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J. Donald Cameron

James Donald Cameron (May 14, 1833 – August 30, 1918) was an American banker, businessman and Republican politician who served as Secretary of War in the cabinet of President Ulysses S. Grant from 1876 to 1877 and represented Pennsylvania in the United States Senate from 1877 to 1897. Cameron succeeded his father, Simon Cameron, in both offices and as boss of the powerful Pennsylvania Republican political machine.

J. Donald Cameron
Cameron c. 1870s
United States Senator
from Pennsylvania
In office
March 20, 1877 – March 3, 1897
Preceded bySimon Cameron
Succeeded byBoies Penrose
Chairman of the
Republican National Committee
In office
November 1, 1879 – July 2, 1880
Acting: November 1, 1879 – December 17, 1879
Preceded byZachariah Chandler
Succeeded byMarshall Jewell
32nd United States Secretary of War
In office
May 22, 1876 – March 4, 1877
PresidentUlysses S. Grant
Preceded byAlphonso Taft
Succeeded byGeorge W. McCrary
Personal details
Born
James Donald Cameron

(1833-05-14)May 14, 1833
Middletown, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedAugust 30, 1918(1918-08-30) (aged 85)
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)Mary McCormick
Elizabeth Sherman
Children7
EducationPrinceton University (BA, MA)

Cameron was raised and educated near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. After graduating from Princeton College, Cameron worked in the banking and railroad industries.

In May 1876, Cameron was appointed Secretary of War as part of a cabinet reshuffle by President Ulysses S. Grant, following the impeachment and resignation of William W. Belknap and a brief tenure by Secretary Alphonso Taft, whom Grant made Attorney General. Cameron's father served in the same office under President Abraham Lincoln.[1][a] During Cameron's tenure, the military was challenged by the Great Sioux War and by the threat of a second Southern secession after the controversial 1876 election of President Rutherford B. Hayes. Cameron proved to be an energetic administrator and his appointment as Secretary of War launched his lengthy political career in the Senate.

After leaving the cabinet, Cameron was elected Senator by the Pennsylvania legislature, under the control of Senator Simon Cameron, his father. Cameron served as Pennsylvania's U.S. Senator from 1877 to 1897, and as chairman on two powerful Senate committees.

After leaving the Senate, Cameron worked in various industrial businesses until his death in 1918. Cameron was the last surviving cabinet member of the Grant Administration.

Early life Edit

James Donald Cameron was born on May 14, 1833, in Middletown, Pennsylvania, in the family home, the first-born son of Simon Cameron, the 26th Secretary of War under President Abraham Lincoln and a powerful Pennsylvania politician. Cameron's mother was Margaret Brua. Cameron was commonly referred to as "Don." Having received his elementary education in Harrisburg, Cameron enrolled in Princeton College (today Princeton University); he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1852 and received a Master of Arts degree in 1855.[2]

Banking and railroad career Edit

After leaving Princeton, Cameron's father Simon placed Cameron as a clerk at the successful Middleton Bank; whose main investments were in the iron, coal, and lumber businesses of Pennsylvania.[2] Cameron worked his way up to being cashier and then president of the bank. As an executive of the Northern Central Railway during the American Civil War, Cameron managed the flow of supplies and soldiers from the northeastern states to Washington, D.C., and Virginia, including efforts to keep the railroad open despite Confederate attempt to damage or destroy it. From 1866 to December 1874 Cameron was president of the Northern Central.[2] As bank president, Cameron was able to improve the financial condition of the railroad. After leaving the Railroad, Cameron worked in various industrial enterprises in Pennsylvania.[2]

Secretary of War Edit

 
J. Donald Cameron as Secretary of War (Huntington 1877)

In 1876, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Cameron to his cabinet as Secretary of War, a post his father once served in during the Lincoln administration, to succeed Alphonso Taft, who became Attorney General, and served as so until the end of Grant's presidency. Cameron's predecessor, Alphonso Taft, had initially replaced William W. Belknap, who had abruptly resigned over taking profit payments from the Fort Sill tradership. The Secretary of War had been given control over all Indian traderships in 1870. Belknap was impeached by the House, and during the summer of 1876 was tried and acquitted by the Senate. Cameron's appointment as Secretary of War was part of a sensational three move realignment by President Grant.[2] U.S. Attorney General Edwards Pierrepont was appointed Minister to England; Secretary Taft was appointed U.S. Attorney General; and Cameron was appointed Secretary of War, on the advice of his father, Senator Simon Cameron.[2] Cameron had never served political office until appointed Secretary of War.[2] Cameron had to quickly acquaint himself with the War Department that was in the midst of fighting the Great Sioux War. After the controversial 1876 Presidential election, Cameron had to contend with the Southern States who threatened to secede from the United States a second time. According to General of the Army William T. Sherman, the U.S. military during 1876 was as active as it had been since the Civil War.

