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Matthew Quay

Matthew Stanley Quay (/kw/; September 30, 1833 – May 28, 1904) was an American politician of the Republican Party who represented Pennsylvania in the United States Senate from 1887 until 1899 and from 1901 until his death in 1904. Quay's control of the Pennsylvania Republican political machine made him one of the most powerful and influential politicians in the country, and he ruled Pennsylvania politics for almost twenty years. As chair of the Republican National Committee and thus party campaign manager, he helped elect Benjamin Harrison as president in 1888 despite his not winning the popular vote. He was also instrumental in the 1900 election of Theodore Roosevelt as vice president.

Matthew Quay
Portrait, c. 1904
United States Senator
from Pennsylvania
In office
January 16, 1901 – May 28, 1904
Preceded byVacant
Succeeded byPhilander C. Knox
In office
March 4, 1887 – March 3, 1899
Preceded byJohn I. Mitchell
Succeeded byVacant
Chair of the Republican National Committee
In office
July 1888 – July 1891
Preceded byBenjamin Jones[1]
Succeeded byJames Clarkson[2]
State offices
Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania[3]
In office
January 22, 1873 – May 2, 1878
GovernorJohn F. Hartranft
Preceded byFrancis Jordan
Succeeded byJohn Blair Linn
In office
January 30, 1879 – November 3, 1882
GovernorHenry M. Hoyt
Preceded byJohn Blair Linn
Succeeded byFrancis Jordan
Treasurer of Pennsylvania[3]
In office
1886–1887
Governor
Preceded byWilliam Livsey
Succeeded byWilliam Livsey
Member of the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives
In office
1865–1868
Preceded byIsaiah White (as member for Beaver and Lawrence counties)
Succeeded byThomas Nicholson
ConstituencyBeaver and Washington counties
Recorder of Philadelphia
In office
1878–1879
Preceded byOffice created
Succeeded byDavid H. Lane
Prothonotary of Beaver County
In office
1856–1861
Preceded byA.R. Thomson
Succeeded byMichael Weyand
Personal details
Born
Matthew Stanley Quay

(1833-09-30)September 30, 1833
Dillsburg, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedMay 28, 1904(1904-05-28) (aged 70)
Beaver, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Agnes Barclay
(m. 1855)
Children5
EducationWashington and Jefferson College (BA)
Signature
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
Years of service1861–1862
RankColonel
Unit134th Pennsylvania Infantry
Battles/wars
AwardsMedal of Honor

Quay studied law and began his career in public office by becoming prothonotary of Beaver County, Pennsylvania, in 1856. He became personal secretary to Governor Andrew Curtin in 1861 after campaigning for him the previous year. During the Civil War, he served in the Union Army, commanding the 134th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment as a colonel. Quay received the Medal of Honor for heroism at the Battle of Fredericksburg. He acted as Pennsylvania's military agent in Washington before returning to Harrisburg to assist Curtin and aid in his re-election in 1863. He was a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from 1865 to 1868.

Beginning in 1867, Quay became increasingly aligned with the political machine run by Senator Simon Cameron, and by 1880 was the chief lieutenant of Cameron and his son and successor Don. He continued to serve in public office, as Secretary of the Commonwealth, Philadelphia County Recorder, and Pennsylvania Treasurer. The last, to which he was elected in 1885, gave him enough power to eclipse Don Cameron as Pennsylvania's Republican political boss, and put him in position to run for the Senate. He served there from 1887 to 1899, and then from 1901 until his death in 1904. There, he strongly advocated for Pennsylvania's economic interests, paying little mind to matters that did not affect his home state.

At the height of his career, Quay influenced appointments to thousands of state and federal positions in Pennsylvania, the occupants of which had to help finance the machine. Opponents within the Pennsylvania Republican Party, such as merchant John Wanamaker, contested his rule from time to time, usually unsuccessfully, though they did block his election to a third term in the Senate for two years, causing the 1899 legislative election for senator to end with no one chosen. Increasingly in poor health, he took on few new battles in his final years. After Quay's death, his political machine was taken over by his fellow Pennsylvania senator, Boies Penrose, who continued to run it until Penrose's own death in 1921.

Early life and career

Matthew Stanley Quay was born in Dillsburg, Pennsylvania, United States, on September 30, 1833. His father was Anderson Beaton Quay, a Presbyterian minister; Matthew's mother's last name at her birth was Catherine McCain.[4] The Quay family was of Scottish and Manx descent;[5][6] Matthew Quay had a Native American great-grandmother.[7] Matthew was named for General Matthew Stanley, who raised McCain after her parents died; he was one of eight children and the oldest son to reach adulthood.[8]

The Quay family lived in several towns in central and western Pennsylvania during Matthew's childhood as Reverend Quay accepted new positions, before they finally settled in Beaver in 1850, where the family had previously lived in the early 1840s. Despite the itinerant nature of the family's existence, the education of the children, including the girls, was not neglected.[9] Matthew attended Beaver and Indiana academies, then enrolled at Jefferson College (now Washington & Jefferson College), where he became a member of Beta Theta Pi.[10]

After graduating in 1850, Quay visited Mississippi, where one of his classmates lived on a plantation. They had plans to go into business giving stereopticon lectures, but the equipment broke. Unable to find suitable employment in the South, he returned to Pennsylvania, where he read law in the Pittsburgh firm of Penney and Starrett. James C. Penney, partner in the firm, stated that he "had never known a man of his age whose mind was so well disciplined and mature".[11] In late 1852, uncertain that he was suited to the law, Quay embarked on another tour of the South but was again unable to find profitable employment and returned to complete his legal studies[12] under the tutelage of Colonel Richard Roberts of Beaver.[5] He was admitted to the bar October 13, 1854, in Beaver County.[13]

In 1856, Governor James Pollock appointed Quay as prothonotary of Beaver County, to fill an unexpired term. The appointment came because the governor and his advisors respected Reverend Quay, and the young lawyer was elected to three-year terms in 1856 and 1859.[14] At this time, the Republican Party was being formed; Quay became a member[4] and was the Beaver County manager of that party's candidate for governor in 1860, Andrew Curtin.[15] Quay's success in getting delegates to the state convention from western Pennsylvania to support Curtin was crucial to his getting the nomination.[16] In October 1860, Curtin was elected, and won Beaver County by a large margin, causing him to admire Quay's political skill.[17]

American Civil War

When I met him [Quay], he did not at first impress me as a man of more than ordinary parts. He was extremely modest and unassuming in manner, with a defective sight in one eye that made his face expressionless, excepting when very warmly aroused in conversation. Under ordinary conditions he might have filled the place of secretary to the Governor without commanding the special attention of the political leaders of the State, but the most momentous events were crowded upon us at Harrisburg immediately after Curtin assumed his official duties, and Quay soon became recognized as one of the most valuable of all the men connected with the administration in meeting sudden and severe emergencies.

Alexander Kelly McClure[18]

When Curtin became governor in January 1861, he made Quay his private secretary.[18] This was a considerable advancement for a rural lawyer. At the start of the Civil War, Quay was among the earliest from Beaver County to volunteer. During May 1861, he was commissioned as a first lieutenant in the 19th Division Pennsylvania Uniformed Militia, but did not take up that place. Instead, Governor Curtin made him assistant commissary general of Pennsylvania, with the rank of lieutenant colonel. After the functions of the state commissariat were transferred to Washington, Curtin continued Quay as his private secretary. Curtin sought to be a friend of and advocate for Pennsylvania's soldiers, and hundreds of letters poured in each day, letters that the governor had decreed must be individually answered, no matter how petty the grievance. This task was delegated to Quay, and he performed it flawlessly, even reproducing Curtin's signature so perfectly even the governor could not tell the difference.[19][20]

Other tasks Quay performed for Curtin included being liaison to the legislature. The Republicans lost their majority in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in the 1861 election, but Quay was able to forge an alliance between the Republican minority and the War Democrats, assuring a legislature that would work with Curtin on war matters. Curtin found Quay's services valuable, and was reluctant to lose him, but Quay wanted a combat assignment, which in August 1862 he got, as colonel of the 134th Pennsylvania Infantry. He and his troops joined General George McClellan's Army of the Potomac in late September 1862, as it pursued General Robert E. Lee's Confederate Army of Northern Virginia after the Battle of Antietam. He did not see combat at that time, as McClellan was content to let Lee retreat into Virginia without a battle. Shortly thereafter, Quay fell ill of typhoid fever, and on medical advice, and because Curtin wanted him to serve as Pennsylvania's military agent in Washington, he submitted his resignation on December 5, 1862, though there were delays in accepting it.[21][22]

In late 1862, Union forces, Quay's among them, prepared for an attack on Fredericksburg, Virginia, on the road to Richmond, the Confederate capital. The acceptance of Quay's resignation was received on the eve of the Battle of Fredericksburg, and he refused to leave his men, persuading commanders to accept him as a voluntary aide-de-camp.[23][24] Quay was warned by the chief surgeon not to join in the battle because of his health, and was told he would die like a fool. He replied, "I'd rather die like a fool than live like a coward."[25] The attack was a disaster for Union forces, as the Confederate soldiers were well-emplaced, and could not be dislodged. Quay's troops were sent to attack the Confederate positions on Marye's Heights; hidden behind a stone wall, Confederate forces were able to unleash a torrent of fire against the attackers. Astride a horse, Quay urged his men forward, and they were able to get within 25 or 30 yards (23 to 28 meters) of the wall before retreating, with half the soldiers dead or wounded. Quay was not wounded, and his conduct earned him the Medal of Honor.[23][24]

Quay then served as Pennsylvania's military agent in Washington.[24] Although the federal government took a predominant role over the states in the Civil War, state governors appointed agents to liaise with federal officials, to see to the well-being of the state's soldiers, and to answer letters and complaints from troops. Unhappy in the role, in 1863, he secured a transfer back to Harrisburg as Curtin's military secretary, where he did similar work, and where he could help with the governor's successful re-election campaign that year.[26]

Entry into politics (1864–1872)

In 1864, Quay was elected to the state House of Representatives for Beaver and Washington counties, he was re-elected in 1865 and 1866.[27] In 1866, he became the leader of the Republican majority in the House and the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. Rarely participating in debate, he sought efficiency, causing the appropriations bills to be brought forward early in the session, rather than late, as was customary.[28][29]

In 1867, the legislature was to elect a United States Senator, since senators before 1913 were chosen by legislators, not the people. Curtin sought the seat, as did former senator and U.S. Secretary of War Simon Cameron. As well as supporting Curtin, Quay wanted to be Speaker of the Pennsylvania House, but Curtin's senatorial rivals believed that granting Quay the powers of the speakership would lead to the election of Curtin. Thus, they combined to defeat him. Cameron gained the party legislative caucus's nomination for senator, and Quay healed relations by moving to make the nomination unanimous. Cameron was thereafter elected by the full legislature.[30][31] Senator Cameron took full control of the state Republican Party over the next years, as Curtin lost power, especially when he was appointed Minister to Russia by President Ulysses S. Grant in 1869, leading to his extended absence from the state, and rising Republicans had to choose between alliance with Cameron or political oblivion. Quay chose the former. Nevertheless, not wanting to be seen as a traitor to Curtin, Quay's change of loyalty was so gradual it was not until 1872 that it was complete.[32][33]

Quay did not seek re-election to the legislature in 1867, instead returning to his hometown and founding a weekly newspaper, the Beaver Radical, which began publication in January 1868. Quay, the editor, declared it to be Republican in outlook but not devoted to any faction. Circulation grew rapidly, and by 1872, the Radical claimed to be the most-distributed weekly in western Pennsylvania. The Radical opposed President Andrew Johnson, but decried the Tenure of Office Act, that Johnson was impeached for violating, as plainly unconstitutional. The Radical also urged Northern states to support African Americans by giving full force to the Fifteenth Amendment's promise of universal male suffrage.[34][35] According to Frank Bernard Evans in his thesis on Pennsylvania politics of the 1870s, Quay made the Radical to be among "the best-known and most widely-quoted journals in the state".[36]

Cameron lieutenant (1872–1879)

Beginning shortly after the Civil War, Simon Cameron had begun to build a powerful Republican political machine in Pennsylvania.[37] The statewide machine was effectively an alliance of municipal and county Republican machines whose interests had to be harmonized by its leader, the most important being the organizations of strongly Republican Philadelphia County and Allegheny County (Pittsburgh).[38] The Pennsylvania Manufacturers Association was closely aligned with the machine, which followed a conservative course over several decades.[37] Beyond personal leadership by the boss, success required efficient party organization, a political program that could unify the party, and a failure of the Democratic Party, deemed the party of treason after the Civil War, to regain the trust of the Pennsylvania electorate.[39]

 
Senator Simon Cameron in 1874

After his return from Russia, Curtin in 1872 destroyed his remaining influence in the Pennsylvania Republican Party by supporting the Liberal Republican Party, made up of those Republicans opposed to the policies of President Grant, or alienated by the corruption in his administration. Quay fully broke with Curtin, strongly supporting the regular Republican ticket.[40][41] Quay backed Grant for re-election over the Liberal Republican/Democratic candidate, Horace Greeley of New York, as well as the Republican nominee for governor, Pennsylvania Auditor General (and former Union General) John F. Hartranft. Both Republican candidates were successful, and Quay was rewarded for his efforts for Hartranft with the post of Secretary of the Commonwealth. Returning to the center of Republican politics, he gave up the Radical, selling it to James S. Rutan, his lieutenant in the Cameron machine[42] In January 1873, Quay managed Cameron's campaign for re-election to the Senate. The Republicans had a majority of 31 overall in the legislature, but dissident Republicans were promoting the industrialist Charlemagne Tower, a political novice, for the seat. Quay disposed of the challenge by calling an early caucus of the Republicans in the legislature, which Tower was unprepared for, and Cameron won easy re-election.[43]

With Cameron re-elected to the Senate and Quay as Governor Hartranft's chief advisor, the Cameron machine was much more deeply entrenched than it had been before the Liberal Republican challenge.[44] When not in Washington, Cameron, by now in his mid-seventies, spent time traveling, increasingly leaving day-to-day administration of the machine to his son Don Cameron, Quay, and Robert Mackey,[45] a Cameron lieutenant who served five one-year terms as state treasurer in the 1860s and 1870s.[46]

Quay was a delegate to the 1876 Republican National Convention, and with Don Cameron helped frustrate the ambitions of Senator James G. Blaine of Maine in favor of those of Ohio Governor Rutherford B. Hayes.[47] Don Cameron and Quay offered Blaine's managers the state's votes in exchange for a promise to appoint a Pennsylvanian to the Cabinet but Blaine refused. The following year Quay would write to Hayes, "I am immediately responsible for the action of the Pennsylvania delegation which resulted in your nomination. Mr. Blaine will tell you this ..."[48] Quay was chairman of the state Republican Party, and helped win the state for Hayes over Samuel Tilden by fewer than 10,000 votes despite a frosty relationship with the nominee. This was the state in which Hayes won the most electoral votes. With the presidential election disputed, Quay was among the Republicans invited by President Grant to go to Louisiana, one of the states at issue, and investigate the situation there, which he did, acting as a partisan for the Republicans. An electoral commission ruled for Hayes. Grant had made Don Cameron Secretary of War; Hayes refused to retain him or appoint anyone else from Pennsylvania. Angered, Simon Cameron resigned from the Senate, though he engineered the election of his son Don by the legislature as his replacement.[49][50]

The Democrats did well in Pennsylvania's 1877 elections, making the following year's elections important, especially since Hartranft's successor was to be elected and Don Cameron's Senate seat would be filled by the 1879 legislature. With Quay and Mackey from western Pennsylvania and the Camerons based in Harrisburg, Philadelphia had no representation at the high levels of the Republican machine. They decided that Quay should relocate to Philadelphia to take on a new, and lucrative, position as County Recorder. The legislature duly created the position, and Hartranft appointed Quay, who resigned as Secretary of the Commonwealth, to it; Quay relocated to Philadelphia, taking a large double house at 11th and Spruce Streets. The maneuver backfired, as Philadelphians were resentful it was not filled by one of their own. Quay worked to elect a Republican governor and legislature, persuading out of staters like House Minority Leader James A. Garfield of Ohio to give speeches in Pennsylvania. Before returning to his home in Beaver, he stayed in Philadelphia long enough to see out the elections, in which Republican Henry M. Hoyt was narrowly elected by a plurality, and the Republicans gained a majority in both houses of the legislature. Though Mackey died on New Year's Day 1879, Don Cameron was re-elected to a full term. Quay resigned, and was re-appointed as Secretary of the Commonwealth by Governor Hoyt.[51][52] According to McClure, "It was in this campaign that Quay made himself the acknowledged Republican master in the State, as Mackey died a few weeks after the election, and Quay, green with the laurels of his great victory, became the supreme leader of the party."[53]

