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People's Party (United States)

The People's Party, also known as the Populist Party or simply the Populists, was a left-wing[2] agrarian populist[3] political party in the United States in the late 19th century. The Populist Party emerged in the early 1890s as an important force in the Southern and Western United States, but collapsed after it nominated Democrat William Jennings Bryan in the 1896 United States presidential election. A rump faction of the party continued to operate into the first decade of the 20th century, but never matched the popularity of the party in the early 1890s.

People's Party
Populist Party
Leader
Founded1892; 131 years ago (1892)
Dissolved1909; 114 years ago (1909)
Merger of
Preceded by
Merged intoDemocratic Party
Ideology
Political positionLeft-wing

The Populist Party's roots lay in the Farmers' Alliance, an agrarian movement that promoted economic action during the Gilded Age, as well as the Greenback Party, an earlier third party that had advocated fiat money. The success of Farmers' Alliance candidates in the 1890 elections, along with the conservatism of both major parties, encouraged Farmers' Alliance leaders to establish a full-fledged third party before the 1892 elections. The Ocala Demands laid out the Populist platform: collective bargaining, federal regulation of railroad rates, an expansionary monetary policy, and a Sub-Treasury Plan that required the establishment of federally controlled warehouses to aid farmers. Other Populist-endorsed measures included bimetallism, a graduated income tax, direct election of Senators, a shorter workweek, and the establishment of a postal savings system. These measures were collectively designed to curb the influence of monopolistic corporate and financial interests and empower small businesses, farmers and laborers.

In the 1892 presidential election, the Populist ticket of James B. Weaver and James G. Field won 8.5% of the popular vote and carried four Western states, becoming the first third party since the end of the American Civil War to win electoral votes. Despite the support of labor organizers like Eugene V. Debs and Terence V. Powderly, the party largely failed to win the vote of urban laborers in the Midwest and the Northeast. Over the next four years, the party continued to run state and federal candidates, building up powerful organizations in several Southern and Western states. Before the 1896 presidential election, the Populists became increasingly polarized between "fusionists," who wanted to nominate a joint presidential ticket with the Democratic Party, and "mid-roaders," like Mary Elizabeth Lease, who favored the continuation of the Populists as an independent third party. After the 1896 Democratic National Convention nominated William Jennings Bryan, a prominent bimetallist, the Populists also nominated Bryan but rejected the Democratic vice-presidential nominee in favor of party leader Thomas E. Watson. In the 1896 election, Bryan swept the South and West but lost to Republican William McKinley by a decisive margin.

After the 1896 presidential election, the Populist Party suffered a nationwide collapse. The party nominated presidential candidates in the three presidential elections after 1896, but none came close to matching Weaver's performance in 1892. Former Populists became inactive or joined other parties. Other than Debs and Bryan, few politicians associated with the Populists retained national prominence.

Historians see the Populists as a reaction to the power of corporate interests in the Gilded Age, but they debate the degree to which the Populists were anti-modern and nativist. Scholars also continue to debate the magnitude of influence the Populists exerted on later organizations and movements, such as the progressives of the early 20th century. Most of the Progressives, such as Theodore Roosevelt, Robert La Follette, and Woodrow Wilson, were bitter enemies of the Populists. In American political rhetoric, "populist" was originally associated with the Populist Party and related to left-wing movements, but beginning in the 1950s it began to take on a more generic meaning, describing any anti-establishment movement regardless of its position on the left–right political spectrum.

Origins

Third party antecedents

 
Economist Edward Kellogg was an early advocate of fiat money.

