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Horatio Seymour

Horatio Seymour (May 31, 1810 – February 12, 1886) was an American politician. He served as Governor of New York from 1853 to 1854 and from 1863 to 1864. He was the Democratic Party nominee for president in the 1868 United States presidential election, losing to Republican Ulysses S. Grant.

Horatio Seymour
Portrait by Mathew Brady, c. 1860–1865
18th Governor of New York
In office
January 1, 1863 – December 31, 1864
LieutenantDavid R. Floyd-Jones
Preceded byEdwin D. Morgan
Succeeded byReuben Fenton
In office
January 1, 1853 – December 31, 1854
LieutenantSanford E. Church
Preceded byWashington Hunt
Succeeded byMyron H. Clark
Speaker of the New York State Assembly
In office
January 7, 1845 – December 31, 1845
Preceded byElisha Litchfield
Succeeded byWilliam C. Crain
Member of the New York State Assembly
from Oneida County
In office
January 1, 1844 – December 31, 1845[a]
Preceded byMulti-member district[b]
Succeeded byMulti-member district[c]
In office
January 1, 1842 – January 31, 1842[d]
Preceded byMulti-member district[e]
Succeeded byMulti-member district[f]
Mayor of Utica, New York
In office
1842–1843
Preceded byJohn C. Devereux
Succeeded byFrederick Hollister
Personal details
Born(1810-05-31)May 31, 1810
Pompey, New York, U.S.
DiedFebruary 12, 1886(1886-02-12) (aged 75)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Resting placeForest Hill Cemetery
Utica, New York, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseMary Bleecker
RelationsHenry Seymour (father)
Origen S. Seymour (cousin)
Horatio Seymour (uncle)
Edward W. Seymour (nephew)
Horatio Seymour Jr. (nephew)
Roscoe Conkling (brother-in-law)
EducationHobart College
Norwich University (BA)
Profession
  • Politician
  • attorney
  • businessman
Signature

Born in Pompey, New York, Seymour was admitted to the New York bar in 1832. He primarily focused on managing his family's business interests. After serving as a military secretary to Governor William L. Marcy, Seymour won election to the New York State Assembly. He was elected that body's speaker in 1845 and aligned with Marcy's "Softshell Hunker" faction. Seymour was nominated for governor in 1850 but narrowly lost to the Whig candidate, Washington Hunt. He defeated Hunt in the 1852 gubernatorial election, and spent much of his tenure trying to reunify the fractured Democratic Party, losing his 1854 re-election campaign in part due to this disunity.

Despite this defeat, Seymour emerged as a prominent national figure within the party. As several Southern states threatened secession, Seymour supported the Crittenden Compromise as a way to avoid civil war. He supported the Union war effort during the Civil War but criticized President Abraham Lincoln's leadership. He won election to another term as governor in 1862 and continued to oppose many of Lincoln's policies. Several delegates at the 1864 Democratic National Convention hoped to nominate Seymour for president, but Seymour declined to seek the nomination. Beset by various issues, he narrowly lost re-election in 1864. After the war, Seymour supported President Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction policies.

As the 1868 Democratic National Convention opened, there was no clear front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination, but Seymour remained widely popular. Serving as the chairman of the convention, as he had in 1864, Seymour refused to seek the nomination for himself. After twenty-two indecisive ballots, the convention nominated Seymour, who finally relented on his opposition to running for president. Seymour faced General Ulysses S. Grant, the widely popular Republican Party nominee, in the 1868 election. Grant won a strong majority of the electoral vote, though his margin in the popular vote was not as overwhelming. Seymour never again sought public office but remained active in politics and supported Grover Cleveland's 1884 campaign for president.

Early life and education

Seymour was born in Pompey Hill, Onondaga County, New York. His father was Henry Seymour, a merchant and politician; his mother, Mary Ledyard Forman (1785–1859), of Matawan, New Jersey, was the daughter of General Jonathan Forman and Mary Ledyard.[1] He was one of six children, and his sister Julia Catherine became the wife of Roscoe Conkling. At the age of 10 he moved with the rest of his family to Utica, where he attended a number of local schools, including Geneva College (later Hobart College). In the autumn of 1824 he was sent to the American Literary, Scientific & Military Academy (Norwich University).[2] Upon his return to Utica after graduating in 1828,[3] Seymour read for the law in the offices of Greene Bronson and Samuel Beardsley. Though admitted to the bar in 1832, he did not enjoy work as an attorney and was primarily preoccupied with politics and managing his family's business interests.[4] He married Mary Bleecker in 1835.[5]

Political career

Entry into politics

Seymour's first role in politics came in 1833, when he was named military secretary to the state's newly elected Democratic governor, William L. Marcy with the rank of colonel.[3] The six years in that position gave Seymour an invaluable education in the politics of the state, and established a firm friendship between the two men. In 1839 he returned to Utica to take over the management of his family's estate in the aftermath of his father's suicide two years earlier, investing profitably in real estate, banks, mines, railroads, and other ventures. In 1841 he won election to the New York State Assembly, and he served simultaneously as mayor of Utica from 1842 to 1843. He won election to the Assembly again in 1843 to 1844, and thanks in part to massive turnover in the ranks of the Democratic caucus he was elected speaker in 1845.[4]: 33–86 

