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James G. Blaine

James Gillespie Blaine (January 31, 1830 – January 27, 1893) was an American statesman and Republican politician who represented Maine in the United States House of Representatives from 1863 to 1876, serving as Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1869 to 1875, and then in the United States Senate from 1876 to 1881.

James G. Blaine
Blaine c. 1870s
28th and 31st United States Secretary of State
In office
March 9, 1889 – June 4, 1892
PresidentBenjamin Harrison
Preceded byThomas F. Bayard
Succeeded byJohn W. Foster
In office
March 7, 1881 – December 19, 1881
PresidentJames A. Garfield
Chester A. Arthur
Preceded byWilliam M. Evarts
Succeeded byFrederick T. Frelinghuysen
United States Senator
from Maine
In office
July 10, 1876 – March 5, 1881
Preceded byLot M. Morrill
Succeeded byWilliam P. Frye
27th Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
In office
March 4, 1869 – March 3, 1875
Preceded byTheodore Pomeroy
Succeeded byMichael C. Kerr
Leader of the House Republican Conference
In office
March 4, 1869 – March 3, 1875
Preceded byTheodore M. Pomeroy
Succeeded byThomas Brackett Reed
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Maine's 3rd district
In office
March 4, 1863 – July 10, 1876
Preceded bySamuel C. Fessenden
Succeeded byEdwin Flye
Personal details
Born
James Gillespie Blaine

(1830-01-31)January 31, 1830
West Brownsville, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedJanuary 27, 1893(1893-01-27) (aged 62)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Resting placeBlaine Memorial Park, Augusta, Maine
Political partyRepublican
SpouseHarriet Stanwood
Children7, including Walker
EducationWashington and Jefferson College (BA)
Signature

Blaine twice served as Secretary of State, first in 1881 under President James A. Garfield and Chester A. Arthur, and then from 1889 to 1892 under President Benjamin Harrison. He is one of only two U.S. Secretaries of State to hold the position under three separate presidents, the other being Daniel Webster. Blaine unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for President in 1876 and 1880 before being nominated in 1884. In the 1884 general election, he was narrowly defeated by Democratic nominee Grover Cleveland. Blaine was one of the late 19th century's leading Republicans and a champion of the party's moderate reformist faction, later known as the "Half-Breeds".

Blaine was born in the western Pennsylvania town of West Brownsville and moved to Maine after completing college where he became a newspaper editor. Nicknamed "the Magnetic Man", he was a charismatic speaker in an era that prized oratory. He began his political career as an early supporter of Republican Abraham Lincoln and the Union war effort in the American Civil War. During Reconstruction, Blaine was a supporter of black suffrage, but opposed some of the more coercive measures of the Radical Republicans. Initially in favor of high tariffs, he later worked to lower tariffs and expand international trade. Railroad promotion and construction were important issues in his time and, as a result of his interest and support, Blaine was widely suspected of corruption in awarding railroad charters, especially with the emergence of the Mulligan letters. Though no evidence of corruption ever surfaced from these allegations, they nevertheless plagued his 1884 presidential candidacy.

As Secretary of State, Blaine was a transitional figure, marking the end of an isolationist era in foreign policy and foreshadowing the rise of the American Century that would begin with the Spanish–American War. His efforts to expand U.S. trade and influence began the nation's shift to a more active American foreign policy. Blaine was a pioneer of tariff reciprocity and urged greater involvement in Latin American affairs. An expansionist, Blaine's policies would lead in less than a decade to the establishment of the U.S. acquisition of Pacific colonies and dominance in the Caribbean.

Early life Edit

Family and childhood Edit

James Gillespie Blaine was born January 31, 1830, in West Brownsville, Pennsylvania, the third child of Ephraim Lyon Blaine and his wife Maria (Gillespie) Blaine. He had two older sisters, Harriet and Margaret.[1] Blaine's father was a western Pennsylvania businessman and landowner, and the family lived in relative comfort.[2] On his father's side, Blaine was descended from Scotch-Irish settlers who first emigrated to Pennsylvania in 1745.[3] His great-grandfather Ephraim Blaine served as a Commissary-General under George Washington in the American Revolutionary War.[4] Blaine's mother and her forebears were Irish Catholics who immigrated to Pennsylvania in the 1780s.[5] Blaine's parents were married in 1820 in a Catholic ceremony, although Blaine's father remained a Presbyterian.[5] Following a common compromise of the era, the Blaines agreed that their daughters would be raised in their mother's Catholic faith while their sons would be brought up in their father's religion.[6] James Blaine's cousin, Angela Gillespie, was a nun and founded the American branch of the Sisters of the Holy Cross.[7] In politics, Blaine's father supported the Whig Party.[8]

Blaine's biographers describe his childhood as "harmonious," and note that the boy took an early interest in history and literature.[9] At the age of thirteen, Blaine enrolled in his father's alma mater, Washington College (now Washington & Jefferson College), in nearby Washington, Pennsylvania.[10] There, he was a member of the Washington Literary Society, one of the college's debating societies.[11] Blaine succeeded academically, graduating near the top of his class and delivering the salutatory address in June 1847.[12] After graduation, Blaine considered attending Yale Law School, but ultimately decided against it, instead moving west to find a job.[13]

Teacher and publisher Edit

In 1848, Blaine was hired as a professor of mathematics and ancient languages at the Western Military Institute in Georgetown, Kentucky.[13] Although he was only 18 years old and younger than many of his students, Blaine adapted well to his new profession.[14] Blaine grew to enjoy life in his adopted state and became an admirer of Kentucky Senator Henry Clay.[14] He also made the acquaintance of Harriet Stanwood, a teacher at the nearby Millersburg Female College and native of Maine.[15] On June 30, 1850, the two wed.[15] Blaine once again considered taking up the study of law, but instead took his new bride to visit his family in Pennsylvania.[16] They next lived with Harriet Blaine's family in Augusta, Maine, for several months, where their first child, Stanwood Blaine, was born in 1851.[16] The young family soon moved again, this time to Philadelphia where Blaine took a job at the Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction of the Blind (now Overbrook School for the Blind) in 1852, teaching science and literature.[17]

 
The offices of the Kennebec Journal, where Blaine got his start in politics as editor.

Philadelphia's law libraries gave Blaine the chance to at last begin to study the law, but in 1853 he received a more tempting offer: to become editor and co-owner of the Kennebec Journal.[16] Blaine had spent several vacations in his wife's native state of Maine and had become friendly with the Journal's editors. When the newspaper's founder, Luther Severance, retired, Blaine was invited to purchase the publication along with co-editor Joseph Baker.[16] He quickly accepted, borrowing the purchase price from his wife's brothers.[18] In 1854, Baker sold his share to John L. Stevens, a local minister.[19] The Journal had been a staunchly Whig newspaper, which coincided with Blaine's and Stevens' political opinions.[19] The decision to become a newspaperman, unexpected as it was, started Blaine on the road to a lifelong career in politics.[20] Blaine's purchase of the Journal coincided with the demise of the Whig party and birth of the Republican party, and Blaine and Stevens actively promoted the new party in their newspaper.[21] The newspaper was financially successful, and Blaine was soon able to invest his profits in coal mines in Pennsylvania and Virginia, forming the basis of his future wealth.[22]

Maine politics Edit

Blaine's career as a Republican newspaperman led naturally to involvement in party politics. In 1856, he was selected as a delegate to the first Republican National Convention.[23] From the party's early days, Blaine identified with the conservative wing, supporting Supreme Court Justice John McLean for the presidential nomination over the more radical John C. Frémont, the eventual nominee.[23] The following year, Blaine was offered the editorship of the Portland Daily Advertiser, which he accepted, selling his interest in the Journal soon thereafter.[24] He still maintained his home in Augusta, however, with his growing family. Although Blaine's first son, Stanwood, died in infancy, he and Harriet had two more sons soon afterward: Walker, in 1855, and Emmons, in 1857.[24] They would have four more children in years to come: Alice, James, Margaret, and Harriet.[25] It was around this time that Blaine left the Presbyterian church of his childhood and joined his wife's new denomination, becoming a member of the South Parish Congregational Church in Augusta.[26]

In 1858, Blaine ran for a seat in the Maine House of Representatives, and was elected.[24] He ran for reelection in 1859, 1860, and 1861, and was successful each time by large majorities. The added responsibilities led Blaine to reduce his duties with the Advertiser in 1860, and he soon ceased editorial work altogether.[27] Meanwhile, his political power was growing as he became chairman of the Republican state committee in 1859, replacing Stevens.[27] Blaine was not a delegate to the Republican convention in 1860, but attended anyway as an enthusiastic supporter of Abraham Lincoln.[27] Returning to Maine, he was elected Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives in 1861 and reelected in 1862.[24] With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861, he supported Lincoln's war effort and saw that the Maine Legislature voted to organize and equip units to join the Union Army.[28]

House of Representatives, 1863–1876 Edit

Elected to the House Edit

Blaine had considered running for the United States House of Representatives from Maine's 4th district in 1860, but agreed to step aside when Anson P. Morrill, a former governor, announced his interest in the seat.[29] Morrill was successful, but after redistricting placed Blaine in the 3rd district for the 1862 election, he allowed his name to be put forward.[29] Running on a campaign of staunch support for the war effort, Blaine was elected by a wide margin; though nationwide, the Republican Party lost a significant number of seats in Congress as the Union war effort to date had been only weakly successful.[30] By the time Blaine took his seat in December 1863, at the start of the 38th Congress, the Union Army had turned the tide of the war with victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg.[31]

As a first-term congressman, he initially said little, mostly following the administration's lead in supporting the continuing war effort.[31] He did clash several times with the leader of the Republicans' radical faction, Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania, firstly over payment of states' debts incurred in supporting the war, and again over monetary policy concerning the new greenback currency.[32] Blaine also spoke in support of the commutation provision of the military draft law passed in 1863 and proposed a constitutional amendment allowing the federal government to impose taxes on exports, but it never passed.[32]

Reconstruction and impeachment Edit

 
James G. Blaine in the 1860s

Blaine was reelected in 1864 and, when the 39th Congress assembled in December 1865, the main issue was the Reconstruction of the defeated Confederate States.[33] Although he was not a member of the committee charged with drafting what became the Fourteenth Amendment, Blaine did make his views on the subject known and believed that three-fourths of the non-seceded states would be needed to ratify it, rather than three-fourths of all states, an opinion that did not prevail and placed him, atypically, in the radical camp.[34] The Republican Congress also played a role in the governance of the conquered South, dissolving the state governments President Andrew Johnson had installed and substituting military governments under Congress' control.[35] Blaine voted in favor of these new, harsher measures, but also supported some leniency toward the former rebels when he opposed a bill that would have barred Southerners from attending the United States Military Academy.[35] Blaine voted to impeach Johnson in 1868, although he had initially opposed the effort.[36] Later, Blaine was more ambiguous about the validity of the charges against Johnson, writing that "there was a very grave difference of opinion among those equally competent to decide,"[37] but he followed his party's leaders.[38]

Monetary policy Edit

Continuing his earlier battle with Stevens, Blaine led the fight in Congress for a strong dollar. After the issuance of 150 million dollars in greenbacks—non-gold-backed currency—the value of the dollar stood at a low ebb.[39] A bipartisan group of inflationists, led by Republican Benjamin F. Butler and Democrat George H. Pendleton, wished to preserve the status quo and allow the Treasury to continue to issue greenbacks and even to use them to pay the interest due on pre-war bonds.[39] Blaine called this idea a repudiation of the nation's promise to investors, which was made when the only currency was gold. Speaking several times on the matter, Blaine said that the greenbacks had only ever been an emergency measure to avoid bankruptcy during the war.[39] Blaine and his hard money allies were successful, but the issue remained alive until 1879, when all remaining greenbacks were made redeemable in gold by the Specie Payment Resumption Act of 1875.[40]

Speaker of the House Edit

During his first three terms in Congress, Blaine had earned for himself a reputation as an expert of parliamentary procedure, and, aside from a growing feud with Roscoe Conkling of New York, had become popular among his fellow Republicans.[41] In March 1869, when Speaker Schuyler Colfax resigned from office at the end of the 40th Congress to become vice president,[42] the highly regarded Blaine was the unanimous choice of the Republican Congressional Caucus to become Speaker of the House for the 41st Congress.[43] In the subsequent March 4, 1869, election for Speaker, Blaine easily defeated Democrat Michael C. Kerr of Indiana by a vote of 135 to 57.[44] Republicans remained in control of the House in the 42nd and 43rd congresses, and Blaine was re-elected as speaker at the start of both of them.[44] His time as speaker came to an end following the 1874-75 elections which produced a Democratic majority in the House for the 44th Congress.[45]

 
Blaine's residence in the capital city of Augusta is the home of Maine governors.

Blaine was an effective Speaker with a magnetic personality. In the words of Washington journalist Benjamin Perley Poore, Blaine's "graceful as well as powerful figure, his strong features, glowing with health, and his hearty, honest manner, made him an attractive speaker and an esteemed friend."[46] Moreover, President Ulysses S. Grant valued his skill and loyalty in leading the House.[47] He enjoyed the job and made his presence in Washington more permanent by buying a large residence on Fifteenth Street in the city.[48] At the same time, the Blaine family moved to a mansion in Augusta.[48][a]

During Blaine's six-year tenure as Speaker his popularity continued to grow, and Republicans dissatisfied with Grant mentioned Blaine as a potential presidential candidate prior to the 1872 Republican National Convention.[49] Instead, Blaine worked steadfastly for Grant's re-election.[49] Blaine's growing fame brought growing opposition from the Democrats, as well, and during the 1872 campaign he was accused of receiving bribes in the Crédit Mobilier scandal.[50] Blaine denied any part in the scandal, which involved railroad companies bribing federal officials to turn a blind eye to fraudulent railroad contracts that overcharged the government by millions of dollars.[50] No one was able to satisfactorily prove Blaine's involvement. Though not an absolute defense, it is true that the law that made the fraud possible had been written before he was elected to Congress. But other Republicans were exposed by the accusations, including Vice President Colfax, who was dropped from the 1872 presidential ticket in favor of Henry Wilson.[50]

Although he supported a general amnesty for former Confederates, Blaine opposed extending it to include Jefferson Davis, and he cooperated with Grant in helping to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1875 in response to increased violence and disenfranchisement of blacks in the South.[51] He refrained from voting on the anti-third term resolution that overwhelmingly passed the House that same year, believing that to vote for it would look self-interested.[52] Blaine was loyal to Grant, and the scandals of the Grant administration did not seem to affect how the public perceived him; according to his biographer, Blaine was never more popular than when he was Speaker.[53] Liberal Republicans saw him as an alternative to the evident corruption of other Republican leaders, and some even urged him to form a new, reformist party.[53] Although he remained a Republican, this base of moderate reformers remained loyal to Blaine and became known as the Half Breed faction of the party.[54]

Blaine Amendment Edit

Once out of the speaker's chair, Blaine had more time to concentrate on his presidential ambitions, and to develop new policy ideas.[55] One result was a foray into education policy. In late 1875, President Grant made several speeches on the importance of the separation of church and state and the duty of the states to provide free public education.[56] Blaine saw in this an issue that would distract from the Grant administration scandals and let the Republican party regain the high moral ground.[55] In December 1875, he proposed a joint resolution that became known as the Blaine Amendment.[55]

The proposed amendment codified the church-state separation Blaine and Grant were promoting, stating that:

No State shall make any law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; and no money raised by taxation in any State for the support of public schools, or derived from any public fund therefor, nor any public lands devoted thereto, shall ever be under the control of any religious sect; nor shall any money so raised or lands so devoted be divided between religious sects or denominations.[b]

The effect was to prohibit the use of public funds by any religious school, although it did not advance Grant's other aim of requiring states to provide public education to all children.[60] The bill passed the House but failed in the Senate.[55] Although it never passed Congress, and left Blaine open to charges of anti-Catholicism, the proposed amendment served Blaine's purpose of rallying Protestants to the Republican party and promoting himself as one of the party's foremost leaders.[55]

1876 presidential election Edit

 
James G. Blaine in the 1870s

Mulligan letters Edit

Blaine entered the 1876 presidential campaign as the favorite, but his chances were almost immediately harmed by the emergence of a scandal.[61] Rumors had begun to spread in February that Blaine had been involved in a transaction with the Union Pacific Railroad which had paid Blaine $64,000 for some Little Rock and Fort Smith Railroad bonds he owned even though they were nearly worthless. In essence, the alleged transaction was presented as a sham designed to bribe Blaine.[61][c] Blaine denied the charges, as did the Union Pacific's directors.[63] Blaine claimed that he never had any dealings with the Little Rock and Fort Smith Railroad except to purchase bonds at market price and that he had lost money on the transaction.[63] Democrats in the House of Representatives, however, demanded a congressional investigation.[64] The testimony appeared to favor Blaine's version of events until May 31, when James Mulligan, a Boston clerk who had been employed by Blaine's brother-in-law, testified that the allegations were true, he had arranged the transaction, and he had letters to prove it.[64] The letters ended with the damning phrase "Kindly burn this letter."[64] When the investigating committee recessed, Blaine met with Mulligan that night in his hotel room. What happened between the men is unclear, but Blaine acquired the letters or, as Mulligan told the committee, snatched them from Mulligan's hands and fled the room. In any event, Blaine had the letters and refused the committee's demand to turn them over.