Ideologically, the Populist Party originated in the debate over monetary policy in the aftermath of the American Civil War. In order to fund that war, the U.S. government had left the gold standard by issuing fiat paper currency known as Greenbacks. After the war, the Eastern financial establishment strongly favored a return to the gold standard for both ideological reasons (they believed that money must be backed by gold which, they argued, had intrinsic value) and economic gain (a return to the gold standard would make their government bonds more valuable).[4] Successive presidential administrations favored "hard money" policies that retired the greenbacks, thereby shrinking the amount of currency in circulation.[5] Financial interests also won passage of the Coinage Act of 1873, which barred the coinage of silver, thereby ending a policy of bimetallism.[6] The deflation caused by these policies affected farmers especially strongly, since deflation made it more difficult to pay debts and led to lower prices for agricultural products.[7]

Angered by these developments, some farmers and other groups began calling for the government to permanently adopt fiat currency. These advocates of "soft money" were influenced by economist Edward Kellogg and Alexander Campbell, both of whom advocated for fiat money issued by a central bank.[8] Despite fierce partisan rivalries, the two major parties were both closely allied with business interests and supported largely similar economic policies, including the gold standard.[9] The Democratic Party's 1868 platform endorsed the continued use of greenbacks, but the party embraced hard money policies after the 1868 election.[10]

Though soft money forces were able to win some support in the West, launching a third party proved difficult in the rest of the country. The United States was deeply polarized by the sectional politics of the post-Civil War era; most Northerners remained firmly attached to the Republican Party, while most Southerners identified with the Democratic Party.[11] In the 1870s advocates of soft money formed the Greenback Party, which called for the continued use of paper money as well as the restoration of bimetallism.[10] Greenback nominee James B. Weaver won over three percent of the vote in the 1880 presidential election, but the Greenback Party was unable to build a durable base of support, and it collapsed in the 1880s.[11] Many former Greenback Party supporters joined the Union Labor Party, but it also failed to win widespread support.[citation needed]

Farmer's Alliance

 
Charles W. Macune, one of the leaders of the Farmers' Alliance

A group of farmers formed the Farmers' Alliance in Lampasas, Texas in 1877, and the organization quickly spread to surrounding counties. The Farmers' Alliance promoted collective economic action by farmers in order to cope with the crop-lien system, which left economic power in the hands of a mercantile elite that furnished goods on credit.[12] The movement became increasingly popular throughout Texas in the mid-1880s, and membership in the organization grew from 10,000 in 1884 to 50,000 at the end of 1885. At the same time, the Farmer's Alliance became increasingly politicized, with members attacking the "money trust" as the source and beneficiary of both the crop lien system and deflation.[13] In the hopes of cementing an alliance with labor groups, the Farmer's Alliance supported the Knights of Labor in the Great Southwest railroad strike of 1886.[14] That same year, a Farmer's Alliance convention issued the Cleburne Demands, a series of resolutions that called for, among other things, collective bargaining, federal regulation of railroad rates, an expansionary monetary policy, and a national banking system administered by the federal government.[15]

President Grover Cleveland's veto of a Texas seed bill in early 1887 outraged many farmers, encouraging the growth of a northern Farmer's Alliance in states like Kansas and Nebraska.[16] That same year, a prolonged drought began in the West, contributing to the bankruptcy of many farmers.[17] In 1887, the Farmer's Alliance merged with the Louisiana Farmers Union and expanded into the South and the Great Plains.[18] In 1889, Charles Macune launched the National Economist, which became the national paper of the Farmer's Alliance.[19]

Macune and other Farmer's Alliance leaders helped organize a December 1889 convention in St. Louis; the convention met with the goal of forming a confederation of the major farm and labor organizations.[20] Though a full merger was not achieved, the Farmer's Alliance and the Knights of Labor jointly endorsed the St. Louis Platform, which included many of the long-standing demands of the Farmer's Alliance. The Platform added a call for Macune's "Sub-Treasury Plan," under which the federal government would establish warehouses in agricultural counties; farmers would be allowed to store their crops in these warehouses and borrow up to 80 percent of the value of their crops.[21] The movement began to expand into the Northeast and the Great Lakes region, while Macune led the establishment of the National Reform Press Association, a network of newspapers sympathetic to the Farmer's Alliance.[22]