Rise to the Senate (1880–1887)

Quay was involved in a financial scandal in 1880. J. Blake Walters, cashier of the Pennsylvania Treasury, made deposits in favored banks using worthless securities, retaining the actual money for stock speculation with Quay and others. Amos C. Noyes was the treasurer, and with Walters gave assurances that the money would not be required from the banks until Quay and his associates had time to restore it. The speculation went badly, and when Samuel Butler, an anti-boss Republican, took office as treasurer in 1880, he demanded a full accounting of state funds. There was a deficit of about $250,000, (equivalent to $7,019,828 in 2021) for which Quay accepted responsibility and sold much of his property, with a gap of about $100,000 filled with a loan from Don Cameron, repaid in 1886 with, according to McClure, a legacy Quay had received. Quay's acceptance of responsibility satisfied the public, as did his statement that Walters (who killed himself) had acted without his instructions.[54][55] Another source of money for Quay was Standard Oil; he had come to terms with John D. Rockefeller's company in 1879 and requested a "loan" of $15,000 in 1880, something Rockefeller thought was worth it. Quay continued to deal with Standard Oil financially until his death in 1904, throughout his time in the Senate.[56]

To avoid sending a delegation supportive of Blaine to the 1880 Republican National Convention in Chicago, Don Cameron and Quay called a state convention early in the year, before the Blaine supporters could organize, and got the selected delegation to agree to vote as a unit for former president Grant, who was seeking a third term.[57] While Quay and Cameron would likely have made peace with a President Blaine to keep control of Pennsylvania, Grant was more amenable to the bosses' demands.[58] Quay and Cameron acted in spite of the fact that Blaine was widely popular in Pennsylvania.[59] The national convention deadlocked and the nomination fell to Garfield. Cameron and Quay were among the "Immortal 306", the delegates who voted for Grant on the 36th and final ballot. Although Garfield narrowly won both in Pennsylvania and nationwide, Quay's support for Grant meant that he and Cameron would not be in the president-elect's inner circle. This showed when the machine's candidate for Senate in early 1881, Henry W. Oliver, was blocked by the combined strength of the Democrats and independent Republicans; Garfield was asked by Quay to intervene, but he would not do so. The senatorship eventually fell to an independent Republican, Congressman John I. Mitchell.[60] Later in 1881, the assassination of Garfield brought Chester A. Arthur, who was more aligned with the bosses, to the White House.[61]

 
Quay eclipsed Senator Don Cameron in the Pennsylvania Republican Party.

In 1882, a replacement for Governor Hoyt was to be elected, and the Republican Party divided. The Cameron-Quay machine backed James A. Beaver, and the independent Republicans, who backed the views of the Republican Party, but abhorred the bossism, supported John Stewart. When Hoyt endorsed Stewart, Quay resigned as Secretary of the Commonwealth in protest. Democrat Robert E. Pattison was elected.[62] Part of the reason for the defeat was because Quay had insisted that Hoyt pardon legislators convicted of taking bribes to pass a bill reimbursing the Pennsylvania Railroad for losses incurred in the Railroad strike of 1877.[63] Don Cameron had backed Beaver early in the campaign; his brusque style also helped prompt the reaction which defeated the candidate, who was himself well-liked in the Republican Party.[64]

While Cameron demanded absolute loyalty to the party machine, in the years after Pattison's victory in 1882, Quay worked to reunite the party and conciliate the independent Republicans. When Blaine again sought the presidential nomination in 1884, Quay surrendered some party offices to the independents in exchange for the state party chairmanship going to his nominee, Thomas V. Cooper. Blaine was nominated, with Quay and Senator Cameron absent from the national convention, but was defeated by Democrat Grover Cleveland. With the White House in the hands of the other party, and with federal offices becoming less political due to the 1883 Pendleton Civil Service Act, Quay sought to dominate at the state level.[65] Appointed state employees, of whatever parties, were dunned a percentage of their salaries, and would lose office if they did not pay.[66] Businesses compensated Quay in cash because of his influence over members of the key committees of the state legislature. Pliable legislators were rewarded by Quay with money for themselves and their campaigns; those unwilling to deal faced well-financed candidates as they sought re-election. Friend and foe had their transactions recorded in files that became known as "Quay's coffins", along with any incidents that might embarrass them, to be brought forth as necessary. In doing so, Quay achieved a level of control over the state government that the Camerons had never reached.[65] This was aided by a sense that Quay was different from Don Cameron, according to Frank W. Leach, Quay's personal secretary, "There was a general feeling that Colonel Quay was nearer the people [than Cameron]".[67]

Requests for jobs litter the paper of politicians of this era. Quay was no exception. His correspondence with Governor James Addams Beaver invariably dealt with two subjects: getting elected and putting people into offices. Both were inseparable functions of the boss, and, with building a war chest, demanded constant attention.

Historian William Alan Blair[68]

Quay had long wanted to become a U.S. senator, if only to place himself on the same footing as Don Cameron, and McClure related that Quay had confided that he had considered taking Curtin's place in the 1867 senatorial battle. Quay wanted Senator Mitchell's seat, that would be filled by the legislature in early 1887.[69] In 1885, he sought election as state treasurer. This would allow him tremendous control over the party apparatus,[70] and a strong position from which to fight the battle to gain the Senate seat in 1887.[71] Quay, who stated the race for treasurer was one for "self-protection and self-preservation" as others maneuvered within the party, faced some criticism at his attempt to gain the office of treasurer, but had no serious opposition at the Republican convention, and was easily elected.[70] James K. Pollock, in his article on Quay for the Dictionary of American Biography, stated that Quay ran for the office of treasurer to gain vindication after the 1880 treasury scandal.[72] Possession of this office would always be critical to the Quay machine; he once stated, "I don't mind losing the governorship or a legislature now and then, but I always need the state treasuryship."[73]

In his new office, Quay had the funds of the state at his command. His ability to deposit state moneys in friendly banks led to an income of some $150,000 per year to the machine. Loans could be granted to favored individuals, with interest or security not required.[74] To gain the senatorship, Quay needed the Republicans to have a successful 1886 election. As part of the deal to become state treasurer, he had agreed to support the party's 1882 candidate, Beaver, who was now acceptable to both machine and independent Republicans. Quay became the power behind the Beaver campaign. When one reporter asked Quay to arrange an interview with Beaver, Quay agreed and handed the reporter an unsealed envelope with a note inside, "Dear Beaver: Don't talk. M.S. Quay."[70] With a united party at his back, Beaver was elected along with the entire Republican statewide ticket, and the Republicans had nearly a two-thirds majority in each house of the legislature.[75]

Determined to be elected by as near a unanimous vote as possible, Quay arranged conferences in each congressional district to which the legislators of that district were invited and told to support the majority sentiment, that is for Quay. On January 4, 1887, the Republican legislative caucus nominated Quay with 154 votes to 9 for the runner-up, Galusha Grow. When the two houses of the legislature voted, Quay received two-thirds majorities in each, and was declared elected a senator.[75] According to John W. Oliver in his journal article on Quay, "By this time Quay had become the undisputed political leader of Pennsylvania. More than that, he was rapidly becoming one of the recognized leaders of the Republican party throughout the nation."[34]

U. S. Senate

1888 presidential campaign

Col. [Thomas J.] Grimeson still hopes to be nominated by the Republicans for State Treasurer. Quay hopes not. The friends of Grimeson recognize with sadness the fact that Quay's hopes generally become realities.

"Political Notes", The Valley Spirit (Chambersburg, Pa.), August 8, 1887, p. 3

Although Quay's first term in the Senate began March 4, 1887, Congress at that time did not convene until December, and so, not yet sworn in, Quay remained as treasurer; he resigned in August. He chose state senator Boies Penrose of Philadelphia to act for him while he was absent in Washington.[76] With Quay away for part of the year in Washington, he needed someone in Harrisburg to deal with the governor and legislature, and run the state organization.[77] Penrose proved an effective choice; Quay, through Penrose, would exercise unparalleled power over state politics. Congress convened in December, but with Democratic President Cleveland still in office, the term was relatively quiet for Quay.[76]

As the 1888 Republican National Convention in Chicago approached, several favorite son candidates were seeking support to become the nominee to challenge Cleveland. Blaine had been ambiguous about whether he would be a candidate, though he still had adherents. Quay was the chairman of the Pennsylvania delegation, which did not strongly support any particular candidate, though there were some leanings toward Ohio Senator John Sherman – the Camerons were related by marriage to him. Quay was willing to support Senator Sherman, but primarily he wanted a candidate who, if victorious, would reward Pennsylvania for its support.[78] The convention deadlocked; Quay, realizing that Sherman could not win, opened negotiations with the managers of former senator Benjamin Harrison of Indiana. Quay wanted a written commitment to appoint a Pennsylvanian acceptable to Quay to the cabinet, but Harrison refused. Nevertheless, as the convention swung towards Harrison on the eighth and final ballot, Quay cast Pennsylvania's votes for the Indianan, but the circumstances did not give the state the credit for getting Harrison the nomination as Quay had hoped.[79]

At the time, the chairman of the Republican National Committee (RNC) served as campaign manager for the presidential candidate, and Quay, a member of that committee, remained away from its post-convention session in New York. He was elected as RNC chairman by a large margin.[80] Quay recruited Philadelphia businessman John Wanamaker to do much fundraising. Wanamaker contributed $10,000 himself, led a committee of ten businessmen who contributed an equal sum, and raised over $200,000. Though the sums were not outlandish by later standards, they were at the time the largest amount ever raised in a presidential campaign.[81] Among those Quay appointed to the national executive campaign committee was Cleveland industrialist Mark Hanna, introducing the future senator to national politics.[72] Quay's technique of assessing corporations for campaign contributions equal to a percentage of their assets would be copied by Hanna when he was RNC chair during the 1896 election.[82]

 
Quay drops an extinguisher on Blaine to prevent another damaging remark, Puck magazine, September 26, 1888

While Quay ran the overall organization out of New York City, Harrison conducted a front porch campaign from his hometown of Indianapolis. Quay originally opposed Harrison's plan, but in August, wired to the candidate, "Keep at it, you're making votes."[83] Blaine's 1884 campaign had been derailed when Rev. Samuel D. Burchard, at a rally with the candidate present, called the Democrats the party of "Rum, Romanism and Rebellion", and both Quay and Harrison were determined to avoid another damaging unscripted remark.[84][85] After Blaine gave a speech describing trusts as innocuous business associations with which no one should interfere, a position contrary to the Republican platform, Quay saw to it that he stuck to less-controversial topics, and limited his speaking engagements.[86]

Quay believed that vote fraud committed by Tammany Hall had given Cleveland New York's electoral votes in 1884, and the election, and the senator was determined to prevent a repetition. To ensure that voter fraud did not occur in New York City, Quay hired agents whose work was ostensibly to compile a city directory, but which would contain the names of all of the city's eligible voters, greatly reducing the scope for voter fraud. Once the work was completed, Quay made it known. He offered rewards for providing evidence resulting in convictions for illegal registration or illegal voting, something the public took more seriously after the first reward paid was for the conviction of a Republican.[87][88] McClure stated that Quay used some of the campaign fund to bribe Tammany Hall leaders who were disenchanted with Cleveland.[89] He also sent money to win Southern congressional districts, and hired Pinkerton detectives to protect GOP-voting African-Americans there, leading to gains and Republican control of the House of Representatives in the next Congress.[63]

There was the start of a scandal just before the election when a letter from Republican campaign treasurer William W. Dudley offering advice as to how to organize men to vote multiple times was pulled from the mails. Quay responded with outrage that a letter had been opened, threatening prosecutions for interfering with the mails, and the election occurred before the scandal could fully develop.[90] Although Cleveland got more votes in New York City, Harrison won New York and the presidency despite losing the national popular vote. Harrison credited "Providence" with his victory, a remark which prompted Quay to state that "Providence hadn't a damn thing to do with it",[87] adding that Harrison would never know how close to the gates of the penitentiary some of his supporters had come to make him president.[91] Despite Harrison's comments, the successful 1888 campaign gave Quay a national reputation, proving he could elect a president.[92]

President-elect Harrison appointed one Pennsylvanian to his cabinet: Wanamaker, who took the patronage-rich position of Postmaster General. Quay, who did not want a cabinet post for himself, would have preferred Wanamaker to receive a diplomatic post, but supported the appointment once it was made clear, for it at least put a Pennsylvanian in the cabinet.[93] Nevertheless, he and Senator Cameron were incensed, as Harrison had failed to abide by the usual custom of discussing the nomination in advance with the nominee's home-state senators, and Wanamaker's appointment led to a break between Quay and Harrison.[94] The appointment of Wanamaker proved a mixed blessing at best for Quay, since it elevated to high office a man who would be a thorn in his side for years to come,[93] and the new Postmaster General enraged him by removing one of Quay's aides from his job with the post office.[95]

Harrison years (1889–1893)

Quay and Harrison quickly came to differ about presidential appointments of federal officials. The president wanted to keep control of appointments and minimize the possibility of appointing corrupt people who might reflect badly on him; the state bosses had made promises during the campaign they needed to make good on or lose influence. The situation was made worse when the newspapers characterized each Pennsylvania appointment as either a victory for Quay or for Harrison, something that both men were aware of.[96] In one incident, Quay handed Harrison a list of people he and Cameron wanted appointed, and replied, when the president asked for their qualifications, that the senators from Pennsylvania vouched for them. Harrison refused to appoint without making investigations, saying he could not blindly delegate the power of appointment.[97] In another incident, Quay tried to discourage an office seeker by telling him the president likely would disregard a recommendation. The office seeker, incredulous, asked, "Doesn't he know that you elected him?" to which Quay replied, "No. Benny thinks God did it."[98]

When Congress convened in December 1889, the Republicans, in full control of government for the first time since the Grant administration, were anxious to get their legislative priorities through that had been campaign pledges in 1888: tariff legislation, monetary legislation, and an elections bill that would allow African-Americans in the South to more freely cast a ballot. The monetary legislation, the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, passed Congress in May 1890.[99] The tariff bill, the McKinley Tariff (named for its sponsor, House Ways and Means Committee chair William McKinley of Ohio), passed the House in May 1890 with no Democrats in favor, but languished in the Senate,[100] while the Lodge Bill, to reform federal elections in the South, passed the House in July, but faced uncertain prospects in the Senate, as white Southerners saw it as a return to Reconstruction.[100]

 
Thomas Nast cartoon calling Quay "a branded criminal", 1890

Quay wanted the tariff to pass because it was supported by many manufacturers who helped finance the Republican Party, especially in Pennsylvania, and he had made promises of protectionist policies during the 1888 campaign. On the other hand, African Americans had no financial gifts to bestow.[101] He also believed the Lodge Bill would provoke renewed sectional conflict.[102] He sought to break the deadlock over the two bills by introducing a resolution in the Republican caucus to set a definite date to vote on the McKinley Tariff while postponing consideration of most other bills, including the Lodge elections legislation, until the next session of Congress in December. This appalled Harrison and bitterly divided the Republican Senate caucus. Eventually a compromise was worked out whereby the Republicans agreed to press the tariff legislation and to bring up the Lodge Bill on the first day of the new session in December.[103][104] Harrison signed the McKinley Tariff into law on October 1, 1890.[105] When the Lodge Bill came to the floor of the Senate in December, Southern senators announced their intention to filibuster, and Republicans with other priorities, mostly from the West, joined with the Democrats to indefinitely postpone its consideration.[106]

In the early part of the Harrison administration there began to be newspaper exposés about Quay and his methods. Although Quay supporters hailed him as a political genius, others deemed him a sinister power behind Harrison's throne. Others who joined the ranks opposing Quay were Pennsylvania reformers such as Henry Lea and Wharton Barker, and disappointed rivals for political power such as Christopher Magee of Pittsburgh.[107] In early 1890, the New York World published a series of articles bringing up incidents from Quay's past, beginning with the 1867 Senate race, in which he was accused of accepting payments to recruit support for Simon Cameron. Quay responded with silence, which he was wont to do.[108] In the 1890 elections, Republicans not only lost control of Congress, but in Pennsylvania, the Democrat, Pattison, was elected governor for a second, non-consecutive term. When asked why the Republican candidate, George W. Delamater had failed, Quay attributed it to "a lack of votes",[109] but historian William Alan Blair stated that Delamater was defeated due to the opposition to Quay.[67]

 
This 1890 Puck cover satirizes Quay's refusal to respond to the allegations.