Opinion swiftly turned against Blaine; the June 3 The New York Times carried the headline "Blaine's Nomination Now Out of the Question." Blaine took his case to the House floor on June 5, theatrically proclaiming his innocence and calling the investigation a partisan attack by Southern Democrats in revenge for his exclusion of Jefferson Davis from the amnesty bill of the previous year.[65] He read selected passages from the letters aloud and said, "Thank God Almighty, I am not afraid to show them!" Blaine even succeeded in extracting an apology from the committee chairman. The political tide turned anew in Blaine's favor, but the pressure had now begun to affect Blaine's health, and he collapsed while leaving church services on June 14.[66] His opponents called the collapse a political stunt, with one Democratic newspaper reporting the event as "Blaine Feigns a Faint." Rumors of Blaine's ill health combined with the lack of hard evidence against him garnered him sympathy among Republicans, and when the Republican convention began in Cincinnati later that month, he was again seen as the frontrunner.[67]

Plumed Knight Edit

 
Exposition Hall of Cincinnati during the announcement of Rutherford B. Hayes as the Republican nominee

Though he was damaged by the Mulligan letters, Blaine entered the convention as the favorite.[68] Five other men were also considered serious candidates: Benjamin Bristow, the Kentucky-born Treasury Secretary; Roscoe Conkling, Blaine's old enemy and now a Senator from New York; Senator Oliver P. Morton of Indiana; Governor Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio; and Governor John F. Hartranft of Pennsylvania.[68] Blaine was nominated by Illinois orator Robert G. Ingersoll in what became a famous speech:

This is a grand year—a year filled with recollections of the Revolution ... a year in which the people call for the man who has torn from the throat of treason the tongue of slander, the man who has snatched the mask of Democracy from the hideous face of rebellion ... Like an armed warrior, like a plumed knight, James G. Blaine from the state of Maine marched down the halls of the American Congress and threw his shining lance full and fair against the brazen foreheads of every traitor to his country and every maligner of his fair reputation.[69]

The speech was a success and Ingersoll's appellation of "plumed knight" remained a nickname for Blaine for years to come.[67] On the first ballot, no candidate received the required majority of 378, but Blaine had the most votes, with 285 and no other candidate had more than 125.[70] There were a few vote shifts in the next five ballots, and Blaine climbed to 308 votes, with his nearest competitor at just 111.[70] On the seventh ballot the situation shifted drastically as anti-Blaine delegates began to coalesce around Hayes; by the time the balloting ended, Blaine's votes had risen to 351, but Hayes surpassed him at 384, a majority.[70]

Blaine received the news at his home in Washington and telegraphed Hayes his congratulations.[71] In the subsequent contest of 1876, Hayes was elected after a contentious compromise over disputed electoral votes.[72] The results of the convention had further effects on Blaine's political career, as Bristow, having lost the nomination, also resigned as Treasury Secretary three days after the convention ended.[71] President Grant selected Senator Lot M. Morrill of Maine to fill the cabinet post, and Maine's governor, Seldon Connor, appointed Blaine to the now-vacant Senate seat.[71] When the Maine Legislature reconvened that autumn, they confirmed Blaine's appointment and elected him to the full six-year term that would begin on March 4, 1877.[71][d]

United States Senate, 1876–1881 Edit

 
Blaine worked with President Hayes (pictured) at times, but was never among his chief defenders in the Senate

Blaine was appointed to the Senate on July 10, 1876, but did not begin his duties there until the Senate convened in December of that year.[73] While in the Senate, he served on the Appropriations Committee and held the chairmanship of the Committee on Civil Service and Retrenchment, but he never achieved the role of leadership that he had held as a member of the House.[74] The Senate in the 45th Congress was controlled by a narrow Republican majority, but it was a majority often divided against itself and against the Hayes administration.[75] Blaine did not number himself among the administration's defenders — later known as the Half-Breeds — but neither could he join the Republicans led by Conkling—later known as the Stalwarts — who opposed Hayes, because of the deep personal enmity between Blaine and Conkling.[75] He opposed Hayes's withdrawal of federal troops from Southern capitals, which effectively ended the Reconstruction of the South, but to no avail.[75] Blaine continued to antagonize Southern Democrats, voting against bills passed in the Democrat-controlled House that would reduce the Army's appropriation and repeal the post-war Enforcement Acts he had helped pass.[76] Such bills passed Congress several times and Hayes vetoed them several times; ultimately, the Enforcement Acts remained in place, but the funds to enforce them dwindled.[77] By 1879, there were only 1,155 soldiers stationed in the former Confederacy, and Blaine believed that this small force could never guarantee the civil and political rights of black Southerners—which would mean an end to the Republican party in the South.[76]

On monetary issues, Blaine continued the advocacy for a strong dollar that he had begun as a Representative.[78] This stance was in opposition to Senate Republican leadership, including Senate President Pro Tempore Thomas W. Ferry, who generally supported the greenback movement.[79] The issue had shifted from debate over greenbacks to debate over which metal should back the dollar: gold and silver, or gold alone.[78] The Coinage Act of 1873 stopped the coinage of silver for all coins worth a dollar or more, effectively tying the dollar to the value of gold. As a result, the money supply contracted and the effects of the Panic of 1873 grew worse, making it more expensive for debtors to pay debts they had entered into when currency was less valuable.[80] Farmers and laborers, especially, clamored for the return of coinage in both metals, believing the increased money supply would restore wages and property values.[81] Democratic Representative Richard P. Bland of Missouri proposed a bill, which passed the House, that required the United States to coin as much silver as miners could sell the government, thus increasing the money supply and aiding debtors.[78] In the Senate, William B. Allison, a Republican from Iowa offered an amendment to limit the silver coinage to two to four million dollars per month.[78] This was still too much for Blaine, and he denounced the bill and the proposed amendment, but the amended Bland–Allison Act passed the Senate by a 48 to 21 vote.[78] Hayes vetoed the bill, but Congress mustered the two-thirds vote to pass it over his veto.[80] Even after the Bland–Allison Act's passage, Blaine continued his opposition, making a series of speeches against it during the 1878 congressional campaign season.[78]

His time in the Senate allowed Blaine to develop his foreign policy ideas. He advocated expansion of the American navy and merchant marine, which had been in decline since the Civil War.[82] Blaine also bitterly opposed the results of the arbitration with Great Britain over American fishermen's right to fish in Canadian waters, which resulted in a $5.5 million award to Britain.[83] Blaine's Anglophobia combined with his support of high tariffs. He had initially opposed a reciprocity treaty with Canada that would have reduced tariffs between the two nations, but by the end of his time in the Senate, he had changed his mind, believing that Americans had more to gain by increasing exports than they would lose by the risk of cheap imports.[84]

1880 presidential election Edit

 
The Interstate Exposition Building (known as the "Glass Palace") during the convention; James A. Garfield is on the podium, waiting to speak.

Hayes had announced early in his presidency that he would not seek another term, which meant that the contest for the Republican nomination in 1880 was open to all challengers—including Blaine.[85] Blaine was among the early favorites for the nomination, as were former President Grant, Treasury Secretary John Sherman of Ohio, and Senator George F. Edmunds of Vermont.[86] Although Grant did not actively promote his candidacy, his entry into the race re-energized the Stalwarts and when the convention met in Chicago in June 1880, they instantly polarized the delegates into Grant and anti-Grant factions, with Blaine the most popular choice of the latter group.[87] Blaine was nominated by James Frederick Joy of Michigan, but in contrast to Ingersoll's exciting speech of 1876, Joy's lengthy oration was remembered only for its maladroitness.[88] After the other candidates were nominated, the first ballot showed Grant leading with 304 votes and Blaine in second with 284; no other candidate had more than Sherman's 93, and none had the required majority of 379.[89] Sherman's delegates could swing the nomination to either Grant or Blaine, but he refused to release them through twenty-eight ballots in the hope that the anti-Grant forces would desert Blaine and flock to him.[89] Eventually, they did desert Blaine, but instead of Sherman they shifted their votes to Ohio Congressman James A. Garfield, and by the thirty-sixth ballot he had 399 votes, enough for victory.[89]

Garfield placated the Stalwarts by endorsing Chester A. Arthur of New York, a Conkling loyalist, as nominee for vice president, but it was to Blaine and his delegates that Garfield owed his nomination.[90] When Garfield was elected over Democrat Winfield Scott Hancock, he turned to Blaine to guide him in selection of his cabinet and offered him the preeminent position: Secretary of State.[91] Blaine accepted, resigning from the Senate on March 4, 1881.[92]

Secretary of State, 1881 Edit

Foreign policy initiatives Edit

Blaine saw presiding over the cabinet as a chance to preside over the Washington social scene, as well, and soon ordered construction of a new, larger home near Dupont Circle.[93] Although his foreign policy experience was minimal, Blaine quickly threw himself into his new duties.[94] By 1881, Blaine had completely abandoned his protectionist leanings and now used his position as Secretary of State to promote freer trade, especially within the western hemisphere.[95] His reasons were twofold: firstly, Blaine's old fear of British interference in the Americas was undiminished, and he saw increased trade with Latin America as the best way to keep Britain from dominating the region.[95] Secondly, he believed that by encouraging exports, he could increase American prosperity, and by doing so position the Republican party as the author of that prosperity, ensuring continued electoral success.[95] Garfield agreed with his Secretary of State's vision and Blaine called for a Pan-American conference in 1882 to mediate disputes among the Latin American nations and to serve as a forum for talks on increasing trade.[96] At the same time, Blaine hoped to negotiate a peace in the War of the Pacific then being fought by Bolivia, Chile, and Peru.[96] Blaine favored a resolution that would not result in Peru yielding any territory, but Chile, which had by 1881 occupied the Peruvian capital, rejected any negotiations that would gain them nothing.[97] Blaine sought to expand American influence in other areas, calling for renegotiation of the Clayton–Bulwer Treaty to allow the United States to construct a canal through Panama without British involvement, as well as attempting to reduce British involvement in the strategically located Kingdom of Hawaii.[98] His plans for the United States' involvement in the world stretched even beyond the Western Hemisphere, as he sought commercial treaties with Korea and Madagascar.[99]

Garfield's assassination Edit

 
Blaine (left) was present at Garfield's assassination.

On July 2, 1881, Blaine and Garfield were walking through the Sixth Street Station of the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad in Washington when Garfield was shot by Charles J. Guiteau,[100] a disgruntled lawyer and crazed office seeker who had made repeated demands for Blaine and other State Department officials to appoint him to various ambassadorships for which he was grossly unqualified or were already filled.

Guiteau, a self-professed Stalwart, believed that after assassinating the President, he would strike a blow to unite the two factions of the Republican Party, allowing him to ingratiate himself with Vice President Arthur and receive his coveted position.[101] Guiteau was overpowered and arrested immediately, while Garfield lingered for two and a half months before he died on September 19, 1881. Guiteau was convicted of killing Garfield and hanged on June 30, 1882.[102]

Garfield's death was not just a personal tragedy for Blaine; it also meant the end of his dominance of the cabinet, and the end of his foreign policy initiatives.[103] With Arthur's ascent to the presidency, the Stalwart faction now held sway, and Blaine's days at the State Department were numbered.[103] While Arthur asked all of the cabinet members to postpone their resignations until Congress recessed that December, Blaine nonetheless tendered his resignation on October 19, 1881, but he agreed to remain in office until December 19, when his successor would be in place.[104]

Blaine's replacement was Frederick T. Frelinghuysen, a New Jersey Stalwart;[104] while Arthur and Frelinghuysen undid much of Blaine's work, cancelling the call for a Pan-American conference and stopping the effort to end the War of the Pacific, they did continue the drive for tariff reductions, signing a reciprocity treaty with Mexico in 1882.[105]

Private life Edit

 
Blaine's mansion in Dupont Circle

Blaine began the year 1882 without a political office for the first time since 1859.[106] Troubled by poor health,[e] he sought no employment other than the completion of the first volume of his memoir, Twenty Years of Congress.[108] Friends in Maine petitioned Blaine to run for Congress in the 1882 elections, but he declined, preferring to spend his time writing and supervising the move to the new home.[25] His income from mining and railroad investments was sufficient to sustain the family's lifestyle and to allow for the construction of a vacation cottage, "Stanwood" on Mount Desert Island, Maine, designed by Frank Furness.[109] Blaine appeared before Congress in 1882 during an investigation into his War of the Pacific diplomacy, defending himself against allegations that he owned an interest in the Peruvian guano deposits being occupied by Chile, but otherwise stayed away from the Capitol.[110] The publication of the first volume of Twenty Years in early 1884 added to Blaine's financial security and thrust him back into the political spotlight.[111] As the 1884 campaign loomed, Blaine's name was being circulated once more as a potential nominee, and despite some reservations, he soon found himself back in the hunt for the presidency.[112]

1884 presidential election Edit

 
Blaine/Logan campaign poster
 
An 1884 cartoon ridicules Blaine as the tattooed-man with many indelible scandals.[f]
 
An anti-Cleveland cartoon highlights the Halpin scandal.