When, in the late 1840s, the New York Democratic Party split between the two factions of Hunkers and Barnburners, Seymour was among those identified with the more conservative Hunker faction, led by Marcy and Senator Daniel S. Dickinson. After this split led to disaster in the election of 1848, when the division between the Hunkers, who supported Lewis Cass, and the Barnburners, who supported their leader, former President Martin Van Buren, Seymour became identified with Marcy's faction within the Hunkers, the so-called "Softshell Hunkers," who hoped to reunite with the Barnburners so as to be able to bring back Democratic dominance within the state.

First term as governor

In 1850, Seymour was the gubernatorial candidate of the reunited Democratic Party, but he narrowly lost to the Whig candidate, Washington Hunt. Seymour and the Softs supported the candidacy of their leader, Marcy, for the presidency in 1852, but when he was defeated they enthusiastically campaigned for Franklin Pierce in 1852. That year proved a good one for the Softs, as Seymour, again supported by a unified Democratic Party, narrowly defeated Hunt in a gubernatorial rematch, while Pierce, overwhelmingly elected president, appointed Marcy as his Secretary of State.

Seymour's first term as governor of New York proved turbulent. He won approval of a measure to finance the enlargement of the Erie Canal via a $10.5 million loan in a special election in February 1854. But much of his tenure was plagued by factional chaos within the state Democratic Party. The Pierce administration's use of the patronage power alienated the Hards, who determined to run their own gubernatorial candidate against Seymour in 1854. Furthermore, the administration's support of the unpopular Kansas–Nebraska Act, with which Seymour was associated indirectly through his friendship with Marcy, cost him many votes. Whigs controlling the state legislature also sought to injure him further politically by responding to his call for action on the problem of alcohol abuse with a bill establishing a statewide prohibition, which Seymour vetoed as unconstitutional. Yet for all his troubles Seymour's prospects for reelection looked promising, as the divisions of the Democrats' opponents between the regular Whig candidate, Myron H. Clark, and the Know-Nothing Daniel Ullman appeared to be more dangerous to the Democrats' opponents than the candidacy of the Hard Greene C. Bronson looked to Democratic unity. In the end, however, the anti-Democratic tide was too strong, and in the four-way race Clark, who received only one-third of the vote, defeated Seymour by 309 votes.

Interlude

 
Horatio Seymour, c. 1860

Despite his defeat, as a former governor of the largest state of the Union, Seymour emerged as a prominent figure in party politics at the national level. In 1856, he was considered a possible compromise presidential candidate in the event of a deadlock between Franklin Pierce and James Buchanan until he wrote a letter definitively ruling himself out. In 1860, some considered Seymour a compromise candidate for the Democratic nomination at the reconvening convention in Baltimore. Seymour wrote a letter to the editor of his local newspaper declaring unreservedly that he was not candidate for either president or vice president. Seymour supported the candidacy of Stephen A. Douglas for the presidency in both 1856 and 1860. In 1861, he accepted nomination as the Democratic candidate for the United States Senate, which was largely an empty honor as the Republican majorities in the state legislature rendered a Republican victory a foregone conclusion.[4]: 171–173, 215–216, 231 

In the secession crisis following Abraham Lincoln's election in 1860, Seymour strongly endorsed the proposed Crittenden Compromise. After the start of the Civil War, Seymour took a cautious middle position within his party, supporting the war effort but criticizing Lincoln's conduct of the war. Seymour was especially critical of Lincoln's wartime centralization of power and restrictions on civil liberties, as well as his support for emancipation.

Second term as governor

 
Gubernatorial portrait of Horatio Seymour
 
Campaign rally celebrating Seymour's election

In 1862, the sitting governor, Republican Edwin D. Morgan, announced that he would not run for an additional term. Recognizing the symbolic importance of a victory in the Empire State, the Democratic Party nominated Seymour as the strongest candidate available. Though Seymour accepted the nomination with reluctance, he threw himself into the election, campaigning across the state in the hope that a Democratic victory would restrain the actions of the Radical Republicans in Washington. He won a close race against the Republican candidate James S. Wadsworth, one of a series of victories by the Democratic ticket in the state that year.[4]: 244–255 

Seymour's second term proved to be even more tumultuous than his first one. As governor of the largest state in the Union from 1863 to 1864, Seymour was one of the most prominent Democratic opponents of the President. He opposed the Lincoln administration's institution of the military draft in 1863 on constitutional grounds, an act which led many to question his support for the war. He also opposed a bill giving votes to the soldiers on legal grounds, vetoing the bill when it reached his desk. While not opposed to the goal he preferred to establish voting provisions through a constitutional amendment that was working its way simultaneously through the state legislature; nonetheless, his veto was portrayed by opponents as hostility to the soldiers. His decision to pay the state's foreign creditors using gold rather than greenbacks alienated "easy money" supporters, while his veto of a bill granting traction rights on Broadway in Manhattan earned him the opposition of Tammany Hall. Finally, his efforts to conciliate the rioters during the New York Draft Riots of July 1863 was used against him by the Republicans, who accused him of treason and support for the Confederacy.[4]: 283–336 

