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James B. Weaver

James Baird Weaver (June 12, 1833 – February 6, 1912) was a member of the United States House of Representatives and two-time candidate for President of the United States. Born in Ohio, he moved to Iowa as a boy when his family claimed a homestead on the frontier. He became politically active as a young man and was an advocate for farmers and laborers. He joined and quit several political parties in the furtherance of the progressive causes in which he believed. After serving in the Union Army in the American Civil War, Weaver returned to Iowa and worked for the election of Republican candidates. After several unsuccessful attempts at Republican nominations to various offices, and growing dissatisfied with the conservative wing of the party, in 1877 Weaver switched to the Greenback Party, which supported increasing the money supply and regulating big business. As a Greenbacker with Democratic support, Weaver won election to the House in 1878.

James B. Weaver
Weaver c. 1870–1880
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Iowa's 6th district
In office
March 4, 1885 – March 3, 1889
Preceded byJohn C. Cook
Succeeded byJohn F. Lacey
In office
March 4, 1879 – March 3, 1881
Preceded byEzekiel S. Sampson
Succeeded byMarsena E. Cutts
Personal details
Born
James Baird Weaver

(1833-06-12)June 12, 1833
Dayton, Ohio, U.S.
DiedFebruary 6, 1912(1912-02-06) (aged 78)
Des Moines, Iowa, U.S.
Resting placeWoodland Cemetery
Political party
Spouse
Clarrisa Vinson
(m. 1858)
Children8
EducationUniversity of Cincinnati (LLB)
Signature
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceUnion Army
Years of service1861–1864
Rank
Commands2nd Iowa Volunteer Infantry Regiment
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War

The Greenbackers nominated Weaver for president in 1880, but he received only 3.3 percent of the popular vote. After several more attempts at elected office, he was again elected to the House in 1884 and 1886. In Congress, he worked for expansion of the money supply and for the opening of Indian Territory to white settlement. As the Greenback Party fell apart, a new anti-big business third party, the People's Party ("Populists"), arose. Weaver helped to organize the party and was their nominee for president in 1892. This time he was more successful and gained 8.5 percent of the popular vote and won five states, but still fell far short of victory. The Populists merged with the Democrats by the end of the 19th century, and Weaver went with them, promoting the candidacy of William Jennings Bryan for president in 1896, 1900, and 1908. After serving as mayor of his home town, Colfax, Iowa, Weaver retired from his pursuit of elective office. He died in Iowa in 1912. Most of Weaver's political goals remained unfulfilled at his death, but many came to pass in the following decades.

Early years

James Baird Weaver was born in Dayton, Ohio, on June 12, 1833, the fifth of thirteen children of Abram Weaver and Susan Imlay Weaver.[1] Weaver's father was a farmer, also born in Ohio, and a descendant of Revolutionary War veterans.[2] He married Weaver's mother, who was from New Jersey, in 1824.[2] Shortly after Weaver's birth, in 1835, the family moved to a farm nine miles north of Cassopolis, Michigan.[1] In 1842 the family moved again to the Iowa Territory to await the opening of former Sac and Fox land to white settlement the following year.[3] They claimed a homestead along the Chequest Creek in Davis County.[3] Abram Weaver built a house and farmed his new land until 1848, when the family moved to Bloomfield, the county seat.[4]

Abram Weaver, a Democrat involved in local politics, was elected clerk of the district court in 1848; he often vied for election to other offices, usually unsuccessfully.[5] Weaver's brother-in-law, Hosea Horn, a Whig, was appointed postmaster the following year, and through him James Weaver secured his first job, delivering mail to neighboring Jefferson County.[6] In 1851 Weaver quit the mail route to read law with Samuel G. McAchran, a local lawyer.[6] Two years later, Weaver interrupted his legal career to accompany another brother-in-law, Dr. Calvin Phelps, on a cattle drive overland from Bloomfield to Sacramento, California.[7] Weaver initially intended to stay and prospect for gold, but instead booked passage on a ship for Panama.[8] He crossed the isthmus, boarded another ship to New York, and returned home to Iowa.[8]

Upon his return Weaver worked briefly as a store clerk before resuming the study of law. He enrolled at the Cincinnati Law School in 1855, where he studied under Bellamy Storer.[9] While in Cincinnati Weaver began to question his support for the institution of slavery, a change biographers attribute to Storer's influence.[10] After graduating in 1856 Weaver returned to Bloomfield and was admitted to the Iowa bar.[11] By 1857 he had broken with the Democratic party of his father to join the growing coalition that opposed the expansion of slavery, which became the Republican Party.[12]

Weaver traveled around southern Iowa in 1858, giving speeches on behalf of his new party's candidates.[13] That summer, he married Clarrisa (Clara) Vinson, a schoolteacher from nearby Keosauqua, Iowa, whom he had courted since he returned from Cincinnati.[13] The marriage lasted until Weaver's death in 1912 and the couple had eight children.[14] After the wedding Weaver started a law firm with Hosea Horn and continued his involvement in Republican politics.[14] He gave several speeches on behalf of Samuel J. Kirkwood for governor in 1859 in a campaign that focused heavily on the slavery debate; although the Republicans lost Weaver's Davis County, Kirkwood narrowly won the election.[15] The next year, Weaver served as a delegate to the state convention and, although not a national delegate, traveled with the Iowa delegation to the 1860 Republican National Convention, where Abraham Lincoln was nominated.[16] Lincoln carried Iowa and won the election, but Southern states responded to the Republican victory by seceding from the Union. By April 1861, the American Civil War had begun.[17]

Civil War

 
Lieutenant James B. Weaver

After the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter, Lincoln called for 75,000 men to join the Union Army.[18] Weaver enlisted in what became Company G of the 2nd Iowa Volunteer Infantry Regiment, and was elected the company's first lieutenant.[19] The 2nd Iowa, commanded by Colonel Samuel Ryan Curtis, a former Congressman, was ordered to Missouri in June 1861 to secure railroad lines in that border state.[20] Weaver's unit spent that summer in northern Missouri and did not see action.[21] Meanwhile Clara gave birth to the couple's second child and first son, named James Bellamy Weaver after his father and Bellamy Storer.[22]

Weaver's first chance at action came in February 1862, when the 2nd Iowa joined Brigadier General Ulysses S. Grant's army outside the Confederate Fort Donelson in Tennessee.[23] Weaver's company was in the thick of the fight, which he described as a "holocaust to the demon of battles",[23] and he took a minor wound in the arm.[23] The rebels surrendered the next day, the most important Union victory of the war to date.[24] The 2nd Iowa next joined other units in the area at Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee, to mass for a major assault deeper into the South.[25] Confederate forces met them there, in the Battle of Shiloh. Weaver's regiment was in the center of the Union lines, in the area later known as the "hornets' nest", and were forced to retreat amid fierce fighting.[25] The next day, the Union forces turned the tide and forced the rebels off the field in what Weaver called a "perfect rout".[26] The carnage at Shiloh (20,000 killed and wounded) was on a scale never before seen in American warfare, and both sides learned that the war would end neither quickly nor easily.[27]

After Shiloh, Weaver and the 2nd Iowa slowly advanced to Corinth, Mississippi, where he was promoted to major.[28] Rebel forces attacked the Union armies there in the Second Battle of Corinth, where Weaver's courage in that Union victory convinced his superiors to promote him to colonel after the regiment's commanding officer was killed.[29] After Corinth, Weaver's unit took up garrison duty in northern Mississippi.[30] In the summer of 1863 they were redeployed to the Tennessee–Alabama border, again on occupation duty around Pulaski, Tennessee.[31] They rejoined the action at the Battle of Resaca, a part of the Atlanta Campaign, then continued with Major General William Tecumseh Sherman's march through Georgia to the sea in 1864.[31] Weaver's enlistment ended in May 1864, and he returned to his family in Iowa.[31] After the war ended Weaver received a promotion to brevet brigadier general, backdated to March 13, 1865.[32][a]

Republican politics

 
Weaver's home, built in 1867 in Bloomfield

Soon after returning from the war Weaver became editor of a pro-Republican Bloomfield newspaper, the Weekly Union Guard.[34] At the 1865 Iowa Republican State Convention, he placed second for the nomination for lieutenant governor.[35] The following year, Weaver was elected district attorney for the second judicial district, covering six counties in southern Iowa.[36] In 1867 President Andrew Johnson appointed him assessor of internal revenue in the first Congressional district, which extended across southeastern Iowa.[32] The job came with a $1500 salary, plus a percentage of taxes collected over $100,000.[32] Weaver held that lucrative position until 1872, when Congress abolished it.[36] He also became involved in the Methodist Episcopal Church, serving as a delegate to a church convention in Baltimore in 1876.[37] Membership in the Methodist church coincided with Weaver's interest in the growing movement for prohibition of the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages.[37] His income and prestige grew along with his family, which included seven children by 1877.[37] Weaver's success allowed him to build a large new home for his family, which still stands.[37]

Weaver's work for the party led many to support his nomination to represent Iowa's 6th congressional district in the federal House of Representatives in 1874.[38] Many party insiders, however, were wary of Weaver's association with the Prohibition movement and preferred to remain uncommitted on the divisive issue.[38] At the convention, Weaver led on the first ballot, but ultimately lost the nomination by one vote to Ezekiel S. Sampson, a local judge.[39] Weaver's allies attributed his loss to "the meanest kind of wire pulling",[40] but Weaver shrugged off the defeat and aimed instead at the gubernatorial nomination in 1875.[40] He launched a vigorous effort, courted delegates around the state, and explicitly endorsed Prohibition and greater state control of railroad rates.[41] Weaver attracted many delegates' support, but alienated those who were friendly to the railroads and wished to avoid the liquor issue.[41] Opposition was scattered among several lesser-known candidates, mostly members of Senator William B. Allison's conservative wing of the party.[42] They united at the convention when a delegate unexpectedly nominated former governor Kirkwood.[42] The nomination carried easily and, after Allison's associates persuaded him to accept it, Kirkwood was nominated, and went on to win the election.[42] In a further defeat, the delegates refused to endorse Prohibition in the party platform.[43] Weaver had small consolation in a nomination to the state Senate, but he lost to his Democratic opponent in the election that fall.[44]