Nomination Edit

In the months leading up to the 1884 convention, Blaine was once more considered the favorite for the nomination, but President Arthur was contemplating a run for election in his own right.[113] George Edmunds was again the favored candidate among reformers and John Sherman had a few delegates pledged to him, but neither was expected to command much support at the convention.[114] John A. Logan of Illinois hoped to attract Stalwart votes if Arthur's campaign was unsuccessful. Blaine was unsure he wanted to try for the nomination for the third time and even encouraged General William T. Sherman, John Sherman's older brother, to accept it if it came to him, but ultimately Blaine agreed to be a candidate again.[115]

William H. West of Ohio nominated Blaine with an enthusiastic speech and after the first ballot, Blaine led the count with 334½ votes.[116] While short of the necessary 417 for nomination, Blaine had far more than any other candidate with Arthur in second place at 278 votes.[116] Blaine was unacceptable to the Arthur delegates just as Blaine's own delegates would never vote for the President, so the contest was between the two for the delegates of the remaining candidates.[116] Blaine's total steadily increased as Logan and Sherman withdrew in his favor and some of the Edmunds delegates defected to him.[116] Unlike in previous conventions, the momentum for Blaine in 1884 would not be halted.[117] On the fourth ballot, Blaine received 541 votes and was, at last, nominated.[117] Logan was named vice presidential nominee on the first ballot, and the Republicans had their ticket.[117]

Campaign against Cleveland Edit

The Democrats held their convention in Chicago the following month and nominated Governor Grover Cleveland of New York. Cleveland's time on the national scene was brief, but Democrats hoped that his reputation as a reformer and an opponent of corruption would attract Republicans dissatisfied with Blaine and his reputation for scandal.[118] They were correct, as reform-minded Republicans (called "Mugwumps") denounced Blaine as corrupt and flocked to Cleveland.[119] The Mugwumps, including such men as Carl Schurz and Henry Ward Beecher, were more concerned with morality than with party, and felt Cleveland was a kindred soul who would promote civil service reform and fight for efficiency in government.[119] However, even as the Democrats gained support from the Mugwumps, they lost some blue-collar workers to the Greenback Party, led by Benjamin F. Butler, Blaine's antagonist from their early days in the House.[120]

The campaign focused on the candidates' personalities, as each candidate's supporters cast aspersions on their opponents. Cleveland's supporters rehashed the old allegations from the Mulligan letters that Blaine had corruptly influenced legislation in favor of railroads, later profiting on the sale of bonds he owned in both companies.[121] Although the stories of Blaine's favors to the railroads had made the rounds eight years earlier, this time more of his correspondence was discovered, making his earlier denials less plausible.[121] Blaine acknowledged that the letters were genuine, but denied that anything in them impugned his integrity or contradicted his earlier explanations.[121] Nevertheless, what Blaine described as "stale slander" served to focus the public's attention negatively on his character.[121] On some of the most damaging correspondence, Blaine had written "Burn this letter," giving Democrats the last line to their rallying cry: "Blaine, Blaine, James G. Blaine, the continental liar from the state of Maine, 'Burn this letter!'"[122]

To counter Cleveland's image of superior morality, Republicans discovered reports that Cleveland had fathered an illegitimate child while he was a lawyer in Buffalo, New York, and chanted "Ma, Ma, where's my Pa?"—to which the Democrats, after Cleveland had been elected, appended, "Gone to the White House, Ha! Ha! Ha!"[123] Cleveland admitted to paying child support in 1874 to Maria Crofts Halpin, the woman who claimed he fathered her child named Oscar Folsom Cleveland.[123] Halpin was involved with several men at the time, including Cleveland's friend and law partner, Oscar Folsom, for whom the child was also named.[123] Cleveland did not know which man was the father, and is believed to have assumed responsibility because he was the only bachelor among them.[123] At the same time, Democratic operatives accused Blaine and his wife of not having been married when their eldest son, Stanwood, was born in 1851; this rumor was false, however, and caused little excitement in the campaign.[124][g] Halpin disputed the claims of being involved with several men, accusing Cleveland of raping and impregnating her, then institutionalizing her against her will to gain control of their child.[125][126]

Both candidates believed that the states of New York, New Jersey, Indiana, and Connecticut would determine the election.[127] In New York, Blaine received less support than he anticipated when Arthur and Conkling, still powerful in the New York Republican party, failed to actively campaign for him.[128] Blaine hoped that he would have more support from Irish Americans than Republicans typically did; while the Irish were mainly a Democratic constituency in the 19th century, Blaine's mother was Irish Catholic, and he believed his career-long opposition to the British government would resonate with the Irish.[129] Blaine's hope for Irish defections to the Republican standard were dashed late in the campaign when one of his supporters, Samuel D. Burchard, gave a speech denouncing the Democrats as the party of "Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion."[130] The Democrats spread the word of this insult in the days before the election, and Cleveland narrowly won all four of the swing states, including New York by just over one thousand votes. While the popular vote total was close, with Cleveland winning by just one-quarter of a percent, the electoral votes gave Cleveland a majority of 219–182.[131]

Party leader in exile Edit

 
Blaine, Benjamin Harrison, and Henry Cabot Lodge and their families on vacation in Bar Harbor, Maine.

Blaine accepted his narrow defeat and spent most of the next year working on the second volume of Twenty Years of Congress.[132] The book continued to earn him enough money to support his lavish household and pay off his debts.[132] Although he spoke to friends of retiring from politics, Blaine still attended dinners and commented on the Cleveland administration's policies.[133] By the time of the 1886 Congressional elections, Blaine was giving speeches and promoting Republican candidates, especially in his home state of Maine.[134] Republicans were successful in Maine, and after the Maine elections in September, Blaine went on a speaking tour from Pennsylvania to Tennessee, hoping to boost the prospects of Republican candidates there.[135] Republicans were less successful nationwide, gaining seats in the House while losing seats in the Senate, but Blaine's speeches kept him and his opinions in the spotlight.[135]

Blaine and his wife and daughters sailed for Europe in June 1887, visiting England, Ireland, Germany, France, Austria-Hungary, and finally Scotland, where they stayed at the summer home of Andrew Carnegie.[136] While in France, Blaine wrote a letter to the New-York Tribune criticizing Cleveland's plans to reduce the tariff, saying that free trade with Europe would impoverish American workers and farmers.[137] The family returned to the United States in August 1887.[136] His letter in the Tribune had raised his political profile even higher, and by 1888 Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge, both former opponents, urged Blaine to run against Cleveland again.[137] Opinion within the party was overwhelmingly in favor of renominating Blaine.[138]

As the state conventions drew nearer, Blaine announced that he would not be a candidate.[138] His supporters doubted his sincerity and continued to encourage him to run, but Blaine still demurred.[138] Hoping to make his intentions clear, Blaine left the country and was staying with Carnegie in Scotland when the 1888 Republican National Convention began in Chicago.[139] Carnegie encouraged Blaine to accept if the convention nominated him, but the delegates finally accepted Blaine's refusal.[139] John Sherman was the most prominent candidate and sought to attract the Blaine supporters to his candidacy, but instead found them flocking to former senator Benjamin Harrison of Indiana after a telegram from Carnegie suggested that Blaine favored him.[140] Blaine returned to the United States in August 1888 and visited Harrison at his home in October, where twenty-five thousand residents paraded in Blaine's honor.[141] Harrison defeated Cleveland in a close election, and offered Blaine his former position as Secretary of State.[142]

Secretary of State, 1889–1892 Edit

 
Blaine in his office, 1890

Harrison had developed his foreign policy based largely on Blaine's ideas, and at the start of his term, Harrison and Blaine had very similar views on the United States' place in the world.[143] In spite of their shared worldview, however, the two men became personally unfriendly as the term went on.[144] Harrison was conscious that his Secretary of State was more popular than he, and while he admired Blaine's gift for diplomacy, he grew displeased with Blaine's frequent absence from his post because of illness, and suspected that Blaine was angling for the presidential nomination in 1892.[144] Harrison tried to limit how many "Blaine men" filled subordinate positions in the State Department and denied Blaine's request that his son, Walker, be appointed First Assistant Secretary, instead naming him Solicitor of the Department of State.[144] Despite the growing personal rancor, the two men continued, with one exception, to agree on the foreign policy questions of the day.[144]

Pacific diplomacy Edit

Blaine and Harrison wished to see American power and trade expanded across the Pacific and were especially interested in securing rights to harbors in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and Pago Pago, Samoa.[145] When Blaine entered office, the United States, Great Britain, and the German Empire were disputing their respective rights in Samoa.[146] Thomas F. Bayard, Blaine's predecessor, had accepted an invitation to a three-party conference in Berlin aimed at resolving the dispute, and Blaine appointed American representatives to attend.[146] The result was a treaty that created a condominium among the three powers, allowing all of them access to the harbor.[146]

In Hawaii, Blaine worked to bind the kingdom more closely to the United States and to avoid its becoming a British protectorate.[147] When the McKinley Tariff of 1890 eliminated the duty on sugar, Hawaiian sugar-growers looked for a way to retain their once-exclusive access to the American market.[147] The Hawaiian minister to the United States, Henry A. P. Carter, tried to arrange for Hawaii to have complete trade reciprocity with the United States, but Blaine proposed instead that Hawaii become an American protectorate; Carter favored the idea, but the Hawaiian king, Kalākaua, rejected the infringement on his sovereignty.[147] Blaine next procured the appointment of his former newspaper colleague John L. Stevens as minister to Hawaii.[148] Stevens had long believed that the United States should annex Hawaii, and as minister he co-operated with Americans living in Hawaii in their efforts to bring about annexation.[148] Their efforts ultimately culminated in a coup d'état against Kalākaua's successor, Liliuokalani, in 1893.[148] Blaine's precise involvement is undocumented, but the results of Stevens' diplomacy were in accord with his ambitions for American power in the region.[148] The new government petitioned the United States for annexation, but by that time Blaine was no longer in office.[148]

Latin America and reciprocity Edit

Soon after taking office, Blaine revived his old idea of an international conference of western hemisphere nations.[149] The result was the First International Conference of American States, which met in Washington in 1890.[149] Blaine and Harrison had high hopes for the conference, including proposals for a customs union, a pan-American railroad line, and an arbitration process to settle disputes among member nations.[149] Their overall goal was to extend trade and political influence over the entire hemisphere; some of the other nations understood this and were wary of deepening ties with the United States to the exclusion of European powers.[149] Blaine said publicly that his only interest was in "annexation of trade," not annexation of territory, but privately he wrote to Harrison of a desire for some territorial enlargement of the United States:

I think there are only three places that are of value enough to be taken ... One is Hawaii and the others are Cuba and Porto Rico [sic]. Cuba and Porto Rico are not now imminent and will not be for a generation. Hawaii may come up for decision at an unexpected hour and I hope we shall be prepared to decide it in the affirmative.[150]

Congress was not as enthusiastic about a customs union as Blaine and Harrison were, but tariff reciprocity provisions were ultimately included in the McKinley Tariff that reduced duties on some inter-American trade.[151] Otherwise, the conference achieved none of Blaine's goals in the short-term, but did lead to further communication and what would eventually become the Organization of American States.[151]

 
Sailors from the USS Baltimore caused the major foreign affairs crisis of Blaine's second term as Secretary of State.

In 1891, a diplomatic crisis arose in Chile that drove a wedge between Harrison and Blaine. The American minister to Chile, Patrick Egan, a political friend of Blaine's, granted asylum to Chileans who were seeking refuge from the Chilean Civil War.[152] Chile was already suspicious of Blaine because of his War of the Pacific diplomacy ten years earlier, and this incident raised tensions even further.[153] When sailors from the Baltimore took shore leave in Valparaíso, a fight broke out, resulting in the deaths of two American sailors and three dozen arrested.[154] When the news reached Washington, Blaine was in Bar Harbor recuperating from a bout of ill health and Harrison himself drafted a demand for reparations.[155] The Chilean foreign minister, Manuel Antonio Matta, replied that Harrison's message was "erroneous or deliberately incorrect" and said that the Chilean government was treating the affair the same as any other criminal matter.[155] Tensions increased as Harrison threatened to break off diplomatic relations unless the United States received a suitable apology.[155] Blaine returned to the capital and made conciliatory overtures to the Chilean government, offering to submit the dispute to arbitration and recall Egan.[155] Harrison still insisted on an apology and submitted a special message to Congress about the threat of war.[156] Chile issued an apology for the incident, and the threat of war subsided.[156]

Relations with European powers Edit

 
1890 political cartoon depicting Blaine "outplaying" British Prime Minister Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury.

Blaine's earliest expressions in the foreign policy sphere were those of a reactionary Anglophobe, but by the end of his career his relationship with the United Kingdom had become more moderate and nuanced.[157][h] A dispute over seal hunting in the waters off Alaska was the cause of Blaine's first interaction with Britain as Harrison's Secretary of State. A law passed in 1889 required Harrison to ban seal hunting in Alaskan waters, but Canadian fishermen believed they had the right to continue fishing there.[159] Soon thereafter, the United States Navy seized several Canadian ships near the Pribilof Islands.[159] Blaine entered into negotiations with Britain and the two nations agreed to submit the dispute to arbitration by a neutral tribunal.[160] Blaine was no longer in office when the tribunal began its work, but the result was to allow the hunting once more, albeit with some regulation, and to require the United States to pay damages of $473,151.[160][i] Ultimately, the nations signed the North Pacific Fur Seal Convention of 1911, which outlawed open-water seal hunting.

At the same time as the Pribilof Islands dispute, an outbreak of mob violence in New Orleans became an international incident. After New Orleans police chief David Hennessy led a crackdown against local mafiosi, he was assassinated on October 14, 1890.[161] After the alleged murderers were found not guilty on March 14, 1891, a mob stormed the jail and lynched eleven of them.[161] Since many of those killed were Italian citizens the Italian minister, Saverio Fava, protested to Blaine.[161] Blaine explained that federal officials could not control how state officials deal with criminal matters, and Fava announced that he would withdraw the legation back to Italy. Blaine and Harrison believed the Italians' response to be an overreaction, and did nothing.[161] Tensions slowly cooled, and after nearly a year, the Italian minister returned to the United States to negotiate an indemnity.[162] After some internal dispute—Blaine wanted conciliation with Italy, Harrison was reluctant to admit fault—the United States agreed to pay an indemnity of $25,000, and normal diplomatic relations resumed.[162][j]

Retirement and death Edit

 
Political cartoon depicting the death and funeral of Blaine.

Blaine had always believed his health to be fragile, and by the time he joined Harrison's cabinet he truly was unwell.[163] The years at the State Department also brought Blaine personal tragedy as two of his children, Walker and Alice, died suddenly in 1890.[164] Another son, Emmons, died in 1892.[164] With these family losses and his declining health, Blaine decided to retire and announced that he would resign from the cabinet on June 4, 1892.[163] Because of their growing animosity, and because Blaine's resignation came three days before the 1892 Republican National Convention began, Harrison suspected that Blaine was preparing to run against him for the party's nomination for president.[163]

Harrison was unpopular with the party and the country, and many of Blaine's old supporters encouraged him to run for the nomination.[165] Blaine had denied any interest in the nomination months before his resignation, but some of his friends, including Senator Matthew Quay of Pennsylvania and James S. Clarkson, chairman of the Republican National Committee, took it for false modesty and worked for his nomination anyway.[166] When Blaine resigned from the cabinet, his boosters were certain that he was a candidate, but the majority of the party stood by the incumbent.[167] Harrison was renominated on the first ballot, but die-hard Blaine delegates still gave their champion 182 and 1/6 votes, good enough for second place.[167]

Blaine spent the summer of 1892 at his Bar Harbor cottage, and did not involve himself in the presidential campaign other than to make a single speech in New York in October.[168] Harrison was defeated soundly in his rematch against former president Cleveland and when Blaine returned to Washington at the close of 1892, he and Harrison were friendlier than they had been in years.[169] Blaine's health declined rapidly in the winter of 1892–1893, and he died in his Washington home on January 27, 1893, four days before turning sixty-three.[170] After a funeral at the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant, he was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Washington.[170] He was later re-interred in Blaine Memorial Park, Augusta, Maine, in 1920.[170]

Legacy Edit

A towering figure in the Republican party of his day, Blaine fell into obscurity fairly soon after his death.[171] A 1905 biography by his wife's cousin, Edward Stanwood, was written when the question was still in doubt, but by the time David Saville Muzzey published his biography of Blaine in 1934, the subtitle "A Political Idol of Other Days" already spoke to its subject's fading place in the popular mind, perhaps because of the nine men the Republican Party nominated for the presidency from 1860 to 1912, Blaine is the only one who never became president. Although several authors studied Blaine's foreign policy career, including Edward P. Crapol's 2000 work, Muzzey's was the last full-scale biography of the man until Neil Rolde's 2006 book. Historian R. Hal Williams was working on a new biography of Blaine, tentatively titled James G. Blaine: A Life in Politics, until his death in 2016.[172]