Secretary Cameron requested legislation from Congress that required war contractors be required to stand by their bids for a definite time period.[3] Secretary Cameron requested funding from Congress through allocations that paid for the War of Rebellion Records, for the preservation Mathew Brady's American Civil War photographs.[3]

The U.S. Military, including the Army, headed by Cameron, and Navy, headed by Secretary George M. Robeson, were also in a technological transition developing submarine technology; and torpedo mines and ships to protect United States' waterways and harbors.

Great Sioux War Edit

 
1903 artistic depiction of the Battle of the Little Big Horn

Without ever holding political office, Secretary of War Cameron had to immediately contend with the Great Sioux War and quickly become acquainted with the bureaucracy of the War Department. When gold was discovered in the Black Hills, miners began to invade Indian territory given by the federal government to the Sioux tribe under the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868. In addition, the federal government planned to put a route of the Northern Pacific Railroad through the Sioux and Cheyenne buffalo hunting grounds.[4] After negotiation for the sale of Sioux land failed in May 1875, President Grant ordered all non-treaty bands to return to the reservation.[5] When Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse refused to comply, Secretary of Interior Zachariah Chandler handed over the jurisdiction of the hostile Indians to the War Department on January 31, 1876, launching the Great Sioux War.[6]

 
General of the Army Sherman warned Cameron that Southern states threatened to secede from the Union if Democratic candidate Tilden was not elected president.

Three battles took place during summer 1876 while Cameron was in charge of the War Department: including the Battle of Rosebud, the Battle of the Little Big Horn, and the Battle of Slim Buttes. By October 1876, the War Department, under Secretary Cameron, had increased troop levels at Western Indian Agencies to crack down on Indian resistance. This was to prevent another massacre that had taken the lives of Colonel George Armstrong Custer and the 7th Cavalry at the Battle of the Little Bighorn. After all hostile Indians were rounded up a new treaty was signed that ceded the Black Hills to the federal government.

Presidential election 1876 crisis Edit

After the controversial Presidential election of 1876 the majority of electoral votes for Republican candidate Rutherford B. Hayes and Democratic candidate Samuel J. Tilden were disputed in the Reconstructed states of Louisiana and Florida.[7] Secretary of War Cameron allowed military troops stationed in both contested states to be at the disposal of Republican politicians.[7] Previously in June 1876 at the Republican National convention Secretary Cameron was instrumental in nominating Hayes as the Republican candidate.[7] In his 1876 Annual Report Cameron mentioned that General of the Army William T. Sherman, notifying the War Department, said Southern states threatened to secede from the Union if Tilden was not elected.[8] President Ulysses S. Grant responded through the War Department by having troops concentrated in Louisiana under Brigadier General Christopher C. Augur and reinforced in North Carolina under Brigadier General Thomas H. Ruger.[8] These stationed troops and the delicate and prudent actions of both generals, Augur and Ruger, to keep peace, prevented a second Civil War.[8] A Presidential commission set up by Congress and President Grant in 1877 finally chose Hayes to be elected President of the United States.[9] Cameron's father, Senator Simon Cameron, and other Republican politicians lobbied President Hayes that Cameron remain Secretary of War, however President Hayes refused, not wanting to be part of any Cameron political dynasty and having desired to nominate his own Cabinet.[7]

U.S. Senator Edit

 
Will he cast his sword into the balance?
An 1882 Puck cartoon depicts Cameron and fellow Pennsylvania senator John I. Mitchell on the Republican Pennsylvania Scale. Cameron, sitting on a platform marked "bossism", attempts to weigh himself down with weights marked "threats", "tricks" and "bluster" while Mitchell, dressed as a Roman, stands at the opposite end as an "Independent Republican". President Chester A. Arthur, too dressed as a Roman, holds a sword marked "patronage" which Cameron asks for to even out the balance.