Quay finally answered the allegations against him in February 1891, addressing the Senate, which he rarely did, and calling the allegations "false and foul to the core".[110] This did little to satisfy his opponents, and there were calls for his resignation as RNC chairman. Harrison had long desired his departure, and was unwilling to defend him. Quay in June 1891 announced that he would not lead the next presidential campaign, and resigned the following month.[111] Quay was not supportive of Harrison as the president faced renomination in 1892, but also disliked the only real rival, Blaine.[112] At the 1892 Republican National Convention in Minneapolis, Quay realized that Harrison's renomination could not be prevented, and himself voted for McKinley, by then governor of Ohio, who was third in the balloting although not a declared candidate. Not wishing to be deprived of patronage if Harrison was re-elected, the senator pledged to work for the Republican ticket, but did little until October, when after negotiations and unknown concessions, he appeared at campaign headquarters, and pledged to help raise money. Nevertheless, Harrison was defeated by former president Cleveland.[113] According to Pollock, Quay's "break with Harrison and his failure to take an active part in the campaign of 1892 was [sic] one of the prime factors in the Democratic victory of that year".[72]

The 1892 legislative elections were also of concern to Quay as the following year's legislature would vote on whether to give him a second term as senator. There was opposition to Quay within the Republican Party, largely centered on Philadelphia, though Pittsburgh bosses such as Magee were also opposed to him, and put forth Congressman John Dalzell of Allegheny County as a rival. In addition to bossism, Quay was attacked for his sporadic attendance in Congress, which he defended by stating he was still often ill from his exertions in the 1888 presidential race, and had to spend time at his Florida home at St. Lucie. His statements were bolstered when he fell ill early in 1892, causing his wife Agnes to make one of her rare trips away from Beaver to tend to him in Florida. Dalzell was vulnerable to attack as a railroad and corporation lawyer, and an agreement was reached to place both their names on the Republican primary ballot, local legislators in theory being bound to abide by the result. With support from fellow Civil War veterans, Quay defeated Dalzell in almost every county, was the overwhelming choice of the Republican legislative caucus in January 1893, and won his second term later that month with two-thirds of the legislature voting for him.[114]

Cleveland administration; rise of McKinley (1893–1896)

With Cleveland back in the White House, the Republicans had only minority status in Congress. The Democrats wanted to revisit the McKinley Tariff, but other matters, such as the repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, had higher priority, and it was not until 1894 that what became known as the Wilson-Gorman Tariff passed the House. Seeking to preserve protectionist tariffs for Pennsylvania's manufacturers, Quay threatened to talk the original bill to death. Since he had not addressed the Senate on a legislative matter in his first term, he was not taken seriously, but he proceeded to do what was very close to that, for the bill that eventually emerged from the Senate was so transformed that President Cleveland refused to sign it, letting it pass into law without his signature. Quay kept control of the Senate floor for over two months, from April 14 to June 16, 1894, himself consuming 14 legislative days, and did not conclude his remarks until he and other pro-tariff legislators had secured a compromise that preserved tariffs on manufactures, as favored by Pennsylvania industry, and included other protectionist provisions.[115] John Oliver wrote, "one can readily see the connection between Quay's fight for a high protective tariff and liberal contributions from the Pennsylvania manufacturers".[116]

 
"Pennsylvania's disgrace": Quay is shown auctioning off his convention support. McKinley stands, center, among the bidders.

Quay faced further rebellion within the Pennsylvania Republican Party in 1895. Republicans had elected Daniel H. Hastings as governor in 1894; he was the candidate the reform element had wanted in 1890 instead of Delamater, and, this time, Quay acquiesced in his nomination. With Hastings elected, the anti-Quay faction pressed its advantage, defeating Penrose in his attempt to gain the Republican nomination for mayor of Philadelphia in early 1895.[117] With Governor Hastings friendly to the opposition, Quay brought the matter to a head by challenging the opposition-aligned chair of the Republican State Committee for his position. He appealed to rural politicians, alleging that the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh machines were trying to take them over. At the state convention, a deal was reached whereby Quay would get the post, and he moved the adoption of a platform that committed the party to reform. This delighted the opposition, and many embraced Quay as a reformed sinner.[118]

McKinley acted early to begin his presidential campaign, meeting with Republican politicians from the South in early 1895 at Thomasville, Georgia, the winter home of his friend and advisor, Mark Hanna. On his return north, Hanna met with former Michigan governor Russell Alger, who was acting as emissary for Quay and New York's Republican political boss, former senator Thomas C. Platt, to discuss a possible deal for the presidential nomination. Despite this and a second meeting, between Hanna and Quay, McKinley insisted he would make no deals to gain the Republican nomination. Platt and Quay decided to promote favorite son candidates to deny McKinley a first-round majority at the 1896 Republican National Convention and force him to the bargaining table.[119][120] According to historian Clarence A. Stern, the opposition to McKinley "appears to have been to a large extent inspired by the desire of such politicians to gain the greatest possible advantage from the existing situation".[121] Quay was Pennsylvania's favorite son and he found considerable enthusiasm in the state for nominating a Pennsylvanian as the state had been the largest to be consistently loyal to the party, but had never received a place on a Republican ticket. Assured of most of Pennsylvania's 64 votes, Quay journeyed to McKinley's home in Canton, Ohio, for discussions, but, according to the press, received only unspecified assurances. After Governor Hastings nominated Quay for president, the senator received 6112 votes, third behind McKinley, who was nominated, and Speaker of the House Thomas B. Reed of Maine.[119][120]

Although Quay was reluctant, he served on the national campaign advisory committee under the new RNC chairman, Hanna, reversing their positions from 1888. Quay played only a small role in the fall campaign, helping to run the campaign's New York headquarters, and making recommendations that Hanna spend more money in several Southern states, part of which Hanna agreed to. McKinley won the election over the Democratic and Populist candidate, William Jennings Bryan, winning Pennsylvania by almost 300,000 votes, providing nearly half of his margin in the popular vote.[122]

Battles with Wanamaker; fight for re-election (1896–1901)

Don Cameron was to retire as senator when his term expired in 1897, and former postmaster general Wanamaker wanted his seat. Although Wanamaker gave his usual $10,000 to the Republican presidential candidate, he was not able to gain Quay's backing to become senator, as Quay feared that should he not gain re-election in 1899, Wanamaker might take power in the state party.[123] According to McClure, the two initially agreed, but the pact fell apart when Wanamaker named someone to conduct financial transactions who was unacceptable to the senator. Wanamaker made speeches throughout Pennsylvania to promote himself as a senatorial candidate, and sought the endorsement of legislative candidates, but was faced with the strength of the Quay machine, which had the support of a majority of the elected Republican legislators. In January 1897, Penrose defeated Wanamaker in the Republican caucus, 133–75, and was elected as Pennsylvania's junior senator.[124] An angered Wanamaker would constantly attack and oppose Quay until the senator's death in 1904.[125]

 
This August 1897 Puck cartoon shows McKinley (center) surrendering the sword of patronage to Republican political bosses (from left) Platt, Hanna and Quay

In the aftermath of the Senate battle, President McKinley turned over patronage appointments in Pennsylvania to Quay and Penrose; Wanamaker requested that a neighbor of his be appointed postmaster of a fourth-class post office, but was turned down.[126] Wanamaker entered the campaign for the Republican nomination for governor in 1898, campaigning statewide and delivering speeches on "Quayism and Boss Domination in Pennsylvania Politics". He was defeated by Congressman William A. Stone, a Quay loyalist.[127] Nevertheless, during the fall campaign, Wanamaker made 140 speeches, hoping to generate enough opposition to Quay to defeat his re-election bid when the legislature met in January 1899.[128]

On October 3, 1898, Quay was arrested for conspiracy to defraud the People's Bank of Philadelphia. Quay had arranged in 1896 for $1,000,000 of state funds (equivalent to $32,572,000 in 2021) to be deposited in it and had persuaded John S. Hopkins, cashier and manager of the bank, that the funds be invested in the Metropolitan Traction Company of New York, sending a telegram: "If you buy and carry a thousand Met for me I will shake the plum tree", believed by investigators to mean that funds from the state treasury would be used to cover the speculation.[129][130] The stock collapsed, the bank failed, and Hopkins fatally shot himself.[66][131] It was alleged that the bank was paying the interest on state funds not to the state treasury, but to Quay.[132] In spite of the allegations, Stone was victorious by over 110,000 votes.[133]

 
Homer Davenport cartoon depicting Quay "held by the enemy" (Wanamaker) and prevented from going to the Senate

Quay was the choice of the Republican legislative caucus in January 1899, but some remained away and his support was not enough for the necessary majority of the legislature with the two houses meeting in joint assembly. For the next three months, the legislature deadlocked as Quay's term in the Senate ended, leaving a vacancy. Quay had a sufficient hold over the Democratic legislative leaders to prevent them from uniting with the anti-Quay Republicans to elect a senator, and the deadlock persisted through 79 ballots. Quay was finally brought to trial on the allegations in April 1899, but the prosecution rested an hour after the legislature adjourned, having failed to elect a senator, and he was quickly acquitted, leading Quay's defenders to allege that the indictment had been purely political.[134]

Within an hour of the acquittal, Governor Stone appointed Quay to fill the vacant Senate seat.[135] Since at the time the Constitution limited governor's appointments to the Senate to when a vacancy occurred during the recess of the legislature, there were immediate questions as to whether this was a valid appointment,[136][137] and when Congress convened in December, Quay was not seated, but his credentials were referred to a committee.[138] In January 1900, that committee recommended that Quay not be seated by a 5–4 vote,[139] and in April the Senate refused to seat Quay by a vote of 33–32 in a vote that cut across party lines, with the Republicans against Quay including Hanna,[140][141] who had become senator from Ohio in 1897.[142]

Angered by Hanna, Quay found the opportunity for revenge at the 1900 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia. With the death of Vice President Garret Hobart in 1899, McKinley needed a new running mate. Some supported New York Governor Theodore Roosevelt, seen as a war hero and a reformer. Among those who wanted Roosevelt on the national ticket was Platt, who did not want him as governor and figured he would be harmless as vice president. Hanna was appalled at the prospect of putting someone he deemed impulsive so near the reins of power. When approached by Platt, Quay was happy to agree to help, in part because of a desire to avenge himself on Hanna. According to McClure, "it was the desertion of Quay by Hanna in the contest for Quay's admission to the Senate that made Roosevelt the nominee for Vice-President against his own earnest protest, and thus made him President of the United States."[143][144]

In August 1900, the Republican State Convention endorsed Quay and denounced the Senate's action, urging the following year's legislature to return him to the Senate. With Wanamaker again making speeches during the fall campaign, Quay also took to the campaign trail. Despite serving two terms in the Senate, he had rarely made a public address, but spoke 19 times across Pennsylvania in October and November 1900. The McKinley/Roosevelt ticket was elected, winning Pennsylvania, but it was uncertain whether Quay had enough support in the legislature to be elected.[145]

Not enough Republicans attended the legislative caucus to provide a majority for Quay leaving him four votes short of a majority to elect. Quay was elected because two Democratic legislators voted for him, and two others remained away from the voting. According to McClure, "only one of Quay's masterly political ingenuity and skillful control of Democrats of easy virtue could have won out in the fight.[146] One of the crucial votes in electing Quay was an ill Republican, brought on a stretcher from the hospital to the state capitol to cast his ballot. He languished, forgotten, in a hallway as his bearers joined in the celebrations of Quay's victory, got pneumonia and died. He was given an impressive funeral: both Quay and Penrose attended, wearing silk hats.[147]

Final years and death (1901–1904)

 
Quay celebrates his re-election under a plum tree, January 1901. From the Pittsburgh Commercial Gazette.

Quay was sworn in to his third term in the Senate on January 18, 1901, in a Senate chamber filled with his supporters, congratulatory telegrams, and flowers. In May, he let it be known he would not seek another term; the long battle over the seat had sapped his strength, and he planned no new political battles. In general, he held to that resolution, though with a few exceptions,[148] and according to McClure, once he made that announcement, "the factional feeling that had harassed him for many years gradually perished".[149]

The assassination of McKinley in September 1901 made Roosevelt president. The fact that he had been instrumental in getting Roosevelt the vice-presidential nomination in 1900 gave Quay little alternative but to support Roosevelt, and the president kept Quay loyal by giving him a major voice in patronage in Pennsylvania, even as he pursued reform policies. With Hanna opposed to Roosevelt and a presidential hopeful for 1904, Roosevelt's allying with Quay, and also Platt, kept the bosses from uniting against him. Roosevelt sometimes refused Quay's requests, as when the senator asked that a Pennsylvanian be appointed to the Isthmian Canal Commission, charged with building the Panama Canal. The president stated that appointment to the commission had to be entirely on merit.[150]

Continued divisions in the Pennsylvania Republican Party led to losses in the off-year elections of 1901, and Quay feared this would get worse in 1902, when there would be elections for the governor and the legislature. John P. Elkin had wide support for governor among Quay's faction of the party, and had defended the senator before the Senate committee considering his credentials in 1899 and 1900. Quay believed it was necessary to nominate for governor a judge whose character was beyond suspicion.[151] Hanna favored Elkin's nomination, and Quay feared that the Ohioan might control Pennsylvania's delegation to the next national convention through Elkin. Thus, Quay pressed for the nomination of Judge Samuel Pennypacker of Philadelphia.[152] Pennypacker was reluctant when approached by a Quay emissary, but agreed; he wrote that his election as governor "came to me without the lifting of a finger, the expenditure of a dime, or the utterance of a sigh".[37] Pennypacker's election postponed the divide in the Republican Party in the state until after Quay's death.[153] In office, Pennypacker generally did what Quay wanted, but sometimes differed from him over appointments to office.[154]

One battle Quay undertook in his last years was statehood for Oklahoma, New Mexico and Arizona. Both major parties had in their platforms pledged support for statehood, and a bill to accomplish this passed the House of Representatives in 1902. One reason Quay wanted the bill to pass is that it might allow William "Bull" Andrews, a longtime Quay lieutenant with financial interests in New Mexico Territory, to reach the Senate. Quay, a member of the Committee on Territories, amassed support in the Senate for the bill, likely enough to pass, but the committee chair, Albert Beveridge of Indiana, felt the three territories were not yet ready for statehood, and used Senate procedures to evade a vote on the bill through the remainder of the session. Quay remaining in Washington through the winter of 1903 to seek passage of his bill, rather than spending part of the winter in Florida as usual, hurt his health. The territories did not attain statehood during Quay's lifetime.[155]

 
Quay in Native American garb, 1904

Oliver considered Quay a "real friend of the American Indian".[156] Throughout his Senate career, he was an advocate for Native Americans, but especially was so in his later years. Although Indians had no contributions to give to Quay's machine, he took up their causes, believing they were treated badly by the Federal government. He was a member of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs; when Chief Joseph and his party came to Washington, they expended all their funds and were unable to get home, Quay paid their railroad fare.[157] During his visits to Florida, he took an interest in the welfare of the Seminole Indians.[158]

Beginning in about 1903, Quay's health deteriorated.[157] He went to his brother's country estate at Morganza, Pennsylvania, in April 1904, but knowing he was dying, he asked to be conveyed home to Beaver.[159] Suffering from gastritis, he continued to lose weight and strength.[160] Quay could read and speak several languages, possessing one of the finest private libraries in America.[72] One day in late May 1904, he asked to be taken into his library, where he read a little, handled the volumes lovingly, and after he fell asleep, was taken back to his room. He died in Beaver on May 28, 1904.[160]

Quay was buried, in Beaver, on May 31, 1904. Shops throughout the area were closed. Trains brought the general public from Pittsburgh and dignitaries from Harrisburg and Washington. Among the senators attending the funeral were Republicans Penrose, Platt and Joseph B. Foraker of Ohio, and Democrats Arthur Gorman of Maryland and Benjamin Tillman of South Carolina. His headstone gives his name and those of his parents, his dates of birth and death, and implora pacem (Latin for "Pray for peace").[161]

Family and sites

 
Agnes Barclay Quay

In 1855, Quay married Agnes Barclay (1831–1911); they had five children; the eldest, Richard Rogers Quay, served in the Pennsylvania legislature. The others were named Andrew Gregg Curtin Quay (a career army officer), Mary Agnew Quay, Coral Quay, and Susan Willard Quay.[162]

In 1905, Hanover Square in Beaver was renamed Quay Square.[163] A historical marker to Quay stands at 3rd and Insurance streets there.[63] The Matthew S. Quay House in Beaver has been designated as a National Historic Landmark. Another of his residences, the Roberts-Quay House in Philadelphia, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.[164]

In recognition of his efforts towards New Mexico statehood, there is a Quay County in New Mexico, named for him in 1903 when it was established, as well as a small unincorporated community known as Quay.[165] The former town of Quay, Oklahoma, was also named for him.[166] A statue of Quay stands in the rotunda of the Pennsylvania Capitol in Harrisburg.[167]

Quay spent much time in Florida over the last fifteen years of his life, both for his health and for the fishing; local historian Jean Ellen Wilson dubbed him "St. Lucie County's first snowbird."[168] Called "Florida's Third Senator" by Judge Minor Jones, he supported federal projects along the Indian River, where he owned property. Two of the houses he owned still stood as of 2010.[168] In his honor, the municipality of Woodley, Florida was named Quay in 1902, but in 1925, amid the Florida land boom, it was renamed Winter Beach.[169]

Assessment

Under Quay’s leadership, Pennsylvania became the most Republican and boss-dominated state in the final decades of the century. His success required considerable manipulation, because he was not able to control the state’s burgeoning cities, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. With his strength residing in the countryside, he kept the cities stirred up by pushing through the legislature charter reforms to limit the power of emerging city leaders or to pit the two cities against each other, but they nevertheless retained their Republican character. Thus, under his direction, the state delivered a Republican-dominated congressional delegation every two years and provided Republican electors every quadrennium. Quay attributed this unbroken success to an application of his definition of politics: "the art of taking money from the few and votes from the many under the pretext of protecting the one from the other."