During the 2016 United States presidential election, both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton were compared to Blaine for their controversies. Blaine's status as a former Secretary of State who sought to erase evidence of his personal corruption drew parallels to Clinton,[173] while his appeals to anti-Chinese sentiment were compared to Trump's anti-Muslim rhetoric.[174] Similarly, the Mugwumps who opposed Blaine in 1884 have been compared to the Never Trump movement.[175]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The house was donated to the State of Maine by Blaine's daughter, Harriet Blaine Beale, in 1919 and is now used as the Governor's residence.
  2. ^ While the First Amendment already imposed the first two restrictions on the federal government, they were not deemed to apply to the states until 1947[57] and 1940,[58] respectively.[59]
  3. ^ $64,000 in 1876 is approximately equal to $1.76 million in present dollars[62]
  4. ^ Before the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913, Senators were chosen by their states' legislatures.
  5. ^ The exact state of Blaine's health is debatable; many of his biographers believe him to have been a hypochondriac.[107]
  6. ^ The cartoon is based on Phryne before the Areopagus, a painting by Jean-Léon Gérôme.
  7. ^ The rumor arose because the Blaines had not filed a marriage license when they married in 1850. Licenses were not required in Kentucky until 1852.[124]
  8. ^ Some scholars have suggested that Blaine's Anglophobia was always more for political advantage than out of genuine sentiment.[158]
  9. ^ $473,152 in 1898 is equal to $16.6 million in present terms[62]
  10. ^ $25,000 in 1892 is equal to $814,259 in present terms[62]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Muzzey, p. 6; Russell, p. 5.
  2. ^ Crapol, p. 1.
  3. ^ Muzzey, p. 1.
  4. ^ Muzzey, pp. 2–3.
  5. ^ a b Muzzey, p. 5; Russell, p. 5.
  6. ^ Rose, pp. 30–31; Muzzey, p. 5.
  7. ^ James, Edward T.; James, Janet Wilson; Boyer, Paul S. (1971). Notable American Women, 1607-1950: A Biographical Dictionary. ISBN 9780674627345.
  8. ^ Rolde, p. 28.
  9. ^ Muzzey, pp. 12–14; Russell, p. 8; Crapol, p. 2.
  10. ^ Muzzey, pp. 4, 14; Russell, p. 8.
  11. ^ McClelland, p. 127.
  12. ^ Muzzey, p. 15; Russell, p. 9–10.
  13. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 16–17; Russell, p. 12.
  14. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 17–19; Rolde, pp. 38–39.
  15. ^ a b Muzzey, p. 20; Russell, p. 28.
  16. ^ a b c d Muzzey, pp. 21–22; Russell, pp. 28–29.
  17. ^ Rolde, p. 47.
  18. ^ Rolde, p. 49.
  19. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 22–23, 27; Russell, pp. 30–31.
  20. ^ Muzzey, p. 24; Crapol, pp. 3–4.
  21. ^ Muzzey, p. 27; Crapol, p. 4.
  22. ^ Muzzey, p. 28; Crapol, p. 18.
  23. ^ a b Muzzey, p. 29; Crapol, p. 9.
  24. ^ a b c d Muzzey, p. 30; Russell, pp. 50–51.
  25. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 228–232.
  26. ^ Rolde, p. 56.
  27. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 31–32; Rolde, pp. 63–69.
  28. ^ Muzzey, pp. 32–35; Crapol, p. 19.
  29. ^ a b Muzzey, p. 37.
  30. ^ Muzzey, p. 39; Crapol, pp. 20–21; Russell, p. 99.
  31. ^ a b Crapol, p. 20; Muzzey, pp. 42–43.
  32. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 42–47; Russell, pp. 101–106.
  33. ^ Muzzey, pp. 48–49; Russell, pp. 130–136.
  34. ^ Muzzey, pp. 50–51.
  35. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 52–53.
  36. ^ Muzzey, p. 57; Russell, pp. 172–175.
  37. ^ Blaine, p. 379, v. 2.
  38. ^ Muzzey, p. 58.
  39. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 53–57.
  40. ^ Hoogenboom, pp. 358–360.
  41. ^ Russell, p. 186; Muzzey, p. 62; Summers, p. 5.
  42. ^ "Representative Schuyler Colfax of Indiana". Historical Highlights. Washington, D.C.: Office of the Historian, U.S. House of Representatives. Retrieved August 23, 2019.
  43. ^ Muzzey, pp. 62–63.
  44. ^ a b Follett, Mary Parker (1909) [First edition, 1896]. The speaker of the House of Representatives. New York, New York: Longmans, Greene, and Company. p. 340. Retrieved August 23, 2019 – via Internet Archive, digitized in 2007.
  45. ^ Crapol, p. 41.
  46. ^ Poore, Ben. Perley, Perley's Reminiscences of Sixty Years in the National Metropolis, Vol.2, p.211 (1886).
  47. ^ Muzzey, p. 62; Crapol, p. 33; Summers, pp. 5–6.
  48. ^ a b Muzzey, p. 64.
  49. ^ a b Muzzey, p. 66.
  50. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 67–70; Russell, pp. 211–217.
  51. ^ Smith, p. 545; Muzzey, p. 74, 77–82; Russell, pp. 266–272.
  52. ^ Muzzey, p. 75.
  53. ^ a b Muzzey, p. 71.
  54. ^ Summers, pp. 59–61.
  55. ^ a b c d e Crapol, pp. 42–43; Green, pp. 49–51.
  56. ^ Smith, pp. 568–571; Green, pp. 47–48.
  57. ^ See Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U.S. 1 (1947).
  58. ^ See Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U.S. 296 (1940).
  59. ^ Green, pp. 39–41.
  60. ^ Green, p. 38.
  61. ^ a b Crapol, p. 44; Muzzey, pp. 83–84; Thompson, pp. 3, 19.
  62. ^ a b c 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved May 28, 2023.
  63. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 84–86.
  64. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 87–93; Crapol, p. 44; Summers, pp. 62–63.
  65. ^ Muzzey, pp. 93–94.
  66. ^ Muzzey, pp. 99–100.
  67. ^ a b Crapol, p. 45.
  68. ^ a b Hoogenboom, p. 261; Muzzey, pp. 104–107.
  69. ^ Quoted in Muzzey, p. 110.
  70. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 111–112; Hoogenboom, p. 263.
  71. ^ a b c d Muzzey, p. 115.
  72. ^ Hoogenboom, pp. 274–294; Muzzey, pp. 116–127.
  73. ^ Muzzey, p. 128.
  74. ^ Muzzey, p. 129.
  75. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 130–133; Hoogenboom, pp. 318–325, 351–369.
  76. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 140–141; Summers, p. 65.
  77. ^ Hoogenboom, pp. 392–402.
  78. ^ a b c d e f Muzzey, pp. 135–139; Crapol, pp. 50–51.
  79. ^ Unger, p. 217.
  80. ^ a b Hoogenboom, pp. 356–359.
  81. ^ Unger, pp. 358–359.
  82. ^ Crapol, pp. 48–50; Muzzey, pp. 146–148.
  83. ^ Muzzey, pp. 148–151; Sewell, pp. 65–66.
  84. ^ Crapol, pp. 51–53.
  85. ^ Hoogenboom, p. 414.
  86. ^ Smith, p. 615; Muzzey, pp. 160–165.
  87. ^ Smith, p. 616; Muzzey, p. 167; Summers, pp. 65–66.
  88. ^ Muzzey, p. 169.
  89. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 171–172; Smith, pp. 616–617.
  90. ^ Muzzey, pp. 173–174; Reeves, pp. 178–183; Crapol, p. 62.
  91. ^ Muzzey, pp. 177–179.
  92. ^ Muzzey, p. 186.
  93. ^ Muzzey, p. 185.
  94. ^ Muzzey, pp. 191–195.
  95. ^ a b c Crapol, pp. 62–64; Pletcher, pp. 55–56.
  96. ^ a b Crapol, pp. 65–66; Doenecke, pp. 55–57; Healy, pp. 57–60.
  97. ^ Doenecke, pp. 57–58; Crapol, p. 70.
  98. ^ Crapol, pp. 74–80; Doenecke, pp. 64–67; Healy, pp. 40–52.
  99. ^ Crapol, p. 81; Doenecke, pp. 71–73.
  100. ^ Peskin, pp. 595–597; Russell, pp. 385–386.
  101. ^ Peskin, pp. 589–590.
  102. ^ Peskin, pp. 606–607.
  103. ^ a b Crapol, pp. 81–82; Russell, p. 386.
  104. ^ a b Russell, p. 388; Reeves, pp. 255–257.
  105. ^ Doenecke, pp. 173–175; Reeves, pp. 398–399.
  106. ^ Muzzey, p. 225.
  107. ^ Summers, pp. 62, 125; Muzzey, pp. 225–227.
  108. ^ Muzzey, p. 226; Russell, p. 390.
  109. ^ Muzzey, pp. 232–237.
  110. ^ Muzzey, pp. 242–246; Crapol, pp. 71–73.
  111. ^ Muzzey, pp. 253–255.
  112. ^ Crapol, p. 91; Muzzey, pp. 263–265.
  113. ^ Crapol, p. 91; Reeves, pp. 368–371.
  114. ^ Crapol, p. 92.
  115. ^ Muzzey, pp. 273–277.
  116. ^ a b c d Muzzey, pp. 281–285; Reeves, p. 380.
  117. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 285–286; Reeves, p. 381.
  118. ^ Nevins, pp. 145–155; Muzzey, pp. 293–296.
  119. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 287–293; Nevins, pp. 156–159.
  120. ^ Nevins, pp. 187–188; Muzzey, p. 294, n. 2.
  121. ^ a b c d Nevins, pp. 159–162; Muzzey, pp. 301–304.
  122. ^ Nevins, p. 177; Muzzey, pp. 303–304.
  123. ^ a b c d Nevins, pp. 162–169; Muzzey, pp. 298–299.
  124. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 299–300; Crapol, p. 98.
  125. ^ Lachman, Charles (2014). A Secret Life. Skyhorse Publishing. pp. 285–288.
  126. ^ Bushong, William; Chervinsky, Lindsay (2007). "The Life and Presidency of Grover Cleveland". White House History.
  127. ^ Nevins, p. 181; Muzzey, p. 322.
  128. ^ Muzzey, pp. 307–308; Reeves, pp. 387–389.
  129. ^ Muzzey, pp. 308–309; Nevins, p. 170.
  130. ^ Muzzey, pp. 316–318; Nevins, pp. 181–184; Crapol, p. 99.
  131. ^ Summers, pp. 289–303; Muzzey, pp. 322–325.
  132. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 326–341.
  133. ^ Muzzey, pp. 341–343.
  134. ^ Muzzey, pp. 347–348.
  135. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 348–349.
  136. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 354–359.
  137. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 361–369; Crapol, p. 106.
  138. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 368–372; Crapol, pp. 106–107.
  139. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 372–374.
  140. ^ Muzzey, pp. 375–382; Calhoun, pp. 47–52.
  141. ^ Muzzey, p. 383.
  142. ^ Muzzey, pp. 387–391; Calhoun, pp. 58–61.
  143. ^ Crapol, pp. 111–113; Calhoun, pp. 74–75.
  144. ^ a b c d Muzzey, pp. 389–391, 462–464; Calhoun, pp. 75–77.
  145. ^ Crapol, pp. 116–117; Calhoun, pp. 77–80, 125–126; Rigby, passim.
  146. ^ a b c Crapol, pp. 116–117; Muzzey, pp. 394–402.
  147. ^ a b c Crapol, pp. 123–125; Calhoun, pp. 125–126, 152–157.
  148. ^ a b c d e Crapol, pp. 125–129; Socolofsky & Spetter, pp. 204–207.
  149. ^ a b c d Crapol, pp. 118–122; Muzzey, pp. 426–437; Pletcher, pp. 56–57.
  150. ^ Crapol, pp. 122–124.
  151. ^ a b Crapol, pp. 120–122; Calhoun, pp. 81–82.
  152. ^ Muzzey, pp. 415–416; Socolofsky & Spetter, p. 146; Healy, p. 207.
  153. ^ Crapol, pp. 130–131.
  154. ^ Muzzey, p. 418; Calhoun, p. 127.
  155. ^ a b c d Muzzey, p. 419–421; Socolofsky & Spetter, pp. 147–149.
  156. ^ a b Muzzey, p. 421–423; Socolofsky & Spetter, pp. 150–152.
  157. ^ Crapol, pp. 105–106, 138–139.
  158. ^ Sewell, passim.
  159. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 403–405; Socolofsky & Spetter, pp. 137–138.
  160. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 408–409; Socolofsky & Spetter, pp. 140–143.
  161. ^ a b c d Socolofsky & Spetter, pp. 153–154; Muzzey, pp. 411–412.
  162. ^ a b Socolofsky & Spetter, pp. 155–156; Muzzey, pp. 412–414; Calhoun, pp. 126–127.
  163. ^ a b c Crapol, p. 132; Socolofsky & Spetter, p. 88.
  164. ^ a b Crapol, p. 121; Muzzey, p. 461.
  165. ^ Calhoun, pp. 134–139; Muzzey, pp. 468–469.
  166. ^ Muzzey, pp. 469–472.
  167. ^ a b Muzzey, pp. 473–479.
  168. ^ Muzzey, pp. 480–482.
  169. ^ Muzzey, pp. 484–487.
  170. ^ a b c Muzzey, pp. 489–491.
  171. ^ Rolde, p. xiii.
  172. ^ "SMU mourns loss of former dean and professor R. Hal Williams". Smu.edu. February 18, 2016. Retrieved May 8, 2016.
  173. ^ Dibacco, Thomas V. (May 19, 2016). 2016 contest could be like 1884 all over again. Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  174. ^ Gyory, Andrew (December 8, 2015). Don’t think Trump will ever pass a Muslim Exclusion Act? Just ask Sen. James G. Blaine. The Washington Post. Retrieved March 3, 2022.
  175. ^ Demaria, Ed (May 9, 2016). In #NeverTrump Movement, Echoes of 1884's 'Mugwumps'. NBC News. Retrieved March 3, 2022.

Sources Edit

Books
  • Blaine, James G. (1886). Twenty Years of Congress. Vol. 2. Norwich, Connecticut: The Henry Bill Publishing Company.
  • Calhoun, Charles William (2005). Benjamin Harrison. New York: Times Books. ISBN 978-0-8050-6952-5.
  • Crapol, Edward P. (2000). James G. Blaine: Architect of Empire. Biographies in American Foreign Policy. Vol. 4. Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources. ISBN 978-0-8420-2604-8.
  • Doenecke, Justus D. (1981). The Presidencies of James A. Garfield and Chester A. Arthur. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0208-7.
  • Healy, David (2001). James G. Blaine and Latin America. Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-8262-1374-7.
  • Hoogenboom, Ari (1995). Rutherford Hayes: Warrior and President. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0641-2.
  • McClelland, William Craig (1903). "A History of Literary Societies at Washington & Jefferson College". The Centennial Celebration of the Chartering of Jefferson College in 1802. Philadelphia: George H. Buchanan and Company.
  • Muzzey, David Saville (1934). James G. Blaine: A Political Idol of Other Days. New York: Dodd, Mead, and Company.
  • Nevins, Allan (1932). Grover Cleveland: A Study in Courage. New York: Dodd, Mead, and Company.
  • Peskin, Allan (1978). Garfield: A Biography. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87338-210-6.
  • Reeves, Thomas C. (1975). Gentleman Boss: The Life of Chester A. Arthur. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-394-46095-6.
  • Rolde, Neil (2006). Continental Liar from the State of Maine: James G. Blaine. Gardiner, Maine: Tilbury House. ISBN 978-0-88448-286-4.
  • Rose, Anne C. (2001). Beloved Strangers: Interfaith Families in Nineteenth-Century America. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-00640-9.
  • Russell, Charles Edward (1931). Blaine of Maine. New York: Cosmopolitan Book Corporation.
  • Smith, Jean Edward (2001). Grant. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-84927-0.
  • Socolofsky, Homer E.; Spetter, Allan B. (1987). The Presidency of Benjamin Harrison. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0320-6.
  • Summers, Mark (2000). Rum, Romanism & Rebellion: The Making of a President, 1884. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-2524-2.
  • Unger, Irwin (2008) [1964]. The Greenback Era: A Social and Political History of American Finance, 1865–1879. New York: ACLS Humanities. ISBN 978-1-59740-431-0.
Articles
  • Green, Steven K. (January 1992). "The Blaine Amendment Reconsidered". The American Journal of Legal History. 36 (1): 38–69. doi:10.2307/845452. JSTOR 845452.
  • Pletcher, David M. (February 1978). "Reciprocity and Latin America in the Early 1890s: A Foretaste of Dollar Diplomacy". Pacific Historical Review. 47 (1): 53–89. doi:10.2307/3637339. JSTOR 3637339.
  • Rigby, Barry (May 1988). "The Origins of American Expansion in Hawaii and Samoa, 1865–1900". The International History Review. 10 (2): 221–237. doi:10.1080/07075332.1988.9640475. JSTOR 40105868.
  • Sewell, Mike (April 1990). "Political Rhetoric and Policy-Making: James G. Blaine and Britain". Journal of American Studies. 24 (1): 61–84. doi:10.1017/S0021875800028711. JSTOR 27555267.
  • Thompson, George H. (Spring 1980). "Asa P. Robinson and the Little Rock and Fort Smith Railroad". The Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 39 (1): 3–20. doi:10.2307/40023148. JSTOR 40023148.