In March 1877, his father resigned his seat in the United States Senate, after receiving assurance that his son would be elected to succeed him by the state legislature. Later that month Cameron was elected by the Pennsylvania Legislature. He was reelected three more times serving for a total of twenty years. He served as chairman of the Committee on Naval Affairs from 1881 to 1891 and again from 1895 to 1897 and as chairman of the Committee on Revolutionary Claims from 1893 to 1895. Cameron also served as chairman of the Republican National Committee from 1879 to 1880.

Cameron was an active politician who, with the initial aid of his father Simon Cameron, and his political ally Matthew Quay, set up a political machine in the Pennsylvania legislature that ensured Cameron would be reelected to office.[10] Senator Cameron rarely gave speeches, and he was viewed as being judicious, unemotional, and reticent.[11] Cameron disapproved of the popular artful oratory methods used by his contemporaries while his own speeches were forceful and direct.[11] Adopting his father's method, Cameron's strength as a politician relied on working inside the antechamber, committees, and caucuses to obtain his goals.[11] Cameron would ally with other pro-free silver Republicans to block the passage of the Federal Elections Bill, that ensured African Americans' voting protection rights in the Solid South.[11] On the whole, Cameron's nearly twenty years in the Senate remained undistinguished while for the most part he voted on the Republican Party line.[11] Cameron, like his father, protected the interest of the Pennsylvania Railroad PRR, ensuring that Pennsylvania government House Speakers E. Reed Myer and his successor Henry M. Long, remained sympathetic to the PRR.[12]

Cameron was re-elected in 1879, 1885, and in 1891 with his last term ending in March 1897.[13] He was succeeded by Boies Penrose. [13]

Later career Edit

After not being a candidate for reelection in 1896, Cameron engaged in several business enterprises in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Death and burial Edit

Cameron died on August 30, 1918, at his country home called "Donegal" (Cameron Estate) in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Cameron was interred at Harrisburg Cemetery in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Cameron was the last surviving Cabinet member of the Grant Administration.

Historical reputation Edit

Cameron was part of a political family dynasty started by his father Simon Cameron carrying on his legacy as Secretary of War and U.S. Senator. Cameron's ascendancy to Secretary of War, was started when a Democratic controlled House launched an investigation in 1876 into Secretary of War William W. Belknap, who abruptly resigned office over bribery charges. Succeeding Alphonso Taft as Secretary of War, Cameron was in charge of the Great Sioux War and the controversial Election of 1876, that almost caused a second civil war. Cameron was part of a transitional period when civilian control was reestablished over the War Department during the end of Reconstruction. As Senator, Cameron was known as a quiet, but powerful, political boss during the Gilded Age, who supported African American voting rights. Cameron followed in his father Simon's footsteps, protecting the railroad interests of the PPR, in control of Pennsylvania Republican Party politics. [12]

According to Cameron's biographer Howard Meneely, Cameron "made politics, not statesmanship, his principle public business."[11] However, Meneely admired Cameron for breaking from the rest of his party and opposing the African American 1890 voting rights legislation, "Force Bill", saying that Cameron "showed admirable and courageous independence," and demonstrating the racist tendencies common among historians of the era. [11] Meneely concluded that Cameron was "[t]horoughly honest in personal matters" and "held in high regard by his friends". [11] As a political boss, Cameron "took over the active management" of Pennsylvania's political machine created by his father, and "with the aid of lieutenants like Matthew Quay ran it skillfully and defiantly as long as he remained in public life." [10]

On April 17, 1913, the 17th Amendment was ratified that mandated the popular vote to elect U.S. Senators, rather than being chosen by state legislatures.[14] The Senate by this time was known as a "Millionaires Club" and political machines, such as the one Cameron ran in Pennsylvania, controlled who would be elected Senator.[14]

Marriages, family, and estate Edit

Cameron married Mary McCormick on May 20, 1856, and together they had six children: Eliza McCormick Cameron (born 1857), who married William H. Bradley; Virginia Rolette Cameron (born 1861), who married Lt. Alexander Rodgers; James McCormick Cameron (born 1865); Mary Cameron (born 1867); Margaretta Brua Cameron (born 1869), who married John William Clark; and Rachel Burnside Cameron (born 1871).[15]

Cameron's second wife, the former Elizabeth Sherman, whom he married in 1878, was the niece of William Tecumseh Sherman and John Sherman and a close friend of Henry Brooks Adams.[16] Their daughter, Martha Cameron (born 1886), married Sir Ronald Charles Lindsay in 1909.