Formation

 
People's Party candidate nominating convention held at Columbus, Nebraska, July 15, 1890

The Farmer's Alliance had initially sought to work within the two-party system, but by 1891 many party leaders had become convinced of the need for a third party that could challenge the conservatism of both major parties.[23] In the 1890 elections, Farmer's Alliance-backed candidates won dozens of races for the U.S. House of Representatives and gained majorities in several state legislatures.[24] Many of these individuals were elected in coalition with Democrats; in Nebraska, the Farmer's Alliance forged an alliance with newly elected Congressman William Jennings Bryan, while in Tennessee, local Farmer's Alliance leader John P. Buchanan was elected governor on the Democratic ticket.[25] As most leading Democrats refused to endorse the Sub-Treasury, many leaders of the Farmer's Alliance remained dissatisfied with both major parties.[26]

In December 1890, a Farmer's Alliance convention re-stated the organization's platform with the Ocala Demands; Farmer's Alliance leaders also agreed to hold another convention in early 1892 to discuss the possibility of establishing a third party if Democrats failed to adopt their policy goals.[27] Among those who favored the establishment of a third party were Farmer's Alliance president Leonidas L. Polk, Georgia newspaper editor Thomas E. Watson, and former Congressman Ignatius L. Donnelly of Minnesota.[28]

 
1892 People's Party campaign poster promoting James Weaver for President of the United States

The February 1892 Farmer's Alliance convention was attended by supporters of Edward Bellamy and Henry George,[29] as well as current and former members of the Greenback Party, Prohibition Party, Anti-Monopoly Party, Labor Reform Party, Union Labor Party, United Labor Party, Workingmen Party, and dozens of other minor parties. Delivering the final speech of the convention, Ignatius L. Donnelly, stated, "We meet in the midst of a nation brought to the verge of moral, political, and material ruin. ... We seek to restore the government of the republic to the hands of the 'plain people' with whom it originated. Our doors are open to all points of the compass. ... The interests of rural and urban labor are the same; their enemies are identical."[30] Following Donnelly's speech, delegates agreed to establish the People's Party and hold a presidential nominating convention on July 4 in Omaha, Nebraska.[31] Journalists covering the fledgling party began referring to it as the "Populist Party," and that term quickly became widely popular.[2]

1892 election

 
1892 electoral vote results

The initial front-runner for the Populist Party's presidential nomination was Leonidas Polk, who had served as the chairman of the convention in St. Louis, but he died of an illness weeks before the Populist convention.[32] The party instead turned to former Union General and 1880 Greenback presidential nominee James B. Weaver of Iowa, nominating him on a ticket with former Confederate army officer James G. Field of Virginia.[33] The convention agreed to a party platform known as the Omaha Platform, which proposed the implementation of the Sub-Treasury and other longtime Farmer's Alliance goals.[34] The platform also called for a graduated income tax, direct election of Senators, a shorter workweek, restrictions on immigration to the United States, and public ownership of railroads and communication lines.[35]

The Populists appealed most strongly to voters in the South, the Great Plains, and the Rocky Mountains.[36] In the Rocky Mountains, Populist voters were motivated by support for free silver (bimetallism), opposition to the power of railroads, and clashes with large landowners over water rights.[37] In the South and the Great Plains, Populists had a broad appeal among farmers, but relatively little support in cities and towns. Businessmen and, to a lesser extent, skilled craftsmen were appalled by the perceived radicalism of Populist proposals. Even in rural areas, many voters resisted casting aside their long-standing partisan allegiances.[38] Turner concludes that Populism appealed most strongly to economically distressed farmers who were isolated from urban centers.[39] Linda Slaughter, a prominent women's rights advocate from the Dakota Territory, also participated in the convention, making her the first American woman to vote for a presidential candidate at a national convention.[40]