The growing accumulation of problems steadily eroded Seymour's position as governor. In what was regarded as a rebuke of his policies, Republicans swept the 1863 state midterm elections, winning all of the major offices and taking control of the State Assembly. In the state elections the following year, Seymour himself was defeated for reelection in a close race by Republican Reuben Fenton.[4]: 350–359, 381 

Prominent Democrat

 
Seymour in an undated photograph

Seymour continued as a prominent figure in national Democratic politics both during and immediately after his second term as governor. In 1864, he served as permanent chairman at the Democratic National Convention, where the opposition of many delegates to the two frontrunners, General George B. McClellan, a War Democrat, and Thomas H. Seymour (no relation to Horatio), a Copperhead, led many to seek out Seymour as a compromise candidate. He refused to be nominated, however, with the nomination ultimately going to McClellan. In the aftermath of the war Seymour joined other Democrats in supporting President Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction policies, and was a strong opponent of Radical Reconstruction, with its emphasis on guaranteeing civil and political rights for freed slaves.[4]: 359–370, 383–391 

1868 Presidential election

 
Seymour/Blair campaign poster

Nomination

As the 1868 presidential election approached, there was no clear candidate for the Democratic nomination. Of the numerous candidates in contention, George H. Pendleton, who had run as the Democratic vice-presidential nominee in 1864, enjoyed considerable support but alienated the fiscal conservatives in the party with his plan to pay off federal debt using greenbacks. When Seymour was approached about running for the nomination, he demurred again, preferring that either Indiana Senator Thomas A. Hendricks or U.S. Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase receive the nomination instead.

At the convention, Seymour once again served as permanent chairman. Balloting began on June 7; on the fourth ballot, the chairman of the North Carolina delegation cast his state's votes for Seymour, whereupon the former governor again restated his refusal to accept the nomination. Two days later, as the twenty-second ballot was being taken, it appeared that Hendricks was in the process of winning the nomination until the leader of the Ohio delegation suddenly switched his delegation's votes to Seymour. Though Seymour reiterated his unwillingness to be the nominee, the delegations revised their votes and gave the nomination to him unanimously.[4]: 411–431 

Campaign

 
Campaign badge, 1868, from the New York Public Library, Schomberg Collection

With the nomination forced upon him, Seymour committed himself to the campaign. He faced considerable challenges; his opponent, General Ulysses S. Grant, enjoyed the support of a unified Republican party and most of the nation's press. While he generally adhered to the tradition that presidential nominees did not actively campaign, Seymour did undertake a tour of the Midwest and the mid-Atlantic states in mid-October. In his campaign Seymour advocated a policy of conservative, limited government, and he opposed the Reconstruction policies of the Republicans in Congress. Seymour's campaign was also marked by pronounced appeals to racism with repeated attempts to brand General Grant as the "Nigger" candidate and Seymour as the "White Man's" candidate.[6] The Republican campaign, by contrast, was the first in which they "waved the bloody shirt", highlighting Seymour's support for mob violence against African-Americans. Though Seymour ran fairly close to Grant in the popular vote, he was defeated decisively in the electoral vote by a count of 214 to 80.[4]: 443–484  Subsequent to Seymour's loss, the Fifteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution was adopted which not only guaranteed the federal right to vote for recently emancipated slaves and others of African ancestry but also compelled New York State to reinstate voting rights for such citizens.

Later years

After the presidential election, Seymour remained involved in state politics, though primarily as an elder statesman rather than an active politician. He received a number of honors during this period, including the chancellorship of Union College in 1873. In 1874 he turned down almost certain election to the United States Senate, urging the nomination instead of the eventual choice, Francis Kernan. He refused two additional efforts to nominate him for the New York governorship, in 1876 and 1879, as well as a final attempt to select him as the Democratic presidential nominee in 1880.[4]: 512, 521–526, 535–539, 571 

Never enjoying robust health, Seymour suffered a permanent decline beginning in 1876. He made a final political effort in 1884 by campaigning for Grover Cleveland's election as president, but deteriorated physically the following year. On July 4, 1885, he was elected to represent his maternal grandfather Gen. Jonathan Forman in the Society of the Cincinnati in the State of New Jersey.[7] In January 1886 his wife Mary suffered an illness. Seymour's own health worsened further. Seymour died in February 1886 and was interred in Forest Hill Cemetery in Utica, New York; Mary died a month later and is buried next to him.[4]: 570–574 

Legacy

 
The Horatio Seymour memorial at the Cathedral of All Saints (Albany, New York).

There is a memorial to Seymour at the Cathedral of All Saints (Albany, New York).

Seymour, Wisconsin, was founded in 1868 and named after Horatio Seymour.