Second wife and two daughters Edit

Donegal Edit

 
Donegal

When Cameron died in 1918, his estate, which had been put in trust, was worth $4 million (equivalent to $78 million in 2022).[17] Cameron had purchased his father Simon Cameron's affectionately known farm estate, "Donegal", on the Susquehanna River in Lancaster County.[17] Cameron lived at "Donegal" during the summer while during the winter he lived on his house boat off the South Carolina coast.[17]

The Cameron Estate (Donegal) was originally granted by William Penn to James Stephenson, who was the great-great-great-great-grandfather of William McKinley. [18] Cameron's father, Simon Cameron, had purchased the property from Nathanial Watson. [18] Donegal was the home of Cameron's daughter Mary Cameron. [18] In 1961, Cameron's granddaughter, Mary Hale Chase, sold the estate to Elizabethtown College. [18] Charles Baugher, president of the college, designated the property for faculty and student housing, while hosting a satellite campus for special education in collaboration with the Downingtown Special School. [18] In 1979, the college sold the Cameron Estate to a private party. [18] Donegal is currently the Cameron Estate Inn & Restaurant.[19]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Alphonso Taft and his son William H. Taft are the only other father-son duo to serve as United States Secretary of War.

References Edit

  1. ^ Bell (1981), p. 3-4.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g New York Times (May 23, 1876), The Presidency
  3. ^ a b Bell (1981), p. 82.
  4. ^ M. John Lubetkin, Jay Cooke's Gamble: The Northern Pacific Railroad, the Sioux, and the Panic of 1873 (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2006).
  5. ^ Griske, p. 64–69.
  6. ^ Commissioner of Indian Affairs to Secretary of the Interior, January 31, 1876; Secretary of the Interior to the Secretary of War, February 1, 1876; Colonel Drum to Gen. Terry and Gen. Crook, February 8, 1876, National Archives.
  7. ^ a b c d Meneely (1929), p. 435.
  8. ^ a b c Cameron (1876), p. 5.
  9. ^ "Hayes v. Tilden: The Electoral College Controversy of 1876–1877." HarpWeek. February 20, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ a b Meneely (1929), pp. 435–436.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Meneely (1929), p. 436.
  12. ^ a b Churella (2013), p. 372.
  13. ^ a b Johnson (1906), p. 119.
  14. ^ a b 17th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution: Direct Election of U.S. Senators (1913)
  15. ^ Center for Pennsylvania Culture Studies. . Penn State Harrisburg. Archived from the original on December 2, 2008. Retrieved June 13, 2008.
  16. ^ Henry Adams, The Education of Henry Adams Chapter XXII Chicago (1893), published in 1918
  17. ^ a b c New York Times (August 31, 1918), Don Cameron Dies; 20 Years A Senator
  18. ^ a b c d e f Benowitz & DePuydt (2014), p. 32.
  19. ^ Cameron Estate Inn & Restaurant (2013)

Sources Edit

  • Bell, William Gardner (1981). Secretarys of War and Secretaries of the Army. Washington, DC: US Army, Center of Military History. OCLC 6603916.
  • Benowitz, Jean-Paul; DePuydt, Peter J. (2014). Elizabethtown College. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. p. 32. ISBN 978-1-4671-2083-8.
  • Cameron, J. Donald (November 20, 1876). Annual Report of the Secretary of War. Vol. 1.
  • Churella, Albert J. (2013). The Pennsylvania Railroad, Volume 1: Building an Empire, 1846-1917. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-4348-2.
  • Griske, Michael. The Diaries of John Hunton.
  • Johnson, Rossiter, ed. (1906). The Biographical Dictionary of America Cameron, James Donald. Boston: American Biographical Society. p. 119.
  • Meneely, A. Howard (1929). Allen Johnson (ed.). Dictionary of American Biography Cameron, James Donald. Vol. 3. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 435–436.