Further reading Edit

  • Bastert, Russell H. (March 1956). "Diplomatic Reversal: Frelinghuysen's Opposition to Blaine's Pan-American Policy in 1882". The Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 42 (4): 653–671. doi:10.2307/1889232. JSTOR 1889232.
  • Green, Steven K., Requiem for State 'Blaine Amendments', Journal of Church and State (2021)
  • Grenville, John A. S. and George Berkeley Young. Politics, Strategy, and American Diplomacy: Studies in Foreign Policy, 1873–1917 (1966) pp 74–101 on "The challenge of Latin America: Harrison and Blaine, 1889–1892"
  • Khoo, Flora. "The Ideological Influence of Political Cartoons on the 1884 US Presidential Race." American Journalism 37.3 (2020): 372-396.
  • Langley, Lester D. (1974). "James Gillespie Blaine: The Ideologue as Diplomat". In Merli, Frank J.; Wilson, Theodore A. (eds.). Makers of American Diplomacy: From Benjamin Franklin to Henry Kissinger. New York: Scribner. pp. 253–278. ISBN 978-0-684-13786-5.
  • Makemson, Harlen (2004–2005). "One Misdeed Evokes Another: How Political Cartoonists Used "Scandal Intertextuality" Against Presidential Candidate James G. Blaine". Media History Monographs. 7 (2): 1–21.
  • Peskin, Allan (1979). "Blaine, Garfield and Latin America". Americas: A Quarterly Review of Inter-American Cultural History. 36 (1): 79–89. doi:10.2307/981139. JSTOR 981139. S2CID 147169121.
  • Spetter, Allan. "Harrison and Blaine: Foreign Policy, 1889-1893" Indiana Magazine of History 65#3 (1969), pp. 214–227 online
  • Tyler, Alice Felt (1927). The Foreign Policy of James G. Blaine. Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press.
  • Volwiler, A. T. "Harrison, Blaine, and American Foreign Policy, 1889-1893" Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 79#4 (1938) pp. 637–648 online
  • West, Stephen A. "Remembering Reconstruction in Its Twilight: Ulysses S. Grant and James G. Blaine on the Origins of Black Suffrage." Journal of the Civil War Era 10.4 (2020): 495-523. online
  • Winchester, Richard Carlyle. "James G. Blaine and the Ideology of American Expansionism" (PhD dissertation, University Of Rochester; Proquest Dissertations Publishing, 1966. 6610831)
  • Windle, Jonathan Clark. "James G. Blaine: His Pan American Policy and its Effect Upon the Mckinley Tariff Act of 1890" (Phd Dissertation, Florida Atlantic University; Proquest Dissertations Publishing, 1976. 1309472.

External links Edit

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Maine's 3rd congressional district

1863–1876
Succeeded by
Preceded by
???
Chair of the House Rules Committee
1873–1876
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
1869–1875
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of State
1881
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of State
1889–1892
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 2) from Maine
1876–1881
Served alongside: Hannibal Hamlin
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Civil Service Committee
1877
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Rules Committee
1877–1879
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for President of the United States
1884
Succeeded by