One of the Populist Party's central goals was to create a coalition between farmers in the South and West and urban laborers in the Midwest and Northeast. In the latter regions, the Populists received the support of union officials like Knights of Labor leader Terrence Powderly and railroad organizer Eugene V. Debs, as well as author Edward Bellamy's Nationalist Clubs. But the Populists lacked compelling campaign planks that appealed specifically to urban laborers, and were largely unable to mobilize support in urban areas. Corporate leaders had largely been successful in preventing labor from organizing politically and economically, and union membership did not rival that of the Farmer's Alliance. Some unions, including the fledgling American Federation of Labor, refused to endorse any political party.[41] Populists were also largely unable to win the support of farmers in the Northeast and the more developed parts of the Midwest.[42]

In the 1892 presidential election, Democratic nominee Grover Cleveland, a strong supporter of the gold standard, defeated incumbent Republican President Benjamin Harrison.[43] Weaver won over one million votes, carried Colorado, Kansas, Idaho, and Nevada, and received electoral votes from Oregon and North Dakota. He was the first third-party candidate since the Civil War to win electoral votes,[44] while Field was first Southern candidate to win electoral votes since the 1872 election.[citation needed] The Populists performed strongly in the West, but many party leaders were disappointed by the results in parts of the South and the entire Great Lakes Region.[45] Weaver failed to win more than 5% of the vote in any state east of the Mississippi River and north of the Mason–Dixon line.[46]

Between presidential elections, 1893–1895

Shortly after Cleveland took office, the country fell into a deep recession known as the Panic of 1893. In response, Cleveland and his Democratic allies repealed the Sherman Silver Purchase Act and passed the Wilson–Gorman Tariff Act, which provided for a minor reduction in tariff rates.[46] The Populists denounced the Cleveland administration's continued adherence to the gold standard, and they angrily attacked the administration's decision to purchase gold from a syndicate led by J. P. Morgan. Millions fell into unemployment and poverty, and groups like Coxey's Army organized protest marches in Washington, D.C.[47] Party membership grew in several states; historian Lawrence Goodwyn estimates that in the mid-1890s the party had "a following of anywhere from 25 to 45 percent of the electorate in twenty-odd states."[48] Partly due to the growing popularity of the Populist movement, the Democratic Congress included a provision to re-implement a federal income tax in the 1894 Wilson–Gorman Tariff Act.[49][a]

The Populists faced challenges from both the established major parties and the "Silverites," who generally disregarded the Omaha Platform in favor of bimetallism. These Silverites, who formed groups like the Silver Party and the Silver Republican Party, became particularly strong in Western mining states like Nevada and Colorado.[50] In Colorado, Populists elected Davis Hanson Waite as governor, but the party divided over the Waite's refusal to break the Cripple Creek miners' strike of 1894.[51] Silverites were also strong in Nebraska, where Democratic Congressman William Jennings Bryan continued to enjoy the support of many Nebraska Populists. A coalition of Democrats and Populists elected Populist William V. Allen to the Senate.[50]

The 1894 elections were a massive defeat for the Democratic Party throughout the country, and a mixed result for the Populists. Populists performed poorly in the West and Midwest, where Republicans dominated, but won elections in Alabama and other states. In the aftermath, some party leaders, particularly those outside the South, became convinced of the need to fuse with Democrats and adopt bimetallism as the party's key issue. Party chairman Herman Taubeneck declared that the party should abandon the Omaha Platform and "unite the reform forces of the nation" behind bimetallism.[52] Meanwhile, leading Democrats increasingly distanced themselves from Cleveland's gold standard policies in the aftermath of their performance in the 1894 elections.[53]