Historian James A. Kehl[4]

Quay's death sparked renewed debate about him,[170] though McClure stated that upon his death, "friend and foe bowed regretfully over the grave of Pennsylvania's ablest and most chivalrous political gladiator".[171] The North American of Philadelphia wrote that though Quay's career was "a record of sustained victory", his death "has removed from Pennsylvania a malign influence which for a generation has been the curse and shame of the Commonwealth [of Pennsylvania]".[172] President Roosevelt sent his condolences,[5] and Governor Pennypacker stated that, "now that he is gone, the people of this state will know what they have lost and what they never quite appreciated."[173]

By taking power from the Camerons in the mid-1880s, Quay restored the Pennsylvania Republican Party to power there at a time it was divided and out of office at both the state and federal levels, and continued the state as one of the largest and most loyal to the Republican Party. He was able to work with and conciliate many of those whom Don Cameron had alienated.[174] Blair wrote that Quay's techniques were to "work one-on-one; keep quiet; maneuver behind the scenes".[175] According to Pollock, Quay "is chiefly to be remembered for his brilliant and consummate genius as a politician. Never in the history of Pennsylvania, with all of its great politicians, has there been a man with such great powers of leadership in political organization. His whole life was a constant fight."[72] Nevertheless, "many of his contemporaries believed him to be an utterly corrupt man, and yet his methods were no worse than those of his adversaries. He was certainly one of the best-hated men in politics."[72] Wilson stated of Quay that from the time of his election as senator, "various combinations of avowed foes and turncoat friends fought to topple him; reformers attempted to wrest power from his grasp and destroy his political machine. Often his political survival was in doubt; there were times he survived by a very slim margin. He was indicted, arrested, beaten at the polls, attacked from the pulpit, criticized in the press. He endured to make two presidents and to serve three terms in the Senate."[7] Oliver deemed Quay, "the most colorful leader in Pennsylvania's history ... No man in all political history ever excelled him as a leader, a strategist, or an organizer".[176]

Quay rarely addressed the Senate; his power was behind the scenes, exercised over dinner and in committee rooms. He authored no major legislation, his interest was in being able to control the flow of legislation. He chaired no major committees, but led the Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. Almost every member of Congress needed a post office or other building to be constructed in his state or district, and his road to that goal lay through Quay, who could exact a price.[4] According to Wendy J. Schiller and Charles Stewart in their book on the legislative election of senators, "for Quay, holding a Senate seat was merely another means of keeping control over his political empire; he was far better known for keeping his eyes peeled on Pennsylvania politics than on the business conducted on the Senate floor."[177]

Patronage in the hands of Quay was profitable: although Wanamaker's 1898 estimate that Quay controlled 14,705 government positions was possibly an exaggeration, the many positions available in a large state like Pennsylvania, where the holders or would-be holders could be dunned for contributions, raised large sums of money that Quay controlled.[178] Such money was key to Quay's power. While state treasurer, he detected loopholes in the laws governing the office, and used them to his advantage, not only during his term of office, but over the next two decades as a series of loyalists occupied that office.[4] Quay kept close control of the purse strings, deciding where money should be doled out.[179] His successor as Pennsylvania's Republican boss, Penrose, stated, "Mr. Quay made it his policy to keep at least one hand on the public purse."[73] He used state money and contributions from industrialists to benefit himself and elect favored candidates. This helped make participation in politics expensive since it required any candidate not acceptable to Quay to raise large sums of money to be successful.[172] Nevertheless, by the close of Quay's career, the power of patronage was becoming an embarrassment, as he had too many friends and allies expecting preferment. In one case, Quay avoided making nineteen enemies by submitting twenty candidates for an office to Governor Stone, and got him to reject them all. Stone then announced his own selection: someone acceptable to Quay.[180]

By the turn of the 20th century, progressive reformers sought to eliminate the boss system, and saw Quay as a prime target, resulting in the re-election deadlock of 1899.[4] After Quay died, the Pennsylvania Republican Party fell into factions, first squabbling over the Senate seat (which fell to the state attorney general, Philander C. Knox) and then losing the election for treasurer in 1905 in a state Roosevelt had carried with two-thirds of the vote the previous year.[181] Pennypacker responded by calling the legislature into special session to pass reform legislation.[182] In controlling the machine after Quay's death (which he did until his own death in 1921), Penrose allowed reform measures such as the direct primary and a requirement of examinations for civil service jobs in Philadelphia.[183][184]

Kehl suggested that Quay, by the nature of his position as boss and senator, concerned himself more with the welfare of Pennsylvania than that of the nation:

Quay was even more committed to the status quo than most legislators were. Serving Pennsylvania rather than the United States, he contributed little to the national legislative program of his party. He was content to sit in silence while senatorial discussion resounded on all sides; he never championed any principle, not even the Republican doctrine of protection[ism]. Although he did speak on the tariff, he pronounced no theory, but merely demanded specific schedules for the iron and steel producers of his state. Once local appetites were appeased, he lapsed into legislative indifference until another issue important to his constituents arose. At the end of his career, such self-interest was disturbing to Republican leadership in the Senate. With his passing, many colleagues tacitly hoped for a successor more committed to issues national in scope and substantive in character.[185]

Notes

  1. ^ "Col. Quay in the saddle". The Philadelphia Inquirer. July 12, 1888. p. 1.
  2. ^ "Quay is out". Boston Daily Globe. July 30, 1891. p. 2.
  3. ^ a b John Augustus Smull, ed. (1890). Smull's Legislative Hand Book and Manual of the State of Pennsylvania. pp. 254–255, 260.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Kehl, James A. (February 1, 2000). "Quay, Matthew Stanley (1833–1904), politician". American National Biography. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.0500639.
  5. ^ a b c "Quay's career ends". The Altoona Mirror. May 30, 1904. p. 2.
  6. ^ Pennypacker, p. 281.
  7. ^ a b Wilson, Jean Ellen. "An original snowbird". Indian River Magazine.
  8. ^ Kehl, p. 4.
  9. ^ Kehl, pp. 4–5.
  10. ^ Johnson, L.E. (2010). Beta Statesmen. The Beta Theta Pi Foundation. p. 7 – via Issuu.com.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. ^ Kehl, pp. 5, 8.
  12. ^ Kehl, pp. 8–9.
  13. ^ Bausman Vol 1, p. 367.
  14. ^ Kehl, p. 9.
  15. ^ Kehl, p. 10.
  16. ^ Evans, p. 18.
  17. ^ Oliver, pp. 2–3.
  18. ^ a b McClure Vol 1, p. 457.
  19. ^ Kehl, pp. 9–11.
  20. ^ McClure Vol 1, p. 458.
  21. ^ Kehl, pp. 12–13.
  22. ^ McClure Vol 1, pp. 458–460.
  23. ^ a b Kehl, pp. 14–15.
  24. ^ a b c McClure Vol 1, p. 461.
  25. ^ Oliver, p. 3.
  26. ^ Kehl, pp. 16–17.
  27. ^ "Matthew Stanley Quay". Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Retrieved August 19, 2022.
  28. ^ McClure Vol 1, pp. 461–462.
  29. ^ Kehl, p. 20.
  30. ^ McClure Vol 1, pp. 462–464.
  31. ^ Kehl, pp. 21–22.
  32. ^ McClure Vol 2, pp. 208–211.
  33. ^ Kehl, pp. 23–24, 31.
  34. ^ a b Oliver, p. 4.
  35. ^ Kehl, pp. 31–34.
  36. ^ Evans, p. 19.
  37. ^ a b c Berman, p. 182.
  38. ^ Evans, p. 20.
  39. ^ Evans, pp. ii, 28.
  40. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 215.
  41. ^ Kehl, p. 37.
  42. ^ Kehl, pp. 37–38.
  43. ^ Evans, pp. 60–62.
  44. ^ Evans, p. 71.
  45. ^ Kahan, pp. 263–264.
  46. ^ Kehl, pp. 35–35.
  47. ^ Kehl, pp. 38–39.
  48. ^ Kahan, pp. 238–239.
  49. ^ Kehl, pp. 39–42.
  50. ^ Kahan, pp. 269–271.
  51. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 499.
  52. ^ Kehl, pp. 43–45.
  53. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 497.
  54. ^ Kehl, pp. 64–66.
  55. ^ McClure Vol 2, pp. 503–505.
  56. ^ Hawke, p. 136.
  57. ^ Kehl, pp. 46–49.
  58. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 507.
  59. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 509.
  60. ^ Kehl, pp. 49–51.
  61. ^ Kehl, p. 52.
  62. ^ Kehl, pp. 53–55.
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  66. ^ a b Blair, p. 81.
  67. ^ a b Blair, p. 83.
  68. ^ Blair, p. 82.
  69. ^ McClure Vol 2, pp. 558–559.
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  71. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 558.
  72. ^ a b c d e f Pollock, p. 297.
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  75. ^ a b McClure Vol 2, pp. 562–565.
  76. ^ a b Kehl, pp. 84–85.
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  79. ^ Kehl, pp. 88–92.
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  81. ^ Gibbons, pp. 258–262.
  82. ^ Horner, p. 195.
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  87. ^ a b "Matthew Quay and the 1888 Presidential Election". United States Senate. Retrieved August 29, 2022.
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  89. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 571.
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  93. ^ a b Kehl, pp. 118–119.
  94. ^ Ershkowitz, p. 228.
  95. ^ Ershkowitz, pp. 228–229.
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  97. ^ Calhoun, pp. 216–217.
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  100. ^ a b Calhoun, pp. 270–271.
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  113. ^ Kehl, pp. 156–176.
  114. ^ Kehl, pp. 180–182.
  115. ^ Kehl, pp. 184–185.
  116. ^ Oliver, p. 10.
  117. ^ Kehl, pp. 187–188.
  118. ^ Kehl, pp. 188–195.
  119. ^ a b Kehl, pp. 197–203.
  120. ^ a b Horner, pp. 143–144.
  121. ^ Stern, p. 26.
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  123. ^ Gibbons, pp. 347–349.
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  126. ^ Ershkowitz, p. 258.
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  136. ^ Kehl, p. 219.
  137. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 610.
  138. ^ "Congressional Record, Vol. 33, December 4, 1899, p. 1" (PDF).
  139. ^ Schiller & Stewart, p. 214.
  140. ^ Taft, p. 142.
  141. ^ Kehl, pp. 219–221.
  142. ^ Horner, pp. 216–218.
  143. ^ McClure Vol 2, pp. 611–612.
  144. ^ Horner, pp. 261–266.
  145. ^ Kehl, pp. 229–233.
  146. ^ McClure Vol 2, pp. 616–617.
  147. ^ Kehl, p. 234.
  148. ^ Kehl, pp. 235–236.
  149. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 617.
  150. ^ Kehl, pp. 238–239.
  151. ^ McClure Vol 2, pp. 621–623.
  152. ^ Kehl, p. 241.
  153. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 624.
  154. ^ Berman, pp. 182–183.
  155. ^ Kehl, pp. 244–248.
  156. ^ Oliver, p. 9.
  157. ^ a b Kehl, pp. 248–249.
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  159. ^ Oliver, p. 13.
  160. ^ a b Kehl, p. 250.
  161. ^ Kehl, pp. 251–252.
  162. ^ "Mr. Quay first became prominent in politics in campaign of 1860". Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette. May 29, 1904. p. 3.
  163. ^ "Personal". The Semi-Weekly New Era. June 28, 1905. p. 4.
  164. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  165. ^ Julyan, Robert H. (1998). The Place Names of New Mexico (second ed.). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. p. 280. ISBN 978-0-8263-1689-9.
  166. ^ Wilson, Linda D. "Quay". Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  167. ^ Kehl, p. 252.
  168. ^ a b Wilson, Jean Ellen (2010). "U.S. Sen. Matthew Stanley Quay". Florida GenWeb. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  169. ^ Vickers, Ramona (August 10, 1962). "Once beautiful Quay Bridge now non-existent". Orlando Sentinel. p. 4-A.
  170. ^ Kehl, p. xi.
  171. ^ McClure Vol 2, p. 619.
  172. ^ a b Kehl, p. xii.
  173. ^ "Born a genius, says governor". Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette. May 29, 1904. p. 1.
  174. ^ Blair, pp. 82–83.
  175. ^ Blair, p. 86.
  176. ^ Oliver, p. 1.
  177. ^ Schiller & Stewart, p. 216.
  178. ^ Blair, pp. 81–82.
  179. ^ Kehl, p. xv.
  180. ^ Blair, pp. 82, 91.
  181. ^ McClure Vol 2, pp. 626–631.
  182. ^ Berman, p. 183.
  183. ^ Schiller & Stewart, p. 215.
  184. ^ Berman, pp. 184–185.
  185. ^ Kehl, pp. 252–253.

References

  • Bausman, Joseph H. (1904) [1888]. History of Beaver County, Pennsylvania, and its Centennial Celebration. Vol. 1. The Knickerbocker Press.
  • Beers, Paul B. (2010). Pennsylvania Politics Today and Yesterday: The Tolerable Accommodation. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0-271-04498-9.
  • Berman, David R. (2019). Governors and the Progressive Movement. University Press of Colorado. ISBN 978-1-60732-915-2.
  • Blair, William Alan (April 1989). "A Practical Politician: The Boss Tactics of Matthew Stanley Quay". Pennsylvania History. 56 (2): 78–89.
  • Bourdon, Jeffrey Normand (September 2014). "Trains, Canes, and Replica Log Cabins: Benjamin Harrison's 1888 Front-Porch Campaign for the Presidency". Indiana Magazine of History. 110 (3): 246–269. doi:10.5378/indimagahist.110.3.0246. JSTOR 10.5378.
  • Calhoun, Charles W. (2013) [2005]. Benjamin Harrison. The American Presidents (1st eBook ed.). Henry Holt & Company LLC. ISBN 978-0-8050-6952-5.
  • Ershkowitz, Herbert (1999). John Wanamaker: Philadelphia Merchant (eBook ed.). Combined Publishing. ISBN 978-1-58097-004-4.
  • Evans, Frank Bernard (1962). Pennsylvania Politics 1872–1877: A Study in Leadership Without Responsibility (Thesis). The Pennsylvania State University. ProQuest 287955994.
  • Gibbons, Herbert Adams (1926). John Wanamaker. Vol. 1. Harper & Brothers. OCLC 162856645.
  • Hawke, David Freeman (1980). John D. The Founding Father of the Rockefellers. Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-011813-6.
  • Horner, William T. (2010). Ohio's Kingmaker: Mark Hanna, Man and Myth. Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0-8214-1894-9.
  • Kahan, Paul (2016). Amiable Scoundrel: Simon Cameron, Lincoln's Scandalous Secretary of War. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-1-61234-814-8.
  • Kehl, James A. (1981). Boss Rule in the Gilded Age: Matt Quay of Pennsylvania. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0-8229-3426-4.
  • McClure, Alexander Kelly (1905). Old Time Notes of Pennsylvania: A Connected and Chronological Record of the Commercial, Industrial and Educational Advancement of Pennsylvania, and the Inner History of All Political Movements Since the Adoption of the Constitution of 1838. Vol. 1. John C. Winston.
  • McClure, Alexander Kelly (1905). Old Time Notes of Pennsylvania: A Connected and Chronological Record of the Commercial, Industrial and Educational Advancement of Pennsylvania, and the Inner History of All Political Movements Since the Adoption of the Constitution of 1838. Vol. 2. John C. Winston.
  • Oliver, John W. (March 1934). "Matthew Stanley Quay". The Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine. 17 (1).
  • Samuel W. Pennypacker (1910). "Matthew Stanley Quay". Pennsylvania in American History. pp. 280–305.
  • Pollock, James K. (1935). "Quay, Matthew Stanley". In Malone, Dumas (ed.). Dictionary of American Biography. Vol. XV. Humphrey Milford. pp. 296–298.
  • Schiller, Wendy J.; Stewart III, Charles (2015). Electing the Senate: Indirect Democracy Before the Seventeenth Amendment (eBook ed.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-16316-1.
  • Stern, Clarence A. (1963). Resurgent Republicanism; the Handiwork of Hanna. Edwards Brothers, Inc. OCLC 256810656.
  • Taft, George S. (1903) [1885]. Compilation of Senate Election Cases from 1789 to 1885, continued to March 3, 1903. United States Government Printing Office. OCLC 1042405215.