james, blaine, james, blaine, redirects, here, confused, with, james, blain, political, organization, associated, with, blaine, faction, james, gillespie, blaine, january, 1830, january, 1893, american, statesman, republican, politician, represented, maine, un. James Blaine redirects here Not to be confused with James Blain For the political organization associated with him see Blaine faction James Gillespie Blaine January 31 1830 January 27 1893 was an American statesman and Republican politician who represented Maine in the United States House of Representatives from 1863 to 1876 serving as Speaker of the U S House of Representatives from 1869 to 1875 and then in the United States Senate from 1876 to 1881 James G BlaineBlaine c 1870s28th and 31st United States Secretary of StateIn office March 9 1889 June 4 1892PresidentBenjamin HarrisonPreceded byThomas F BayardSucceeded byJohn W FosterIn office March 7 1881 December 19 1881PresidentJames A GarfieldChester A ArthurPreceded byWilliam M EvartsSucceeded byFrederick T FrelinghuysenUnited States Senatorfrom MaineIn office July 10 1876 March 5 1881Preceded byLot M MorrillSucceeded byWilliam P Frye27th Speaker of the United States House of RepresentativesIn office March 4 1869 March 3 1875Preceded byTheodore PomeroySucceeded byMichael C KerrLeader of the House Republican ConferenceIn office March 4 1869 March 3 1875Preceded byTheodore M PomeroySucceeded byThomas Brackett ReedMember of the U S House of Representatives from Maine s 3rd districtIn office March 4 1863 July 10 1876Preceded bySamuel C FessendenSucceeded byEdwin FlyePersonal detailsBornJames Gillespie Blaine 1830 01 31 January 31 1830West Brownsville Pennsylvania U S DiedJanuary 27 1893 1893 01 27 aged 62 Washington D C U S Resting placeBlaine Memorial Park Augusta MainePolitical partyRepublicanSpouseHarriet StanwoodChildren7 including WalkerEducationWashington and Jefferson College BA SignatureBlaine twice served as Secretary of State first in 1881 under President James A Garfield and Chester A Arthur and then from 1889 to 1892 under President Benjamin Harrison He is one of only two U S Secretaries of State to hold the position under three separate presidents the other being Daniel Webster Blaine unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for President in 1876 and 1880 before being nominated in 1884 In the 1884 general election he was narrowly defeated by Democratic nominee Grover Cleveland Blaine was one of the late 19th century s leading Republicans and a champion of the party s moderate reformist faction later known as the Half Breeds Blaine was born in the western Pennsylvania town of West Brownsville and moved to Maine after completing college where he became a newspaper editor Nicknamed the Magnetic Man he was a charismatic speaker in an era that prized oratory He began his political career as an early supporter of Republican Abraham Lincoln and the Union war effort in the American Civil War During Reconstruction Blaine was a supporter of black suffrage but opposed some of the more coercive measures of the Radical Republicans Initially in favor of high tariffs he later worked to lower tariffs and expand international trade Railroad promotion and construction were important issues in his time and as a result of his interest and support Blaine was widely suspected of corruption in awarding railroad charters especially with the emergence of the Mulligan letters Though no evidence of corruption ever surfaced from these allegations they nevertheless plagued his 1884 presidential candidacy As Secretary of State Blaine was a transitional figure marking the end of an isolationist era in foreign policy and foreshadowing the rise of the American Century that would begin with the Spanish American War His efforts to expand U S trade and influence began the nation s shift to a more active American foreign policy Blaine was a pioneer of tariff reciprocity and urged greater involvement in Latin American affairs An expansionist Blaine s policies would lead in less than a decade to the establishment of the U S acquisition of Pacific colonies and dominance in the Caribbean Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Family and childhood 1 2 Teacher and publisher 1 3 Maine politics 2 House of Representatives 1863 1876 2 1 Elected to the House 2 2 Reconstruction and impeachment 2 3 Monetary policy 2 4 Speaker of the House 2 5 Blaine Amendment 3 1876 presidential election 3 1 Mulligan letters 3 2 Plumed Knight 4 United States Senate 1876 1881 5 1880 presidential election 6 Secretary of State 1881 6 1 Foreign policy initiatives 6 2 Garfield s assassination 6 3 Private life 7 1884 presidential election 7 1 Nomination 7 2 Campaign against Cleveland 8 Party leader in exile 9 Secretary of State 1889 1892 9 1 Pacific diplomacy 9 2 Latin America and reciprocity 9 3 Relations with European powers 10 Retirement and death 11 Legacy 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life EditFamily and childhood Edit James Gillespie Blaine was born January 31 1830 in West Brownsville Pennsylvania the third child of Ephraim Lyon Blaine and his wife Maria Gillespie Blaine He had two older sisters Harriet and Margaret 1 Blaine s father was a western Pennsylvania businessman and landowner and the family lived in relative comfort 2 On his father s side Blaine was descended from Scotch Irish settlers who first emigrated to Pennsylvania in 1745 3 His great grandfather Ephraim Blaine served as a Commissary General under George Washington in the American Revolutionary War 4 Blaine s mother and her forebears were Irish Catholics who immigrated to Pennsylvania in the 1780s 5 Blaine s parents were married in 1820 in a Catholic ceremony although Blaine s father remained a Presbyterian 5 Following a common compromise of the era the Blaines agreed that their daughters would be raised in their mother s Catholic faith while their sons would be brought up in their father s religion 6 James Blaine s cousin Angela Gillespie was a nun and founded the American branch of the Sisters of the Holy Cross 7 In politics Blaine s father supported the Whig Party 8 Blaine s biographers describe his childhood as harmonious and note that the boy took an early interest in history and literature 9 At the age of thirteen Blaine enrolled in his father s alma mater Washington College now Washington amp Jefferson College in nearby Washington Pennsylvania 10 There he was a member of the Washington Literary Society one of the college s debating societies 11 Blaine succeeded academically graduating near the top of his class and delivering the salutatory address in June 1847 12 After graduation Blaine considered attending Yale Law School but ultimately decided against it instead moving west to find a job 13 Teacher and publisher Edit In 1848 Blaine was hired as a professor of mathematics and ancient languages at the Western Military Institute in Georgetown Kentucky 13 Although he was only 18 years old and younger than many of his students Blaine adapted well to his new profession 14 Blaine grew to enjoy life in his adopted state and became an admirer of Kentucky Senator Henry Clay 14 He also made the acquaintance of Harriet Stanwood a teacher at the nearby Millersburg Female College and native of Maine 15 On June 30 1850 the two wed 15 Blaine once again considered taking up the study of law but instead took his new bride to visit his family in Pennsylvania 16 They next lived with Harriet Blaine s family in Augusta Maine for several months where their first child Stanwood Blaine was born in 1851 16 The young family soon moved again this time to Philadelphia where Blaine took a job at the Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction of the Blind now Overbrook School for the Blind in 1852 teaching science and literature 17 nbsp The offices of the Kennebec Journal where Blaine got his start in politics as editor Philadelphia s law libraries gave Blaine the chance to at last begin to study the law but in 1853 he received a more tempting offer to become editor and co owner of the Kennebec Journal 16 Blaine had spent several vacations in his wife s native state of Maine and had become friendly with the Journal s editors When the newspaper s founder Luther Severance retired Blaine was invited to purchase the publication along with co editor Joseph Baker 16 He quickly accepted borrowing the purchase price from his wife s brothers 18 In 1854 Baker sold his share to John L Stevens a local minister 19 The Journal had been a staunchly Whig newspaper which coincided with Blaine s and Stevens political opinions 19 The decision to become a newspaperman unexpected as it was started Blaine on the road to a lifelong career in politics 20 Blaine s purchase of the Journal coincided with the demise of the Whig party and birth of the Republican party and Blaine and Stevens actively promoted the new party in their newspaper 21 The newspaper was financially successful and Blaine was soon able to invest his profits in coal mines in Pennsylvania and Virginia forming the basis of his future wealth 22 Maine politics Edit Blaine s career as a Republican newspaperman led naturally to involvement in party politics In 1856 he was selected as a delegate to the first Republican National Convention 23 From the party s early days Blaine identified with the conservative wing supporting Supreme Court Justice John McLean for the presidential nomination over the more radical John C Fremont the eventual nominee 23 The following year Blaine was offered the editorship of the Portland Daily Advertiser which he accepted selling his interest in the Journal soon thereafter 24 He still maintained his home in Augusta however with his growing family Although Blaine s first son Stanwood died in infancy he and Harriet had two more sons soon afterward Walker in 1855 and Emmons in 1857 24 They would have four more children in years to come Alice James Margaret and Harriet 25 It was around this time that Blaine left the Presbyterian church of his childhood and joined his wife s new denomination becoming a member of the South Parish Congregational Church in Augusta 26 In 1858 Blaine ran for a seat in the Maine House of Representatives and was elected 24 He ran for reelection in 1859 1860 and 1861 and was successful each time by large majorities The added responsibilities led Blaine to reduce his duties with the Advertiser in 1860 and he soon ceased editorial work altogether 27 Meanwhile his political power was growing as he became chairman of the Republican state committee in 1859 replacing Stevens 27 Blaine was not a delegate to the Republican convention in 1860 but attended anyway as an enthusiastic supporter of Abraham Lincoln 27 Returning to Maine he was elected Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives in 1861 and reelected in 1862 24 With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861 he supported Lincoln s war effort and saw that the Maine Legislature voted to organize and equip units to join the Union Army 28 House of Representatives 1863 1876 EditElected to the House Edit Main article Electoral history of James G Blaine Blaine had considered running for the United States House of Representatives from Maine s 4th district in 1860 but agreed to step aside when Anson P Morrill a former governor announced his interest in the seat 29 Morrill was successful but after redistricting placed Blaine in the 3rd district for the 1862 election he allowed his name to be put forward 29 Running on a campaign of staunch support for the war effort Blaine was elected by a wide margin though nationwide the Republican Party lost a significant number of seats in Congress as the Union war effort to date had been only weakly successful 30 By the time Blaine took his seat in December 1863 at the start of the 38th Congress the Union Army had turned the tide of the war with victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg 31 As a first term congressman he initially said little mostly following the administration s lead in supporting the continuing war effort 31 He did clash several times with the leader of the Republicans radical faction Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania firstly over payment of states debts incurred in supporting the war and again over monetary policy concerning the new greenback currency 32 Blaine also spoke in support of the commutation provision of the military draft law passed in 1863 and proposed a constitutional amendment allowing the federal government to impose taxes on exports but it never passed 32 Reconstruction and impeachment Edit nbsp James G Blaine in the 1860sBlaine was reelected in 1864 and when the 39th Congress assembled in December 1865 the main issue was the Reconstruction of the defeated Confederate States 33 Although he was not a member of the committee charged with drafting what became the Fourteenth Amendment Blaine did make his views on the subject known and believed that three fourths of the non seceded states would be needed to ratify it rather than three fourths of all states an opinion that did not prevail and placed him atypically in the radical camp 34 The Republican Congress also played a role in the governance of the conquered South dissolving the state governments President Andrew Johnson had installed and substituting military governments under Congress control 35 Blaine voted in favor of these new harsher measures but also supported some leniency toward the former rebels when he opposed a bill that would have barred Southerners from attending the United States Military Academy 35 Blaine voted to impeach Johnson in 1868 although he had initially opposed the effort 36 Later Blaine was more ambiguous about the validity of the charges against Johnson writing that there was a very grave difference of opinion among those equally competent to decide 37 but he followed his party s leaders 38 Monetary policy Edit Continuing his earlier battle with Stevens Blaine led the fight in Congress for a strong dollar After the issuance of 150 million dollars in greenbacks non gold backed currency the value of the dollar stood at a low ebb 39 A bipartisan group of inflationists led by Republican Benjamin F Butler and Democrat George H Pendleton wished to preserve the status quo and allow the Treasury to continue to issue greenbacks and even to use them to pay the interest due on pre war bonds 39 Blaine called this idea a repudiation of the nation s promise to investors which was made when the only currency was gold Speaking several times on the matter Blaine said that the greenbacks had only ever been an emergency measure to avoid bankruptcy during the war 39 Blaine and his hard money allies were successful but the issue remained alive until 1879 when all remaining greenbacks were made redeemable in gold by the Specie Payment Resumption Act of 1875 40 Speaker of the House Edit During his first three terms in Congress Blaine had earned for himself a reputation as an expert of parliamentary procedure and aside from a growing feud with Roscoe Conkling of New York had become popular among his fellow Republicans 41 In March 1869 when Speaker Schuyler Colfax resigned from office at the end of the 40th Congress to become vice president 42 the highly regarded Blaine was the unanimous choice of the Republican Congressional Caucus to become Speaker of the House for the 41st Congress 43 In the subsequent March 4 1869 election for Speaker Blaine easily defeated Democrat Michael C Kerr of Indiana by a vote of 135 to 57 44 Republicans remained in control of the House in the 42nd and 43rd congresses and Blaine was re elected as speaker at the start of both of them 44 His time as speaker came to an end following the 1874 75 elections which produced a Democratic majority in the House for the 44th Congress 45 nbsp Blaine s residence in the capital city of Augusta is the home of Maine governors Blaine was an effective Speaker with a magnetic personality In the words of Washington journalist Benjamin Perley Poore Blaine s graceful as well as powerful figure his strong features glowing with health and his hearty honest manner made him an attractive speaker and an esteemed friend 46 Moreover President Ulysses S Grant valued his skill and loyalty in leading the House 47 He enjoyed the job and made his presence in Washington more permanent by buying a large residence on Fifteenth Street in the city 48 At the same time the Blaine family moved to a mansion in Augusta 48 a During Blaine s six year tenure as Speaker his popularity continued to grow and Republicans dissatisfied with Grant mentioned Blaine as a potential presidential candidate prior to the 1872 Republican National Convention 49 Instead Blaine worked steadfastly for Grant s re election 49 Blaine s growing fame brought growing opposition from the Democrats as well and during the 1872 campaign he was accused of receiving bribes in the Credit Mobilier scandal 50 Blaine denied any part in the scandal which involved railroad companies bribing federal officials to turn a blind eye to fraudulent railroad contracts that overcharged the government by millions of dollars 50 No one was able to satisfactorily prove Blaine s involvement Though not an absolute defense it is true that the law that made the fraud possible had been written before he was elected to Congress But other Republicans were exposed by the accusations including Vice President Colfax who was dropped from the 1872 presidential ticket in favor of Henry Wilson 50 Although he supported a general amnesty for former Confederates Blaine opposed extending it to include Jefferson Davis and he cooperated with Grant in helping to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1875 in response to increased violence and disenfranchisement of blacks in the South 51 He refrained from voting on the anti third term resolution that overwhelmingly passed the House that same year believing that to vote for it would look self interested 52 Blaine was loyal to Grant and the scandals of the Grant administration did not seem to affect how the public perceived him according to his biographer Blaine was never more popular than when he was Speaker 53 Liberal Republicans saw him as an alternative to the evident corruption of other Republican leaders and some even urged him to form a new reformist party 53 Although he remained a Republican this base of moderate reformers remained loyal to Blaine and became known as the Half Breed faction of the party 54 Blaine Amendment Edit Main article Blaine Amendment Once out of the speaker s chair Blaine had more time to concentrate on his presidential ambitions and to develop new policy ideas 55 One result was a foray into education policy In late 1875 President Grant made several speeches on the importance of the separation of church and state and the duty of the states to provide free public education 56 Blaine saw in this an issue that would distract from the Grant administration scandals and let the Republican party regain the high moral ground 55 In December 1875 he proposed a joint resolution that became known as the Blaine Amendment 55 The proposed amendment codified the church state separation Blaine and Grant were promoting stating that No State shall make any law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof and no money raised by taxation in any State for the support of public schools or derived from any public fund therefor nor any public lands devoted thereto shall ever be under the control of any religious sect nor shall any money so raised or lands so devoted be divided between religious sects or denominations b The effect was to prohibit the use of public funds by any religious school although it did not advance Grant s other aim of requiring states to provide public education to all children 60 The bill passed the House but failed in the Senate 55 Although it never passed Congress and left Blaine open to charges of anti Catholicism the proposed amendment served Blaine s purpose of rallying Protestants to the Republican party and promoting himself as one of the party s foremost leaders 55 1876 presidential election Edit nbsp James G Blaine in the 1870sMulligan letters Edit Blaine entered the 1876 presidential campaign as the favorite but his chances were almost immediately harmed by the emergence of a scandal 61 Rumors had begun to spread in February that Blaine had been involved in a transaction with the Union Pacific Railroad which had paid Blaine 64 000 for some Little Rock and Fort Smith Railroad bonds he owned even though they were nearly worthless In essence the alleged transaction was presented as a sham designed to bribe Blaine 61 c Blaine denied the charges as did the Union Pacific s directors 63 Blaine claimed that he never had any dealings with the Little Rock and Fort Smith Railroad except to purchase bonds at market price and that he had lost money on the transaction 63 Democrats in the House of Representatives however demanded a congressional investigation 64 The testimony appeared to favor Blaine s version of events until May 31 when James Mulligan a Boston clerk who had been employed by Blaine s brother in law testified that the allegations were true he had arranged the transaction and he had letters to prove it 64 The letters ended with the damning phrase Kindly burn this letter 64 When the investigating committee recessed Blaine met with Mulligan that night in his hotel room What happened between the men is unclear but Blaine acquired the letters or as Mulligan told the committee snatched them from Mulligan s hands and fled the room In any event Blaine had the letters and refused the committee s demand to turn them over Opinion swiftly turned against Blaine the June 3 The New York Times carried the headline Blaine s Nomination Now Out of the Question Blaine took his case to the House floor on June 5 theatrically proclaiming his innocence and calling the investigation a partisan attack by Southern Democrats in revenge for his exclusion of Jefferson Davis from the amnesty bill of the previous year 65 He read selected passages from the letters aloud and said Thank God Almighty I am not afraid to show them Blaine even succeeded in extracting an apology from the committee chairman The political tide turned anew in Blaine s favor but the pressure had now begun to affect Blaine s health and he collapsed while leaving church services on June 14 66 His opponents called the collapse a political stunt with one Democratic newspaper reporting the event as Blaine Feigns a Faint Rumors of Blaine s ill health combined with the lack of hard evidence against him garnered him sympathy among Republicans and when the Republican convention began in Cincinnati later that month he was again seen as the frontrunner 67 Plumed Knight Edit nbsp Exposition Hall of Cincinnati during the announcement of Rutherford B Hayes as the Republican nomineeMain article 1876 Republican National Convention Though he was damaged by the Mulligan letters Blaine entered the convention as the favorite 68 Five other men were also considered serious candidates Benjamin Bristow the Kentucky born Treasury Secretary Roscoe Conkling Blaine s old enemy and now a Senator from New York Senator Oliver P Morton of Indiana Governor Rutherford B Hayes of Ohio and Governor John F Hartranft of Pennsylvania 68 Blaine was nominated by Illinois orator Robert G Ingersoll in what became a famous speech This is a grand year a year filled with recollections of the Revolution a year in which the people call for the man who has torn from the throat of treason the tongue of slander the man who has snatched the mask of Democracy from the hideous face of rebellion Like an armed warrior like a plumed knight James G Blaine from the state of Maine marched down the halls of the American Congress and threw his shining lance full and fair against the brazen foreheads of every traitor to his country and every maligner of his fair reputation 69 The speech was a success and Ingersoll s appellation of plumed knight remained a nickname for Blaine for years to come 67 On the first ballot no candidate received the required majority of 378 but Blaine had the most