The Populists became increasingly polarized between moderate "fusionists" like Taubeneck and radical "mid-roaders" (named for their desire to take a middle road between Democrats and Republicans) like Tom Watson.[54] Fusionists believed the perceived radicalism of the Omaha Platform limited the party's appeal, whereas a platform based on free silver would resonate with a wide array of groups.[55] The mid-roaders believed that free silver did not represent serious economic reform, and continued to call for government ownership of railroads, major changes to the financial system, and resistance to the influence of large corporations.[56] One Texas Populist wrote that free silver would "leave undisturbed all the conditions which give rise to the undue concentration of wealth. The so-called silver party may prove a veritable Trojan Horse if we are not careful."[57] In an attempt to get the party to repudiate the Omaha Platform in favor of free silver, Taubeneck called a party convention in December 1894. Rather than repudiating the Omaha Platform, the convention expanded it to include a call for the municipal ownership of public utilities.[58]

Populist-Republican fusion in North Carolina

In 1894–1896 the Populist wave of agrarian unrest swept through the cotton and tobacco regions of the South.[59] The most dramatic impact was in North Carolina, where the poor white farmers who comprised the Populist party formed a working coalition with the Republican Party, then largely controlled by blacks in the low country, and poor whites in the mountain districts. They took control of the state legislature in both 1894 and 1896, and the governorship in 1896. Restrictive rules on voting were repealed. In 1895 the legislature rewarded its black allies with patronage, naming 300 black magistrates in eastern districts, as well as deputy sheriffs and city policemen. They also received some federal patronage from the coalition congressman, and state patronage from the governor.[60]

Women and African Americans

Due to the prevailing racist attitudes of the late 19th century, any political alliance of Southern blacks and Southern whites was difficult to construct, but shared economic concerns allowed some transracial coalition building.[61] After 1886, black farmers started organizing local agricultural groups along the lines the Farmer's Alliance advocated, and in 1888 the national Colored Alliance was established.[62] Some southern Populists, including Watson, openly spoke of the need for poor blacks and poor whites to set aside their racial differences in the name of shared economic interests. The Populists followed the Prohibition Party in actively including women in their affairs. But regardless of these appeals, racism did not evade the People's Party. Prominent Populist Party leaders such as Marion Butler at least partially demonstrated a dedication to the cause of white supremacy, and there appears to have been some support for this viewpoint in the party's rank-and-file membership.[63] After 1900 Watson himself became an outspoken white supremacist.

Conspiratorial tendencies

Historians continue to debate the degree to which the Populists were bigoted against foreigners and Jews.[64] Members of the anti-Catholic American Protective Association were influential in California's Populist Party organization, and some Populists embraced the anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that the Rothschild family sought to control the United States.[65] Historian Hasia Diner says:

Some Populists believed that Jews made up a class of international financiers whose policies had ruined small family farms, they asserted, owned the banks and promoted the gold standard, the chief sources of their impoverishment. Agrarian radicalism posited the city as antithetical to American values, asserting that Jews were the essence of urban corruption.[66]

Presidential election of 1896

 
In 1896, the 36-year-old William Jennings Bryan was the chosen candidate resulting from the fusion of the Democrats and the People's Party.

In the lead-up to the 1896 presidential election, mid-roaders, fusionists, and free silver Democrats all maneuvered to put their favored candidates in the best position to win. Mid-roaders sought to ensure that the Populists would hold their national convention before that of the Democratic Party, thereby ensuring that they could not be accused of dividing "reform" forces.[67] Defying those hopes, Taubeneck arranged for the 1896 Populist National Convention to take place one week after the 1896 Democratic National Convention.[67] Mid-roaders mobilized to defeat the fusionists; the Southern Mercury urged readers to nominate convention delegates who would "support the Omaha Platform in its entirety."[68] As most of the party's high-ranking officeholders were fusionists, the mid-roaders faced difficulty in uniting around a candidate.[69]

The 1896 Republican National Convention nominated William McKinley, a long-time Republican leader who was best known for leading the passage of 1890 McKinley Tariff. McKinley initially sought to downplay the gold standard in favor of campaigning on higher tariff rates, but he agreed to fully endorse the gold standard at the insistence of Republican donors and party leaders.[70] Meeting later in the year, the 1896 Democratic National Convention nominated William Jennings Bryan for president after Bryan's Cross of Gold speech galvanized the party behind free silver. For vice president, the party nominated conservative shipping magnate Arthur Sewall.[71]