Seymour Avenue in the Bronx, New York, was named for him.

Electoral history

Gubernatorial elections

New York Gubernatorial Election 1850
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Horatio Seymour 214,352 49.57% +22.87
Whig Washington Hunt 214,614 49.64%
Liberty William Lawrence Chaplin 3,416 0.79%
Whig hold Swing
New York Gubernatorial Election 1852
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Horatio Seymour 264,121 50.31% +.74
Whig Washington Hunt (Incumbent) 241,525 46.01%
Free Soil Minthorne Tompkins 19,296 3.68%
Democratic gain from Whig Swing
New York Gubernatorial Election 1854
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Horatio Seymour (Incumbent) 156,495 33.32% −16.99
Whig Myron H. Clark 156,804 33.38%
Know Nothing Daniel Ullman 122,282 26.03%
Democratic Greene C. Bronson 33,850 7.21%
Whig gain from Democratic Swing
New York Gubernatorial Election 1862
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Horatio Seymour 306,649 50.89% +7.08
Republican James S. Wadsworth 295,897 49.11%
Democratic gain from Republican Swing
New York Gubernatorial Election 1864
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Horatio Seymour (Incumbent) 361,264 49.43% −1.46
Republican Reuben Fenton 368,557 50.57%
Republican gain from Democratic Swing

1868 Presidential election

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote(a) Electoral
vote(a)
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote(a)
Ulysses S. Grant Republican Illinois 3,013,650 52.7% 214 Schuyler Colfax Indiana 214
Horatio Seymour Democratic New York 2,708,744 47.3% 80 Francis Preston Blair, Jr. Missouri 80
Other 46 0.0% Other
Total 5,722,440 100% 294 294
Needed to win 148 148

Notes

  1. ^ Serving with:
    1844: Justus Childs, James Douglass, Richard Empey
    1854: Andrew Billings, Merit Brooks, Calvert Comstock
  2. ^ Dan P. Cadwell, Amos S. Fassett, David Murray, John H. Tower
  3. ^ Chauncey C. Cook, Benjamin F. Cooper, Daniel G. Dorrance, Russel Fuller
  4. ^ Serving with: Ichabod C. Baker, Ebenezer Robbins, DeWitt C. Stephens
  5. ^ Calvin Dawley, Joseph Halleck, Luke Hitchcock, Nathaniel Odell
  6. ^ Dan P. Cadwell, Amos S. Fassett, David Murray, John H. Tower

See also

References

  1. ^ "Horatio Seymour".
  2. ^ Ellis, William Arba (1911). Norwich University, 1819–1911; Her History, Her Graduates, Her Roll of Honor. Vol. 2. Montpelier, VT: Capital City Press. p. 215.
  3. ^ a b Norwich University, 1819–1911
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Stewart Mitchell, Horatio Seymour of New York (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1938).
  5. ^ . HarpWeek. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved July 28, 2011.
  6. ^ NY Public Library, Schomberg Collection, badge produced in 1868, digitized 2013
  7. ^ "Princeton, N. J., July 4th, 1885".

Further reading

  • Furniss, Jack. "To save the union “in behalf of conservative men”: Horatio Seymour and the democratic vision for war." in New Perspectives on the Union War (Fordham University Press, 2019) pp. 63-90.
  • Harris, William C. Two Against Lincoln: Reverdy Johnson and Horatio Seymour, Champions of the Loyal Opposition (2017) excerpt
  • Linkugel, Wilmer A. (1959). "Horatio Seymour: Stump speaker in 1868". Quarterly Journal of Speech. 45 (4): 431–438. doi:10.1080/00335635909382379.
  • McCabe, James Dabney (1868). The Life and Public Services of Horatio Seymour. Jones Brothers & Co. online edition
  • Mitchell, Stewart (1938). Horatio Seymour of New York. Harvard University Press., a standard scholarly biography.
  • Murdock, Eugene C. "Horatio Seymour and the 1863 draft." Civil War History 11.2 (1965): 117-141. excerpt
  • Wall, Alexander J. (1929). A Sketch of the Life of Horatio Seymour, 1810-1886: with a Detailed Account of his Administration as Governor of the State of New York during the War of 1861-1865. Lancaster. OCLC 3297449., thin
  • Zornow, William Frank (1950). "McClellan and Seymour in the Chicago Convention of 1864". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 43 (4): 282–295. JSTOR 40189856.

Primary sources

  • Seymour, Horatio. Public Record: Including Speeches, Messages, Proclamations, Official Correspondence, and Other Public Utterances of Horatio Seymour; from the Campaign of 1856 to the Present Time. (1868) online.