votes with 285 and no other candidate had more than 125 70 There were a few vote shifts in the next five ballots and Blaine climbed to 308 votes with his nearest competitor at just 111 70 On the seventh ballot the situation shifted drastically as anti Blaine delegates began to coalesce around Hayes by the time the balloting ended Blaine s votes had risen to 351 but Hayes surpassed him at 384 a majority 70 Blaine received the news at his home in Washington and telegraphed Hayes his congratulations 71 In the subsequent contest of 1876 Hayes was elected after a contentious compromise over disputed electoral votes 72 The results of the convention had further effects on Blaine s political career as Bristow having lost the nomination also resigned as Treasury Secretary three days after the convention ended 71 President Grant selected Senator Lot M Morrill of Maine to fill the cabinet post and Maine s governor Seldon Connor appointed Blaine to the now vacant Senate seat 71 When the Maine Legislature reconvened that autumn they confirmed Blaine s appointment and elected him to the full six year term that would begin on March 4 1877 71 d United States Senate 1876 1881 Edit nbsp Blaine worked with President Hayes pictured at times but was never among his chief defenders in the SenateBlaine was appointed to the Senate on July 10 1876 but did not begin his duties there until the Senate convened in December of that year 73 While in the Senate he served on the Appropriations Committee and held the chairmanship of the Committee on Civil Service and Retrenchment but he never achieved the role of leadership that he had held as a member of the House 74 The Senate in the 45th Congress was controlled by a narrow Republican majority but it was a majority often divided against itself and against the Hayes administration 75 Blaine did not number himself among the administration s defenders later known as the Half Breeds but neither could he join the Republicans led by Conkling later known as the Stalwarts who opposed Hayes because of the deep personal enmity between Blaine and Conkling 75 He opposed Hayes s withdrawal of federal troops from Southern capitals which effectively ended the Reconstruction of the South but to no avail 75 Blaine continued to antagonize Southern Democrats voting against bills passed in the Democrat controlled House that would reduce the Army s appropriation and repeal the post war Enforcement Acts he had helped pass 76 Such bills passed Congress several times and Hayes vetoed them several times ultimately the Enforcement Acts remained in place but the funds to enforce them dwindled 77 By 1879 there were only 1 155 soldiers stationed in the former Confederacy and Blaine believed that this small force could never guarantee the civil and political rights of black Southerners which would mean an end to the Republican party in the South 76 On monetary issues Blaine continued the advocacy for a strong dollar that he had begun as a Representative 78 This stance was in opposition to Senate Republican leadership including Senate President Pro Tempore Thomas W Ferry who generally supported the greenback movement 79 The issue had shifted from debate over greenbacks to debate over which metal should back the dollar gold and silver or gold alone 78 The Coinage Act of 1873 stopped the coinage of silver for all coins worth a dollar or more effectively tying the dollar to the value of gold As a result the money supply contracted and the effects of the Panic of 1873 grew worse making it more expensive for debtors to pay debts they had entered into when currency was less valuable 80 Farmers and laborers especially clamored for the return of coinage in both metals believing the increased money supply would restore wages and property values 81 Democratic Representative Richard P Bland of Missouri proposed a bill which passed the House that required the United States to coin as much silver as miners could sell the government thus increasing the money supply and aiding debtors 78 In the Senate William B Allison a Republican from Iowa offered an amendment to limit the silver coinage to two to four million dollars per month 78 This was still too much for Blaine and he denounced the bill and the proposed amendment but the amended Bland Allison Act passed the Senate by a 48 to 21 vote 78 Hayes vetoed the bill but Congress mustered the two thirds vote to pass it over his veto 80 Even after the Bland Allison Act s passage Blaine continued his opposition making a series of speeches against it during the 1878 congressional campaign season 78 His time in the Senate allowed Blaine to develop his foreign policy ideas He advocated expansion of the American navy and merchant marine which had been in decline since the Civil War 82 Blaine also bitterly opposed the results of the arbitration with Great Britain over American fishermen s right to fish in Canadian waters which resulted in a 5 5 million award to Britain 83 Blaine s Anglophobia combined with his support of high tariffs He had initially opposed a reciprocity treaty with Canada that would have reduced tariffs between the two nations but by the end of his time in the Senate he had changed his mind believing that Americans had more to gain by increasing exports than they would lose by the risk of cheap imports 84 1880 presidential election Edit nbsp The Interstate Exposition Building known as the Glass Palace during the convention James A Garfield is on the podium waiting to speak Main article 1880 Republican National Convention Hayes had announced early in his presidency that he would not seek another term which meant that the contest for the Republican nomination in 1880 was open to all challengers including Blaine 85 Blaine was among the early favorites for the nomination as were former President Grant Treasury Secretary John Sherman of Ohio and Senator George F Edmunds of Vermont 86 Although Grant did not actively promote his candidacy his entry into the race re energized the Stalwarts and when the convention met in Chicago in June 1880 they instantly polarized the delegates into Grant and anti Grant factions with Blaine the most popular choice of the latter group 87 Blaine was nominated by James Frederick Joy of Michigan but in contrast to Ingersoll s exciting speech of 1876 Joy s lengthy oration was remembered only for its maladroitness 88 After the other candidates were nominated the first ballot showed Grant leading with 304 votes and Blaine in second with 284 no other candidate had more than Sherman s 93 and none had the required majority of 379 89 Sherman s delegates could swing the nomination to either Grant or Blaine but he refused to release them through twenty eight ballots in the hope that the anti Grant forces would desert Blaine and flock to him 89 Eventually they did desert Blaine but instead of Sherman they shifted their votes to Ohio Congressman James A Garfield and by the thirty sixth ballot he had 399 votes enough for victory 89 Garfield placated the Stalwarts by endorsing Chester A Arthur of New York a Conkling loyalist as nominee for vice president but it was to Blaine and his delegates that Garfield owed his nomination 90 When Garfield was elected over Democrat Winfield Scott Hancock he turned to Blaine to guide him in selection of his cabinet and offered him the preeminent position Secretary of State 91 Blaine accepted resigning from the Senate on March 4 1881 92 Secretary of State 1881 EditForeign policy initiatives Edit Blaine saw presiding over the cabinet as a chance to preside over the Washington social scene as well and soon ordered construction of a new larger home near Dupont Circle 93 Although his foreign policy experience was minimal Blaine quickly threw himself into his new duties 94 By 1881 Blaine had completely abandoned his protectionist leanings and now used his position as Secretary of State to promote freer trade especially within the western hemisphere 95 His reasons were twofold firstly Blaine s old fear of British interference in the Americas was undiminished and he saw increased trade with Latin America as the best way to keep Britain from dominating the region 95 Secondly he believed that by encouraging exports he could increase American prosperity and by doing so position the Republican party as the author of that prosperity ensuring continued electoral success 95 Garfield agreed with his Secretary of State s vision and Blaine called for a Pan American conference in 1882 to mediate disputes among the Latin American nations and to serve as a forum for talks on increasing trade 96 At the same time Blaine hoped to negotiate a peace in the War of the Pacific then being fought by Bolivia Chile and Peru 96 Blaine favored a resolution that would not result in Peru yielding any territory but Chile which had by 1881 occupied the Peruvian capital rejected any negotiations that would gain them nothing 97 Blaine sought to expand American influence in other areas calling for renegotiation of the Clayton Bulwer Treaty to allow the United States to construct a canal through Panama without British involvement as well as attempting to reduce British involvement in the strategically located Kingdom of Hawaii 98 His plans for the United States involvement in the world stretched even beyond the Western Hemisphere as he sought commercial treaties with Korea and Madagascar 99 Garfield s assassination Edit nbsp Blaine left was present at Garfield s assassination On July 2 1881 Blaine and Garfield were walking through the Sixth Street Station of the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad in Washington when Garfield was shot by Charles J Guiteau 100 a disgruntled lawyer and crazed office seeker who had made repeated demands for Blaine and other State Department officials to appoint him to various ambassadorships for which he was grossly unqualified or were already filled Guiteau a self professed Stalwart believed that after assassinating the President he would strike a blow to unite the two factions of the Republican Party allowing him to ingratiate himself with Vice President Arthur and receive his coveted position 101 Guiteau was overpowered and arrested immediately while Garfield lingered for two and a half months before he died on September 19 1881 Guiteau was convicted of killing Garfield and hanged on June 30 1882 102 Garfield s death was not just a personal tragedy for Blaine it also meant the end of his dominance of the cabinet and the end of his foreign policy initiatives 103 With Arthur s ascent to the presidency the Stalwart faction now held sway and Blaine s days at the State Department were numbered 103 While Arthur asked all of the cabinet members to postpone their resignations until Congress recessed that December Blaine nonetheless tendered his resignation on October 19 1881 but he agreed to remain in office until December 19 when his successor would be in place 104 Blaine s replacement was Frederick T Frelinghuysen a New Jersey Stalwart 104 while Arthur and Frelinghuysen undid much of Blaine s work cancelling the call for a Pan American conference and stopping the effort to end the War of the Pacific they did continue the drive for tariff reductions signing a reciprocity treaty with Mexico in 1882 105 Private life Edit nbsp Blaine s mansion in Dupont CircleBlaine began the year 1882 without a political office for the first time since 1859 106 Troubled by poor health e he sought no employment other than the completion of the first volume of his memoir Twenty Years of Congress 108 Friends in Maine petitioned Blaine to run for Congress in the 1882 elections but he declined preferring to spend his time writing and supervising the move to the new home 25 His income from mining and railroad investments was sufficient to sustain the family s lifestyle and to allow for the construction of a vacation cottage Stanwood on Mount Desert Island Maine designed by Frank Furness 109 Blaine appeared before Congress in 1882 during an investigation into his War of the Pacific diplomacy defending himself against allegations that he owned an interest in the Peruvian guano deposits being occupied by Chile but otherwise stayed away from the Capitol 110 The publication of the first volume of Twenty Years in early 1884 added to Blaine s financial security and thrust him back into the political spotlight 111 As the 1884 campaign loomed Blaine s name was being circulated once more as a potential nominee and despite some reservations he soon found himself back in the hunt for the presidency 112 1884 presidential election EditMain article 1884 United States presidential election nbsp Blaine Logan campaign poster nbsp An 1884 cartoon ridicules Blaine as the tattooed man with many indelible scandals f nbsp An anti Cleveland cartoon highlights the Halpin scandal Nomination Edit Main article 1884 Republican National Convention In the months leading up to the 1884 convention Blaine was once more considered the favorite for the nomination but President Arthur was contemplating a run for election in his own right 113 George Edmunds was again the favored candidate among reformers and John Sherman had a few delegates pledged to him but neither was expected to command much support at the convention 114 John A Logan of Illinois hoped to attract Stalwart votes if Arthur s campaign was unsuccessful Blaine was unsure he wanted to try for the nomination for the third time and even encouraged General William T Sherman John Sherman s older brother to accept it if it came to him but ultimately Blaine agreed to be a candidate again 115 William H West of Ohio nominated Blaine with an enthusiastic speech and after the first ballot Blaine led the count with 334 votes 116 While short of the necessary 417 for nomination Blaine had far more than any other candidate with Arthur in second place at 278 votes 116 Blaine was unacceptable to the Arthur delegates just as Blaine s own delegates would never vote for the President so the contest was between the two for the delegates of the remaining candidates 116 Blaine s total steadily increased as Logan and Sherman withdrew in his favor and some of the Edmunds delegates defected to him 116 Unlike in previous conventions the momentum for Blaine in 1884 would not be halted 117 On the fourth ballot Blaine received 541 votes and was at last nominated 117 Logan was named vice presidential nominee on the first ballot and the Republicans had their ticket 117 Campaign against Cleveland Edit The Democrats held their convention in Chicago the following month and nominated Governor Grover Cleveland of New York Cleveland s time on the national scene was brief but Democrats hoped that his reputation as a reformer and an opponent of corruption would attract Republicans dissatisfied with Blaine and his reputation for scandal 118 They were correct as reform minded Republicans called Mugwumps denounced Blaine as corrupt and flocked to Cleveland 119 The Mugwumps including such men as Carl Schurz and Henry Ward Beecher were more concerned with morality than with party and felt Cleveland was a kindred soul who would promote civil service reform and fight for efficiency in government 119 However even as the Democrats gained support from the Mugwumps they lost some blue collar workers to the Greenback Party led by Benjamin F Butler Blaine s antagonist from their early days in the House 120 The campaign focused on the candidates personalities as each candidate s supporters cast aspersions on their opponents Cleveland s supporters rehashed the old allegations from the Mulligan letters that Blaine had corruptly influenced legislation in favor of railroads later profiting on the sale of bonds he owned in both companies 121 Although the stories of Blaine s favors to the railroads had made the rounds eight years earlier this time more of his correspondence was discovered making his earlier denials less plausible 121 Blaine acknowledged that the letters were genuine but denied that anything in them impugned his integrity or contradicted his earlier explanations 121 Nevertheless what Blaine described as stale slander served to focus the public s attention negatively on his character 121 On some of the most damaging correspondence Blaine had written Burn this letter giving Democrats the last line to their rallying cry Blaine Blaine James G Blaine the continental liar from the state of Maine Burn this letter 122 To counter Cleveland s image of superior morality Republicans discovered reports that Cleveland had fathered an illegitimate child while he was a lawyer in Buffalo New York and chanted Ma Ma where s my Pa to which the Democrats after Cleveland had been elected appended Gone to the White House Ha Ha Ha 123 Cleveland admitted to paying child support in 1874 to Maria Crofts Halpin the woman who claimed he fathered her child named Oscar Folsom Cleveland 123 Halpin was involved with several men at the time including Cleveland s friend and law partner Oscar Folsom for whom the child was also named 123 Cleveland did not know which man was the father and is believed to have assumed responsibility because he was the only bachelor among them 123 At the same time Democratic operatives accused Blaine and his wife of not having been married when their eldest son Stanwood was born in 1851 this rumor was false however and caused little excitement in the campaign 124 g Halpin disputed the claims of being involved with several men accusing Cleveland of raping and impregnating her then institutionalizing her against her will to gain control of their child 125 126 Both candidates believed that the states of New York New Jersey Indiana and Connecticut would determine the election 127 In New York Blaine received less support than he anticipated when Arthur and Conkling still powerful in the New York Republican party failed to actively campaign for him 128 Blaine hoped that he would have more support from Irish Americans than Republicans typically did while the Irish were mainly a Democratic constituency in the 19th century Blaine s mother was Irish Catholic and he believed his career long opposition to the British government would resonate with the Irish 129 Blaine s hope for Irish defections to the Republican standard were dashed late in the campaign when one of his supporters Samuel D Burchard gave a speech denouncing the Democrats as the party of Rum Romanism and Rebellion 130 The Democrats spread the word of this insult in the days before the election and Cleveland narrowly won all four of the swing states including New York by just over one thousand votes While the popular vote total was close with Cleveland winning by just one quarter of a percent the electoral votes gave Cleveland a majority of 219 182 131 Party leader in exile Edit nbsp Blaine Benjamin Harrison and Henry Cabot Lodge and their families on vacation in Bar Harbor Maine Blaine accepted his narrow defeat and spent most of the next year working on the second volume of Twenty Years of Congress 132 The book continued to earn him enough money to support his lavish household and pay off his debts 132 Although he spoke to friends of retiring from politics Blaine still attended dinners and commented on the Cleveland administration s policies 133 By the time of the 1886 Congressional elections Blaine was giving speeches and promoting Republican candidates especially in his home state of Maine 134 Republicans were successful in Maine and after the Maine elections in September Blaine went on a speaking tour from Pennsylvania to Tennessee hoping to boost the prospects of Republican candidates there 135 Republicans were less successful nationwide gaining seats in the House while losing seats in the Senate but Blaine s speeches kept him and his opinions in the spotlight 135 Blaine and his wife and daughters sailed for Europe in June 1887 visiting England Ireland Germany France Austria Hungary and finally Scotland where they stayed at the summer home of Andrew Carnegie 136 While in France Blaine wrote a letter to the New York Tribune criticizing Cleveland s plans to reduce the tariff saying that free trade with Europe would impoverish American workers and farmers 137 The family returned to the United States in August 1887 136 His letter in the Tribune had raised his political profile even higher and by 1888 Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge both former opponents urged Blaine to run against Cleveland again 137 Opinion within the party was overwhelmingly in favor of renominating Blaine 138 As the state conventions drew nearer Blaine announced that he would not be a candidate 138 His supporters doubted his sincerity and continued to encourage him to run but Blaine still demurred 138 Hoping to make his intentions clear Blaine left the country and was staying with Carnegie in Scotland when the 1888 Republican National Convention began in Chicago 139 Carnegie encouraged Blaine to accept if the convention nominated him but the delegates finally accepted Blaine s refusal 139 John Sherman was the most prominent candidate and sought to attract the Blaine supporters to his candidacy but instead found them flocking to former senator Benjamin Harrison of Indiana after a telegram from Carnegie suggested that Blaine favored him 140 Blaine returned to the United States in August 1888 and visited Harrison at his home in October where twenty five thousand residents paraded in Blaine s honor 141 Harrison defeated Cleveland in a close election and offered Blaine his former position as Secretary of State 142 Secretary of State 1889 1892 Edit nbsp Blaine in his office 1890Harrison had developed his foreign policy based largely on Blaine s ideas and at the start of his term Harrison and Blaine had very similar views on the United States place in the world 143 In spite of their shared worldview however the two men became personally unfriendly as the term went on 144 Harrison was conscious that his Secretary of State was more popular than he and while he admired Blaine s gift for diplomacy he grew displeased with Blaine s frequent absence from his post because of illness and suspected that Blaine was angling for the presidential nomination in 1892 144 Harrison tried to limit how many Blaine men filled subordinate positions in the State Department and denied Blaine s request that his son Walker be appointed First Assistant Secretary instead naming him Solicitor of the Department of State 144 Despite the growing personal rancor the two men continued with one exception to agree on the foreign policy questions of the day 144 Pacific diplomacy Edit Blaine and Harrison wished to see American power and trade expanded across the Pacific and were especially interested in securing rights to harbors in Pearl Harbor Hawaii and Pago Pago Samoa 145 When Blaine entered office the United States Great Britain and the German Empire were disputing their respective rights in Samoa 146 Thomas F Bayard Blaine s predecessor had accepted an invitation to a three party conference in Berlin aimed at resolving the dispute and Blaine appointed American representatives to attend 146 The result was a treaty that created a condominium among the three powers allowing all of them access to the harbor 146 In Hawaii Blaine worked to bind the kingdom more closely to the United States and to avoid its becoming a British protectorate 147 When the McKinley Tariff of 1890 eliminated the duty on sugar Hawaiian sugar growers looked for a way to retain their once exclusive access to the American market 147 The Hawaiian minister to the United States Henry A P Carter tried to arrange for Hawaii to have complete trade reciprocity with the United States but Blaine proposed instead that Hawaii become an American protectorate Carter favored the idea but the Hawaiian king Kalakaua rejected the infringement on his sovereignty 147 Blaine next procured the appointment of his former newspaper colleague John L Stevens as minister to Hawaii 148 Stevens had long believed that the United States should annex Hawaii and as minister he co operated with Americans living in Hawaii in their efforts to bring about annexation 148 Their efforts ultimately culminated in a coup d etat against Kalakaua