External links Edit

Political offices
Preceded by United States Secretary of War
1876–1877
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 3) from Pennsylvania
1877–1897
Served alongside: William A. Wallace, John I. Mitchell, Matt Quay
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Naval Affairs Committee
1881–1893
Succeeded by
Chair of the Senate Naval Affairs Committee
1895–1897
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Chair of the Republican National Committee
1879–1880
Succeeded by

donald, cameron, james, donald, cameron, 1833, august, 1918, american, banker, businessman, republican, politician, served, secretary, cabinet, president, ulysses, grant, from, 1876, 1877, represented, pennsylvania, united, states, senate, from, 1877, 1897, ca. James Donald Cameron May 14 1833 August 30 1918 was an American banker businessman and Republican politician who served as Secretary of War in the cabinet of President Ulysses S Grant from 1876 to 1877 and represented Pennsylvania in the United States Senate from 1877 to 1897 Cameron succeeded his father Simon Cameron in both offices and as boss of the powerful Pennsylvania Republican political machine J Donald CameronCameron c 1870sUnited States Senatorfrom PennsylvaniaIn office March 20 1877 March 3 1897Preceded bySimon CameronSucceeded byBoies PenroseChairman of the Republican National CommitteeIn office November 1 1879 July 2 1880Acting November 1 1879 December 17 1879Preceded byZachariah ChandlerSucceeded byMarshall Jewell32nd United States Secretary of WarIn office May 22 1876 March 4 1877PresidentUlysses S GrantPreceded byAlphonso TaftSucceeded byGeorge W McCraryPersonal detailsBornJames Donald Cameron 1833 05 14 May 14 1833Middletown Pennsylvania U S DiedAugust 30 1918 1918 08 30 aged 85 Lancaster County Pennsylvania U S Political partyRepublicanSpouse s Mary McCormickElizabeth ShermanChildren7EducationPrinceton University BA MA Cameron was raised and educated near Harrisburg Pennsylvania After graduating from Princeton College Cameron worked in the banking and railroad industries In May 1876 Cameron was appointed Secretary of War as part of a cabinet reshuffle by President Ulysses S Grant following the impeachment and resignation of William W Belknap and a brief tenure by Secretary Alphonso Taft whom Grant made Attorney General Cameron s father served in the same office under President Abraham Lincoln 1 a During Cameron s tenure the military was challenged by the Great Sioux War and by the threat of a second Southern secession after the controversial 1876 election of President Rutherford B Hayes Cameron proved to be an energetic administrator and his appointment as Secretary of War launched his lengthy political career in the Senate After leaving the cabinet Cameron was elected Senator by the Pennsylvania legislature under the control of Senator Simon Cameron his father Cameron served as Pennsylvania s U S Senator from 1877 to 1897 and as chairman on two powerful Senate committees After leaving the Senate Cameron worked in various industrial businesses until his death in 1918 Cameron was the last surviving cabinet member of the Grant Administration Contents 1 Early life 2 Banking and railroad career 3 Secretary of War 3 1 Great Sioux War 3 2 Presidential election 1876 crisis 4 U S Senator 5 Later career 6 Death and burial 7 Historical reputation 8 Marriages family and estate 8 1 Second wife and two daughters 8 2 Donegal 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksEarly life EditJames Donald Cameron was born on May 14 1833 in Middletown Pennsylvania in the family home the first born son of Simon Cameron the 26th Secretary of War under President Abraham Lincoln and a powerful Pennsylvania politician Cameron s mother was Margaret Brua Cameron was commonly referred to as Don Having received his elementary education in Harrisburg Cameron enrolled in Princeton College today Princeton University he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1852 and received a Master of Arts degree in 1855 2 Banking and railroad career EditAfter leaving Princeton Cameron s father Simon placed Cameron as a clerk at the successful Middleton Bank whose main investments were in the iron coal and lumber businesses of Pennsylvania 2 Cameron worked his way up to being cashier and then president of the bank As an executive of the Northern Central Railway during the American Civil War Cameron managed the flow of supplies and soldiers from the northeastern states to Washington D C and Virginia including efforts to keep the railroad open despite Confederate attempt to damage or destroy it From 1866 to December 1874 Cameron was president of the Northern Central 2 As bank president Cameron was able to improve the financial condition of the railroad After leaving the Railroad Cameron worked in various industrial enterprises in Pennsylvania 2 Secretary of War Edit nbsp J Donald Cameron as Secretary of War Huntington 1877 In 1876 President Ulysses S Grant appointed Cameron to his cabinet as Secretary of War a post his father once served in during the Lincoln administration to succeed Alphonso Taft who became Attorney General and served as so