Switch to the Greenback Party

 
Weaver as a candidate for Congress, 1878

After his defeats in 1875 Weaver grew disenchanted with the Republican party, not only because it had spurned him, but also because of the policy choices of the dominant Allison faction.[45] In May 1876 he traveled to Indianapolis to attend the national convention of the newly formed Greenback Party.[45] The new party had arisen, mostly in the West, as a response to the economic depression that followed the Panic of 1873.[46] During the Civil War, Congress had authorized "greenbacks", a new form of fiat money that was redeemable not in gold but in government bonds.[47] The greenbacks had helped to finance the war when the government's gold supply did not keep pace with the expanding costs of maintaining the armies. When the crisis had passed, many in both parties, especially in the East, wanted to place the nation's currency on a gold standard as soon as possible.[48] The Specie Payment Resumption Act, passed in 1875, ordered that greenbacks be gradually withdrawn and replaced with gold-backed currency beginning in 1879. At the same time, the depression had made it more expensive for debtors to pay debts they had contracted when currency was less valuable.[49] Beyond their support for a larger money supply, Greenbackers also favored an eight-hour work day, safety regulations in factories, and an end to child labor.[50] As historian Herbert Clancy put it, they "anticipated by almost fifty years the progressive legislation of the first quarter of the twentieth century".[50]

In the 1876 presidential campaign the Republicans nominated Rutherford B. Hayes and the Democrats chose Samuel J. Tilden. Both candidates opposed the issuance of more greenbacks (candidates who favored the gold-backed currency were called "hard money" supporters, while the Greenbackers' policy of encouraging inflation was known as "soft money".)[51] Weaver was impressed with the Greenbackers and their candidate, Peter Cooper, but while he advocated some soft-money policies, he declined the Greenback nomination for Congress and remained a Republican; he campaigned for Hayes in the election that year.[52] In 1877 Weaver attended the Republican state convention and saw the state party adopt a soft-money platform that also favored Prohibition.[53] The gubernatorial nominee, however, was John H. Gear, an opponent of Prohibition who had worked to defeat Weaver in his quest for the governorship two years earlier.[53] After initially supporting Gear Weaver joined the Greenback party in August.[46] He gave speeches on behalf of his new party, debated former allies across the state, and establishing himself as a prominent advocate for the Greenback cause.[54]

Congress

 
Thomas Nast depicts Weaver as an ungainly donkey who is finally recognized by Speaker Samuel J. Randall.

In May 1878 Weaver accepted the Greenback nomination for the House of Representatives in the 6th district.[55] Although Weaver's political career up to then had been as a staunch Republican, Democrats in the 6th district thought that endorsing him was likely the only way to defeat Sampson, the incumbent Republican.[56] Since the start of the Civil War, Democrats had been in the minority across Iowa; electoral fusion with Greenbackers represented their best chance to get their candidates into office.[56] Hard-money Democrats objected to the idea, but some were reassured when Henry H. Trimble, a prominent Bloomfield Democrat, assured them that if elected Weaver would align with House Democrats on all issues other than the money question.[57] Democrats declined to endorse any candidate at the 6th district convention, but soft-money leaders in the party circulated their own slate of candidates that included Democrats and Greenbackers.[58] The Greenback–Democrat ticket prevailed, and Weaver was elected with 16,366 votes to Sampson's 14,307.[59]

Weaver entered the 46th Congress in March 1879, one of thirteen Greenbackers elected in 1878.[60] Although the House was closely divided, neither major party included the Greenbackers in their caucus, leaving them few committee assignments and little input on legislation.[61] Weaver gave his first speech in April 1879, criticizing the use of the army to police Southern polling stations, while also decrying the violence against black Southerners that made such protection necessary; he then described the Greenback platform, which he said would put an end to the sectional and economic strife.[62] The next month, he spoke in favor of a bill calling for an increase in the money supply by allowing the unlimited coinage of silver, but the bill was easily defeated.[63] Weaver's oratorical skill drew praise, but he had no luck in advancing Greenback policy ideas.[64]

In 1880 Weaver prepared a resolution stating that the government, not banks, should issue currency and determine its volume, and that the federal debt should be repaid in whatever currency the government chose, not just gold as the law then required.[65] The proposed resolution would never be allowed to emerge from committees dominated by Democrats and Republicans, so Weaver planned to introduce it directly to the whole House for debate, as members were permitted to do every Monday.[65] Rather than debate a proposition that would expose the monetary divide in the Democratic Party, Speaker Samuel J. Randall refused to recognize Weaver when he rose to propose the resolution.[65] Weaver returned to the floor each succeeding Monday, with the same result, and the press took notice of Randall's obstruction.[65] Eventually, Republican James A. Garfield of Ohio interceded with Randall to recognize Weaver, which he reluctantly did on April 5, 1880.[66] The Republicans, mostly united behind hard money, largely voted against the measure, while many Democrats joined the Greenbackers voting in favor. Despite support by the soft-money Democrats, the resolution was defeated 84–117 with many members abstaining.[67] Although he lost the vote, Weaver had promoted the monetary issue in the national consciousness.[67]

Presidential election of 1880

 
An 1880 cartoon in Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper ridicules the Greenback party as a collection of disparate radicals.

By 1879, the Greenback coalition had divided, with the faction most prominent in the South and West, led by Marcus M. "Brick" Pomeroy, splitting from the main party.[68] Pomeroy's faction, called the "Union Greenback Labor Party", was more radical and emphasized its independence, and suggested that Eastern Greenbackers were likely to "sell out the party at any time to the Democrats".[68] Weaver remained with the rump Greenback party, often called the "National Greenback Party", and the national reputation he had earned in Congress made him one of the party's leading presidential hopefuls.[69]

The Union Greenbackers held their convention first and nominated Stephen D. Dillaye of New Jersey for president and Barzillai J. Chambers of Texas for vice president, but also sent a delegation to the National Greenback convention in Chicago that June, with an eye toward reuniting the party.[70] The two factions agreed to reunify, and also to admit a delegation from the Socialist Labor Party.[71] Thus united, the convention turned to nominations. Weaver led on the first ballot, and on the second he secured a majority.[72] Chambers won the convention's vote for vice president.[72]

In a departure from the political traditions of the day Weaver himself campaigned, making speeches across the South in July and August.[73] As the Greenbackers had the only ticket that included a Southerner, Weaver and Chambers hoped to make inroads in the South.[74] As the campaign progressed, however, Weaver's message of racial inclusion drew violent protests in the South, as the Greenbackers faced the same obstacles the Republicans did in the face of increasing black disenfranchisement.[75] In the autumn Weaver campaigned in the North, but the Greenbackers' lack of support was compounded by Weaver's refusal to run a fusion ticket in states where Democratic and Greenbacker strength might have combined to outvote the Republicans.[76]

Weaver received 305,997 votes and no electoral votes, compared to 4,446,158 for the winner, Republican James A. Garfield, and 4,444,260 for Democrat Winfield Scott Hancock.[77] The party was strongest in the West and South, but in no state did Weaver receive more than 12 percent of the vote (his best state was Texas, with 11.7 percent); his nationwide total was just 3 percent.[78] That figure represented an improvement over the Greenback vote of 1876, but to Weaver, who expected twice as many votes as he received, it was a disappointment.[79]

Office-seeker and party promoter

After the election Weaver returned to the lame-duck session of Congress and proposed an unsuccessful constitutional amendment that would have provided for the direct election of Senators.[80][b] After his term expired in March he resumed his speaking tour, promoting the Greenback Party across the nation.[81] He and Edward H. Gillette, another Iowa Greenback Congressman, bought the Iowa Tribune in 1882 to help spread the Greenback message.[82] That same year, Weaver ran for his old 6th district seat in the House against the incumbent Republican, Marsena E. Cutts.[83] This time the Democrats and Greenbackers ran separate candidates, and Weaver finished a distant second.[83] Cutts died before taking office, and the Republicans offered to let Weaver run unopposed in the special election if he rejoined their party; he declined, and John C. Cook, a Democrat, won the seat.[83]

In 1883 Weaver was the Greenback nominee for governor of Iowa.[82] Again, the Democrats ran a separate candidate and the incumbent Republican, Buren R. Sherman, was re-elected with a plurality.[82] Weaver was a delegate to the 1884 Greenback National Convention in Indianapolis and supported the eventual nominee, Benjamin Butler of Massachusetts.[84] Back in Iowa, Weaver again ran for the House, this time with the Democrats' support. Greenback fortunes declined nationally, as Butler received just over half as many votes for president as Weaver had four years earlier.[85] Weaver's House race bucked the trend: he defeated Republican Frank T. Campbell by just 67 votes.[85]

Return to Congress

Unlike in his previous congressional term, when Weaver entered the 49th United States Congress, he was the only Greenback member.[86] The new president, Democrat Grover Cleveland, was friendly to Weaver, and asked his advice on Iowa patronage.[87] As it had been for years, Weaver's chief concern was with the nation's money and finance, and the relationship between labor and capital.[88]

In 1885 Weaver proposed the creation of a Department of Labor, which he suggested would find a solution to disputes between labor and management.[89][c] Labor tensions increased the following year as the Knights of Labor went on strike against Jay Gould's rail empire, and a strike against the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company ended in the bloody Haymarket riot.[89] Weaver believed the nation's hard-money policies were responsible for labor unrest, calling it "purely a question of money, and nothing else"[89] and declaring, "If this Congress will not protect labor, it must protect itself".[89] He saw the triumph of one plank of the Greenback platform when Congress established the Interstate Commerce Commission to regulate the railroads.[90] Weaver thought the bill should have given the government more power, including the ability to set rates directly, but he voted for the final bill.[90]

 
Weaver supported white settlers' right to homesteads in the Unassigned Lands.