Further reading

  • Chapman, Elizabeth Ann (1924). Matthew S. Quay and the Republican Machine in Pennsylvania (Thesis). University of Wisconsin.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
William Livsey
Treasurer of Pennsylvania
1885–1887
Succeeded by
William Livsey
U.S. Senate
Preceded by United States Senator (Class 1) from Pennsylvania
1887–1899
Served alongside: J. Donald Cameron, Boies Penrose
Vacant
Party political offices
Preceded by Chair of the Republican National Committee
1888–1891
Succeeded by

matthew, quay, matthew, stanley, quay, september, 1833, 1904, american, politician, republican, party, represented, pennsylvania, united, states, senate, from, 1887, until, 1899, from, 1901, until, death, 1904, quay, control, pennsylvania, republican, politica. Matthew Stanley Quay k w eɪ September 30 1833 May 28 1904 was an American politician of the Republican Party who represented Pennsylvania in the United States Senate from 1887 until 1899 and from 1901 until his death in 1904 Quay s control of the Pennsylvania Republican political machine made him one of the most powerful and influential politicians in the country and he ruled Pennsylvania politics for almost twenty years As chair of the Republican National Committee and thus party campaign manager he helped elect Benjamin Harrison as president in 1888 despite his not winning the popular vote He was also instrumental in the 1900 election of Theodore Roosevelt as vice president Matthew QuayPortrait c 1904United States Senatorfrom PennsylvaniaIn office January 16 1901 May 28 1904Preceded byVacantSucceeded byPhilander C KnoxIn office March 4 1887 March 3 1899Preceded byJohn I MitchellSucceeded byVacantChair of the Republican National CommitteeIn office July 1888 July 1891Preceded byBenjamin Jones 1 Succeeded byJames Clarkson 2 State officesSecretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 3 In office January 22 1873 May 2 1878GovernorJohn F HartranftPreceded byFrancis JordanSucceeded byJohn Blair LinnIn office January 30 1879 November 3 1882GovernorHenry M HoytPreceded byJohn Blair LinnSucceeded byFrancis JordanTreasurer of Pennsylvania 3 In office 1886 1887GovernorRobert E Pattison James A BeaverPreceded byWilliam LivseySucceeded byWilliam LivseyMember of thePennsylvania House of RepresentativesIn office 1865 1868Preceded byIsaiah White as member for Beaver and Lawrence counties Succeeded byThomas NicholsonConstituencyBeaver and Washington countiesRecorder of PhiladelphiaIn office 1878 1879Preceded byOffice createdSucceeded byDavid H LaneProthonotary of Beaver CountyIn office 1856 1861Preceded byA R ThomsonSucceeded byMichael WeyandPersonal detailsBornMatthew Stanley Quay 1833 09 30 September 30 1833Dillsburg Pennsylvania U S DiedMay 28 1904 1904 05 28 aged 70 Beaver Pennsylvania U S Political partyRepublicanSpouseAgnes Barclay m 1855 wbr Children5EducationWashington and Jefferson College BA SignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited StatesBranch serviceUnited States ArmyYears of service1861 1862RankColonelUnit134th Pennsylvania InfantryBattles warsAmerican Civil War Battle of FredericksburgAwardsMedal of HonorQuay studied law and began his career in public office by becoming prothonotary of Beaver County Pennsylvania in 1856 He became personal secretary to Governor Andrew Curtin in 1861 after campaigning for him the previous year During the Civil War he served in the Union Army commanding the 134th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment as a colonel Quay received the Medal of Honor for heroism at the Battle of Fredericksburg He acted as Pennsylvania s military agent in Washington before returning to Harrisburg to assist Curtin and aid in his re election in 1863 He was a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from 1865 to 1868 Beginning in 1867 Quay became increasingly aligned with the political machine run by Senator Simon Cameron and by 1880 was the chief lieutenant of Cameron and his son and successor Don He continued to serve in public office as Secretary of the Commonwealth Philadelphia County Recorder and Pennsylvania Treasurer The last to which he was elected in 1885 gave him enough power to eclipse Don Cameron as Pennsylvania s Republican political boss and put him in position to run for the Senate He served there from 1887 to 1899 and then from 1901 until his death in 1904 There he strongly advocated for Pennsylvania s economic interests paying little mind to matters that did not affect his home state At the height of his career Quay influenced appointments to thousands of state and federal positions in Pennsylvania the occupants of which had to help finance the machine Opponents within the Pennsylvania Republican Party such as merchant John Wanamaker contested his rule from time to time usually unsuccessfully though they did block his election to a third term in the Senate for two years causing the 1899 legislative election for senator to end with no one chosen Increasingly in poor health he took on few new battles in his final years After Quay s death his political machine was taken over by his fellow Pennsylvania senator Boies Penrose who continued to run it until Penrose s own death in 1921 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 American Civil War 3 Entry into politics 1864 1872 4 Cameron lieutenant 1872 1879 5 Rise to the Senate 1880 1887 6 U S Senate 6 1 1888 presidential campaign 6 2 Harrison years 1889 1893 6 3 Cleveland administration rise of McKinley 1893 1896 6 4 Battles with Wanamaker fight for re election 1896 1901 6 5 Final years and death 1901 1904 7 Family and sites 8 Assessment 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life and career EditMatthew Stanley Quay was born in Dillsburg Pennsylvania United States on September 30 1833 His father was Anderson Beaton Quay a Presbyterian minister Matthew s mother s last name at her birth was Catherine McCain 4 The Quay family was of Scottish and Manx descent 5 6 Matthew Quay had a Native American great grandmother 7 Matthew was named for General Matthew Stanley who raised McCain after her parents died he was one of eight children and the oldest son to reach adulthood 8 The Quay family lived in several towns in central and western Pennsylvania during Matthew s childhood as Reverend Quay accepted new positions before they finally settled in Beaver in 1850 where the family had previously lived in the early 1840s Despite the itinerant nature of the family s existence the education of the children including the girls was not neglected 9 Matthew attended Beaver and Indiana academies then enrolled at Jefferson College now Washington amp Jefferson College where he became a member of Beta Theta Pi 10 After graduating in 1850 Quay visited Mississippi where one of his classmates lived on a plantation They had plans to go into business giving stereopticon lectures but the equipment broke Unable to find suitable employment in the South he returned to Pennsylvania where he read law in the Pittsburgh firm of Penney and Starrett James C Penney partner in the firm stated that he had never known a man of his age whose mind was so well disciplined and mature 11 In late 1852 uncertain that he was suited to the law Quay embarked on another tour of the South but was again unable to find profitable employment and returned to complete his legal studies 12 under the tutelage of Colonel Richard Roberts of Beaver 5 He was admitted to the bar October 13 1854 in Beaver County 13 In 1856 Governor James Pollock appointed Quay as prothonotary of Beaver County to fill an unexpired term The appointment came because the governor and his advisors respected Reverend Quay and the young lawyer was elected to three year terms in 1856 and 1859 14 At this time the Republican Party was being formed Quay became a member 4 and was the Beaver County manager of that party s candidate for governor in 1860 Andrew Curtin 15 Quay s success in getting delegates to the state convention from western Pennsylvania to support Curtin was crucial to his getting the nomination 16 In October 1860 Curtin was elected and won Beaver County by a large margin causing him to admire Quay s political skill 17 American Civil War EditWhen I met him Quay he did not at first impress me as a man of more than ordinary parts He was extremely modest and unassuming in manner with a defective sight in one eye that made his face expressionless excepting when very warmly aroused in conversation Under ordinary conditions he might have filled the place of secretary to the Governor without commanding the special attention of the political leaders of the State but the most momentous events were crowded upon us at Harrisburg immediately after Curtin assumed his official duties and Quay soon became recognized as one of the most valuable of all the men connected with the administration in meeting sudden and severe emergencies Alexander Kelly McClure 18 When Curtin became governor in January 1861 he made Quay his private secretary 18 This was a considerable advancement for a rural lawyer At the start of the Civil War Quay was among the earliest from Beaver County to volunteer During May 1861 he was commissioned as a first lieutenant in the 19th Division Pennsylvania Uniformed Militia but did not take up that place Instead Governor Curtin made him assistant commissary general of Pennsylvania with the rank of lieutenant colonel After the functions of the state commissariat were transferred to Washington Curtin continued Quay as his private secretary Curtin sought to be a friend of and advocate for Pennsylvania s soldiers and hundreds of letters poured in each day letters that the governor had decreed must be individually answered no matter how petty the grievance This task was delegated to Quay and he performed it flawlessly even reproducing Curtin s signature so perfectly even the governor could not tell the difference 19 20 Other tasks Quay performed for Curtin included being liaison to the legislature The Republicans lost their majority in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in the 1861 election but Quay was able to forge an alliance between the Republican minority and the War Democrats assuring a legislature that would work with Curtin on war matters Curtin found Quay s services valuable and was reluctant to lose him but Quay wanted a combat assignment which in August 1862 he got as colonel of the 134th Pennsylvania Infantry He and his troops joined General George McClellan s Army of the Potomac in late September 1862 as it pursued General Robert E Lee s Confederate Army of Northern Virginia after the Battle of Antietam He did not see combat at that time as McClellan was content to let Lee retreat into Virginia without a battle Shortly thereafter Quay fell ill of typhoid fever and on medical advice and because Curtin wanted him to serve as Pennsylvania s military agent in Washington he submitted his resignation on December 5 1862 though there were delays in accepting it 21 22 In late 1862 Union forces Quay s among them prepared for an attack on Fredericksburg Virginia on the road to Richmond the Confederate capital The acceptance of Quay s resignation was received on the eve of the Battle of Fredericksburg and he refused to leave his men persuading commanders to accept him as a voluntary aide de camp 23 24 Quay was warned by the chief surgeon not to join in the battle because of his health and was told he would die like a fool He replied I d rather die like a fool than live like a coward 25 The attack was a disaster for Union forces as the Confederate soldiers were well emplaced and could not be dislodged Quay s troops were sent to attack the Confederate positions on Marye s Heights hidden behind a stone wall Confederate forces were able to unleash a torrent of fire against the attackers Astride a horse Quay urged his men forward and they were able to get within 25 or 30 yards 23 to 28 meters of the wall before retreating with half the soldiers dead or wounded Quay was not wounded and his conduct earned him the Medal of Honor 23 24 Quay then served as Pennsylvania s military agent in Washington 24 Although the federal government took a predominant role over the states in the Civil War state governors appointed agents to liaise with federal officials to see to the well being of the state s soldiers and to answer letters and complaints from troops Unhappy in the role in 1863 he secured a transfer back to Harrisburg as Curtin s military secretary where he did similar work and where he could help with the governor s successful re election campaign that year 26 Entry into politics 1864 1872 EditIn 1864 Quay was elected to the state House of Representatives for Beaver and Washington counties he was re elected in 1865 and 1866 27 In 1866 he became the leader of the Republican majority in the House and the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee Rarely participating in debate he sought efficiency causing the appropriations bills to be brought forward early in the session rather than late as was customary 28 29 In 1867 the legislature was to elect a United States Senator since senators before 1913 were chosen by legislators not the people Curtin sought the seat as did former senator and U S Secretary of War Simon Cameron As well as supporting Curtin Quay wanted to be Speaker of the Pennsylvania House but Curtin s senatorial rivals believed that granting Quay the powers of the speakership would lead to the election of Curtin Thus they combined to defeat him Cameron gained the party legislative caucus s nomination for senator and Quay healed relations by moving to make the nomination unanimous Cameron was thereafter elected by the full legislature 30 31 Senator Cameron took full control of the state Republican Party over the next years as Curtin lost power especially when he was appointed Minister to Russia by President Ulysses S Grant in 1869 leading to his extended absence from the state and rising Republicans had to choose between alliance with Cameron or political oblivion Quay chose the former Nevertheless not wanting to be seen as a traitor to Curtin Quay s change of loyalty was so gradual it was not until 1872 that it was complete 32 33 Quay did not seek re election to the legislature in 1867 instead returning to his hometown and founding a weekly newspaper the Beaver Radical which began publication in January 1868 Quay the editor declared it to be Republican in outlook but not devoted to any faction Circulation grew rapidly and by 1872 the Radical claimed to be the most distributed weekly in western Pennsylvania The Radical opposed President Andrew Johnson but decried the Tenure of Office Act that Johnson was impeached for violating as plainly unconstitutional The Radical also urged Northern states to support African Americans by giving full force to the Fifteenth Amendment s promise of universal male suffrage 34 35 According to Frank Bernard Evans in his thesis on Pennsylvania politics of the 1870s Quay made the Radical to be among the best known and most widely quoted journals in the state 36 Cameron lieutenant 1872 1879 EditBeginning shortly after the Civil War Simon Cameron had begun to build a powerful Republican political machine in Pennsylvania 37 The statewide machine was effectively an alliance of municipal and county Republican machines whose interests had to be harmonized by its leader the most important being the organizations of strongly Republican Philadelphia County and Allegheny County Pittsburgh 38 The Pennsylvania Manufacturers Association was closely aligned with the machine which followed a conservative course over several decades 37 Beyond personal leadership by the boss success required efficient party organization a political program that could unify the party and a failure of the Democratic Party deemed the party of treason after the Civil War to regain the trust of the Pennsylvania electorate 39 Senator Simon Cameron in 1874 After his return from Russia Curtin in 1872 destroyed his remaining influence in the Pennsylvania Republican Party by supporting the Liberal Republican Party made up of those Republicans opposed to the policies of President Grant or alienated by the corruption in his administration Quay fully broke with Curtin strongly supporting the regular Republican ticket 40 41 Quay backed Grant for re election over the Liberal Republican Democratic candidate Horace Greeley of New York as well as the Republican nominee for governor Pennsylvania Auditor General and former Union General John F Hartranft Both Republican candidates were successful and Quay was rewarded for his efforts for Hartranft with the post of Secretary of the Commonwealth Returning to the center of Republican politics he gave up the Radical selling it to James S Rutan his lieutenant in the Cameron machine 42 In January 1873 Quay managed Cameron s campaign for re election to the Senate The Republicans had a majority of 31 overall in the legislature but dissident Republicans were promoting the industrialist Charlemagne Tower a political novice for the seat Quay disposed of the challenge by calling an early caucus of the Republicans in the legislature which Tower was unprepared for and Cameron won easy re election 43 With Cameron re elected to the Senate and Quay as Governor Hartranft s chief advisor the Cameron machine was much more deeply entrenched than it had been before the Liberal Republican challenge 44 When not in Washington Cameron by now in his mid seventies spent time traveling increasingly leaving day to day administration of the machine to his son Don Cameron Quay and Robert Mackey 45 a Cameron lieutenant who served five one year terms as state treasurer in the 1860s and 1870s 46 Quay was a delegate to the 1876 Republican National Convention and with Don Cameron helped frustrate the ambitions of Senator James G Blaine of Maine in favor of those of Ohio Governor Rutherford B Hayes 47 Don Cameron and Quay offered Blaine s managers the state s votes in exchange for a promise to appoint a Pennsylvanian to the Cabinet but Blaine refused The following year Quay would write to Hayes I am immediately responsible for the action of the Pennsylvania delegation which resulted in your nomination Mr Blaine will tell you this 48 Quay was chairman of the state Republican Party and helped win the state for Hayes over Samuel Tilden by fewer than 10 000 votes despite a frosty relationship with the nominee This was the state in which Hayes won the most electoral votes With the presidential election disputed Quay was among the Republicans invited by President Grant to go to Louisiana one of the states at issue and investigate the situation there which he did acting as a partisan for the Republicans An electoral commission ruled for Hayes Grant had made Don Cameron Secretary of War Hayes refused to retain him or appoint anyone else from Pennsylvania Angered Simon Cameron resigned from the Senate though he engineered the election of his son Don by the legislature as his replacement 49 50 The Democrats did well in Pennsylvania s 1877 elections making the following year s elections important especially since Hartranft s successor was to be elected and Don