until the end of Grant s presidency Cameron s predecessor Alphonso Taft had initially replaced William W Belknap who had abruptly resigned over taking profit payments from the Fort Sill tradership The Secretary of War had been given control over all Indian traderships in 1870 Belknap was impeached by the House and during the summer of 1876 was tried and acquitted by the Senate Cameron s appointment as Secretary of War was part of a sensational three move realignment by President Grant 2 U S Attorney General Edwards Pierrepont was appointed Minister to England Secretary Taft was appointed U S Attorney General and Cameron was appointed Secretary of War on the advice of his father Senator Simon Cameron 2 Cameron had never served political office until appointed Secretary of War 2 Cameron had to quickly acquaint himself with the War Department that was in the midst of fighting the Great Sioux War After the controversial 1876 Presidential election Cameron had to contend with the Southern States who threatened to secede from the United States a second time According to General of the Army William T Sherman the U S military during 1876 was as active as it had been since the Civil War Secretary Cameron requested legislation from Congress that required war contractors be required to stand by their bids for a definite time period 3 Secretary Cameron requested funding from Congress through allocations that paid for the War of Rebellion Records for the preservation Mathew Brady s American Civil War photographs 3 The U S Military including the Army headed by Cameron and Navy headed by Secretary George M Robeson were also in a technological transition developing submarine technology and torpedo mines and ships to protect United States waterways and harbors Great Sioux War Edit nbsp 1903 artistic depiction of the Battle of the Little Big HornWithout ever holding political office Secretary of War Cameron had to immediately contend with the Great Sioux War and quickly become acquainted with the bureaucracy of the War Department When gold was discovered in the Black Hills miners began to invade Indian territory given by the federal government to the Sioux tribe under the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868 In addition the federal government planned to put a route of the Northern Pacific Railroad through the Sioux and Cheyenne buffalo hunting grounds 4 After negotiation for the sale of Sioux land failed in May 1875 President Grant ordered all non treaty bands to return to the reservation 5 When Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse refused to comply Secretary of Interior Zachariah Chandler handed over the jurisdiction of the hostile Indians to the War Department on January 31 1876 launching the Great Sioux War 6 nbsp General of the Army Sherman warned Cameron that Southern states threatened to secede from the Union if Democratic candidate Tilden was not elected president Three battles took place during summer 1876 while Cameron was in charge of the War Department including the Battle of Rosebud the Battle of the Little Big Horn and the Battle of Slim Buttes By October 1876 the War Department under Secretary Cameron had increased troop levels at Western Indian Agencies to crack down on Indian resistance This was to prevent another massacre that had taken the lives of Colonel George Armstrong Custer and the 7th Cavalry at the Battle of the Little Bighorn After all hostile Indians were rounded up a new treaty was signed that ceded the Black Hills to the federal government Presidential election 1876 crisis Edit After the controversial Presidential election of 1876 the majority of electoral votes for Republican candidate Rutherford B Hayes and Democratic candidate Samuel J Tilden were disputed in the Reconstructed states of Louisiana and Florida 7 Secretary of War Cameron allowed military troops stationed in both contested states to be at the disposal of Republican politicians 7 Previously in June 1876 at the Republican National convention Secretary Cameron was instrumental in nominating Hayes as the Republican candidate 7 In his 1876 Annual Report Cameron mentioned that General of the Army William T Sherman notifying the War Department said Southern states threatened to secede from the Union if Tilden was not elected 8 President Ulysses S Grant responded through the War Department by having troops concentrated in Louisiana under Brigadier General Christopher C Augur and reinforced in North Carolina under Brigadier General Thomas H Ruger 8 These stationed troops and the delicate and prudent actions of both generals Augur and Ruger to keep peace prevented a second Civil War 8 A Presidential commission set up by Congress and President Grant in 1877 finally chose Hayes to be elected President of the United States 9 Cameron s father Senator Simon Cameron and other Republican politicians lobbied President Hayes that Cameron remain Secretary of War however President Hayes refused not wanting to be part of any Cameron political dynasty and having desired to nominate his own Cabinet 7 U S Senator Edit nbsp Will he cast his sword into the balance An 1882 Puck cartoon depicts Cameron and fellow