Weaver also took up the issue of white settlement in Indian Territory.[91] For several years, white settlers had been claiming homesteads in the Unassigned Lands in what is now Oklahoma.[92] After the Civil War the Five Civilized Tribes had been forced to cede their unused western lands to the federal government. The settlers, known as Boomers, believed that federal ownership made the lands open to settlement under the Homestead Acts.[93] The federal government disagreed, as did the Cherokee Nation, which leased its neighboring Cherokee Outlet to Kansas cattle ranchers, and many Easterners, who believed the Boomers to be the tools of railroad interests.[92][93] Weaver saw the issue as one between the landless poor homesteaders and wealthy cattlemen, and took the side of the former.[94] He introduced a bill in December 1885 to organize Indian Territory and the neighboring Neutral Strip into a new Oklahoma Territory.[95] The bill died in committee, but Weaver reintroduced it in February 1886 and gave a speech calling for the Indian reservations to be broken up into homesteads for individual Natives and the remaining land to be open to white settlement.[96]

The Committee on Territories again rejected Weaver's bill, but approved a compromise measure that opened the Unassigned Lands, Cherokee Outlet, and Neutral Strip to settlement.[97] Congress debated the bill over several months, while the tribes announced their resistance to their lands becoming a territory; according to an 1884 Supreme Court decision, Elk v. Wilkins, Native Americans were not citizens, and thus would have no voting rights in the new territory.[98] When Weaver returned to Iowa to campaign for re-election, the bill was still in limbo.[99] Running again on a Democratic–Greenback fusion ticket, Weaver was re-elected to the House in 1886 with a 618-vote majority.[100]

In the lame-duck session of 1887 Congress passed the Dawes Act, which allowed the president to terminate tribal governments, and broke up Indian reservations into homesteads for individual natives.[99] Although the Five Civilized Tribes were exempt from the Act, the spirit of the law encouraged Weaver and the Boomers to continue their own efforts to open western Indian Territory to white settlement.[99] Weaver reintroduced his Oklahoma bill in the new Congress the following year, but again it stalled in committee.[101] He returned to Iowa for another re-election campaign in September 1888, but the Greenback party had fallen apart, replaced by a new left-wing third party, the Union Labor Party.[102] In Iowa's 6th district, the new party agreed to fuse with Democrats to nominate Weaver, but this time the Republicans were stronger.[102] Their candidate, John F. Lacey, was elected with an 828-vote margin.[103] The Union Laborites and their presidential candidate, Alson Streeter, fared poorly nationally as well, and the new party soon dissolved.[104] Weaver returned to Congress for the lame-duck session and once more pushed to organize the Oklahoma Territory.[105] This time he prevailed, as the House voted 147–102 to open the Unassigned Lands to homesteaders.[106] The Senate followed suit and President Cleveland, who was about to leave office, signed the bill into law.[107]

Farmers' Alliance and a new party

 
Weaver in 1892

The new president, Republican Benjamin Harrison, set April 22, 1889, as the date when the rush for the Unassigned Lands would begin.[108] Weaver arrived at a railroad station[d] in the territory in March with an eye toward relocating there.[108] The would-be homesteaders welcomed him with great acclaim.[108] Although settlers were not allowed to stake claims before noon on April 22, many scouted out the land ahead of time, and even marked off informal claims; Weaver was among them.[108] After the rush, settlers who had waited challenged the claims of the "Sooners" who had entered early.[109] Weaver's identification with the group harmed his popularity in the territory.[109] His claim was ultimately denied, and he returned to Iowa in 1890.[109]

Weaver and his wife moved their household in 1890 from Bloomfield to Colfax, near Des Moines, as the former Congressman took up more active management of the Iowa Tribune.[110] The Greenback and Union Labor parties were defunct, but he still proselytized for their ideals.[111] In August 1890 Weaver addressed a convention in Des Moines where former Greenbackers and Laborites gathered, although he declined their nomination for Congress.[112] The economic conditions that had created the Greenback party had not gone away; many farmers and laborers believed their situation had gotten worse since the Long Depression began in 1873.[113] Many farmers had joined the Farmers' Alliance, which sought to promote soft-money ideas on a non-partisan basis; rather than create a third party, they endorsed major party candidates who supported their ideas and hired speakers to educate the public.[114] Alliance-backed candidates did well in the 1890 elections, especially in the South, where Democrats endorsed by the Alliance won 44 seats.[114]

Alliance members gathered that December in Ocala, Florida, and formulated a platform, later called the Ocala Demands, that called for looser money, government control of the railroads, a graduated income tax, and the direct election of senators.[115] Weaver endorsed the message in the Tribune and corresponded with the group's leader, Leonidas L. Polk.[115] Weaver attended the group's convention in Cincinnati in May 1891, where he and Polk argued against forming a third party.[115] Another delegate, Ignatius L. Donnelly, argued forcefully for a break from the two major parties, and his argument carried the day, although Weaver and Polk kept many of Donnelly's more radical proposals out of the convention's statement of principles.[115]

Presidential election of 1892

 
1892 People's Party campaign poster

The following year, Weaver accepted the decision to form a new party (called the People's Party or Populist Party) and published a book, A Call to Action, detailing the party's principles and castigating the "few haughty millionaires who are gathering up the riches of the new world".[116] He attended their convention in Omaha, Nebraska, in July 1892.[117] After Polk's sudden death in June Weaver was considered the front-runner for the nomination.[117] He was nominated on the first ballot, easily besting his closest rival, Senator James H. Kyle of South Dakota.[118] Weaver accepted the nomination and promised to "visit every state in the Union and carry the banner of the people into the enemy's camp".[119] The vice presidential nomination went to James G. Field, a Confederate veteran and former Attorney General of Virginia.[118]

The platform adopted in Omaha was ambitious for its time, calling for a graduated income tax, public ownership of the railroads, telegraph, and telephone systems, government-issued currency, and the unlimited coinage of silver (the idea that the United States would buy as much silver as miners could sell the government and strike it into coins) at a favorable 16-to-1 ratio with gold.[120] The Republicans nominated Harrison for re-election, and the Democrats put forward ex-President Cleveland; as in 1880, Weaver was confident of a good showing for the new party against their opponents.[121] Harrison had shown some favor to the free silver cause, but his party largely supported the hard-money gold standard; Cleveland was solidly for gold, but his running mate, Adlai Stevenson of Illinois, was a silverite.[122] Against these, the Populist Party stood alone as undisputed partisans of soft money, which Weaver hoped would lead to success in rural areas.[123] Further, as labor disturbances broke out in Homestead, Pennsylvania, and elsewhere, Weaver hoped urban laborers would rally to the Populist cause.[124]

Weaver embarked on a speaking tour across the northern plains and Pacific coast states.[125] In late August he turned South, hoping to break the Democrats' grip on those states.[126] As in 1880, the issue of race hurt Weaver among white Southern voters, as he sought to attract black voters by urging cooperation between white and black farmers and calling for an end to lynchings.[126] Weaver drew good crowds in the South, but he and his wife were also subjected to abuse from hecklers.[127] Southern Democrats depicted Weaver as a threat to the conservative Democrats in power there; with the increasing disenfranchisement of black voters, this was to prove fatal to the Populists' hopes in the South.[128]

On election day Cleveland triumphed, carrying the entire South and many Northern states.[129] Weaver's performance was better than that of any third party candidate since the Civil War,[e] as he won over a million votes – 8.5 percent of the total cast nationwide.[130] In four states, he won a plurality, giving the Populists the electoral votes of Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, and Nevada along with two more votes from North Dakota and Oregon: twenty-two in total.[130] Weaver believed the performance "a surprising success",[131] and thought it portended good results in future elections.[131] "Unaided by money," he said afterward, "our grand young party has made an enviable record and achieved a surprising success at the polls."[132]

Populist elder statesman

Weaver believed that the Populists' embrace of free silver would be the main issue to attract new members to the party.[133] After the election he attended a meeting of the American Bimetallic League, a pro-silver group, and gave speeches advocating an inflationist monetary policy.[134] Meanwhile the Panic of 1893 caused bank failures, factory closures, and general economic upheaval.[134] As the federal gold reserves dwindled, President Cleveland convinced Congress to repeal the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, which ensured the government would purchase less silver for coining and which further disconcerted free silver supporters.[134] While depletion of gold reserves slowed after the repeal, the country's economy still floundered.[135]

 
Weaver supported Democrat William Jennings Bryan for president in 1896.

The next year, 1894, saw pay cuts and labor disturbances, including a massive strike by the workers at the Pullman Company.[135] A group of unemployed workers, known as Coxey's Army, marched on Washington that spring.[136] Weaver met with them in Iowa and expressed sympathy with the movement, so long as they refrained from lawbreaking.[136] He then returned to the campaign trail, stumping for Populist candidates in the 1894 midterm elections.[137] The election proved disastrous for the Democrats, but most of the gains went to the Republicans rather than to the Populists, who gained a few seats in the South but lost ground in the West.[138] During the election, Weaver became friendly with William Jennings Bryan, a Democratic Congressman from Nebraska and a charismatic supporter of free silver.[138] Bryan had lost his bid for the Senate in the election, but his reputation as an exciting speaker made him a presidential possibility in 1896.[138]

Weaver privately supported Bryan's quest for the Democratic nomination in 1896, which their convention awarded him on the fifth ballot.[139] When the Populist convention gathered the next month in Chicago, they divided between endorsing the silverite Democrat and preserving their new party's independence.[140] Weaver backed the former course, holding the issues the party stood for to be of more importance than the party itself.[141] A majority of delegates agreed, but without the enthusiasm that had marked their convention of four years earlier.[142][f] At the same time, Weaver joined with anti-fusionists to keep the Populist platform from deviating from the party's ideological principles.[144] Against the fusion candidate stood Republican William McKinley of Ohio, a hard-money conservative. Bryan succeeded in uniting the South and West, Weaver's longtime dream, but with the more populous North solidly behind McKinley, Bryan lost the election.[145]

Despite the loss, Weaver still believed the Populist cause would triumph. He agreed to be nominated one last time for his old 6th district House seat on a Democratic-Populist fusion ticket.[145] As he had ten years earlier, Republican John Lacey defeated Weaver.[145] In 1900 Weaver attended a convention of fusionist Populists in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, the party having split on the issue of cooperation with the Democrats.[146] The fusionists backed Bryan, the Democratic nominee, but he lost again to McKinley, this time by a greater margin.[146] The following year, Weaver was elected to office for the last time as the mayor of his hometown, Colfax, Iowa, after defeating Republican P. H. Cragen and served in that position until 1903.[147][148]

Later years and death

 
James and Clara Weaver in 1908

The Republican Party's popularity after the victory in the Spanish–American War led Weaver, for the first time, to doubt that populist values would eventually prevail.[149] With the demise of the Populist Party, Weaver became a Democrat and was a delegate to the 1904 Democratic National Convention.[149] He was displeased at the party's nominee, Alton B. Parker, whom he thought "plutocratic",[150] but Weaver supported his unsuccessful campaign nevertheless.[150] He gave serious consideration to running for the House again that year, but decided against it.[151] In 1908 he supported Bryan's third campaign as the Democratic nominee for president, but it, too, was unsuccessful.[150]