When the Populist convention met, fusionists proposed that the Populists nominate the Democratic ticket, while mid-roaders organized to defeat fusionist efforts. As Sewall was objectionable to many within the party, the mid-roaders successfully moved a motion to nominate the vice president first. Despite a telegram from Bryan indicating that he would not accept the Populist nomination if the party did not also nominate Sewall, the convention chose Tom Watson as the party's vice presidential nominee. The convention also reaffirmed the major planks of the 1892 platform and added support for initiatives and referendums.[72] When the convention's presidential ballot began, it was still unclear whether Bryan would be nominated for president and whether Bryan would accept the nomination if offered. Mid-roaders put forward their own candidate, obscure newspaper editor S. F. Norton, but Norton was unable to win the support of many delegates. After a long and contentious series of roll call votes, Bryan won the Populist presidential nomination, taking 1042 votes to Norton's 321 votes.[73]

Despite his earlier proclamation, Bryan accepted the Populist nomination.[74] Facing a massive financial and organizational disadvantage,[75] Bryan embarked on a campaign that took him across the country. He largely ignored major cities and the Northeast, instead focusing on the Midwest, which he hoped to win in conjunction with the Great Plains, the Far West, and the South.[76] Watson, ostensibly Bryan's running mate, campaigned on a platform of "Straight Populism" and frequently attacked Sewall as an agent for "the banks and railroads." He delivered several speeches in Texas and the Midwest before returning to his home in Georgia for the remainder of the election.[74]

Ultimately, McKinley won a decisive majority of the electoral vote and became the first presidential candidate to win a majority of the popular vote since the 1876 presidential election.[76] Bryan swept the old Populist strongholds in the West and South, and added the silverite states in the West, but did poorly in the industrial heartland. His strength was largely based on the traditional Democratic vote, but he lost many German Catholics and members of the middle class. Historians believe his defeat was partly attributable to the tactics Bryan used; he had aggressively "run" for president, while traditional candidates would use "front porch campaigns."[77][page needed] The united opposition of nearly all business leaders and most religious leaders also hurt his candidacy, as did his poor showing among Catholic groups who were alienated by Bryan's emphasis on Protestant moral values.[76]

Collapse

 
People's Party campaign poster from 1904 touting the candidacy of Thomas E. Watson

The Populist movement never recovered from the failure of 1896, and national fusion with the Democrats proved disastrous to the party. In the Midwest, the Populist Party essentially merged into the Democratic Party before the end of the 1890s.[78] In the South, the National alliance with the Democrats sapped the Populists' ability to remain independent. Tennessee's Populist Party was demoralized by a diminishing membership, and puzzled and split by the dilemma of whether to fight the state-level enemy (the Democrats) or the national foe (the Republicans and Wall Street). By 1900 the People's Party of Tennessee was a shadow of what it once was.[79][page needed] A similar pattern repeated throughout the South, where the Populist Party had previously sought alliances with the Republican Party against the dominant state Democrats, including in Watson's Georgia.

In North Carolina, the state Democratic Party orchestrated a propaganda campaign in newspapers across the state, and created a brutal and violent white supremacy election campaign to defeat the North Carolina Populists and GOP, the Fusionist revolt in North Carolina collapsed in 1898, and white Democrats returned to power. The gravity of the crisis was underscored by a major race riot in Wilmington in 1898, two days after the election. Knowing they had just retaken control of the state legislature, the Democrats were confident they could not be overcome. They attacked and overcame the Fusionists; mobs roamed the black neighborhoods, shooting, killing, burning buildings, and making a special target of the black newspaper.[80] There were no further insurgencies in any Southern states involving a successful black coalition at the state level. By 1900, the gains of the populist-Republican coalition were reversed, and the Democrats ushered in disfranchisement:[81] practically all blacks lost their vote, and the Populist-Republican alliance fell apart.

