISBN 978 0 393 31742 8 a b c Johnson Impeached February to March 1868 US House of Representatives History Art amp Archives history house gov United States House of Representatives Retrieved 2 March 2021 A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation U S Congressional Documents and Debates 1774 1875 memory loc gov Library of Congress Retrieved 28 March 2022 This article incorporates public domain material from Stephen W Stathis and David C Huckabee Congressional Resolutions on Presidential Impeachment A Historical Overview PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved December 31 2019 Impeached but Not Removed March to May 1868 US House of Representatives History Art amp Archives history house gov United States House of Representatives Retrieved 2 March 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title First impeachment inquiry against Andrew Johnson amp oldid 1137799438, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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