That same year, Weaver and his wife, Clara, celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary, surrounded by six of their children.[152] The Iowa legislature honored him in 1909, and hung a portrait of him in the Iowa State Historical Building.[153] He wrote a history of Jasper County, Iowa, where he lived, which was published in 1912.[154] Weaver planned to campaign on behalf of Democratic candidates that year, but did not have the chance.[155] On February 6 he died of heart failure at his daughter's house after being sick for ten days in Des Moines.[156] After a funeral at the First Methodist Church in Des Moines Weaver was buried in that city's Woodland Cemetery.[157] The last letter he wrote was an endorsement of Speaker of the House Champ Clark for the Democratic presidential nomination, but he went on to lose the nomination to Woodrow Wilson.[158]

Legacy

Many of Iowa's leading statesmen, including Weaver's former adversaries, praised him at his funeral and in the years thereafter.[157] Fusion with the Democrats had brought Populist policy into the mainstream, and several of the policies for which Weaver fought became law after his death, including the direct election of Senators, a graduated income tax, and a monetary policy not based on the gold standard; others, such as public ownership of the railroads and telephone companies, were never enacted.[159] In a 2008 biography, Robert B. Mitchell wrote that "Weaver's legacy cannot be assessed using conventional measures",[159] as much of what he fought for did not come to pass until after his death.[159] Even so, Mitchell credits Weaver for beginning the political effort that led to those changes: "Weaver's most important legacy in national politics is not what he advocated, or how subsequent reforms worked, but his effect on America's continuing political conversation."[160]

Notes

  1. ^ Weaver was one of many Union officers granted retroactive brevet promotions after the war ended as a reward for their service. Weaver was nominated for the appointment, to rank from March 13, 1865, by President Andrew Johnson on February 24, 1866, and the United States Senate confirmed the appointment on April 10, 1866.[33]
  2. ^ Before the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913 Senators were chosen by their states' legislatures.
  3. ^ In 1903 Congress did create a Department of Commerce and Labor; in 1913 a separate Department of Labor was created.
  4. ^ Oklahoma Station, where the settlers gathered, was the site of the future capital, Oklahoma City.
  5. ^ Since Weaver only Theodore Roosevelt in 1912, Robert M. La Follette, Sr. in 1924, George Wallace in 1968 and Ross Perot in 1992 have exceeded his vote share as a third-party candidate.
  6. ^ Rather than endorse the Democratic vice presidential candidate, the Populists nominated one of their own, former Congressman Thomas E. Watson of Georgia.[143]

References

  1. ^ a b Haynes 1919, p. 2.
  2. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 8.
  3. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 7.
  4. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 12.
  5. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 8–9.
  6. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 13.
  7. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 10–13.
  8. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, pp. 18–20.
  9. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 14.
  10. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 24–25; Lause 2001, p. 10.
  11. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 16.
  12. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 26.
  13. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 27.
  14. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 28.
  15. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 30.
  16. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 31.
  17. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 33.
  18. ^ McPherson 1988, p. 274.
  19. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 35.
  20. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 27.
  21. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 36.
  22. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 24.
  23. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, p. 39.
  24. ^ McPherson 1988, p. 402.
  25. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 40.
  26. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 41.
  27. ^ McPherson 1988, pp. 413–414.
  28. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 42.
  29. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 43.
  30. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 44.
  31. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, pp. 46–47.
  32. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, p. 50.
  33. ^ Eicher, John H., and David J. Eicher, Civil War High Commands. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 978-0-8047-3641-1. p. 760.
  34. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 49.
  35. ^ Lause 2001, p. 15.
  36. ^ a b Haynes 1919, p. 68.
  37. ^ a b c d Mitchell 2008, p. 51.
  38. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 55.
  39. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 70–71.
  40. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 57.
  41. ^ a b Haynes 1919, p. 74.
  42. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, pp. 58–59.
  43. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 80–81.
  44. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 61.
  45. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 68.
  46. ^ a b Colbert 1978, p. 26.
  47. ^ Unger 1964, pp. 14–15.
  48. ^ Unger 1964, pp. 16–17.
  49. ^ Unger 1964, pp. 228–233.
  50. ^ a b Clancy 1958, pp. 163–164.
  51. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 65–66.
  52. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 69.
  53. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 70.
  54. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 95–98.
  55. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 74.
  56. ^ a b Colbert 1978, p. 27.
  57. ^ Colbert 1978, pp. 31–33.
  58. ^ Colbert 1978, pp. 35–38.
  59. ^ Colbert 1978, p. 39.
  60. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 83.
  61. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 84.
  62. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 108–113.
  63. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 87.
  64. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 88–89.
  65. ^ a b c d Mitchell 2008, p. 90.
  66. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 92.
  67. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 93.
  68. ^ a b Doolen 1972, pp. 439–440.
  69. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 98–99.
  70. ^ Lause 2001, pp. 50–51.
  71. ^ Lause 2001, pp. 61–71.
  72. ^ a b Lause 2001, pp. 79–81.
  73. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 102–103.
  74. ^ Lause 2001, pp. 85–104.
  75. ^ Lause 2001, pp. 105–124.
  76. ^ Lause 2001, pp. 124–146.
  77. ^ Ackerman 2003, p. 221.
  78. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 111.
  79. ^ Lause 2001, pp. 206–208.
  80. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 115–116.
  81. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 117–120.
  82. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, p. 122.
  83. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, p. 121.
  84. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 215–216.
  85. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 124.
  86. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 127.
  87. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 289.
  88. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 221.
  89. ^ a b c d Mitchell 2008, pp. 129–130.
  90. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 131.
  91. ^ Colbert 2008, p. 177.
  92. ^ a b Colbert 2008, pp. 178–179.
  93. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 128.
  94. ^ Colbert 2008, p. 179.
  95. ^ Colbert 2008, p. 181.
  96. ^ Colbert 2008, p. 182.
  97. ^ Colbert 2008, p. 183.
  98. ^ Colbert 2008, p. 184.
  99. ^ a b c Colbert 2008, p. 185.
  100. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 132.
  101. ^ Colbert 2008, p. 186.
  102. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 133.
  103. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 134.
  104. ^ Newcombe 1946, p. 88.
  105. ^ Colbert 2008, p. 188.
  106. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 137.
  107. ^ Colbert 2008, p. 190.
  108. ^ a b c d Colbert 2008, p. 191.
  109. ^ a b c Colbert 2008, p. 192.
  110. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 138.
  111. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 139.
  112. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 300–301.
  113. ^ Goodwyn 1978, p. viii.
  114. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, pp. 140–141.
  115. ^ a b c d Mitchell 2008, pp. 142–143.
  116. ^ Weaver 1892, p. 6.
  117. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 152.
  118. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 155.
  119. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 315.
  120. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 153.
  121. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 158.
  122. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 159.
  123. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 161.
  124. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 160.
  125. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 319–322.
  126. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, pp. 165–167.
  127. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 324–329.
  128. ^ Mitchell 2008, pp. 167–170.
  129. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 175.
  130. ^ a b Haynes 1919, p. 335.
  131. ^ a b Goodwyn 1978, p. 201.
  132. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 176.
  133. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 177.
  134. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, p. 178.
  135. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 181.
  136. ^ a b Haynes 1919, p. 353.
  137. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 182.
  138. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, p. 183.
  139. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 184.
  140. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 186.
  141. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 188.
  142. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 189.
  143. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 187.
  144. ^ Goodwyn 1978, p. 257.
  145. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, p. 191.
  146. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 192.
  147. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 407.
  148. ^ "Jen. James B. Weaver Dead". Evening Times-Republican. 26 March 1901. p. 3. from the original on 16 December 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  149. ^ a b Mitchell 2008, p. 193.
  150. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, p. 194.
  151. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 400.
  152. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 408.
  153. ^ Haynes 1919, pp. 410–412.
  154. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 199.
  155. ^ Haynes 1919, p. 404.
  156. ^ "Jen. James B. Weaver Dead". The Sheboygan Press. 7 February 1912. p. 5. from the original on 16 December 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  157. ^ a b Haynes 1919, pp. 424–431.
  158. ^ "Champ Clark Praised By Voice From Grave". Lincoln Journal Star. 23 March 1912. p. 1. from the original on 16 December 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  159. ^ a b c Mitchell 2008, pp. 206–207.
  160. ^ Mitchell 2008, p. 208.

Sources

Books

Articles

  • Colbert, Thomas Burnell (Spring 1978). "Political Fusion in Iowa: The Election of James B. Weaver to Congress in 1878". Arizona and the West. 20 (1): 25–40. JSTOR 40168674.
  • Colbert, Thomas Burnell (Autumn 2008). "The Lion of the Land: James B. Weaver, Kansas, and the Oklahoma lands. 1884–1890" (PDF). Kansas History. 31 (3): 176–193.
  • Doolen, Richard M. (Winter 1972). ""Brick" Pomeroy and the Greenback Clubs". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 65 (4): 434–450. JSTOR 40191206.
  • Newcombe, Alfred W. (March 1946). "Alson J. Streeter: An Agrarian Liberal". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 39 (1): 68–95. JSTOR 40188188.

Further reading

  • Colbert, Thomas Burnell (1988). "Disgruntled 'Chronic Office Seeker' or Man of Political Integrity: James Baird Weaver and the Republican Party in Iowa, 1857–1877". Annals of Iowa. 49 (3): 187–207. doi:10.17077/0003-4827.12087.
  • Sage, Leland L. (1953). "Weaver in Allison's Way". Annals of Iowa. 31 (7): 485–507. doi:10.17077/0003-4827.7281.