External links

  • Works by or about Horatio Seymour at Internet Archive
  • First Edition 1862 Report on Horatio Seymour Winning New York Governor's Race.
  • Speeches of Hon. Horatio Seymour : at the conventions held at Albany, January 31, 1861 and September 10, 1862
  • [1] Political Graveyard
Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the New York State Assembly
1845
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of New York
1853–1854
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of New York
1863–1864
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of New York
1850, 1852, 1854
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of New York
1862, 1864
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for President of the United States
1868
Succeeded by

horatio, seymour, other, people, named, disambiguation, 1810, february, 1886, american, politician, served, governor, york, from, 1853, 1854, from, 1863, 1864, democratic, party, nominee, president, 1868, united, states, presidential, election, losing, republi. For other people named Horatio Seymour see Horatio Seymour disambiguation Horatio Seymour May 31 1810 February 12 1886 was an American politician He served as Governor of New York from 1853 to 1854 and from 1863 to 1864 He was the Democratic Party nominee for president in the 1868 United States presidential election losing to Republican Ulysses S Grant Horatio SeymourPortrait by Mathew Brady c 1860 186518th Governor of New YorkIn office January 1 1863 December 31 1864LieutenantDavid R Floyd JonesPreceded byEdwin D MorganSucceeded byReuben FentonIn office January 1 1853 December 31 1854LieutenantSanford E ChurchPreceded byWashington HuntSucceeded byMyron H ClarkSpeaker of the New York State AssemblyIn office January 7 1845 December 31 1845Preceded byElisha LitchfieldSucceeded byWilliam C CrainMember of the New York State Assemblyfrom Oneida CountyIn office January 1 1844 December 31 1845 a Preceded byMulti member district b Succeeded byMulti member district c In office January 1 1842 January 31 1842 d Preceded byMulti member district e Succeeded byMulti member district f Mayor of Utica New YorkIn office 1842 1843Preceded byJohn C DevereuxSucceeded byFrederick HollisterPersonal detailsBorn 1810 05 31 May 31 1810Pompey New York U S DiedFebruary 12 1886 1886 02 12 aged 75 New York City New York U S Resting placeForest Hill CemeteryUtica New York U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseMary BleeckerRelationsHenry Seymour father Origen S Seymour cousin Horatio Seymour uncle Edward W Seymour nephew Horatio Seymour Jr nephew Roscoe Conkling brother in law EducationHobart CollegeNorwich University BA ProfessionPoliticianattorneybusinessmanSignatureBorn in Pompey New York Seymour was admitted to the New York bar in 1832 He primarily focused on managing his family s business interests After serving as a military secretary to Governor William L Marcy Seymour won election to the New York State Assembly He was elected that body s speaker in 1845 and aligned with Marcy s Softshell Hunker faction Seymour was nominated for governor in 1850 but narrowly lost to the Whig candidate Washington Hunt He defeated Hunt in the 1852 gubernatorial election and spent much of his tenure trying to reunify the fractured Democratic Party losing his 1854 re election campaign in part due to this disunity Despite this defeat Seymour emerged as a prominent national figure within the party As several Southern states threatened secession Seymour supported the Crittenden Compromise as a way to avoid civil war He supported the Union war effort during the Civil War but criticized President Abraham Lincoln s leadership He won election to another term as governor in 1862 and continued to oppose many of Lincoln s policies Several delegates at the 1864 Democratic National Convention hoped to nominate Seymour for president but Seymour declined to seek the nomination Beset by various issues he narrowly lost re election in 1864 After the war Seymour supported President Andrew Johnson s Reconstruction policies As the 1868 Democratic National Convention opened there was no clear front runner for the Democratic presidential nomination but Seymour remained widely popular Serving as the chairman of the convention as he had in 1864 Seymour refused to seek the nomination for himself After twenty two indecisive ballots the convention nominated Seymour who finally relented on his opposition to running for president Seymour faced General Ulysses S Grant the widely popular Republican Party nominee in the 1868 election Grant won a strong majority of the electoral vote though his margin in the popular vote was not as overwhelming Seymour never again sought public office but remained active in politics and supported Grover Cleveland s 1884 campaign for president Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Political career 2 1 Entry into politics 2 2 First term as governor 2 3 Interlude 2 4 Second term as governor 2 5 Prominent Democrat 2 6 1868 Presidential election 2 6 1 Nomination 2 6 2 Campaign 3 Later years 4 Legacy 5 Electoral history 5 1 Gubernatorial elections 5 2 1868 Presidential election 6 Notes 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Primary sources 10 External linksEarly life and education EditSeymour was born in Pompey Hill Onondaga County New York His father was Henry Seymour a merchant and politician his mother Mary Ledyard Forman 1785 1859 of Matawan New Jersey was the daughter of General Jonathan Forman and Mary Ledyard 1 He was one of six children and his sister Julia Catherine became the wife of Roscoe Conkling At the age of 10 he moved with the rest of his family to Utica where he attended a number of local schools including Geneva College later Hobart College In the autumn of 1824 he was sent to the American Literary Scientific amp Military Academy Norwich University 2 Upon his return to Utica after graduating in 1828 3 Seymour read for the