In 1900, many Populist voters supported Bryan again (though Marion Butler's home county of Sampson swung heavily to Republican McKinley in a backlash against the state Democratic party), but the weakened party nominated a separate ticket of Wharton Barker and Ignatius L. Donnelly, and disbanded afterward.[citation needed] The prosperity of the first decade of the 1900s helped ensure that the party continued to fade away.[82] Populist activists retired from politics, joined a major party, or followed Debs into the Socialist Party.

In 1904, the party was reorganized, and Watson was its nominee for president in 1904 and 1908, after which the party disbanded again.

In A Preface to Politics, published in 1913, Walter Lippmann wrote, "As I write, a convention of the Populist Party has just taken place. Eight delegates attended the meeting, which was held in a parlor."[83] This may record the last gasp of the party organization.

Legacy

According to Gene Clanton's study of Kansas, populism and progressivism had a few similarities but different bases of support. Both opposed corruption and trusts. Populism emerged earlier and came out of the farm community. It was radically egalitarian in favor of the disadvantaged classes. It was weak in the towns and cities except in labor unions. Progressivism, on the other hand, was a later movement. It emerged after the 1890s from the urban business and professional communities. Most of its activists had opposed populism. It was elitist, and emphasized education and expertise. Its goals were to enhance efficiency, reduce waste, and enlarge the opportunities for upward social mobility. However, some former Populists changed their emphasis after 1900 and supported progressive reforms.[84]

Debate by historians

Since the 1890s historians have vigorously debated the nature of Populism.[85] Some historians see the populists as forward-looking liberal reformers, others as reactionaries trying to recapture an idyllic and utopian past. For some they were radicals out to restructure American life, and for others they were economically hard-pressed agrarians seeking government relief. Much recent scholarship emphasizes Populism's debt to early American republicanism.[86] Clanton (1991) stresses that Populism was "the last significant expression of an old radical tradition that derived from Enlightenment sources that had been filtered through a political tradition that bore the distinct imprint of Jeffersonian, Jacksonian, and Lincolnian democracy." This tradition emphasized human rights over the cash nexus of the Gilded Age's dominant ideology.[87]

Frederick Jackson Turner and a succession of western historians depicted the Populist as responding to the closure of the frontier. Turner wrote:

The Farmers' Alliance and the Populist demand for government ownership of the railroad is a phase of the same effort of the pioneer farmer, on his latest frontier. The proposals have taken increasing proportions in each region of Western Advance. Taken as a whole, Populism is a manifestation of the old pioneer ideals of the native American, with the added element of increasing readiness to utilize the national government to effect its ends.[88]

The most influential Turner student of Populism was John D. Hicks, who emphasized economic pragmatism over ideals, presenting Populism as interest group politics, with have-nots demanding their fair share of America's wealth which was being leeched off by nonproductive speculators. Hicks emphasized the drought that ruined so many Kansas farmers, but also pointed to financial manipulations, deflation in prices caused by the gold standard, high interest rates, mortgage foreclosures, and high railroad rates. Corruption accounted for such outrages and Populists presented popular control of government as the solution, a point that later students of republicanism emphasized.[89] In the 1930s, C. Vann Woodward stressed the southern base, seeing the possibility of a black-and-white coalition of poor against the overbearing rich.[90]