External links

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Iowa's 6th congressional district

1879–1881
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Iowa's 6th congressional district

1885–1889
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Greenback nominee for President of the United States
1880
Succeeded by
Preceded by
D. M. Clark
Greenback nominee for Governor of Iowa
1883
Succeeded by
Elias Doty
New political party Populist nominee for President of the United States
1892
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by
Phineas Cragan
Mayor of Colfax
1901–1903
Succeeded by
John Hahn

james, weaver, james, baird, weaver, june, 1833, february, 1912, member, united, states, house, representatives, time, candidate, president, united, states, born, ohio, moved, iowa, when, family, claimed, homestead, frontier, became, politically, active, young. James Baird Weaver June 12 1833 February 6 1912 was a member of the United States House of Representatives and two time candidate for President of the United States Born in Ohio he moved to Iowa as a boy when his family claimed a homestead on the frontier He became politically active as a young man and was an advocate for farmers and laborers He joined and quit several political parties in the furtherance of the progressive causes in which he believed After serving in the Union Army in the American Civil War Weaver returned to Iowa and worked for the election of Republican candidates After several unsuccessful attempts at Republican nominations to various offices and growing dissatisfied with the conservative wing of the party in 1877 Weaver switched to the Greenback Party which supported increasing the money supply and regulating big business As a Greenbacker with Democratic support Weaver won election to the House in 1878 James B WeaverWeaver c 1870 1880Member of the U S House of Representatives from Iowa s 6th districtIn office March 4 1885 March 3 1889Preceded byJohn C CookSucceeded byJohn F LaceyIn office March 4 1879 March 3 1881Preceded byEzekiel S SampsonSucceeded byMarsena E CuttsPersonal detailsBornJames Baird Weaver 1833 06 12 June 12 1833Dayton Ohio U S DiedFebruary 6 1912 1912 02 06 aged 78 Des Moines Iowa U S Resting placeWoodland CemeteryPolitical partyRepublican until 1876 Greenback 1877 1889 Populist 1890 1908 Democratic from 1908 SpouseClarrisa Vinson m 1858 wbr Children8EducationUniversity of Cincinnati LLB SignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited StatesBranch serviceUnion ArmyYears of service1861 1864RankBrevet brigadier generalColonelCommands2nd Iowa Volunteer Infantry RegimentBattles warsAmerican Civil WarThe Greenbackers nominated Weaver for president in 1880 but he received only 3 3 percent of the popular vote After several more attempts at elected office he was again elected to the House in 1884 and 1886 In Congress he worked for expansion of the money supply and for the opening of Indian Territory to white settlement As the Greenback Party fell apart a new anti big business third party the People s Party Populists arose Weaver helped to organize the party and was their nominee for president in 1892 This time he was more successful and gained 8 5 percent of the popular vote and won five states but still fell far short of victory The Populists merged with the Democrats by the end of the 19th century and Weaver went with them promoting the candidacy of William Jennings Bryan for president in 1896 1900 and 1908 After serving as mayor of his home town Colfax Iowa Weaver retired from his pursuit of elective office He died in Iowa in 1912 Most of Weaver s political goals remained unfulfilled at his death but many came to pass in the following decades Contents 1 Early years 2 Civil War 3 Republican politics 4 Switch to the Greenback Party 5 Congress 6 Presidential election of 1880 7 Office seeker and party promoter 8 Return to Congress 9 Farmers Alliance and a new party 10 Presidential election of 1892 11 Populist elder statesman 12 Later years and death 13 Legacy 14 Notes 15 References 16 Sources 17 Further reading 18 External linksEarly years EditJames Baird Weaver was born in Dayton Ohio on June 12 1833 the fifth of thirteen children of Abram Weaver and Susan Imlay Weaver 1 Weaver s father was a farmer also born in Ohio and a descendant of Revolutionary War veterans 2 He married Weaver s mother who was from New Jersey in 1824 2 Shortly after Weaver s birth in 1835 the family moved to a farm nine miles north of Cassopolis Michigan 1 In 1842 the family moved again to the Iowa Territory to await the opening of former Sac and Fox land to white settlement the following year 3 They claimed a homestead along the Chequest Creek in Davis County 3 Abram Weaver built a house and farmed his new land until 1848 when the family moved to Bloomfield the county seat 4 Abram Weaver a Democrat involved in local politics was elected clerk of the district court in 1848 he often vied for election to other offices usually unsuccessfully 5 Weaver s brother in law Hosea Horn a Whig was appointed postmaster the following year and through him James Weaver secured his first job delivering mail to neighboring Jefferson County 6 In 1851 Weaver quit the mail route to read law with Samuel G McAchran a local lawyer 6 Two years later Weaver interrupted his legal career to accompany another brother in law Dr Calvin Phelps on a cattle drive overland from Bloomfield to Sacramento California 7 Weaver initially intended to stay and prospect for gold but instead booked passage on a ship for Panama 8 He crossed the isthmus boarded another ship to New York and returned home to Iowa 8 Upon his return Weaver worked briefly as a store clerk before resuming the study of law He enrolled at the Cincinnati Law School in 1855 where he studied under Bellamy Storer 9 While in Cincinnati Weaver began to question his support for the institution of slavery a change biographers attribute to Storer s influence 10 After graduating in 1856 Weaver returned to Bloomfield and was admitted to the Iowa bar 11 By 1857 he had broken with the Democratic party of his father to join the growing coalition that opposed the expansion of slavery which became the Republican Party 12 Weaver traveled around southern Iowa in 1858 giving speeches on behalf of his new party s candidates 13 That summer he married Clarrisa Clara Vinson a schoolteacher from nearby Keosauqua Iowa whom he had courted since he returned from Cincinnati 13 The marriage lasted until Weaver s death in 1912 and the couple had eight children 14 After the wedding Weaver started a law firm with Hosea Horn and continued his involvement in Republican politics 14 He gave several speeches on behalf of Samuel J Kirkwood for governor in 1859 in a campaign that focused heavily on the slavery debate although the Republicans lost Weaver s Davis County Kirkwood narrowly won the election 15 The next year Weaver served as a delegate to the state convention and although not a national delegate traveled with the Iowa delegation to the 1860 Republican National Convention where Abraham Lincoln was nominated 16 Lincoln carried Iowa and won the election but Southern states responded to the Republican victory by seceding from the Union By April 1861 the American Civil War had begun 17 Civil War Edit Lieutenant James B Weaver After the Confederate attack on Fort Sumter Lincoln called for 75 000 men to join the Union Army 18 Weaver enlisted in what became Company G of the 2nd Iowa Volunteer Infantry Regiment and was elected the company s first lieutenant 19 The 2nd Iowa commanded by Colonel Samuel Ryan Curtis a former Congressman was ordered to Missouri in June 1861 to secure railroad lines in that border state 20 Weaver s unit spent that summer in northern Missouri and did not see action 21 Meanwhile Clara gave birth to the couple s second child and first son named James Bellamy Weaver after his father and Bellamy Storer 22 Weaver s first chance at action came in February 1862 when the 2nd Iowa joined Brigadier General Ulysses S Grant s army outside the Confederate Fort Donelson in Tennessee 23 Weaver s company was in the thick of the fight which he described as a holocaust to the demon of battles 23 and he took a minor wound in the arm 23 The rebels surrendered the next day the most important Union victory of the war to date 24 The 2nd Iowa next joined other units in the area at Pittsburg Landing Tennessee to mass for a major assault deeper into the South 25 Confederate forces met them there in the Battle of Shiloh Weaver s regiment was in the center of the Union lines in the area later known as the hornets nest and were forced to retreat amid fierce fighting 25 The next day the Union forces turned the tide and forced the rebels off the field in what Weaver called a perfect rout 26 The carnage at Shiloh 20 000 killed and wounded was on a scale never before seen in American warfare and both sides learned that the war would end neither quickly nor easily 27 After Shiloh Weaver and the 2nd Iowa slowly advanced to Corinth Mississippi where he was promoted to major 28 Rebel forces attacked the Union armies there in the Second Battle of Corinth where Weaver s courage in that Union victory convinced his superiors to promote him to colonel after the regiment s commanding officer was killed 29 After Corinth Weaver s unit took up garrison duty in northern Mississippi 30 In the summer of 1863 they were redeployed to the Tennessee Alabama border again on occupation duty around Pulaski Tennessee 31 They rejoined the action at the Battle of Resaca a part of the Atlanta Campaign then continued with Major General William Tecumseh Sherman s march through Georgia to the sea in 1864 31 Weaver s enlistment ended in May 1864 and he returned to his family in Iowa 31 After the war ended Weaver received a promotion to brevet brigadier general backdated to March 13 1865 32 a Republican politics Edit Weaver s home built in 1867 in Bloomfield Soon after returning from the war Weaver became editor of a pro Republican Bloomfield newspaper the Weekly Union Guard 34 At the 1865 Iowa Republican State Convention he placed second for the nomination for lieutenant governor 35 The following year Weaver was elected district attorney for the second judicial district covering six counties in southern Iowa 36 In 1867 President Andrew Johnson appointed him assessor of internal revenue in the first Congressional district which extended across southeastern Iowa 32 The job came with a 1500 salary plus a percentage of taxes collected over 100 000 32 Weaver held that lucrative position until 1872 when Congress abolished it 36 He also became involved in the Methodist Episcopal Church serving as a delegate to a church convention in Baltimore in 1876 37 Membership in the Methodist church coincided with Weaver s interest in the growing movement for prohibition of the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages 37 His income and prestige grew along with his family which included seven children by 1877 37 Weaver s success allowed him to build a large new home for his family which still stands 37 Weaver s work for the party led many to support his nomination to represent Iowa s 6th congressional district in the federal House of Representatives in 1874 38 Many party insiders however were wary of Weaver s association with the Prohibition movement and preferred to remain uncommitted on the divisive issue 38 At the convention Weaver led on the first ballot but ultimately lost the nomination by one vote to Ezekiel S Sampson a local judge 39 Weaver s allies attributed his loss to the meanest kind of wire pulling 40 but Weaver shrugged off the defeat and aimed instead at the gubernatorial nomination in 1875 40 He launched a vigorous effort courted delegates around the state and explicitly endorsed Prohibition and greater state control of railroad rates 