Pennsylvania senator John I Mitchell on the Republican Pennsylvania Scale Cameron sitting on a platform marked bossism attempts to weigh himself down with weights marked threats tricks and bluster while Mitchell dressed as a Roman stands at the opposite end as an Independent Republican President Chester A Arthur too dressed as a Roman holds a sword marked patronage which Cameron asks for to even out the balance In March 1877 his father resigned his seat in the United States Senate after receiving assurance that his son would be elected to succeed him by the state legislature Later that month Cameron was elected by the Pennsylvania Legislature He was reelected three more times serving for a total of twenty years He served as chairman of the Committee on Naval Affairs from 1881 to 1891 and again from 1895 to 1897 and as chairman of the Committee on Revolutionary Claims from 1893 to 1895 Cameron also served as chairman of the Republican National Committee from 1879 to 1880 Cameron was an active politician who with the initial aid of his father Simon Cameron and his political ally Matthew Quay set up a political machine in the Pennsylvania legislature that ensured Cameron would be reelected to office 10 Senator Cameron rarely gave speeches and he was viewed as being judicious unemotional and reticent 11 Cameron disapproved of the popular artful oratory methods used by his contemporaries while his own speeches were forceful and direct 11 Adopting his father s method Cameron s strength as a politician relied on working inside the antechamber committees and caucuses to obtain his goals 11 Cameron would ally with other pro free silver Republicans to block the passage of the Federal Elections Bill that ensured African Americans voting protection rights in the Solid South 11 On the whole Cameron s nearly twenty years in the Senate remained undistinguished while for the most part he voted on the Republican Party line 11 Cameron like his father protected the interest of the Pennsylvania Railroad PRR ensuring that Pennsylvania government House Speakers E Reed Myer and his successor Henry M Long remained sympathetic to the PRR 12 Cameron was re elected in 1879 1885 and in 1891 with his last term ending in March 1897 13 He was succeeded by Boies Penrose 13 Later career EditAfter not being a candidate for reelection in 1896 Cameron engaged in several business enterprises in Harrisburg Pennsylvania Death and burial EditCameron died on August 30 1918 at his country home called Donegal Cameron Estate in Lancaster County Pennsylvania Cameron was interred at Harrisburg Cemetery in Harrisburg Pennsylvania Cameron was the last surviving Cabinet member of the Grant Administration Historical reputation EditCameron was part of a political family dynasty started by his father Simon Cameron carrying on his legacy as Secretary of War and U S Senator Cameron s ascendancy to Secretary of War was started when a Democratic controlled House launched an investigation in 1876 into Secretary of War William W Belknap who abruptly resigned office over bribery charges Succeeding Alphonso Taft as Secretary of War Cameron was in charge of the Great Sioux War and the controversial Election of 1876 that almost caused a second civil war Cameron was part of a transitional period when civilian control was reestablished over the War Department during the end of Reconstruction As Senator Cameron was known as a quiet but powerful political boss during the Gilded Age who supported African American voting rights Cameron followed in his father Simon s footsteps protecting the railroad interests of the PPR in control of Pennsylvania Republican Party politics 12 According to Cameron s biographer Howard Meneely Cameron made politics not statesmanship his principle public business 11 However Meneely admired Cameron for breaking from the rest of his party and opposing the African American 1890 voting rights legislation Force Bill saying that Cameron showed admirable and courageous independence and demonstrating the racist tendencies common among historians of the era 11 Meneely concluded that Cameron was t horoughly honest in personal matters and held in high regard by his friends 11 As a political boss Cameron took over the active management of Pennsylvania s political machine created by his father and with the aid of lieutenants like Matthew Quay ran it skillfully and defiantly as long as he remained in public life 10 On April 17 1913 the 17th Amendment was ratified that mandated the popular vote to elect U S Senators rather than being chosen by state legislatures 14 The Senate by this time was known as a Millionaires Club and political machines such as the one Cameron ran in Pennsylvania controlled who would be elected Senator 14 Marriages family and estate EditCameron married Mary McCormick on May 20 1856 and together they had six children Eliza McCormick Cameron born 1857 who married William H Bradley Virginia Rolette Cameron born 1861 who married Lt Alexander Rodgers James McCormick Cameron born 1865 Mary Cameron born 1867 Margaretta Brua Cameron born 1869 who married John William Clark and Rachel Burnside Cameron born 1871 15 Cameron s second wife