Cameron s Senate seat would be filled by the 1879 legislature With Quay and Mackey from western Pennsylvania and the Camerons based in Harrisburg Philadelphia had no representation at the high levels of the Republican machine They decided that Quay should relocate to Philadelphia to take on a new and lucrative position as County Recorder The legislature duly created the position and Hartranft appointed Quay who resigned as Secretary of the Commonwealth to it Quay relocated to Philadelphia taking a large double house at 11th and Spruce Streets The maneuver backfired as Philadelphians were resentful it was not filled by one of their own Quay worked to elect a Republican governor and legislature persuading out of staters like House Minority Leader James A Garfield of Ohio to give speeches in Pennsylvania Before returning to his home in Beaver he stayed in Philadelphia long enough to see out the elections in which Republican Henry M Hoyt was narrowly elected by a plurality and the Republicans gained a majority in both houses of the legislature Though Mackey died on New Year s Day 1879 Don Cameron was re elected to a full term Quay resigned and was re appointed as Secretary of the Commonwealth by Governor Hoyt 51 52 According to McClure It was in this campaign that Quay made himself the acknowledged Republican master in the State as Mackey died a few weeks after the election and Quay green with the laurels of his great victory became the supreme leader of the party 53 Rise to the Senate 1880 1887 EditQuay was involved in a financial scandal in 1880 J Blake Walters cashier of the Pennsylvania Treasury made deposits in favored banks using worthless securities retaining the actual money for stock speculation with Quay and others Amos C Noyes was the treasurer and with Walters gave assurances that the money would not be required from the banks until Quay and his associates had time to restore it The speculation went badly and when Samuel Butler an anti boss Republican took office as treasurer in 1880 he demanded a full accounting of state funds There was a deficit of about 250 000 equivalent to 7 019 828 in 2021 for which Quay accepted responsibility and sold much of his property with a gap of about 100 000 filled with a loan from Don Cameron repaid in 1886 with according to McClure a legacy Quay had received Quay s acceptance of responsibility satisfied the public as did his statement that Walters who killed himself had acted without his instructions 54 55 Another source of money for Quay was Standard Oil he had come to terms with John D Rockefeller s company in 1879 and requested a loan of 15 000 in 1880 something Rockefeller thought was worth it Quay continued to deal with Standard Oil financially until his death in 1904 throughout his time in the Senate 56 To avoid sending a delegation supportive of Blaine to the 1880 Republican National Convention in Chicago Don Cameron and Quay called a state convention early in the year before the Blaine supporters could organize and got the selected delegation to agree to vote as a unit for former president Grant who was seeking a third term 57 While Quay and Cameron would likely have made peace with a President Blaine to keep control of Pennsylvania Grant was more amenable to the bosses demands 58 Quay and Cameron acted in spite of the fact that Blaine was widely popular in Pennsylvania 59 The national convention deadlocked and the nomination fell to Garfield Cameron and Quay were among the Immortal 306 the delegates who voted for Grant on the 36th and final ballot Although Garfield narrowly won both in Pennsylvania and nationwide Quay s support for Grant meant that he and Cameron would not be in the president elect s inner circle This showed when the machine s candidate for Senate in early 1881 Henry W Oliver was blocked by the combined strength of the Democrats and independent Republicans Garfield was asked by Quay to intervene but he would not do so The senatorship eventually fell to an independent Republican Congressman John I Mitchell 60 Later in 1881 the assassination of Garfield brought Chester A Arthur who was more aligned with the bosses to the White House 61 Quay eclipsed Senator Don Cameron in the Pennsylvania Republican Party In 1882 a replacement for Governor Hoyt was to be elected and the Republican Party divided The Cameron Quay machine backed James A Beaver and the independent Republicans who backed the views of the Republican Party but abhorred the bossism supported John Stewart When Hoyt endorsed Stewart Quay resigned as Secretary of the Commonwealth in protest Democrat Robert E Pattison was elected 62 Part of the reason for the defeat was because Quay had insisted that Hoyt pardon legislators convicted of taking bribes to pass a bill reimbursing the Pennsylvania Railroad for losses incurred in the Railroad strike of 1877 63 Don Cameron had backed Beaver early in the campaign his brusque style also helped prompt the reaction which defeated the candidate who was himself well liked in the Republican Party 64 While Cameron demanded absolute loyalty to the party machine in the years after Pattison s victory in 1882 Quay worked to reunite the party and conciliate the independent Republicans When Blaine again sought the presidential nomination in 1884 Quay surrendered some party offices to the independents in exchange for the state party chairmanship going to his nominee Thomas V Cooper Blaine was nominated with Quay and Senator Cameron absent from the national convention but was defeated by Democrat Grover Cleveland With the White House in the hands of the other party and with federal offices becoming less political due to the 1883 Pendleton Civil Service Act Quay sought to dominate at the state level 65 Appointed state employees of whatever parties were dunned a percentage of their salaries and would lose office if they did not pay 66 Businesses compensated Quay in cash because of his influence over members of the key committees of the state legislature Pliable legislators were rewarded by Quay with money for themselves and their campaigns those unwilling to deal faced well financed candidates as they sought re election Friend and foe had their transactions recorded in files that became known as Quay s coffins along with any incidents that might embarrass them to be brought forth as necessary In doing so Quay achieved a level of control over the state government that the Camerons had never reached 65 This was aided by a sense that Quay was different from Don Cameron according to Frank W Leach Quay s personal secretary There was a general feeling that Colonel Quay was nearer the people than Cameron 67 Requests for jobs litter the paper of politicians of this era Quay was no exception His correspondence with Governor James Addams Beaver invariably dealt with two subjects getting elected and putting people into offices Both were inseparable functions of the boss and with building a war chest demanded constant attention Historian William Alan Blair 68 Quay had long wanted to become a U S senator if only to place himself on the same footing as Don Cameron and McClure related that Quay had confided that he had considered taking Curtin s place in the 1867 senatorial battle Quay wanted Senator Mitchell s seat that would be filled by the legislature in early 1887 69 In 1885 he sought election as state treasurer This would allow him tremendous control over the party apparatus 70 and a strong position from which to fight the battle to gain the Senate seat in 1887 71 Quay who stated the race for treasurer was one for self protection and self preservation as others maneuvered within the party faced some criticism at his attempt to gain the office of treasurer but had no serious opposition at the Republican convention and was easily elected 70 James K Pollock in his article on Quay for the Dictionary of American Biography stated that Quay ran for the office of treasurer to gain vindication after the 1880 treasury scandal 72 Possession of this office would always be critical to the Quay machine he once stated I don t mind losing the governorship or a legislature now and then but I always need the state treasuryship 73 In his new office Quay had the funds of the state at his command His ability to deposit state moneys in friendly banks led to an income of some 150 000 per year to the machine Loans could be granted to favored individuals with interest or security not required 74 To gain the senatorship Quay needed the Republicans to have a successful 1886 election As part of the deal to become state treasurer he had agreed to support the party s 1882 candidate Beaver who was now acceptable to both machine and independent Republicans Quay became the power behind the Beaver campaign When one reporter asked Quay to arrange an interview with Beaver Quay agreed and handed the reporter an unsealed envelope with a note inside Dear Beaver Don t talk M S Quay 70 With a united party at his back Beaver was elected along with the entire Republican statewide ticket and the Republicans had nearly a two thirds majority in each house of the legislature 75 Determined to be elected by as near a unanimous vote as possible Quay arranged conferences in each congressional district to which the legislators of that district were invited and told to support the majority sentiment that is for Quay On January 4 1887 the Republican legislative caucus nominated Quay with 154 votes to 9 for the runner up Galusha Grow When the two houses of the legislature voted Quay received two thirds majorities in each and was declared elected a senator 75 According to John W Oliver in his journal article on Quay By this time Quay had become the undisputed political leader of Pennsylvania More than that he was rapidly becoming one of the recognized leaders of the Republican party throughout the nation 34 U S Senate Edit1888 presidential campaign Edit Main article 1888 United States presidential election Col Thomas J Grimeson still hopes to be nominated by the Republicans for State Treasurer Quay hopes not The friends of Grimeson recognize with sadness the fact that Quay s hopes generally become realities Political Notes The Valley Spirit Chambersburg Pa August 8 1887 p 3 Although Quay s first term in the Senate began March 4 1887 Congress at that time did not convene until December and so not yet sworn in Quay remained as treasurer he resigned in August He chose state senator Boies Penrose of Philadelphia to act for him while he was absent in Washington 76 With Quay away for part of the year in Washington he needed someone in Harrisburg to deal with the governor and legislature and run the state organization 77 Penrose proved an effective choice Quay through Penrose would exercise unparalleled power over state politics Congress convened in December but with Democratic President Cleveland still in office the term was relatively quiet for Quay 76 As the 1888 Republican National Convention in Chicago approached several favorite son candidates were seeking support to become the nominee to challenge Cleveland Blaine had been ambiguous about whether he would be a candidate though he still had adherents Quay was the chairman of the Pennsylvania delegation which did not strongly support any particular candidate though there were some leanings toward Ohio Senator John Sherman the Camerons were related by marriage to him Quay was willing to support Senator Sherman but primarily he wanted a candidate who if victorious would reward Pennsylvania for its support 78 The convention deadlocked Quay realizing that Sherman could not win opened negotiations with the managers of former senator Benjamin Harrison of Indiana Quay wanted a written commitment to appoint a Pennsylvanian acceptable to Quay to the cabinet but Harrison refused Nevertheless as the convention swung towards Harrison on the eighth and final ballot Quay cast Pennsylvania s votes for the Indianan but the circumstances did not give the state the credit for getting Harrison the nomination as Quay had hoped 79 At the time the chairman of the Republican National Committee RNC served as campaign manager for the presidential candidate and Quay a member of that committee remained away from its post convention session in New York He was elected as RNC chairman by a large margin 80 Quay recruited Philadelphia businessman John Wanamaker to do much fundraising Wanamaker contributed 10 000 himself led a committee of ten businessmen who contributed an equal sum and raised over 200 000 Though the sums were not outlandish by later standards they were at the time the largest amount ever raised in a presidential campaign 81 Among those Quay appointed to the national executive campaign committee was Cleveland industrialist Mark Hanna introducing the future senator to national politics 72 Quay s technique of assessing corporations for campaign contributions equal to a percentage of their assets would be copied by Hanna when he was RNC chair during the 1896 election 82 Quay drops an extinguisher on Blaine to prevent another damaging remark Puck magazine September 26 1888 While Quay ran the overall organization out of New York City Harrison conducted a front porch campaign from his hometown of Indianapolis Quay originally opposed Harrison s plan but in August wired to the candidate Keep at it you re making votes 83 Blaine s 1884 campaign had been derailed when Rev Samuel D Burchard at a rally with the candidate present called the Democrats the party of Rum Romanism and Rebellion and both Quay and Harrison were determined to avoid another damaging unscripted remark 84 85 After Blaine gave a speech describing trusts as innocuous business associations with which no one should interfere a position contrary to the Republican platform Quay saw to it that he stuck to less controversial topics and limited his speaking engagements 86 Quay believed that vote fraud committed by Tammany Hall had given Cleveland New York s electoral votes in 1884 and the election and the senator was determined to prevent a repetition To ensure that voter fraud did not occur in New York City Quay hired agents whose work was ostensibly to compile a city directory but which would contain the names of all of the city s eligible voters greatly reducing the scope for voter fraud Once the work was completed Quay made it known He offered rewards for providing evidence resulting in convictions for illegal registration or illegal voting something the public took more seriously after the first reward paid was for the conviction of a Republican 87 88 McClure stated that Quay used some of the campaign fund to bribe Tammany Hall leaders who were disenchanted with Cleveland 89 He also sent money to win Southern congressional districts and hired Pinkerton detectives to protect GOP voting African Americans there leading to gains and Republican control of the House of Representatives in the next Congress 63 There was the start of a scandal just before the election when a letter from Republican campaign treasurer William W Dudley offering advice as to how to organize men to vote multiple times was pulled from the mails Quay responded with outrage that a letter had been opened threatening prosecutions for interfering with the mails and the election occurred before the scandal could fully develop 90 Although Cleveland got more votes in New York City Harrison won New York and the presidency despite losing the national popular vote Harrison credited Providence with his victory a remark which prompted Quay to state that Providence hadn t a damn thing to do with it 87 adding that Harrison would never know how close to the gates of the penitentiary some of his supporters had come to make him president 91 Despite Harrison s comments the successful 1888 campaign gave Quay a national reputation proving he could elect a president 92 President elect Harrison appointed one Pennsylvanian to his cabinet Wanamaker who took the patronage rich position of Postmaster General Quay who did not want a cabinet post for himself would have preferred Wanamaker to receive a diplomatic post but supported the appointment once it was made clear for it at least put a Pennsylvanian in the cabinet 93 Nevertheless he and Senator Cameron were incensed as Harrison had failed to abide by the usual custom of discussing the nomination in advance with the nominee s home state senators and Wanamaker s appointment led to a break between Quay and Harrison 94 The appointment of Wanamaker proved a mixed blessing at best for Quay since it elevated to high office a man who would be a thorn in his side for years to come 93 and the new Postmaster General enraged him by removing one of Quay s aides from his job with the post office 95 Harrison years 1889 1893 Edit Quay and Harrison quickly came to differ about presidential appointments of federal officials The president wanted to keep control of appointments and minimize the possibility of appointing corrupt people who might reflect badly on him the state bosses had made promises during the campaign they needed to make good on or lose influence The situation was made worse when the newspapers characterized each Pennsylvania appointment as either a victory for Quay or for Harrison something that both men were aware of 96 In one incident Quay handed Harrison a list of people he and Cameron wanted appointed and replied when the president asked for their qualifications that the senators from Pennsylvania vouched for them Harrison refused to appoint without making investigations saying he could not blindly delegate the power of appointment 97 In another incident Quay tried to discourage an office seeker by telling him the president likely would disregard a recommendation The office seeker incredulous asked Doesn t he know that you elected him to which Quay replied No Benny thinks God did it 98 When Congress convened in December 1889 the Republicans in full control of government for the first time since the Grant administration were anxious to get their legislative priorities through that had been campaign pledges in 1888 tariff legislation monetary legislation and an elections bill that would allow African Americans in the South to more freely cast a ballot The monetary legislation the Sherman Silver Purchase Act passed Congress in May 1890 99 The tariff bill the McKinley Tariff named for its sponsor House Ways and Means Committee chair William McKinley of Ohio passed the House in May 1890 with no Democrats in favor but languished in the Senate 100 while the Lodge Bill to reform federal elections in the South passed the House in July but faced uncertain prospects in the Senate as white Southerners saw it as a return to Reconstruction 100 Thomas Nast cartoon calling Quay a branded criminal 1890 Quay wanted the tariff to pass because it was supported by many manufacturers who helped finance the Republican Party especially in Pennsylvania and he had made promises of protectionist policies during the 1888 campaign On the other hand African Americans had no financial gifts to bestow 101 He also believed the Lodge Bill would provoke renewed sectional conflict 102 He sought to break the deadlock over the two bills by introducing a resolution in the