41 Weaver attracted many delegates support but alienated those who were friendly to the railroads and wished to avoid the liquor issue 41 Opposition was scattered among several lesser known candidates mostly members of Senator William B Allison s conservative wing of the party 42 They united at the convention when a delegate unexpectedly nominated former governor Kirkwood 42 The nomination carried easily and after Allison s associates persuaded him to accept it Kirkwood was nominated and went on to win the election 42 In a further defeat the delegates refused to endorse Prohibition in the party platform 43 Weaver had small consolation in a nomination to the state Senate but he lost to his Democratic opponent in the election that fall 44 Switch to the Greenback Party Edit Weaver as a candidate for Congress 1878 After his defeats in 1875 Weaver grew disenchanted with the Republican party not only because it had spurned him but also because of the policy choices of the dominant Allison faction 45 In May 1876 he traveled to Indianapolis to attend the national convention of the newly formed Greenback Party 45 The new party had arisen mostly in the West as a response to the economic depression that followed the Panic of 1873 46 During the Civil War Congress had authorized greenbacks a new form of fiat money that was redeemable not in gold but in government bonds 47 The greenbacks had helped to finance the war when the government s gold supply did not keep pace with the expanding costs of maintaining the armies When the crisis had passed many in both parties especially in the East wanted to place the nation s currency on a gold standard as soon as possible 48 The Specie Payment Resumption Act passed in 1875 ordered that greenbacks be gradually withdrawn and replaced with gold backed currency beginning in 1879 At the same time the depression had made it more expensive for debtors to pay debts they had contracted when currency was less valuable 49 Beyond their support for a larger money supply Greenbackers also favored an eight hour work day safety regulations in factories and an end to child labor 50 As historian Herbert Clancy put it they anticipated by almost fifty years the progressive legislation of the first quarter of the twentieth century 50 In the 1876 presidential campaign the Republicans nominated Rutherford B Hayes and the Democrats chose Samuel J Tilden Both candidates opposed the issuance of more greenbacks candidates who favored the gold backed currency were called hard money supporters while the Greenbackers policy of encouraging inflation was known as soft money 51 Weaver was impressed with the Greenbackers and their candidate Peter Cooper but while he advocated some soft money policies he declined the Greenback nomination for Congress and remained a Republican he campaigned for Hayes in the election that year 52 In 1877 Weaver attended the Republican state convention and saw the state party adopt a soft money platform that also favored Prohibition 53 The gubernatorial nominee however was John H Gear an opponent of Prohibition who had worked to defeat Weaver in his quest for the governorship two years earlier 53 After initially supporting Gear Weaver joined the Greenback party in August 46 He gave speeches on behalf of his new party debated former allies across the state and establishing himself as a prominent advocate for the Greenback cause 54 Congress Edit Thomas Nast depicts Weaver as an ungainly donkey who is finally recognized by Speaker Samuel J Randall In May 1878 Weaver accepted the Greenback nomination for the House of Representatives in the 6th district 55 Although Weaver s political career up to then had been as a staunch Republican Democrats in the 6th district thought that endorsing him was likely the only way to defeat Sampson the incumbent Republican 56 Since the start of the Civil War Democrats had been in the minority across Iowa electoral fusion with Greenbackers represented their best chance to get their candidates into office 56 Hard money Democrats objected to the idea but some were reassured when Henry H Trimble a prominent Bloomfield Democrat assured them that if elected Weaver would align with House Democrats on all issues other than the money question 57 Democrats declined to endorse any candidate at the 6th district convention but soft money leaders in the party circulated their own slate of candidates that included Democrats and Greenbackers 58 The Greenback Democrat ticket prevailed and Weaver was elected with 16 366 votes to Sampson s 14 307 59 Weaver entered the 46th Congress in March 1879 one of thirteen Greenbackers elected in 1878 60 Although the House was closely divided neither major party included the Greenbackers in their caucus leaving them few committee assignments and little input on legislation 61 Weaver gave his first speech in April 1879 criticizing the use of the army to police Southern polling stations while also decrying the violence against black Southerners that made such protection necessary he then described the Greenback platform which he said would put an end to the sectional and economic strife 62 The next month he spoke in favor of a bill calling for an increase in the money supply by allowing the unlimited coinage of silver but the bill was easily defeated 63 Weaver s oratorical skill drew praise but he had no luck in advancing Greenback policy ideas 64 In 1880 Weaver prepared a resolution stating that the government not banks should issue currency and determine its volume and that the federal debt should be repaid in whatever currency the government chose not just gold as the law then required 65 The proposed resolution would never be allowed to emerge from committees dominated by Democrats and Republicans so Weaver planned to introduce it directly to the whole House for debate as members were permitted to do every Monday 65 Rather than debate a proposition that would expose the monetary divide in the Democratic Party Speaker Samuel J Randall refused to recognize Weaver when he rose to propose the resolution 65 Weaver returned to the floor each succeeding Monday with the same result and the press took notice of Randall s obstruction 65 Eventually Republican James A Garfield of Ohio interceded with Randall to recognize Weaver which he reluctantly did on April 5 1880 66 The Republicans mostly united behind hard money largely voted against the measure while many Democrats joined the Greenbackers voting in favor Despite support by the soft money Democrats the resolution was defeated 84 117 with many members abstaining 67 Although he lost the vote Weaver had promoted the monetary issue in the national consciousness 67 Presidential election of 1880 EditMain article 1880 United States presidential election An 1880 cartoon in Frank Leslie s Illustrated Newspaper ridicules the Greenback party as a collection of disparate radicals By 1879 the Greenback coalition had divided with the faction most prominent in the South and West led by Marcus M Brick Pomeroy splitting from the main party 68 Pomeroy s faction called the Union Greenback Labor Party was more radical and emphasized its independence and suggested that Eastern Greenbackers were likely to sell out the party at any time to the Democrats 68 Weaver remained with the rump Greenback party often called the National Greenback Party and the national reputation he had earned in Congress made him one of the party s leading presidential hopefuls 69 The Union Greenbackers held their convention first and nominated Stephen D Dillaye of New Jersey for president and Barzillai J Chambers of Texas for vice president but also sent a delegation to the National Greenback convention in Chicago that June with an eye toward reuniting the party 70 The two factions agreed to reunify and also to admit a delegation from the Socialist Labor Party 71 Thus united the convention turned to nominations Weaver led on the first ballot and on the second he secured a majority 72 Chambers won the convention s vote for vice president 72 In a departure from the political traditions of the day Weaver himself campaigned making speeches across the South in July and August 73 As the Greenbackers had the only ticket that included a Southerner Weaver and Chambers hoped to make inroads in the South 74 As the campaign progressed however Weaver s message of racial inclusion drew violent protests in the South as the Greenbackers faced the same obstacles the Republicans did in the face of increasing black disenfranchisement 75 In the autumn Weaver campaigned in the North but the Greenbackers lack of support was compounded by Weaver s refusal to run a fusion ticket in states where Democratic and Greenbacker strength might have combined to outvote the Republicans 76 Weaver received 305 997 votes and no electoral votes compared to 4 446 158 for the winner Republican James A Garfield and 4 444 260 for Democrat Winfield Scott Hancock 77 The party was strongest in the West and South but in no state did Weaver receive more than 12 percent of the vote his best state was Texas with 11 7 percent his nationwide total was just 3 percent 78 That figure represented an improvement over the Greenback vote of 1876 but to Weaver who expected twice as many votes as he received it was a disappointment 79 Office seeker and party promoter EditAfter the election Weaver returned to the lame duck session of Congress and proposed an unsuccessful constitutional amendment that would have provided for the direct election of Senators 80 b After his term expired in March he resumed his speaking tour promoting the Greenback Party across the nation 81 He and Edward H Gillette another Iowa Greenback Congressman bought the Iowa Tribune in 1882 to help spread the Greenback message 82 That same year Weaver ran for his old 6th district seat in the House against the incumbent Republican Marsena E Cutts 83 This time the Democrats and Greenbackers ran separate candidates and Weaver finished a distant second 83 Cutts died before taking office and the Republicans offered to let Weaver run unopposed in the special election if he rejoined their party he declined and John C Cook a Democrat won the seat 83 In 1883 Weaver was the Greenback nominee for governor of Iowa 82 Again the Democrats ran a separate candidate and the incumbent Republican Buren R Sherman was re elected with a plurality 82 Weaver was a delegate to the 1884 Greenback National Convention in Indianapolis and supported the eventual nominee Benjamin Butler of Massachusetts 84 Back in Iowa Weaver again ran for the House this time with the Democrats support Greenback fortunes declined nationally as Butler received just over half as many votes for president as Weaver had four years earlier 85 Weaver s House race bucked the trend he defeated Republican Frank T Campbell by just 67 votes 85 Return to Congress EditUnlike in his previous congressional term when Weaver entered the 49th United States Congress he was the only Greenback member 86 The new president Democrat Grover Cleveland was friendly to Weaver and asked his advice on Iowa patronage 87 As it had been for years Weaver s chief concern was with the nation s money and finance and the relationship between labor and capital 88 In 1885 Weaver proposed the creation of a Department of Labor which he suggested would find a solution to disputes between labor and management 89 c Labor tensions increased the following year as the Knights of Labor went on strike against Jay Gould s rail empire and a strike against the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company ended in the bloody Haymarket riot 89 Weaver believed the nation s hard money policies were responsible for labor unrest calling it purely a question of money and nothing else 89 and declaring If this Congress will not protect labor it must protect itself 89 He saw the triumph of one plank of the