law in the offices of Greene Bronson and Samuel Beardsley Though admitted to the bar in 1832 he did not enjoy work as an attorney and was primarily preoccupied with politics and managing his family s business interests 4 He married Mary Bleecker in 1835 5 Political career EditEntry into politics Edit Seymour s first role in politics came in 1833 when he was named military secretary to the state s newly elected Democratic governor William L Marcy with the rank of colonel 3 The six years in that position gave Seymour an invaluable education in the politics of the state and established a firm friendship between the two men In 1839 he returned to Utica to take over the management of his family s estate in the aftermath of his father s suicide two years earlier investing profitably in real estate banks mines railroads and other ventures In 1841 he won election to the New York State Assembly and he served simultaneously as mayor of Utica from 1842 to 1843 He won election to the Assembly again in 1843 to 1844 and thanks in part to massive turnover in the ranks of the Democratic caucus he was elected speaker in 1845 4 33 86 When in the late 1840s the New York Democratic Party split between the two factions of Hunkers and Barnburners Seymour was among those identified with the more conservative Hunker faction led by Marcy and Senator Daniel S Dickinson After this split led to disaster in the election of 1848 when the division between the Hunkers who supported Lewis Cass and the Barnburners who supported their leader former President Martin Van Buren Seymour became identified with Marcy s faction within the Hunkers the so called Softshell Hunkers who hoped to reunite with the Barnburners so as to be able to bring back Democratic dominance within the state First term as governor Edit In 1850 Seymour was the gubernatorial candidate of the reunited Democratic Party but he narrowly lost to the Whig candidate Washington Hunt Seymour and the Softs supported the candidacy of their leader Marcy for the presidency in 1852 but when he was defeated they enthusiastically campaigned for Franklin Pierce in 1852 That year proved a good one for the Softs as Seymour again supported by a unified Democratic Party narrowly defeated Hunt in a gubernatorial rematch while Pierce overwhelmingly elected president appointed Marcy as his Secretary of State Seymour s first term as governor of New York proved turbulent He won approval of a measure to finance the enlargement of the Erie Canal via a 10 5 million loan in a special election in February 1854 But much of his tenure was plagued by factional chaos within the state Democratic Party The Pierce administration s use of the patronage power alienated the Hards who determined to run their own gubernatorial candidate against Seymour in 1854 Furthermore the administration s support of the unpopular Kansas Nebraska Act with which Seymour was associated indirectly through his friendship with Marcy cost him many votes Whigs controlling the state legislature also sought to injure him further politically by responding to his call for action on the problem of alcohol abuse with a bill establishing a statewide prohibition which Seymour vetoed as unconstitutional Yet for all his troubles Seymour s prospects for reelection looked promising as the divisions of the Democrats opponents between the regular Whig candidate Myron H Clark and the Know Nothing Daniel Ullman appeared to be more dangerous to the Democrats opponents than the candidacy of the Hard Greene C Bronson looked to Democratic unity In the end however the anti Democratic tide was too strong and in the four way race Clark who received only one third of the vote defeated Seymour by 309 votes Interlude Edit Horatio Seymour c 1860 Despite his defeat as a former governor of the largest state of the Union Seymour emerged as a prominent figure in party politics at the national level In 1856 he was considered a possible compromise presidential candidate in the event of a deadlock between Franklin Pierce and James Buchanan until he wrote a letter definitively ruling himself out In 1860 some considered Seymour a compromise candidate for the Democratic nomination at the reconvening convention in Baltimore Seymour wrote a letter to the editor of his local newspaper declaring unreservedly that he was not candidate for either president or vice president Seymour supported the candidacy of Stephen A Douglas for the presidency in both 1856 and 1860 In 1861 he accepted nomination as the Democratic candidate for the United States Senate which was largely an empty honor as the Republican majorities in the state legislature rendered a Republican victory a foregone conclusion 4 171 173 215 216 231 In the secession crisis following Abraham Lincoln s election in 1860 Seymour strongly endorsed the proposed Crittenden Compromise After the start of the Civil War Seymour took a cautious middle position within his party supporting the war effort but criticizing Lincoln s conduct of the war Seymour was especially critical of Lincoln s wartime centralization of power and restrictions on civil liberties as well as his support for emancipation Second term as governor Edit Gubernatorial portrait of Horatio Seymour Campaign rally celebrating Seymour s election In 1862 the sitting governor Republican Edwin D Morgan announced that he would not run for an additional term Recognizing the symbolic importance of a victory in the Empire State the Democratic Party nominated Seymour as the strongest candidate available Though Seymour accepted the nomination with reluctance he threw himself into the election campaigning across the state in the hope that a Democratic victory would restrain the actions of the Radical Republicans in Washington He won a close race against the Republican candidate James S Wadsworth one of a series of victories by the Democratic ticket in the state that year 4 244 255 Seymour s second term proved to be even more tumultuous than