s successor Liliuokalani in 1893 148 Blaine s precise involvement is undocumented but the results of Stevens diplomacy were in accord with his ambitions for American power in the region 148 The new government petitioned the United States for annexation but by that time Blaine was no longer in office 148 Latin America and reciprocity Edit Soon after taking office Blaine revived his old idea of an international conference of western hemisphere nations 149 The result was the First International Conference of American States which met in Washington in 1890 149 Blaine and Harrison had high hopes for the conference including proposals for a customs union a pan American railroad line and an arbitration process to settle disputes among member nations 149 Their overall goal was to extend trade and political influence over the entire hemisphere some of the other nations understood this and were wary of deepening ties with the United States to the exclusion of European powers 149 Blaine said publicly that his only interest was in annexation of trade not annexation of territory but privately he wrote to Harrison of a desire for some territorial enlargement of the United States I think there are only three places that are of value enough to be taken One is Hawaii and the others are Cuba and Porto Rico sic Cuba and Porto Rico are not now imminent and will not be for a generation Hawaii may come up for decision at an unexpected hour and I hope we shall be prepared to decide it in the affirmative 150 Congress was not as enthusiastic about a customs union as Blaine and Harrison were but tariff reciprocity provisions were ultimately included in the McKinley Tariff that reduced duties on some inter American trade 151 Otherwise the conference achieved none of Blaine s goals in the short term but did lead to further communication and what would eventually become the Organization of American States 151 nbsp Sailors from the USS Baltimore caused the major foreign affairs crisis of Blaine s second term as Secretary of State In 1891 a diplomatic crisis arose in Chile that drove a wedge between Harrison and Blaine The American minister to Chile Patrick Egan a political friend of Blaine s granted asylum to Chileans who were seeking refuge from the Chilean Civil War 152 Chile was already suspicious of Blaine because of his War of the Pacific diplomacy ten years earlier and this incident raised tensions even further 153 When sailors from the Baltimore took shore leave in Valparaiso a fight broke out resulting in the deaths of two American sailors and three dozen arrested 154 When the news reached Washington Blaine was in Bar Harbor recuperating from a bout of ill health and Harrison himself drafted a demand for reparations 155 The Chilean foreign minister Manuel Antonio Matta replied that Harrison s message was erroneous or deliberately incorrect and said that the Chilean government was treating the affair the same as any other criminal matter 155 Tensions increased as Harrison threatened to break off diplomatic relations unless the United States received a suitable apology 155 Blaine returned to the capital and made conciliatory overtures to the Chilean government offering to submit the dispute to arbitration and recall Egan 155 Harrison still insisted on an apology and submitted a special message to Congress about the threat of war 156 Chile issued an apology for the incident and the threat of war subsided 156 Relations with European powers Edit nbsp 1890 political cartoon depicting Blaine outplaying British Prime Minister Robert Gascoyne Cecil 3rd Marquess of Salisbury Blaine s earliest expressions in the foreign policy sphere were those of a reactionary Anglophobe but by the end of his career his relationship with the United Kingdom had become more moderate and nuanced 157 h A dispute over seal hunting in the waters off Alaska was the cause of Blaine s first interaction with Britain as Harrison s Secretary of State A law passed in 1889 required Harrison to ban seal hunting in Alaskan waters but Canadian fishermen believed they had the right to continue fishing there 159 Soon thereafter the United States Navy seized several Canadian ships near the Pribilof Islands 159 Blaine entered into negotiations with Britain and the two nations agreed to submit the dispute to arbitration by a neutral tribunal 160 Blaine was no longer in office when the tribunal began its work but the result was to allow the hunting once more albeit with some regulation and to require the United States to pay damages of 473 151 160 i Ultimately the nations signed the North Pacific Fur Seal Convention of 1911 which outlawed open water seal hunting At the same time as the Pribilof Islands dispute an outbreak of mob violence in New Orleans became an international incident After New Orleans police chief David Hennessy led a crackdown against local mafiosi he was assassinated on October 14 1890 161 After the alleged murderers were found not guilty on March 14 1891 a mob stormed the jail and lynched eleven of them 161 Since many of those killed were Italian citizens the Italian minister Saverio Fava protested to Blaine 161 Blaine explained that federal officials could not control how state officials deal with criminal matters and Fava announced that he would withdraw the legation back to Italy Blaine and Harrison believed the Italians response to be an overreaction and did nothing 161 Tensions slowly cooled and after nearly a year the Italian minister returned to the United States to negotiate an indemnity 162 After some internal dispute Blaine wanted conciliation with Italy Harrison was reluctant to admit fault the United States agreed to pay an indemnity of 25 000 and normal diplomatic relations resumed 162 j Retirement and death Edit nbsp Political cartoon depicting the death and funeral of Blaine Blaine had always believed his health to be fragile and by the time he joined Harrison s cabinet he truly was unwell 163 The years at the State Department also brought Blaine personal tragedy as two of his children Walker and Alice died suddenly in 1890 164 Another son Emmons died in 1892 164 With these family losses and his declining health Blaine decided to retire and announced that he would resign from the cabinet on June 4 1892 163 Because of their growing animosity and because Blaine s resignation came three days before the 1892 Republican National Convention began Harrison suspected that Blaine was preparing to run against him for the party s nomination for president 163 Harrison was unpopular with the party and the country and many of Blaine s old supporters encouraged him to run for the nomination 165 Blaine had denied any interest in the nomination months before his resignation but some of his friends including Senator Matthew Quay of Pennsylvania and James S Clarkson chairman of the Republican National Committee took it for false modesty and worked for his nomination anyway 166 When Blaine resigned from the cabinet his boosters were certain that he was a candidate but the majority of the party stood by the incumbent 167 Harrison was renominated on the first ballot but die hard Blaine delegates still gave their champion 182 and 1 6 votes good enough for second place 167 Blaine spent the summer of 1892 at his Bar Harbor cottage and did not involve himself in the presidential campaign other than to make a single speech in New York in October 168 Harrison was defeated soundly in his rematch against former president Cleveland and when Blaine returned to Washington at the close of 1892 he and Harrison were friendlier than they had been in years 169 Blaine s health declined rapidly in the winter of 1892 1893 and he died in his Washington home on January 27 1893 four days before turning sixty three 170 After a funeral at the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant he was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Washington 170 He was later re interred in Blaine Memorial Park Augusta Maine in 1920 170 Legacy EditA towering figure in the Republican party of his day Blaine fell into obscurity fairly soon after his death 171 A 1905 biography by his wife s cousin Edward Stanwood was written when the question was still in doubt but by the time David Saville Muzzey published his biography of Blaine in 1934 the subtitle A Political Idol of Other Days already spoke to its subject s fading place in the popular mind perhaps because of the nine men the Republican Party nominated for the presidency from 1860 to 1912 Blaine is the only one who never became president Although several authors studied Blaine s foreign policy career including Edward P Crapol s 2000 work Muzzey s was the last full scale biography of the man until Neil Rolde s 2006 book Historian R Hal Williams was working on a new biography of Blaine tentatively titled James G Blaine A Life in Politics until his death in 2016 172 During the 2016 United States presidential election both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton were compared to Blaine for their controversies Blaine s status as a former Secretary of State who sought to erase evidence of his personal corruption drew parallels to Clinton 173 while his appeals to anti Chinese sentiment were compared to Trump s anti Muslim rhetoric 174 Similarly the Mugwumps who opposed Blaine in 1884 have been compared to the Never Trump movement 175 Notes Edit The house was donated to the State of Maine by Blaine s daughter Harriet Blaine Beale in 1919 and is now used as the Governor s residence While the First Amendment already imposed the first two restrictions on the federal government they were not deemed to apply to the states until 1947 57 and 1940 58 respectively 59 64 000 in 1876 is approximately equal to 1 76 million in present dollars 62 Before the passage of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913 Senators were chosen by their states legislatures The exact state of Blaine s health is debatable many of his biographers believe him to have been a hypochondriac 107 The cartoon is based on Phryne before the Areopagus a painting by Jean Leon Gerome The rumor arose because the Blaines had not filed a marriage license when they married in 1850 Licenses were not required in Kentucky until 1852 124 Some scholars have suggested that Blaine s Anglophobia was always more for political advantage than out of genuine sentiment 158 473 152 in 1898 is equal to 16 6 million in present terms 62 25 000 in 1892 is equal to 814 259 in present terms 62 References EditCitations Edit Muzzey p 6 Russell p 5 Crapol p 1 Muzzey p 1 Muzzey pp 2 3 a b Muzzey p 5 Russell p 5 Rose pp 30 31 Muzzey p 5 James Edward T James Janet Wilson Boyer Paul S 1971 Notable American Women 1607 1950 A Biographical Dictionary ISBN 9780674627345 Rolde p 28 Muzzey pp 12 14 Russell p 8 Crapol p 2 Muzzey pp 4 14 Russell p 8 McClelland p 127 Muzzey p 15 Russell p 9 10 a b Muzzey pp 16 17 Russell p 12 a b Muzzey pp 17 19 Rolde pp 38 39 a b Muzzey p 20 Russell p 28 a b c d Muzzey pp 21 22 Russell pp 28 29 Rolde p 47 Rolde p 49 a b Muzzey pp 22 23 27 Russell pp 30 31 Muzzey p 24 Crapol pp 3 4 Muzzey p 27 Crapol p 4 Muzzey p 28 Crapol p 18 a b Muzzey p 29 Crapol p 9 a b c d Muzzey p 30 Russell pp 50 51 a b Muzzey pp 228 232 Rolde p 56 a b c Muzzey pp 31 32 Rolde pp 63 69 Muzzey pp 32 35 Crapol p 19 a b Muzzey p 37 Muzzey p 39 Crapol pp 20 21 Russell p 99 a b Crapol p 20 Muzzey pp 42 43 a b Muzzey pp 42 47 Russell pp 101 106 Muzzey pp 48 49 Russell pp 130 136 Muzzey pp 50 51 a b Muzzey pp 52 53 Muzzey p 57 Russell pp 172 175 Blaine p 379 v 2 Muzzey p 58 a b c Muzzey pp 53 57 Hoogenboom pp 358 360 Russell p 186 Muzzey p 62 Summers p 5 Representative Schuyler Colfax of Indiana Historical Highlights Washington D C Office of the Historian U S House of Representatives Retrieved August 23 2019 Muzzey pp 62 63 a b Follett Mary Parker 1909 First edition 1896 The speaker of the House of Representatives New York New York Longmans Greene and Company p 340 Retrieved August 23 2019 via Internet Archive digitized in 2007 Crapol p 41 Poore Ben Perley Perley s Reminiscences of Sixty Years in the National Metropolis Vol 2 p 211 1886 Muzzey p 62 Crapol p 33 Summers pp 5 6 a b Muzzey p 64 a b Muzzey p 66 a b c Muzzey pp 67 70 Russell pp 211 217 Smith p 545 Muzzey p 74 77 82 Russell pp 266 272 Muzzey p 75 a b Muzzey p 71 Summers pp 59 61 a b c d e Crapol pp 42 43 Green pp 49 51 Smith pp 568 571 Green pp 47 48 See Everson v Board of Education 330 U S 1 1947 See Cantwell v Connecticut 310 U S 296 1940 Green pp 39 41 Green p 38 a b Crapol p 44 Muzzey pp 83 84 Thompson pp 3 19 a b c 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved May 28 2023 a b Muzzey pp 84 86 a b c Muzzey pp 87 93 Crapol p 44 Summers pp 62 63 Muzzey pp 93 94 Muzzey pp 99 100 a b Crapol p 45 a b Hoogenboom p 261 Muzzey pp 104 107 Quoted in Muzzey p 110 a b c Muzzey pp 111 112 Hoogenboom p 263 a b c d Muzzey p 115 Hoogenboom pp 274 294 Muzzey pp 116 127 Muzzey p 128 Muzzey p 129 a b c Muzzey pp 130 133 Hoogenboom pp 318 325 351 369 a b Muzzey pp 140 141 Summers p 65 Hoogenboom pp 392 402 a b c d e f Muzzey pp 135 139 Crapol pp 50 51 Unger p 217 a b Hoogenboom pp 356 359 Unger pp 358 359 Crapol pp 48 50 Muzzey pp 146 148 Muzzey pp 148 151 Sewell pp 65 66 Crapol pp 51 53 Hoogenboom p 414 Smith p 615 Muzzey pp 160 165 Smith p 616 Muzzey p 167 Summers pp 65 66 Muzzey p 169 a b c Muzzey pp 171 172 Smith pp 616 617 Muzzey pp 173 174 Reeves pp 178 183 Crapol p 62 Muzzey pp 177 179 Muzzey p 186 Muzzey p 185 Muzzey pp 191 195 a b c Crapol pp 62 64 Pletcher pp 55 56 a b Crapol pp 65 66 Doenecke pp 55 57 Healy pp 57 60 Doenecke pp 57 58 Crapol p 70 Crapol pp 74 80 Doenecke pp 64 67 Healy pp 40 52 Crapol p 81 Doenecke pp 71 73 Peskin pp 595 597 Russell pp 385 386 Peskin pp 589 590 Peskin pp 606 607 a b Crapol pp 81 82 Russell p 386 a b Russell p 388 Reeves pp 255 257 Doenecke pp 173 175 Reeves pp 398 399 Muzzey p 225 Summers pp 62 125 Muzzey pp 225 227 Muzzey p 226 Russell p 390 Muzzey pp 232 237 Muzzey pp 242 246 Crapol pp 71 73 Muzzey pp 253 255 Crapol p 91 Muzzey pp 263 265 Crapol p 91 Reeves pp 368 371 Crapol p 92 Muzzey pp 273 277 a b c d Muzzey pp 281 285 Reeves p 380 a b c Muzzey pp 285 286 Reeves p 381 Nevins pp 145 155 Muzzey pp 293 296 a b Muzzey pp 287 293 Nevins pp 156 159 Nevins pp 187 188 Muzzey p 294 n 2 a b c d Nevins pp 159 162 Muzzey pp 301 304 Nevins p 177 Muzzey pp 303 304 a b c d Nevins pp 162 169 Muzzey pp 298 299 a b Muzzey pp 299 300 Crapol p 98 Lachman Charles 2014 A Secret Life Skyhorse Publishing pp 285 288 Bushong William Chervinsky Lindsay 2007 The Life and Presidency of Grover Cleveland White House History Nevins p 181 Muzzey p 322 Muzzey pp 307 308 Reeves pp 387 389 Muzzey pp 308 309 Nevins p 170 Muzzey pp 316 318 Nevins pp 181 184 Crapol p 99 Summers pp 289 303 Muzzey pp 322 325 a b Muzzey pp 326 341 Muzzey pp 341 343 Muzzey pp 347 348 a b Muzzey pp 348 349 a b Muzzey pp 354 359 a b Muzzey pp 361 369 Crapol p 106 a b c Muzzey pp 368 372 Crapol pp 106 107 a b Muzzey pp 372 374 Muzzey pp 375 382 Calhoun pp 47 52 Muzzey p 383 Muzzey pp 387 391 Calhoun pp 58 61 Crapol pp 111 113 Calhoun pp 74 75 a b c d Muzzey pp 389 391 462 464 Calhoun pp 75 77 Crapol pp 116 117 Calhoun pp 77 80 125 126 Rigby passim a b c Crapol pp 116 117 Muzzey pp 394 402 a b c Crapol pp 123 125 Calhoun pp 125 126 152 157 a b c d e Crapol pp 125 129 Socolofsky amp Spetter pp 204 207 a b c d Crapol pp 118 122 Muzzey pp 426 437 Pletcher pp 56 57 Crapol pp 122 124 a b Crapol pp 120 122 Calhoun pp 81 82 Muzzey pp 415 416 Socolofsky amp Spetter p 146 Healy p 207 Crapol pp 130 131 Muzzey p 418 Calhoun p 127 a b c d Muzzey p 419 421 Socolofsky amp Spetter pp 147 149 a b Muzzey p 421 423 Socolofsky amp Spetter pp 150 152 Crapol pp 105 106 138 139 Sewell passim a b Muzzey pp 403 405 Socolofsky amp Spetter pp 137 138 a b Muzzey pp 408 409 Socolofsky amp Spetter pp 140 143 a b c d Socolofsky amp Spetter pp 153 154 Muzzey pp 411 412 a b Socolofsky amp Spetter pp 155 156 Muzzey pp 412 414 Calhoun pp 126 127 a b c Crapol p 132 Socolofsky amp Spetter p 88 a b Crapol p 121 Muzzey p 461 Calhoun pp 134 139 Muzzey pp 468 469 Muzzey pp 469 472 a b Muzzey pp 473 479 Muzzey pp 480 482 Muzzey pp 484 487 a b c Muzzey pp 489 491 Rolde p xiii SMU mourns loss of former dean and professor R Hal Williams Smu edu February 18 2016 Retrieved May 8 2016 Dibacco Thomas V May 19 2016 2016 contest could be like 1884 all over again Orlando Sentinel Retrieved March 3 2022 Gyory Andrew December 8 2015 Don t think Trump will ever pass a Muslim Exclusion Act Just ask Sen James G Blaine The Washington Post Retrieved March 3 2022 Demaria Ed May 9 2016 In NeverTrump Movement Echoes of 1884 s Mugwumps NBC News Retrieved March 3 2022 Sources Edit BooksBlaine James G 1886 Twenty Years of Congress Vol 2 Norwich Connecticut The Henry Bill Publishing Company Calhoun Charles William 2005 Benjamin Harrison New York Times Books ISBN 978 0 8050 6952 5 Crapol Edward P 2000 James G Blaine Architect of Empire Biographies in American Foreign Policy Vol 4 Wilmington Delaware Scholarly Resources ISBN 978 0 8420 2604 8 Doenecke Justus D 1981 The Presidencies of James A Garfield and Chester A Arthur Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0208 7 Healy David 2001 James G Blaine and Latin America Columbia Missouri University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 1374 7 Hoogenboom Ari 1995 Rutherford Hayes Warrior and President Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0641 2 McClelland William Craig 1903 A History of Literary Societies at Washington amp Jefferson College The Centennial Celebration of the Chartering of Jefferson College in 1802 Philadelphia George H Buchanan and Company Muzzey David Saville 1934 James G Blaine A Political Idol of Other Days New York Dodd Mead and Company Nevins Allan 1932 Grover Cleveland A Study in Courage New York Dodd Mead and Company Peskin Allan 1978 Garfield A Biography Kent Ohio Kent State University Press ISBN 978 0 87338 210 6 Reeves Thomas C 1975 Gentleman Boss The Life of Chester A Arthur New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 46095 6 Rolde Neil 2006 Continental Liar from the State of Maine James G Blaine Gardiner Maine Tilbury House ISBN 978 0 88448 286 4 Rose Anne C 2001 Beloved Strangers Interfaith Families in Nineteenth Century America Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 00640 9 Russell Charles Edward 1931 Blaine of Maine New York Cosmopolitan Book Corporation Smith Jean Edward 2001 Grant New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 84927 0 Socolofsky Homer E Spetter Allan B 1987 The Presidency of Benjamin Harrison Lawrence Kansas University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0320 6 Summers Mark 2000 Rum Romanism amp Rebellion The Making of a President 1884 Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 2524 2 Unger Irwin 2008 1964 The Greenback Era A Social and Political History of American Finance 1865 1879 New York ACLS Humanities ISBN 978 1 59740 431 0 ArticlesGreen Steven K January 1992 The Blaine Amendment Reconsidered The American Journal of Legal History 36 1 38 69 doi 10 2307 845452 JSTOR 845452 Pletcher David M February 1978 Reciprocity and Latin America in the Early 1890s A Foretaste of Dollar Diplomacy Pacific Historical Review 47 1 53 89 doi 10 2307 3637339 JSTOR 3637339 Rigby Barry May 1988 The Origins of American Expansion in Hawaii and Samoa 1865 1900 The International History Review 10 2 221 237 doi 10 1080 07075332 1988 9640475 JSTOR 40105868 Sewell Mike April 1990 Political Rhetoric and Policy Making James G Blaine and Britain Journal of American Studies 24 1 61 84 doi 10 1017 S0021875800028711 JSTOR 27555267 Thompson George H Spring 1980 Asa P Robinson and the Little Rock and Fort Smith Railroad The Arkansas Historical Quarterly 39 1 3 20 doi 10 2307 40023148 JSTOR 40023148 Further reading EditBastert Russell H March 1956 Diplomatic Reversal Frelinghuysen s Opposition to Blaine s Pan American Policy in 1882 The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 42 4 653 671 doi 10 2307 1889232 JSTOR 1889232 Green Steven K Requiem for State Blaine Amendments Journal of Church and State 2021 Grenville John A S and George Berkeley Young Politics Strategy and American Diplomacy Studies in Foreign Policy 1873 1917 1966 pp 74 101 on The challenge of Latin America Harrison and Blaine 1889 1892 Khoo Flora The Ideological Influence of Political Cartoons on the 1884 US Presidential Race American Journalism 37 3 2020 372 396 Langley Lester D 1974 James Gillespie Blaine The Ideologue as Diplomat In Merli Frank J Wilson Theodore A eds Makers of American Diplomacy From Benjamin Franklin to Henry Kissinger New York Scribner pp 253 278 ISBN 978 0 684 13786 5 Makemson Harlen 2004 2005 One Misdeed Evokes Another How Political Cartoonists Used Scandal Intertextuality Against Presidential Candidate James G Blaine Media History Monographs 7 2 1 21 Peskin Allan 1979 Blaine Garfield and Latin America Americas A Quarterly Review of Inter American Cultural History 36 1 79 89 doi 10 2307 981139 JSTOR 981139 S2CID 147169121 Spetter Allan Harrison and Blaine Foreign Policy 1889 1893 Indiana Magazine of History 65 3 1969 pp 214 227 online Tyler Alice Felt 1927 The Foreign Policy of James G Blaine Minneapolis Minnesota University of Minnesota Press Volwiler A T Harrison Blaine and American Foreign Policy 1889 1893 Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 79 4 1938 pp 637 648 online West Stephen A Remembering Reconstruction in Its Twilight Ulysses S Grant and James G Blaine on the Origins of Black Suffrage Journal of the Civil War Era 10 4 2020 495 523 online Winchester Richard Carlyle James G Blaine and the Ideology of American Expansionism PhD dissertation University Of Rochester Proquest Dissertations Publishing 1966 6610831 Windle Jonathan Clark James G Blaine His Pan American Policy and its Effect Upon the Mckinley Tariff Act of 1890 Phd Dissertation Florida Atlantic University Proquest Dissertations Publishing 1976 1309472 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to James G Blaine nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to James G Blaine United States Congress James G Blaine id B000519 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress James G Blaine Presidential Contender from C SPAN s The Contenders nbsp Texts on Wikisource Blaine James Gillespie Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Blaine James Gillespie The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Blaine James Gillespie Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Blaine James Gillespie New International Encyclopedia 1905 Blaine James Gillespie Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 Cooper Thompson 1884 Blaine James Gillespie Men of the Time eleventh ed London George Routledge amp Sons Works by James G Blaine at Project Gutenberg Works by or about James G Blaine at Internet ArchiveU S House of RepresentativesPreceded bySamuel C Fessenden Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Maine s 3rd congressional district1863 1876 Succeeded byEdwin FlyePreceded by Chair of the House Rules Committee1873 1876 Succeeded byJ Warren KeiferPolitical officesPreceded byTheodore Pomeroy Speaker of the United States House of Representatives1869 1875 Succeeded byMichael C KerrPreceded byWilliam M Evarts United States Secretary of State1881 Succeeded byFrederick T FrelinghuysenPreceded byThomas F Bayard United States Secretary of State1889 1892 Succeeded byJohn W FosterU S SenatePreceded byLot M Morrill U S Senator Class 2 from Maine1876 1881 Served alongside Hannibal Hamlin Succeeded byWilliam P FryePreceded byPowell Clayton Chair of the Senate Civil Service Committee1877 Succeeded byHenry TellerPreceded byThomas Ferry Chair of the Senate Rules Committee1877 1879 Succeeded byJohn T MorganParty political officesPreceded byJames A Garfield Republican nominee for President of the United States1884 Succeeded byBenjamin Harrison Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James G Blaine amp oldid 1177804661, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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