Greenback platform when Congress established the Interstate Commerce Commission to regulate the railroads 90 Weaver thought the bill should have given the government more power including the ability to set rates directly but he voted for the final bill 90 Weaver supported white settlers right to homesteads in the Unassigned Lands Weaver also took up the issue of white settlement in Indian Territory 91 For several years white settlers had been claiming homesteads in the Unassigned Lands in what is now Oklahoma 92 After the Civil War the Five Civilized Tribes had been forced to cede their unused western lands to the federal government The settlers known as Boomers believed that federal ownership made the lands open to settlement under the Homestead Acts 93 The federal government disagreed as did the Cherokee Nation which leased its neighboring Cherokee Outlet to Kansas cattle ranchers and many Easterners who believed the Boomers to be the tools of railroad interests 92 93 Weaver saw the issue as one between the landless poor homesteaders and wealthy cattlemen and took the side of the former 94 He introduced a bill in December 1885 to organize Indian Territory and the neighboring Neutral Strip into a new Oklahoma Territory 95 The bill died in committee but Weaver reintroduced it in February 1886 and gave a speech calling for the Indian reservations to be broken up into homesteads for individual Natives and the remaining land to be open to white settlement 96 The Committee on Territories again rejected Weaver s bill but approved a compromise measure that opened the Unassigned Lands Cherokee Outlet and Neutral Strip to settlement 97 Congress debated the bill over several months while the tribes announced their resistance to their lands becoming a territory according to an 1884 Supreme Court decision Elk v Wilkins Native Americans were not citizens and thus would have no voting rights in the new territory 98 When Weaver returned to Iowa to campaign for re election the bill was still in limbo 99 Running again on a Democratic Greenback fusion ticket Weaver was re elected to the House in 1886 with a 618 vote majority 100 In the lame duck session of 1887 Congress passed the Dawes Act which allowed the president to terminate tribal governments and broke up Indian reservations into homesteads for individual natives 99 Although the Five Civilized Tribes were exempt from the Act the spirit of the law encouraged Weaver and the Boomers to continue their own efforts to open western Indian Territory to white settlement 99 Weaver reintroduced his Oklahoma bill in the new Congress the following year but again it stalled in committee 101 He returned to Iowa for another re election campaign in September 1888 but the Greenback party had fallen apart replaced by a new left wing third party the Union Labor Party 102 In Iowa s 6th district the new party agreed to fuse with Democrats to nominate Weaver but this time the Republicans were stronger 102 Their candidate John F Lacey was elected with an 828 vote margin 103 The Union Laborites and their presidential candidate Alson Streeter fared poorly nationally as well and the new party soon dissolved 104 Weaver returned to Congress for the lame duck session and once more pushed to organize the Oklahoma Territory 105 This time he prevailed as the House voted 147 102 to open the Unassigned Lands to homesteaders 106 The Senate followed suit and President Cleveland who was about to leave office signed the bill into law 107 Farmers Alliance and a new party Edit Weaver in 1892 The new president Republican Benjamin Harrison set April 22 1889 as the date when the rush for the Unassigned Lands would begin 108 Weaver arrived at a railroad station d in the territory in March with an eye toward relocating there 108 The would be homesteaders welcomed him with great acclaim 108 Although settlers were not allowed to stake claims before noon on April 22 many scouted out the land ahead of time and even marked off informal claims Weaver was among them 108 After the rush settlers who had waited challenged the claims of the Sooners who had entered early 109 Weaver s identification with the group harmed his popularity in the territory 109 His claim was ultimately denied and he returned to Iowa in 1890 109 Weaver and his wife moved their household in 1890 from Bloomfield to Colfax near Des Moines as the former Congressman took up more active management of the Iowa Tribune 110 The Greenback and Union Labor parties were defunct but he still proselytized for their ideals 111 In August 1890 Weaver addressed a convention in Des Moines where former Greenbackers and Laborites gathered although he declined their nomination for Congress 112 The economic conditions that had created the Greenback party had not gone away many farmers and laborers believed their situation had gotten worse since the Long Depression began in 1873 113 Many farmers had joined the Farmers Alliance which sought to promote soft money ideas on a non partisan basis rather than create a third party they endorsed major party candidates who supported their ideas and hired speakers to educate the public 114 Alliance backed candidates did well in the 1890 elections especially in the South where Democrats endorsed by the Alliance won 44 seats 114 Alliance members gathered that December in Ocala Florida and formulated a platform later called the Ocala Demands that called for looser money government control of the railroads a graduated income tax and the direct election of senators 115 Weaver endorsed the message in the Tribune and corresponded with the group s leader Leonidas L Polk 115 Weaver attended the group s convention in Cincinnati in May 1891 where he and Polk argued against forming a third party 115 Another delegate Ignatius L Donnelly argued forcefully for a break from the two major parties and his argument carried the day although Weaver and Polk kept many of Donnelly s more radical proposals out of the convention s statement of principles 115 Presidential election of 1892 EditMain article 1892 United States presidential election 1892 People s Party campaign poster The following year Weaver accepted the decision to form a new party called the People s Party or Populist Party and published a book A Call to Action detailing the party s principles and castigating the few haughty millionaires who are gathering up the riches of the new world 116 He attended their convention in Omaha Nebraska in July 1892 117 After Polk s sudden death in June Weaver was considered the front runner for the nomination 117 He was nominated on the first ballot easily besting his closest rival Senator James H Kyle of South Dakota 118 Weaver accepted the nomination and promised to visit every state in the Union and carry the banner of the people into the enemy s camp 119 The vice presidential nomination went to James G Field a Confederate veteran and former Attorney General of Virginia 118 The platform adopted in Omaha was ambitious for its time calling for a graduated income tax public ownership of the railroads telegraph and telephone systems government issued currency and the unlimited coinage of silver the idea that the United States would buy as much silver as miners could sell the government and strike it into coins at a favorable 16 to 1 ratio with gold 120 The Republicans nominated Harrison for re election and the Democrats put forward ex President Cleveland as in 1880 Weaver was confident of a good showing for the new party against their opponents 121 Harrison had shown some favor to the free silver cause but his party largely supported the hard money gold standard Cleveland was solidly for gold but his running mate Adlai Stevenson of Illinois was a silverite 122 Against these the Populist Party stood alone as undisputed partisans of soft money which Weaver hoped would lead to success in rural areas 123 Further as labor disturbances broke out in Homestead Pennsylvania and elsewhere Weaver hoped urban laborers would rally to the Populist cause 124 Weaver embarked on a speaking tour across the northern plains and Pacific coast states 125 In late August he turned South hoping to break the Democrats grip on those states 126 As in 1880 the issue of race hurt Weaver among white Southern voters as he sought to attract black voters by urging cooperation between white and black farmers and calling for an end to lynchings 126 Weaver drew good crowds in the South but he and his wife were also subjected to abuse from hecklers 127 Southern Democrats depicted Weaver as a threat to the conservative Democrats in power there with the increasing disenfranchisement of black voters this was to prove fatal to the Populists hopes in the South 128 On election day Cleveland triumphed carrying the entire South and many Northern states 129 Weaver s performance was better than that of any third party candidate since the Civil War e as he won over a million votes 8 5 percent of the total cast nationwide 130 In four states he won a plurality giving the Populists the electoral votes of Colorado Idaho Kansas and Nevada along with two more votes from North Dakota and Oregon twenty two in total 130 Weaver believed the performance a surprising success 131 and thought it portended good results in future elections 131 Unaided by money he said afterward our grand young party has made an enviable record and achieved a surprising success at the polls 132 Populist elder statesman EditWeaver believed that the Populists embrace of free silver would be the main issue to attract new members to the party 133 After the election he attended a meeting of the American Bimetallic League a pro silver group and gave speeches advocating an inflationist monetary policy 134 Meanwhile the Panic of 1893 caused bank failures factory closures and general economic upheaval 134 As the federal gold reserves dwindled President Cleveland convinced Congress to repeal the Sherman Silver Purchase Act which ensured the government would purchase less silver for coining and which further disconcerted free silver supporters 134 While depletion of gold reserves slowed after the repeal the country s economy still floundered 135 Weaver supported Democrat William Jennings Bryan for president in 1896 The next year 1894 saw pay cuts and labor disturbances including a massive strike by the workers at the Pullman Company 135 A group of unemployed workers known as Coxey s Army marched on Washington that spring 136 Weaver met with them in Iowa and expressed sympathy with the movement so long as they refrained from lawbreaking 136 He then returned to the campaign trail stumping for Populist candidates in the 1894 midterm elections 137 The election proved disastrous for the Democrats but most of the gains went to the Republicans rather than to the Populists who gained a few seats in the South but lost ground in the West 138 During the election Weaver became friendly with William Jennings Bryan a Democratic Congressman from Nebraska and a charismatic supporter of free silver 138 Bryan had lost his bid for the Senate in the election but his reputation as an exciting speaker made him a presidential possibility in 1896 138 Weaver privately supported Bryan s quest for the Democratic nomination in 1896 which their convention awarded him on the fifth ballot 139 When the Populist convention gathered the next month in Chicago they divided between endorsing the silverite Democrat and preserving their new party s independence 140 Weaver backed the former course holding the issues the party stood for to be of more importance than the party itself 141 A majority of delegates agreed but without the enthusiasm that had marked their convention of four years earlier 142 f At the same time Weaver joined with anti fusionists to keep the Populist platform from deviating from the party s ideological principles 144 Against the fusion candidate stood