his first one As governor of the largest state in the Union from 1863 to 1864 Seymour was one of the most prominent Democratic opponents of the President He opposed the Lincoln administration s institution of the military draft in 1863 on constitutional grounds an act which led many to question his support for the war He also opposed a bill giving votes to the soldiers on legal grounds vetoing the bill when it reached his desk While not opposed to the goal he preferred to establish voting provisions through a constitutional amendment that was working its way simultaneously through the state legislature nonetheless his veto was portrayed by opponents as hostility to the soldiers His decision to pay the state s foreign creditors using gold rather than greenbacks alienated easy money supporters while his veto of a bill granting traction rights on Broadway in Manhattan earned him the opposition of Tammany Hall Finally his efforts to conciliate the rioters during the New York Draft Riots of July 1863 was used against him by the Republicans who accused him of treason and support for the Confederacy 4 283 336 The growing accumulation of problems steadily eroded Seymour s position as governor In what was regarded as a rebuke of his policies Republicans swept the 1863 state midterm elections winning all of the major offices and taking control of the State Assembly In the state elections the following year Seymour himself was defeated for reelection in a close race by Republican Reuben Fenton 4 350 359 381 Prominent Democrat Edit Seymour in an undated photograph Seymour continued as a prominent figure in national Democratic politics both during and immediately after his second term as governor In 1864 he served as permanent chairman at the Democratic National Convention where the opposition of many delegates to the two frontrunners General George B McClellan a War Democrat and Thomas H Seymour no relation to Horatio a Copperhead led many to seek out Seymour as a compromise candidate He refused to be nominated however with the nomination ultimately going to McClellan In the aftermath of the war Seymour joined other Democrats in supporting President Andrew Johnson s Reconstruction policies and was a strong opponent of Radical Reconstruction with its emphasis on guaranteeing civil and political rights for freed slaves 4 359 370 383 391 1868 Presidential election Edit Seymour Blair campaign poster Further information 1868 United States presidential election Nomination Edit As the 1868 presidential election approached there was no clear candidate for the Democratic nomination Of the numerous candidates in contention George H Pendleton who had run as the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 1864 enjoyed considerable support but alienated the fiscal conservatives in the party with his plan to pay off federal debt using greenbacks When Seymour was approached about running for the nomination he demurred again preferring that either Indiana Senator Thomas A Hendricks or U S Chief Justice Salmon P Chase receive the nomination instead At the convention Seymour once again served as permanent chairman Balloting began on June 7 on the fourth ballot the chairman of the North Carolina delegation cast his state s votes for Seymour whereupon the former governor again restated his refusal to accept the nomination Two days later as the twenty second ballot was being taken it appeared that Hendricks was in the process of winning the nomination until the leader of the Ohio delegation suddenly switched his delegation s votes to Seymour Though Seymour reiterated his unwillingness to be the nominee the delegations revised their votes and gave the nomination to him unanimously 4 411 431 Campaign Edit Campaign badge 1868 from the New York Public Library Schomberg Collection With the nomination forced upon him Seymour committed himself to the campaign He faced considerable challenges his opponent General Ulysses S Grant enjoyed the support of a unified Republican party and most of the nation s press While he generally adhered to the tradition that presidential nominees did not actively campaign Seymour did undertake a tour of the Midwest and the mid Atlantic states in mid October In his campaign Seymour advocated a policy of conservative limited government and he opposed the Reconstruction policies of the Republicans in Congress Seymour s campaign was also marked by pronounced appeals to racism with repeated attempts to brand General Grant as the Nigger candidate and Seymour as the White Man s candidate 6 The Republican campaign by contrast was the first in which they waved the bloody shirt highlighting Seymour s support for mob violence against African Americans Though Seymour ran fairly close to Grant in the popular vote he was defeated decisively in the electoral vote by a count of 214 to 80 4 443 484 Subsequent to Seymour s loss the Fifteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution was adopted which not only guaranteed the federal right to vote for recently emancipated slaves and others of African ancestry but also compelled New York State to reinstate voting rights for such citizens Later years EditAfter the presidential election Seymour remained involved in state politics though primarily as an elder statesman rather than an active politician He received a number of honors during this period including the chancellorship of Union College in 1873 In 1874 he turned down almost certain election to the United States Senate urging the nomination instead of the eventual choice Francis Kernan He refused two additional efforts to nominate him for the New York governorship in 1876 and 1879 as well as a final attempt to select him as the Democratic presidential nominee in 1880 4 512 521 526 535 539 571 Never enjoying robust health Seymour suffered a permanent decline beginning in 1876 He made a final political effort in 1884 by campaigning for Grover Cleveland s election as president but