the former Elizabeth Sherman whom he married in 1878 was the niece of William Tecumseh Sherman and John Sherman and a close friend of Henry Brooks Adams 16 Their daughter Martha Cameron born 1886 married Sir Ronald Charles Lindsay in 1909 Second wife and two daughters Edit nbsp Elizabeth Cameron second wife of Senator Donald Cameron Pa ca 1890 and ca 1910 nbsp Rachel Cameron daughter of Senator Donald Cameron Pa ca 1896 nbsp Martha Cameron daughter of Senator Donald Cameron Pa ca 1896Donegal Edit nbsp DonegalWhen Cameron died in 1918 his estate which had been put in trust was worth 4 million equivalent to 78 million in 2022 17 Cameron had purchased his father Simon Cameron s affectionately known farm estate Donegal on the Susquehanna River in Lancaster County 17 Cameron lived at Donegal during the summer while during the winter he lived on his house boat off the South Carolina coast 17 The Cameron Estate Donegal was originally granted by William Penn to James Stephenson who was the great great great great grandfather of William McKinley 18 Cameron s father Simon Cameron had purchased the property from Nathanial Watson 18 Donegal was the home of Cameron s daughter Mary Cameron 18 In 1961 Cameron s granddaughter Mary Hale Chase sold the estate to Elizabethtown College 18 Charles Baugher president of the college designated the property for faculty and student housing while hosting a satellite campus for special education in collaboration with the Downingtown Special School 18 In 1979 the college sold the Cameron Estate to a private party 18 Donegal is currently the Cameron Estate Inn amp Restaurant 19 See also EditBibliography of Ulysses S GrantNotes Edit Alphonso Taft and his son William H Taft are the only other father son duo to serve as United States Secretary of War References Edit Bell 1981 p 3 4 a b c d e f g New York Times May 23 1876 The Presidency a b Bell 1981 p 82 M John Lubetkin Jay Cooke s Gamble The Northern Pacific Railroad the Sioux and the Panic of 1873 Norman University of Oklahoma Press 2006 Griske p 64 69 Commissioner of Indian Affairs to Secretary of the Interior January 31 1876 Secretary of the Interior to the Secretary of War February 1 1876 Colonel Drum to Gen Terry and Gen Crook February 8 1876 National Archives a b c d Meneely 1929 p 435 a b c Cameron 1876 p 5 Hayes v Tilden The Electoral College Controversy of 1876 1877 HarpWeek Archived February 20 2006 at the Wayback Machine a b Meneely 1929 pp 435 436 a b c d e f g h Meneely 1929 p 436 a b Churella 2013 p 372 a b Johnson 1906 p 119 a b 17th Amendment to the U S Constitution Direct Election of U S Senators 1913 Center for Pennsylvania Culture Studies Mary McCormick Penn State Harrisburg Archived from the original on December 2 2008 Retrieved June 13 2008 Henry Adams The Education of Henry Adams Chapter XXII Chicago 1893 published in 1918 a b c New York Times August 31 1918 Don Cameron Dies 20 Years A Senator a b c d e f Benowitz amp DePuydt 2014 p 32 Cameron Estate Inn amp Restaurant 2013 Sources EditBell William Gardner 1981 Secretarys of War and Secretaries of the Army Washington DC US Army Center of Military History OCLC 6603916 Benowitz Jean Paul DePuydt Peter J 2014 Elizabethtown College Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing p 32 ISBN 978 1 4671 2083 8 Cameron J Donald November 20 1876 Annual Report of the Secretary of War Vol 1 Churella Albert J 2013 The Pennsylvania Railroad Volume 1 Building an Empire 1846 1917 Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 4348 2 Griske Michael The Diaries of John Hunton Johnson Rossiter ed 1906 The Biographical Dictionary of America Cameron James Donald Boston American Biographical Society p 119 Meneely A Howard 1929 Allen Johnson ed Dictionary of American Biography Cameron James Donald Vol 3 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 435 436 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to J Donald Cameron nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about J Donald Cameron United States Congress J Donald Cameron id C000065 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress J Donald Cameron at Find a Grave J Donald Cameron Biography Archived June 8 2010 at the Wayback Machine in Secretaries of War and Secretaries of the Army a publication of the United States Army Center of Military History Bird s eye view of Cameron s Donegal Estate Bing mapsPolitical officesPreceded byAlphonso Taft United States Secretary of War1876 1877 Succeeded byGeorge W McCraryU S SenatePreceded bySimon Cameron U S Senator Class 3 from Pennsylvania1877 1897 Served alongside William A Wallace John I Mitchell Matt Quay Succeeded byBoies PenrosePreceded byJohn R McPherson Chair of the Senate Naval Affairs Committee1881 1893 Succeeded byJohn R McPhersonChair of the Senate Naval Affairs Committee1895 1897 Succeeded byEugene HaleParty political officesPreceded byZachariah Chandler Chair of the Republican National Committee1879 1880 Succeeded byMarshall Jewell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J Donald Cameron amp oldid 1178427377, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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