Republican caucus to set a definite date to vote on the McKinley Tariff while postponing consideration of most other bills including the Lodge elections legislation until the next session of Congress in December This appalled Harrison and bitterly divided the Republican Senate caucus Eventually a compromise was worked out whereby the Republicans agreed to press the tariff legislation and to bring up the Lodge Bill on the first day of the new session in December 103 104 Harrison signed the McKinley Tariff into law on October 1 1890 105 When the Lodge Bill came to the floor of the Senate in December Southern senators announced their intention to filibuster and Republicans with other priorities mostly from the West joined with the Democrats to indefinitely postpone its consideration 106 In the early part of the Harrison administration there began to be newspaper exposes about Quay and his methods Although Quay supporters hailed him as a political genius others deemed him a sinister power behind Harrison s throne Others who joined the ranks opposing Quay were Pennsylvania reformers such as Henry Lea and Wharton Barker and disappointed rivals for political power such as Christopher Magee of Pittsburgh 107 In early 1890 the New York World published a series of articles bringing up incidents from Quay s past beginning with the 1867 Senate race in which he was accused of accepting payments to recruit support for Simon Cameron Quay responded with silence which he was wont to do 108 In the 1890 elections Republicans not only lost control of Congress but in Pennsylvania the Democrat Pattison was elected governor for a second non consecutive term When asked why the Republican candidate George W Delamater had failed Quay attributed it to a lack of votes 109 but historian William Alan Blair stated that Delamater was defeated due to the opposition to Quay 67 This 1890 Puck cover satirizes Quay s refusal to respond to the allegations Quay finally answered the allegations against him in February 1891 addressing the Senate which he rarely did and calling the allegations false and foul to the core 110 This did little to satisfy his opponents and there were calls for his resignation as RNC chairman Harrison had long desired his departure and was unwilling to defend him Quay in June 1891 announced that he would not lead the next presidential campaign and resigned the following month 111 Quay was not supportive of Harrison as the president faced renomination in 1892 but also disliked the only real rival Blaine 112 At the 1892 Republican National Convention in Minneapolis Quay realized that Harrison s renomination could not be prevented and himself voted for McKinley by then governor of Ohio who was third in the balloting although not a declared candidate Not wishing to be deprived of patronage if Harrison was re elected the senator pledged to work for the Republican ticket but did little until October when after negotiations and unknown concessions he appeared at campaign headquarters and pledged to help raise money Nevertheless Harrison was defeated by former president Cleveland 113 According to Pollock Quay s break with Harrison and his failure to take an active part in the campaign of 1892 was sic one of the prime factors in the Democratic victory of that year 72 The 1892 legislative elections were also of concern to Quay as the following year s legislature would vote on whether to give him a second term as senator There was opposition to Quay within the Republican Party largely centered on Philadelphia though Pittsburgh bosses such as Magee were also opposed to him and put forth Congressman John Dalzell of Allegheny County as a rival In addition to bossism Quay was attacked for his sporadic attendance in Congress which he defended by stating he was still often ill from his exertions in the 1888 presidential race and had to spend time at his Florida home at St Lucie His statements were bolstered when he fell ill early in 1892 causing his wife Agnes to make one of her rare trips away from Beaver to tend to him in Florida Dalzell was vulnerable to attack as a railroad and corporation lawyer and an agreement was reached to place both their names on the Republican primary ballot local legislators in theory being bound to abide by the result With support from fellow Civil War veterans Quay defeated Dalzell in almost every county was the overwhelming choice of the Republican legislative caucus in January 1893 and won his second term later that month with two thirds of the legislature voting for him 114 Cleveland administration rise of McKinley 1893 1896 Edit With Cleveland back in the White House the Republicans had only minority status in Congress The Democrats wanted to revisit the McKinley Tariff but other matters such as the repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act had higher priority and it was not until 1894 that what became known as the Wilson Gorman Tariff passed the House Seeking to preserve protectionist tariffs for Pennsylvania s manufacturers Quay threatened to talk the original bill to death Since he had not addressed the Senate on a legislative matter in his first term he was not taken seriously but he proceeded to do what was very close to that for the bill that eventually emerged from the Senate was so transformed that President Cleveland refused to sign it letting it pass into law without his signature Quay kept control of the Senate floor for over two months from April 14 to June 16 1894 himself consuming 14 legislative days and did not conclude his remarks until he and other pro tariff legislators had secured a compromise that preserved tariffs on manufactures as favored by Pennsylvania industry and included other protectionist provisions 115 John Oliver wrote one can readily see the connection between Quay s fight for a high protective tariff and liberal contributions from the Pennsylvania manufacturers 116 Pennsylvania s disgrace Quay is shown auctioning off his convention support McKinley stands center among the bidders Quay faced further rebellion within the Pennsylvania Republican Party in 1895 Republicans had elected Daniel H Hastings as governor in 1894 he was the candidate the reform element had wanted in 1890 instead of Delamater and this time Quay acquiesced in his nomination With Hastings elected the anti Quay faction pressed its advantage defeating Penrose in his attempt to gain the Republican nomination for mayor of Philadelphia in early 1895 117 With Governor Hastings friendly to the opposition Quay brought the matter to a head by challenging the opposition aligned chair of the Republican State Committee for his position He appealed to rural politicians alleging that the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh machines were trying to take them over At the state convention a deal was reached whereby Quay would get the post and he moved the adoption of a platform that committed the party to reform This delighted the opposition and many embraced Quay as a reformed sinner 118 McKinley acted early to begin his presidential campaign meeting with Republican politicians from the South in early 1895 at Thomasville Georgia the winter home of his friend and advisor Mark Hanna On his return north Hanna met with former Michigan governor Russell Alger who was acting as emissary for Quay and New York s Republican political boss former senator Thomas C Platt to discuss a possible deal for the presidential nomination Despite this and a second meeting between Hanna and Quay McKinley insisted he would make no deals to gain the Republican nomination Platt and Quay decided to promote favorite son candidates to deny McKinley a first round majority at the 1896 Republican National Convention and force him to the bargaining table 119 120 According to historian Clarence A Stern the opposition to McKinley appears to have been to a large extent inspired by the desire of such politicians to gain the greatest possible advantage from the existing situation 121 Quay was Pennsylvania s favorite son and he found considerable enthusiasm in the state for nominating a Pennsylvanian as the state had been the largest to be consistently loyal to the party but had never received a place on a Republican ticket Assured of most of Pennsylvania s 64 votes Quay journeyed to McKinley s home in Canton Ohio for discussions but according to the press received only unspecified assurances After Governor Hastings nominated Quay for president the senator received 611 2 votes third behind McKinley who was nominated and Speaker of the House Thomas B Reed of Maine 119 120 Although Quay was reluctant he served on the national campaign advisory committee under the new RNC chairman Hanna reversing their positions from 1888 Quay played only a small role in the fall campaign helping to run the campaign s New York headquarters and making recommendations that Hanna spend more money in several Southern states part of which Hanna agreed to McKinley won the election over the Democratic and Populist candidate William Jennings Bryan winning Pennsylvania by almost 300 000 votes providing nearly half of his margin in the popular vote 122 Battles with Wanamaker fight for re election 1896 1901 Edit Main article 1899 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania Don Cameron was to retire as senator when his term expired in 1897 and former postmaster general Wanamaker wanted his seat Although Wanamaker gave his usual 10 000 to the Republican presidential candidate he was not able to gain Quay s backing to become senator as Quay feared that should he not gain re election in 1899 Wanamaker might take power in the state party 123 According to McClure the two initially agreed but the pact fell apart when Wanamaker named someone to conduct financial transactions who was unacceptable to the senator Wanamaker made speeches throughout Pennsylvania to promote himself as a senatorial candidate and sought the endorsement of legislative candidates but was faced with the strength of the Quay machine which had the support of a majority of the elected Republican legislators In January 1897 Penrose defeated Wanamaker in the Republican caucus 133 75 and was elected as Pennsylvania s junior senator 124 An angered Wanamaker would constantly attack and oppose Quay until the senator s death in 1904 125 This August 1897 Puck cartoon shows McKinley center surrendering the sword of patronage to Republican political bosses from left Platt Hanna and Quay In the aftermath of the Senate battle President McKinley turned over patronage appointments in Pennsylvania to Quay and Penrose Wanamaker requested that a neighbor of his be appointed postmaster of a fourth class post office but was turned down 126 Wanamaker entered the campaign for the Republican nomination for governor in 1898 campaigning statewide and delivering speeches on Quayism and Boss Domination in Pennsylvania Politics He was defeated by Congressman William A Stone a Quay loyalist 127 Nevertheless during the fall campaign Wanamaker made 140 speeches hoping to generate enough opposition to Quay to defeat his re election bid when the legislature met in January 1899 128 On October 3 1898 Quay was arrested for conspiracy to defraud the People s Bank of Philadelphia Quay had arranged in 1896 for 1 000 000 of state funds equivalent to 32 572 000 in 2021 to be deposited in it and had persuaded John S Hopkins cashier and manager of the bank that the funds be invested in the Metropolitan Traction Company of New York sending a telegram If you buy and carry a thousand Met for me I will shake the plum tree believed by investigators to mean that funds from the state treasury would be used to cover the speculation 129 130 The stock collapsed the bank failed and Hopkins fatally shot himself 66 131 It was alleged that the bank was paying the interest on state funds not to the state treasury but to Quay 132 In spite of the allegations Stone was victorious by over 110 000 votes 133 Homer Davenport cartoon depicting Quay held by the enemy Wanamaker and prevented from going to the Senate Quay was the choice of the Republican legislative caucus in January 1899 but some remained away and his support was not enough for the necessary majority of the legislature with the two houses meeting in joint assembly For the next three months the legislature deadlocked as Quay s term in the Senate ended leaving a vacancy Quay had a sufficient hold over the Democratic legislative leaders to prevent them from uniting with the anti Quay Republicans to elect a senator and the deadlock persisted through 79 ballots Quay was finally brought to trial on the allegations in April 1899 but the prosecution rested an hour after the legislature adjourned having failed to elect a senator and he was quickly acquitted leading Quay s defenders to allege that the indictment had been purely political 134 Within an hour of the acquittal Governor Stone appointed Quay to fill the vacant Senate seat 135 Since at the time the Constitution limited governor s appointments to the Senate to when a vacancy occurred during the recess of the legislature there were immediate questions as to whether this was a valid appointment 136 137 and when Congress convened in December Quay was not seated but his credentials were referred to a committee 138 In January 1900 that committee recommended that Quay not be seated by a 5 4 vote 139 and in April the Senate refused to seat Quay by a vote of 33 32 in a vote that cut across party lines with the Republicans against Quay including Hanna 140 141 who had become senator from Ohio in 1897 142 Angered by Hanna Quay found the opportunity for revenge at the 1900 Republican National Convention in Philadelphia With the death of Vice President Garret Hobart in 1899 McKinley needed a new running mate Some supported New York Governor Theodore Roosevelt seen as a war hero and a reformer Among those who wanted Roosevelt on the national ticket was Platt who did not want him as governor and figured he would be harmless as vice president Hanna was appalled at the prospect of putting someone he deemed impulsive so near the reins of power When approached by Platt Quay was happy to agree to help in part because of a desire to avenge himself on Hanna According to McClure it was the desertion of Quay by Hanna in the contest for Quay s admission to the Senate that made Roosevelt the nominee for Vice President against his own earnest protest and thus made him President of the United States 143 144 In August 1900 the Republican State Convention endorsed Quay and denounced the Senate s action urging the following year s legislature to return him to the Senate With Wanamaker again making speeches during the fall campaign Quay also took to the campaign trail Despite serving two terms in the Senate he had rarely made a public address but spoke 19 times across Pennsylvania in October and November 1900 The McKinley Roosevelt ticket was elected winning Pennsylvania but it was uncertain whether Quay had enough support in the legislature to be elected 145 Not enough Republicans attended the legislative caucus to provide a majority for Quay leaving him four votes short of a majority to elect Quay was elected because two Democratic legislators voted for him and two others remained away from the voting According to McClure only one of Quay s masterly political ingenuity and skillful control of Democrats of easy virtue could have won out in the fight 146 One of the crucial votes in electing Quay was an ill Republican brought on a stretcher from the hospital to the state capitol to cast his ballot He languished forgotten in a hallway as his bearers joined in the celebrations of Quay s victory got pneumonia and died He was given an impressive funeral both Quay and Penrose attended wearing silk hats 147 Final years and death 1901 1904 Edit Quay celebrates his re election under a plum tree January 1901 From the Pittsburgh Commercial Gazette Quay was sworn in to his third term in the Senate on January 18 1901 in a Senate chamber filled with his supporters congratulatory telegrams and flowers In May he let it be known he would not seek another term the long battle over the seat had sapped his strength and he planned no new political battles In general he held to that resolution though with a few exceptions 148 and according to McClure once he made that announcement the factional feeling that had harassed him for many years gradually perished 149 The assassination of McKinley in September 1901 made Roosevelt president The fact that he had been instrumental in getting Roosevelt the vice presidential nomination in 1900 gave Quay little alternative but to support Roosevelt and the president kept Quay loyal by giving him a major voice in patronage in Pennsylvania even as he pursued reform policies With Hanna opposed to Roosevelt and a presidential hopeful for 1904 Roosevelt s allying with Quay and also Platt kept the bosses from uniting against him Roosevelt sometimes refused Quay s requests as when the senator asked that a Pennsylvanian be appointed to the Isthmian Canal Commission charged with building the Panama Canal The president stated that appointment to the commission had to be entirely on merit 150 Continued divisions in the Pennsylvania Republican Party led to losses in the off year elections of 1901 and Quay feared this would get worse in 1902 when there would be elections for the governor and the legislature John P Elkin had wide support for governor among Quay s faction of the party and had defended the senator before the Senate committee considering his credentials in 1899 and 1900 Quay believed it was necessary to nominate for governor a judge whose character was beyond suspicion 151 Hanna favored Elkin s nomination and Quay feared that the Ohioan might control Pennsylvania s delegation to the next national convention through Elkin Thus Quay pressed for the nomination of Judge Samuel Pennypacker of Philadelphia 152 Pennypacker was reluctant when approached by a Quay emissary but agreed he wrote that his election as governor came to me without the lifting of a finger the expenditure of a dime or the utterance of a sigh 37 Pennypacker s election postponed the divide in the Republican Party in the state until after Quay s death 153 In office Pennypacker generally did what Quay wanted but sometimes differed from him over appointments to office 154 One battle Quay undertook in his last years was statehood for Oklahoma New Mexico and Arizona Both major parties had in their platforms pledged support for statehood and a bill to accomplish this passed the House of Representatives in 1902 One reason Quay wanted the bill to pass is that it might allow William Bull Andrews a longtime Quay lieutenant with financial interests in New Mexico Territory to reach the Senate Quay a member of the Committee on Territories amassed support in the Senate for the bill likely enough to pass but the committee chair Albert Beveridge of Indiana felt the three territories were not yet ready for statehood and used Senate procedures to evade a vote on the bill through the remainder of the session Quay remaining in Washington through the winter of 1903 to seek passage of his bill rather