deteriorated physically the following year On July 4 1885 he was elected to represent his maternal grandfather Gen Jonathan Forman in the Society of the Cincinnati in the State of New Jersey 7 In January 1886 his wife Mary suffered an illness Seymour s own health worsened further Seymour died in February 1886 and was interred in Forest Hill Cemetery in Utica New York Mary died a month later and is buried next to him 4 570 574 Legacy EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2018 The Horatio Seymour memorial at the Cathedral of All Saints Albany New York There is a memorial to Seymour at the Cathedral of All Saints Albany New York Seymour Wisconsin was founded in 1868 and named after Horatio Seymour Seymour Avenue in the Bronx New York was named for him Electoral history EditGubernatorial elections Edit New York Gubernatorial Election 1850 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Horatio Seymour 214 352 49 57 22 87Whig Washington Hunt 214 614 49 64 Liberty William Lawrence Chaplin 3 416 0 79 Whig hold SwingNew York Gubernatorial Election 1852 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Horatio Seymour 264 121 50 31 74Whig Washington Hunt Incumbent 241 525 46 01 Free Soil Minthorne Tompkins 19 296 3 68 Democratic gain from Whig SwingNew York Gubernatorial Election 1854 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Horatio Seymour Incumbent 156 495 33 32 16 99Whig Myron H Clark 156 804 33 38 Know Nothing Daniel Ullman 122 282 26 03 Democratic Greene C Bronson 33 850 7 21 Whig gain from Democratic SwingNew York Gubernatorial Election 1862 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Horatio Seymour 306 649 50 89 7 08Republican James S Wadsworth 295 897 49 11 Democratic gain from Republican SwingNew York Gubernatorial Election 1864 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Horatio Seymour Incumbent 361 264 49 43 1 46Republican Reuben Fenton 368 557 50 57 Republican gain from Democratic Swing1868 Presidential election Edit Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote a Electoralvote a Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote a Ulysses S Grant Republican Illinois 3 013 650 52 7 214 Schuyler Colfax Indiana 214Horatio Seymour Democratic New York 2 708 744 47 3 80 Francis Preston Blair Jr Missouri 80Other 46 0 0 Other Total 5 722 440 100 294 294Needed to win 148 148Notes Edit Serving with 1844 Justus Childs James Douglass Richard Empey1854 Andrew Billings Merit Brooks Calvert Comstock Dan P Cadwell Amos S Fassett David Murray John H Tower Chauncey C Cook Benjamin F Cooper Daniel G Dorrance Russel Fuller Serving with Ichabod C Baker Ebenezer Robbins DeWitt C Stephens Calvin Dawley Joseph Halleck Luke Hitchcock Nathaniel Odell Dan P Cadwell Amos S Fassett David Murray John H TowerSee also EditSeymour Conkling familyReferences Edit Horatio Seymour Ellis William Arba 1911 Norwich University 1819 1911 Her History Her Graduates Her Roll of Honor Vol 2 Montpelier VT Capital City Press p 215 a b Norwich University 1819 1911 a b c d e f g h i j k Stewart Mitchell Horatio Seymour of New York Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1938 Horatio Seymour HarpWeek Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved July 28 2011 NY Public Library Schomberg Collection badge produced in 1868 digitized 2013 Princeton N J July 4th 1885 Further reading EditFurniss Jack To save the union in behalf of conservative men Horatio Seymour and the democratic vision for war in New Perspectives on the Union War Fordham University Press 2019 pp 63 90 Harris William C Two Against Lincoln Reverdy Johnson and Horatio Seymour Champions of the Loyal Opposition 2017 excerpt Linkugel Wilmer A 1959 Horatio Seymour Stump speaker in 1868 Quarterly Journal of Speech 45 4 431 438 doi 10 1080 00335635909382379 McCabe James Dabney 1868 The Life and Public Services of Horatio Seymour Jones Brothers amp Co online edition Mitchell Stewart 1938 Horatio Seymour of New York Harvard University Press a standard scholarly biography Murdock Eugene C Horatio Seymour and the 1863 draft Civil War History 11 2 1965 117 141 excerpt Wall Alexander J 1929 A Sketch of the Life of Horatio Seymour 1810 1886 with a Detailed Account of his Administration as Governor of the State of New York during the War of 1861 1865 Lancaster OCLC 3297449 thin Zornow William Frank 1950 McClellan and Seymour in the Chicago Convention of 1864 Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 43 4 282 295 JSTOR 40189856 Primary sources Edit Seymour Horatio Public Record Including Speeches Messages Proclamations Official Correspondence and Other Public Utterances of Horatio Seymour from the Campaign of 1856 to the Present Time 1868 online External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Horatio Seymour Wikimedia Commons has media related to Horatio Seymour Works by or about Horatio Seymour at Internet Archive Mr Lincoln and New York Horatio Seymour First Edition 1862 Report on Horatio Seymour Winning New York Governor s Race Speeches of Hon Horatio Seymour at the conventions held at Albany January 31 1861 and September 10 1862 1 Political GraveyardPolitical officesPreceded byElisha Litchfield Speaker of the New York State Assembly1845 Succeeded byWilliam C CrainPreceded byWashington Hunt Governor of New York1853 1854 Succeeded byMyron H ClarkPreceded byEdwin D Morgan Governor of New York1863 1864 Succeeded byReuben FentonParty political officesPreceded byReuben H Walworth Democratic nominee for Governor of New York1850 1852 1854 Succeeded byAmasa J ParkerPreceded byWilliam Kelly Democratic nominee for Governor of New York1862 1864 Succeeded byJohn T HoffmanPreceded byGeorge B McClellan Democratic nominee for President of the United States1868 Succeeded byHorace Greeley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Horatio Seymour amp oldid 1136556809, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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