Republican William McKinley of Ohio a hard money conservative Bryan succeeded in uniting the South and West Weaver s longtime dream but with the more populous North solidly behind McKinley Bryan lost the election 145 Despite the loss Weaver still believed the Populist cause would triumph He agreed to be nominated one last time for his old 6th district House seat on a Democratic Populist fusion ticket 145 As he had ten years earlier Republican John Lacey defeated Weaver 145 In 1900 Weaver attended a convention of fusionist Populists in Sioux Falls South Dakota the party having split on the issue of cooperation with the Democrats 146 The fusionists backed Bryan the Democratic nominee but he lost again to McKinley this time by a greater margin 146 The following year Weaver was elected to office for the last time as the mayor of his hometown Colfax Iowa after defeating Republican P H Cragen and served in that position until 1903 147 148 Later years and death Edit James and Clara Weaver in 1908 The Republican Party s popularity after the victory in the Spanish American War led Weaver for the first time to doubt that populist values would eventually prevail 149 With the demise of the Populist Party Weaver became a Democrat and was a delegate to the 1904 Democratic National Convention 149 He was displeased at the party s nominee Alton B Parker whom he thought plutocratic 150 but Weaver supported his unsuccessful campaign nevertheless 150 He gave serious consideration to running for the House again that year but decided against it 151 In 1908 he supported Bryan s third campaign as the Democratic nominee for president but it too was unsuccessful 150 That same year Weaver and his wife Clara celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary surrounded by six of their children 152 The Iowa legislature honored him in 1909 and hung a portrait of him in the Iowa State Historical Building 153 He wrote a history of Jasper County Iowa where he lived which was published in 1912 154 Weaver planned to campaign on behalf of Democratic candidates that year but did not have the chance 155 On February 6 he died of heart failure at his daughter s house after being sick for ten days in Des Moines 156 After a funeral at the First Methodist Church in Des Moines Weaver was buried in that city s Woodland Cemetery 157 The last letter he wrote was an endorsement of Speaker of the House Champ Clark for the Democratic presidential nomination but he went on to lose the nomination to Woodrow Wilson 158 Legacy EditMany of Iowa s leading statesmen including Weaver s former adversaries praised him at his funeral and in the years thereafter 157 Fusion with the Democrats had brought Populist policy into the mainstream and several of the policies for which Weaver fought became law after his death including the direct election of Senators a graduated income tax and a monetary policy not based on the gold standard others such as public ownership of the railroads and telephone companies were never enacted 159 In a 2008 biography Robert B Mitchell wrote that Weaver s legacy cannot be assessed using conventional measures 159 as much of what he fought for did not come to pass until after his death 159 Even so Mitchell credits Weaver for beginning the political effort that led to those changes Weaver s most important legacy in national politics is not what he advocated or how subsequent reforms worked but his effect on America s continuing political conversation 160 Notes Edit Weaver was one of many Union officers granted retroactive brevet promotions after the war ended as a reward for their service Weaver was nominated for the appointment to rank from March 13 1865 by President Andrew Johnson on February 24 1866 and the United States Senate confirmed the appointment on April 10 1866 33 Before the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913 Senators were chosen by their states legislatures In 1903 Congress did create a Department of Commerce and Labor in 1913 a separate Department of Labor was created Oklahoma Station where the settlers gathered was the site of the future capital Oklahoma City Since Weaver only Theodore Roosevelt in 1912 Robert M La Follette Sr in 1924 George Wallace in 1968 and Ross Perot in 1992 have exceeded his vote share as a third party candidate Rather than endorse the Democratic vice presidential candidate the Populists nominated one of their own former Congressman Thomas E Watson of Georgia 143 References Edit a b Haynes 1919 p 2 a b Mitchell 2008 p 8 a b Mitchell 2008 p 7 Mitchell 2008 p 12 Mitchell 2008 pp 8 9 a b Mitchell 2008 p 13 Haynes 1919 pp 10 13 a b Mitchell 2008 pp 18 20 Haynes 1919 p 14 Mitchell 2008 pp 24 25 Lause 2001 p 10 Haynes 1919 p 16 Mitchell 2008 p 26 a b Mitchell 2008 p 27 a b Mitchell 2008 p 28 Mitchell 2008 p 30 Mitchell 2008 p 31 Mitchell 2008 p 33 McPherson 1988 p 274 Mitchell 2008 p 35 Haynes 1919 p 27 Mitchell 2008 p 36 Mitchell 2008 p 24 a b c Mitchell 2008 p 39 McPherson 1988 p 402 a b Mitchell 2008 p 40 Haynes 1919 p 41 McPherson 1988 pp 413 414 Mitchell 2008 p 42 Mitchell 2008 p 43 Mitchell 2008 p 44 a b c Mitchell 2008 pp 46 47 a b c Mitchell 2008 p 50 Eicher John H and David J Eicher Civil War High Commands Stanford Stanford University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 8047 3641 1 p 760 Mitchell 2008 p 49 Lause 2001 p 15 a b Haynes 1919 p 68 a b c d Mitchell 2008 p 51 a b Mitchell 2008 p 55 Haynes 1919 pp 70 71 a b Mitchell 2008 p 57 a b Haynes 1919 p 74 a b c Mitchell 2008 pp 58 59 Haynes 1919 pp 80 81 Mitchell 2008 p 61 a b Mitchell 2008 p 68 a b Colbert 1978 p 26 Unger 1964 pp 14 15 Unger 1964 pp 16 17 Unger 1964 pp 228 233 a b Clancy 1958 pp 163 164 Mitchell 2008 pp 65 66 Mitchell 2008 p 69 a b Mitchell 2008 p 70 Haynes 1919 pp 95 98 Mitchell 2008 p 74 a b Colbert 1978 p 27 Colbert 1978 pp 31 33 Colbert 1978 pp 35 38 Colbert 1978 p 39 Mitchell 2008 p 83 Mitchell 2008 p 84 Haynes 1919 pp 108 113 Mitchell 2008 p 87 Mitchell 2008 pp 88 89 a b c d Mitchell 2008 p 90 Mitchell 2008 p 92 a b Mitchell 2008 p 93 a b Doolen 1972 pp 439 440 Mitchell 2008 pp 98 99 Lause 2001 pp 50 51 Lause 2001 pp 61 71 a b Lause 2001 pp 79 81 Mitchell 2008 pp 102 103 Lause 2001 pp 85 104 Lause 2001 pp 105 124 Lause 2001 pp 124 146 Ackerman 2003 p 221 Mitchell 2008 p 111 Lause 2001 pp 206 208 Mitchell 2008 pp 115 116 Mitchell 2008 pp 117 120 a b c Mitchell 2008 p 122 a b c Mitchell 2008 p 121 Haynes 1919 pp 215 216 a b Mitchell 2008 p 124 Mitchell 2008 p 127 Haynes 1919 p 289 Haynes 1919 p 221 a b c d Mitchell 2008 pp 129 130 a b Mitchell 2008 p 131 Colbert 2008 p 177 a b Colbert 2008 pp 178 179 a b Mitchell 2008 p 128 Colbert 2008 p 179 Colbert 2008 p 181 Colbert 2008 p 182 Colbert 2008 p 183 Colbert 2008 p 184 a b c Colbert 2008 p 185 Mitchell 2008 p 132 Colbert 2008 p 186 a b Mitchell 2008 p 133 Mitchell 2008 p 134 Newcombe 1946 p 88 Colbert 2008 p 188 Mitchell 2008 p 137 Colbert 2008 p 190 a b c d Colbert 2008 p 191 a b c Colbert 2008 p 192 Mitchell 2008 p 138 Mitchell 2008 p 139 Haynes 1919 pp 300 301 Goodwyn 1978 p viii a b Mitchell 2008 pp 140 141 a b c d Mitchell 2008 pp 142 143 Weaver 1892 p 6 a b Mitchell 2008 p 152 a b Mitchell 2008 p 155 Haynes 1919 p 315 Mitchell 2008 p 153 Mitchell 2008 p 158 Mitchell 2008 p 159 Mitchell 2008 p 161 Mitchell 2008 p 160 Haynes 1919 pp 319 322 a b Mitchell 2008 pp 165 167 Haynes 1919 pp 324 329 Mitchell 2008 pp 167 170 Mitchell 2008 p 175 a b Haynes 1919 p 335 a b Goodwyn 1978 p 201 Mitchell 2008 p 176 Mitchell 2008 p 177 a b c Mitchell 2008 p 178 a b Mitchell 2008 p 181 a b Haynes 1919 p 353 Mitchell 2008 p 182 a b c Mitchell 2008 p 183 Mitchell 2008 p 184 Mitchell 2008 p 186 Mitchell 2008 p 188 Mitchell 2008 p 189 Mitchell 2008 p 187 Goodwyn 1978 p 257 a b c Mitchell 2008 p 191 a b Mitchell 2008 p 192 Haynes 1919 p 407 Jen James B Weaver Dead Evening Times Republican 26 March 1901 p 3 Archived from the original on 16 December 2019 via Newspapers com a b Mitchell 2008 p 193 a b c Mitchell 2008 p 194 Haynes 1919 p 400 Haynes 1919 p 408 Haynes 1919 pp 410 412 Mitchell 2008 p 199 Haynes 1919 p 404 Jen James B Weaver Dead The Sheboygan Press 7 February 1912 p 5 Archived from the original on 16 December 2019 via Newspapers com a b Haynes 1919 pp 424 431 Champ Clark Praised By Voice From Grave Lincoln Journal Star 23 March 1912 p 1 Archived from the original on 16 December 2019 via Newspapers com a b c Mitchell 2008 pp 206 207 Mitchell 2008 p 208 Sources EditBooks Ackerman Kenneth D 2003 Dark Horse The Surprise Election and Political Murder of President James A Garfield New York New York Carroll amp Graf ISBN 0 7867 1151 5 Clancy Herbert J 1958 The Presidential Election of 1880 Chicago Illinois Loyola University Press ISBN 978 1 258 19190 0 Goodwyn Lawrence 1978 The Populist Moment A Short History of the Agrarian Revolt in America New York New York Galaxy Books ISBN 0 19 502417 6 Haynes Frederick Emory 1919 James Baird Weaver Iowa City Iowa The State Historical Society of Iowa ISBN 9780722248188 OCLC 3733204 Lause Mark A 2001 The Civil War s Last Campaign James B Weaver the Greenback Labor Party amp the Politics of Race and Section Lanham Maryland University Press of America ISBN 0 7618 1917 7 McPherson James M 1988 Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era New York New York Ballantine Books ISBN 0 345 35942 9 Mitchell Robert B 2008 Skirmisher The Life Times and Political Career of James B Weaver Roseville Minnesota Edinborough Press ISBN 978 1 889020 26 6 Unger Irwin 1964 The Greenback Era A Social and Political History of American Finance 1865 1879 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 04517 8 Weaver James Baird 1892 A Call to Action An Interpretation of the Great Uprising Its Source and Causes Des Moines Iowa Iowa Printing Co OCLC 647058228 Articles Colbert Thomas Burnell Spring 1978 Political Fusion in Iowa The Election of James B Weaver to Congress in 1878 Arizona and the West 20 1 25 40 JSTOR 40168674 Colbert Thomas Burnell Autumn 2008 The Lion of the Land James B Weaver Kansas and the Oklahoma lands 1884 1890 PDF Kansas History 31 3 176 193 Doolen Richard M Winter 1972 Brick Pomeroy and the Greenback Clubs Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 65 4 434 450 JSTOR 40191206 Newcombe Alfred W March 1946 Alson J Streeter An Agrarian Liberal Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 39 1 68 95 JSTOR 40188188 Further reading Edit American Civil War portalColbert Thomas Burnell 1988 Disgruntled Chronic Office Seeker or Man of Political Integrity James Baird Weaver and the Republican Party in Iowa 1857 1877 Annals of Iowa 49 3 187 207 doi 10 17077 0003 4827 12087 Sage Leland L 1953 Weaver in Allison s Way Annals of Iowa 31 7 485 507 doi 10 17077 0003 4827 7281 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to James Weaver United States Congress James B Weaver id W000225 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved on 13 February 2008U S House of RepresentativesPreceded byEzekiel S Sampson Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Iowa s 6th congressional district1879 1881 Succeeded byMarsena E CuttsPreceded byJohn C Cook Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Iowa s 6th congressional district1885 1889 Succeeded byJohn F LaceyParty political officesPreceded byPeter Cooper Greenback nominee for President of the United States1880 Succeeded byBenjamin ButlerPreceded byD M Clark Greenback nominee for Governor of Iowa1883 Succeeded byElias DotyNew political party Populist nominee for President of the United States1892 Succeeded byWilliam Jennings BryanEndorsedPolitical officesPreceded byPhineas Cragan Mayor of Colfax1901 1903 Succeeded byJohn Hahn Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James B Weaver amp oldid 1143832470, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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