than spending part of the winter in Florida as usual hurt his health The territories did not attain statehood during Quay s lifetime 155 Quay in Native American garb 1904 Oliver considered Quay a real friend of the American Indian 156 Throughout his Senate career he was an advocate for Native Americans but especially was so in his later years Although Indians had no contributions to give to Quay s machine he took up their causes believing they were treated badly by the Federal government He was a member of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs when Chief Joseph and his party came to Washington they expended all their funds and were unable to get home Quay paid their railroad fare 157 During his visits to Florida he took an interest in the welfare of the Seminole Indians 158 Beginning in about 1903 Quay s health deteriorated 157 He went to his brother s country estate at Morganza Pennsylvania in April 1904 but knowing he was dying he asked to be conveyed home to Beaver 159 Suffering from gastritis he continued to lose weight and strength 160 Quay could read and speak several languages possessing one of the finest private libraries in America 72 One day in late May 1904 he asked to be taken into his library where he read a little handled the volumes lovingly and after he fell asleep was taken back to his room He died in Beaver on May 28 1904 160 Quay was buried in Beaver on May 31 1904 Shops throughout the area were closed Trains brought the general public from Pittsburgh and dignitaries from Harrisburg and Washington Among the senators attending the funeral were Republicans Penrose Platt and Joseph B Foraker of Ohio and Democrats Arthur Gorman of Maryland and Benjamin Tillman of South Carolina His headstone gives his name and those of his parents his dates of birth and death and implora pacem Latin for Pray for peace 161 Family and sites Edit Agnes Barclay Quay In 1855 Quay married Agnes Barclay 1831 1911 they had five children the eldest Richard Rogers Quay served in the Pennsylvania legislature The others were named Andrew Gregg Curtin Quay a career army officer Mary Agnew Quay Coral Quay and Susan Willard Quay 162 In 1905 Hanover Square in Beaver was renamed Quay Square 163 A historical marker to Quay stands at 3rd and Insurance streets there 63 The Matthew S Quay House in Beaver has been designated as a National Historic Landmark Another of his residences the Roberts Quay House in Philadelphia was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976 164 In recognition of his efforts towards New Mexico statehood there is a Quay County in New Mexico named for him in 1903 when it was established as well as a small unincorporated community known as Quay 165 The former town of Quay Oklahoma was also named for him 166 A statue of Quay stands in the rotunda of the Pennsylvania Capitol in Harrisburg 167 Quay spent much time in Florida over the last fifteen years of his life both for his health and for the fishing local historian Jean Ellen Wilson dubbed him St Lucie County s first snowbird 168 Called Florida s Third Senator by Judge Minor Jones he supported federal projects along the Indian River where he owned property Two of the houses he owned still stood as of 2010 168 In his honor the municipality of Woodley Florida was named Quay in 1902 but in 1925 amid the Florida land boom it was renamed Winter Beach 169 Assessment EditUnder Quay s leadership Pennsylvania became the most Republican and boss dominated state in the final decades of the century His success required considerable manipulation because he was not able to control the state s burgeoning cities Philadelphia and Pittsburgh With his strength residing in the countryside he kept the cities stirred up by pushing through the legislature charter reforms to limit the power of emerging city leaders or to pit the two cities against each other but they nevertheless retained their Republican character Thus under his direction the state delivered a Republican dominated congressional delegation every two years and provided Republican electors every quadrennium Quay attributed this unbroken success to an application of his definition of politics the art of taking money from the few and votes from the many under the pretext of protecting the one from the other Historian James A Kehl 4 Quay s death sparked renewed debate about him 170 though McClure stated that upon his death friend and foe bowed regretfully over the grave of Pennsylvania s ablest and most chivalrous political gladiator 171 The North American of Philadelphia wrote that though Quay s career was a record of sustained victory his death has removed from Pennsylvania a malign influence which for a generation has been the curse and shame of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 172 President Roosevelt sent his condolences 5 and Governor Pennypacker stated that now that he is gone the people of this state will know what they have lost and what they never quite appreciated 173 By taking power from the Camerons in the mid 1880s Quay restored the Pennsylvania Republican Party to power there at a time it was divided and out of office at both the state and federal levels and continued the state as one of the largest and most loyal to the Republican Party He was able to work with and conciliate many of those whom Don Cameron had alienated 174 Blair wrote that Quay s techniques were to work one on one keep quiet maneuver behind the scenes 175 According to Pollock Quay is chiefly to be remembered for his brilliant and consummate genius as a politician Never in the history of Pennsylvania with all of its great politicians has there been a man with such great powers of leadership in political organization His whole life was a constant fight 72 Nevertheless many of his contemporaries believed him to be an utterly corrupt man and yet his methods were no worse than those of his adversaries He was certainly one of the best hated men in politics 72 Wilson stated of Quay that from the time of his election as senator various combinations of avowed foes and turncoat friends fought to topple him reformers attempted to wrest power from his grasp and destroy his political machine Often his political survival was in doubt there were times he survived by a very slim margin He was indicted arrested beaten at the polls attacked from the pulpit criticized in the press He endured to make two presidents and to serve three terms in the Senate 7 Oliver deemed Quay the most colorful leader in Pennsylvania s history No man in all political history ever excelled him as a leader a strategist or an organizer 176 Quay rarely addressed the Senate his power was behind the scenes exercised over dinner and in committee rooms He authored no major legislation his interest was in being able to control the flow of legislation He chaired no major committees but led the Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds Almost every member of Congress needed a post office or other building to be constructed in his state or district and his road to that goal lay through Quay who could exact a price 4 According to Wendy J Schiller and Charles Stewart in their book on the legislative election of senators for Quay holding a Senate seat was merely another means of keeping control over his political empire he was far better known for keeping his eyes peeled on Pennsylvania politics than on the business conducted on the Senate floor 177 Patronage in the hands of Quay was profitable although Wanamaker s 1898 estimate that Quay controlled 14 705 government positions was possibly an exaggeration the many positions available in a large state like Pennsylvania where the holders or would be holders could be dunned for contributions raised large sums of money that Quay controlled 178 Such money was key to Quay s power While state treasurer he detected loopholes in the laws governing the office and used them to his advantage not only during his term of office but over the next two decades as a series of loyalists occupied that office 4 Quay kept close control of the purse strings deciding where money should be doled out 179 His successor as Pennsylvania s Republican boss Penrose stated Mr Quay made it his policy to keep at least one hand on the public purse 73 He used state money and contributions from industrialists to benefit himself and elect favored candidates This helped make participation in politics expensive since it required any candidate not acceptable to Quay to raise large sums of money to be successful 172 Nevertheless by the close of Quay s career the power of patronage was becoming an embarrassment as he had too many friends and allies expecting preferment In one case Quay avoided making nineteen enemies by submitting twenty candidates for an office to Governor Stone and got him to reject them all Stone then announced his own selection someone acceptable to Quay 180 By the turn of the 20th century progressive reformers sought to eliminate the boss system and saw Quay as a prime target resulting in the re election deadlock of 1899 4 After Quay died the Pennsylvania Republican Party fell into factions first squabbling over the Senate seat which fell to the state attorney general Philander C Knox and then losing the election for treasurer in 1905 in a state Roosevelt had carried with two thirds of the vote the previous year 181 Pennypacker responded by calling the legislature into special session to pass reform legislation 182 In controlling the machine after Quay s death which he did until his own death in 1921 Penrose allowed reform measures such as the direct primary and a requirement of examinations for civil service jobs in Philadelphia 183 184 Kehl suggested that Quay by the nature of his position as boss and senator concerned himself more with the welfare of Pennsylvania than that of the nation Quay was even more committed to the status quo than most legislators were Serving Pennsylvania rather than the United States he contributed little to the national legislative program of his party He was content to sit in silence while senatorial discussion resounded on all sides he never championed any principle not even the Republican doctrine of protection ism Although he did speak on the tariff he pronounced no theory but merely demanded specific schedules for the iron and steel producers of his state Once local appetites were appeased he lapsed into legislative indifference until another issue important to his constituents arose At the end of his career such self interest was disturbing to Republican leadership in the Senate With his passing many colleagues tacitly hoped for a successor more committed to issues national in scope and substantive in character 185 Notes Edit Col Quay in the saddle The Philadelphia Inquirer July 12 1888 p 1 Quay is out Boston Daily Globe July 30 1891 p 2 a b John Augustus Smull ed 1890 Smull s Legislative Hand Book and Manual of the State of Pennsylvania pp 254 255 260 a b c d e f Kehl James A February 1 2000 Quay Matthew Stanley 1833 1904 politician American National Biography doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 0500639 a b c Quay s career ends The Altoona Mirror May 30 1904 p 2 Pennypacker p 281 a b Wilson Jean Ellen An original snowbird Indian River Magazine Kehl p 4 Kehl pp 4 5 Johnson L E 2010 Beta Statesmen The Beta Theta Pi Foundation p 7 via Issuu com a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint url status link Kehl pp 5 8 Kehl pp 8 9 Bausman Vol 1 p 367 Kehl p 9 Kehl p 10 Evans p 18 Oliver pp 2 3 a b McClure Vol 1 p 457 Kehl pp 9 11 McClure Vol 1 p 458 Kehl pp 12 13 McClure Vol 1 pp 458 460 a b Kehl pp 14 15 a b c McClure Vol 1 p 461 Oliver p 3 Kehl pp 16 17 Matthew Stanley Quay Pennsylvania House of Representatives Retrieved August 19 2022 McClure Vol 1 pp 461 462 Kehl p 20 McClure Vol 1 pp 462 464 Kehl pp 21 22 McClure Vol 2 pp 208 211 Kehl pp 23 24 31 a b Oliver p 4 Kehl pp 31 34 Evans p 19 a b c Berman p 182 Evans p 20 Evans pp ii 28 McClure Vol 2 p 215 Kehl p 37 Kehl pp 37 38 Evans pp 60 62 Evans p 71 Kahan pp 263 264 Kehl pp 35 35 Kehl pp 38 39 Kahan pp 238 239 Kehl pp 39 42 Kahan pp 269 271 McClure Vol 2 p 499 Kehl pp 43 45 McClure Vol 2 p 497 Kehl pp 64 66 McClure Vol 2 pp 503 505 Hawke p 136 Kehl pp 46 49 McClure Vol 2 p 507 McClure Vol 2 p 509 Kehl pp 49 51 Kehl p 52 Kehl pp 53 55 a b c Matthew S Quay Historical Marker explorepahistory com WITF Inc Retrieved September 3 2022 Blair p 85 a b Kehl p 64 a b Blair p 81 a b Blair p 83 Blair p 82 McClure Vol 2 pp 558 559 a b c Kehl pp 65 66 McClure Vol 2 p 558 a b c d e f Pollock p 297 a b Blair p 80 Kehl pp 66 67 a b McClure Vol 2 pp 562 565 a b Kehl pp 84 85 Schiller amp Stewart pp 203 204 Kehl pp 85 88 Kehl pp 88 92 Kehl pp 93 95 Gibbons pp 258 262 Horner p 195 Bourdon p 254 Kehl p 99 Bourdon pp 251 252 Kehl pp 100 101 a b Matthew Quay and the 1888 Presidential Election United States Senate Retrieved August 29 2022 Kehl pp 102 107 McClure Vol 2 p 571 Kehl pp 106 107 Kehl p 117 Blair p 88 a b Kehl pp 118 119 Ershkowitz p 228 Ershkowitz pp 228 229 Kehl pp 123 124 Calhoun pp 216 217 Kehl p 122 Kehl p 128 a b Calhoun pp 270 271 Kehl pp 129 133 Oliver p 8 Calhoun pp 311 317 Kehl p 133 Calhoun p 323 Kehl p 136 Kehl pp 137 139 Kehl pp 138 142 Kehl pp 153 154 Kehl pp 155 156 Kehl pp 155 158 McClure Vol 2 p 584 Kehl pp 156 176 Kehl pp 180 182 Kehl pp 184 185 Oliver p 10 Kehl pp 187 188 Kehl pp 188 195 a b Kehl pp 197 203 a b Horner pp 143 144 Stern p 26 Kehl pp 202 205 Gibbons pp 347 349 McClure Vol 2 pp 596 599 Ershkowitz p 251 Ershkowitz p 258 Kehl p 212 Ershkowitz pp 264 266 Blair pp 80 81 Kehl p 215 Kehl p 214 Schiller amp Stewart p 205 Beers p 47 Kehl pp 214 218 McClure Vol 2 p 606 Kehl p 219 McClure Vol 2 p 610 Congressional Record Vol 33 December 4 1899 p 1 PDF Schiller amp Stewart p 214 Taft p 142 Kehl pp 219 221 Horner pp 216 218 McClure Vol 2 pp 611 612 Horner pp 261 266 Kehl pp 229 233 McClure Vol 2 pp 616 617 Kehl p 234 Kehl pp 235 236 McClure Vol 2 p 617 Kehl pp 238 239 McClure Vol 2 pp 621 623 Kehl p 241 McClure Vol 2 p 624 Berman pp 182 183 Kehl pp 244 248 Oliver p 9 a b Kehl pp 248 249 Oliver pp 8 9 Oliver p 13 a b Kehl p 250 Kehl pp 251 252 Mr Quay first became prominent in politics in campaign of 1860 Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette May 29 1904 p 3 Personal The Semi Weekly New Era June 28 1905 p 4 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Julyan Robert H 1998 The Place Names of New Mexico second ed Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press p 280 ISBN 978 0 8263 1689 9 Wilson Linda D Quay Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Retrieved November 10 2022 Kehl p 252 a b Wilson Jean Ellen 2010 U S Sen Matthew Stanley Quay Florida GenWeb Retrieved September 2 2022 Vickers Ramona August 10 1962 Once beautiful Quay Bridge now non existent Orlando Sentinel p 4 A Kehl p xi McClure Vol 2 p 619 a b Kehl p xii Born a genius says governor Pittsburgh Weekly Gazette May 29 1904 p 1 Blair pp 82 83 Blair p 86 Oliver p 1 Schiller amp Stewart p 216 Blair pp 81 82 Kehl p xv Blair pp 82 91 McClure Vol 2 pp 626 631 Berman p 183 Schiller amp Stewart p 215 Berman pp 184 185 Kehl pp 252 253 References EditBausman Joseph H 1904 1888 History of Beaver County Pennsylvania and its Centennial Celebration Vol 1 The Knickerbocker Press Beers Paul B 2010 Pennsylvania Politics Today and Yesterday The Tolerable Accommodation Penn State Press ISBN 978 0 271 04498 9 Berman David R 2019 Governors and the Progressive Movement University Press of Colorado ISBN 978 1 60732 915 2 Blair William Alan April 1989 A Practical Politician The Boss Tactics of Matthew Stanley Quay Pennsylvania History 56 2 78 89 Bourdon Jeffrey Normand September 2014 Trains Canes and Replica Log Cabins Benjamin Harrison s 1888 Front Porch Campaign for the Presidency Indiana Magazine of History 110 3 246 269 doi 10 5378 indimagahist 110 3 0246 JSTOR 10 5378 Calhoun Charles W 2013 2005 Benjamin Harrison The American Presidents 1st eBook ed Henry Holt amp Company LLC ISBN 978 0 8050 6952 5 Ershkowitz Herbert 1999 John Wanamaker Philadelphia Merchant eBook ed Combined Publishing ISBN 978 1 58097 004 4 Evans Frank Bernard 1962 Pennsylvania Politics 1872 1877 A Study in Leadership Without Responsibility Thesis The Pennsylvania State University ProQuest 287955994 Gibbons Herbert Adams 1926 John Wanamaker Vol 1 Harper amp Brothers OCLC 162856645 Hawke David Freeman 1980 John D The Founding Father of the Rockefellers Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 011813 6 Horner William T 2010 Ohio s Kingmaker Mark Hanna Man and Myth Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 8214 1894 9 Kahan Paul 2016 Amiable Scoundrel Simon Cameron Lincoln s Scandalous Secretary of War University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 1 61234 814 8 Kehl James A 1981 Boss Rule in the Gilded Age Matt Quay of Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 3426 4 McClure Alexander Kelly 1905 Old Time Notes of Pennsylvania A Connected and Chronological Record of the Commercial Industrial and Educational Advancement of Pennsylvania and the Inner History of All Political Movements Since the Adoption of the Constitution of 1838 Vol 1 John C Winston McClure Alexander Kelly 1905 Old Time Notes of Pennsylvania A Connected and Chronological Record of the Commercial Industrial and Educational Advancement of Pennsylvania and the Inner History of All Political Movements Since the Adoption of the Constitution of 1838 Vol 2 John C Winston Oliver John W March 1934 Matthew Stanley Quay The Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine 17 1 Samuel W Pennypacker 1910 Matthew Stanley Quay Pennsylvania in American History pp 280 305 Pollock James K 1935 Quay Matthew Stanley In Malone Dumas ed Dictionary of American Biography Vol XV Humphrey Milford pp 296 298 Schiller Wendy J Stewart III Charles 2015 Electing the Senate Indirect Democracy Before the Seventeenth Amendment eBook ed Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16316 1 Stern Clarence A 1963 Resurgent Republicanism the Handiwork of Hanna Edwards Brothers Inc OCLC 256810656 Taft George S 1903 1885 Compilation of Senate Election Cases from 1789 to 1885 continued to March 3 1903 United States Government Printing Office OCLC 1042405215 Further reading EditChapman Elizabeth Ann 1924 Matthew S Quay and the Republican Machine in Pennsylvania Thesis University of Wisconsin External links Edit Biography portal American Civil War portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to Matthew S Quay Wikisource has original works by or about Matthew Quay Political officesPreceded byWilliam Livsey Treasurer of Pennsylvania1885 1887 Succeeded byWilliam LivseyU S SenatePreceded byJohn Mitchell United States Senator Class 1 from Pennsylvania1887 1899 Served alongside J Donald Cameron Boies Penrose VacantParty political officesPreceded byBenjamin Jones Chair of the Republican National Committee1888 1891 Succeeded byJames Clarkson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Matthew Quay amp oldid 1144522356, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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