In the 1950s, scholars such as Richard Hofstadter portrayed the Populist movement as an irrational response of backward-looking farmers to the challenges of modernity. Though Hofstadter wrote that the Populists were the "first modern political movement of practical importance in the United States to insist that the federal government had some responsibility for the common weal", he criticized the movement as anti-Semitic, conspiracy-minded, nativist, and grievance-based.[9] According to Hofstadter, the antithesis of anti-modern Populism was the modernizing nature of Progressivism. Hofstadter noted that leading progressives like Theodore Roosevelt, Robert La Follette Sr., George Norris and Woodrow Wilson were vehement enemies of Populism, though Bryan cooperated with them and accepted the Populist nomination in 1896.[91][page needed] Reichley (1992) sees the Populist Party primarily as a reaction to the decline of the political hegemony of white Protestant farmers; the share of farmers in the workforce had fallen from about 70% in the early 1830s to about 33% in the 1890s. Reichley argues that, while the Populist Party was founded in reaction to economic hardship, by the mid-1890s it was "reacting not simply against the money power but against the whole world of cities and alien customs and loose living they felt was challenging the agrarian way of life."[65]

Goodwyn (1976)[92][page needed] and Postel (2007) reject the notion that the Populists were traditionalistic and anti-modern. Rather, they argue, the Populists aggressively sought self-consciously progressive goals. Goodwyn criticizes Hofstadter's reliance on secondary sources to characterize the Populists, working instead with material generated by the Populists themselves. Goodwyn determines that the farmers' cooperatives gave rise to a Populist culture, and their efforts to free farmers from lien merchants revealed to them the political structure of the economy, which propelled them into politics. The Populists sought diffusion of scientific and technical knowledge, formed highly centralized organizations, launched large-scale incorporated businesses, and pressed for an array of state-centered reforms. Hundreds of thousands of women committed to Populism, seeking a more modern life, education, and employment in schools and offices. A large section of the labor movement looked to Populism for answers, forging a political coalition with farmers that gave impetus to the regulatory state. Progress, however, was also menacing and inhumane, Postel notes. White Populists embraced social-Darwinist notions of racial improvement, Chinese exclusion and separate-but-equal.[93][page needed]

Influence on later movements

Populist voters remained active in the electorate long after 1896, but historians continue to debate which party, if any, absorbed the largest share of them. In a case study of California Populists, historian Michael Magliari found that Populist voters influenced reform movements in California's Democratic Party and Socialist Party, but had a smaller impact on California's Republican Party.[94] In 1990, historian William F. Holmes wrote, "an earlier generation of historians viewed Populism as the initiator of twentieth-century liberalism as manifested in Progressivism, but over the past two decades we have learned that fundamental differences separated the two movements."[95] Most of the leading progressives (except Bryan) fiercely opposed Populism. Theodore Roosevelt, Norris, La Follette, William Allen White and Wilson all strongly opposed Populism. It is debated whether any Populist ideas made their way into the Democratic Party during the New Deal era. The New Deal farm programs were designed by experts (like Henry A. Wallace) who had nothing to do with Populism. Michael Kazin's The Populist Persuasion (1995) argues that Populism reflected a rhetorical style that manifested itself in spokesmen like Father Charles Coughlin in the 1930s and Governor George Wallace in the 1960s.

Long after the dissolution of the Populist Party, other third parties, including a People's Party founded in 1971 and a Populist Party founded in 1984, took on similar names. These parties were not directly related to the Populist Party.

Populism as a generic term

In the United States, the term "populist" originally referred to the Populist Party and related left-wing movements of the late 19th century that wanted to curtail the power of the corporate and financial establishment. Later the term "populist" began to apply to any anti-establishment movement.[2] The original generic definition of the term, which has held consistently since the emergence of its post-Populist Party genericness, describes a populist as "a believer in the rights, wisdom, or virtues of the common people."[96][97] In the 21st century, the term once again began to be used. Politicians as diverse as independent left-wing Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Republican President Donald Trump have been labeled populists.

Electoral history and elected officials

Presidential tickets

Year Presidential nominee Home state Previous positions Vice presidential nominee Home state Previous positions Votes Notes
1892  
James B. Weaver
  Iowa Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Iowa's 6th congressional district
(1879–1881; 1885–1889)
Greenback Party nominee for President of the United States
(1880)
 
James G. Field
  Virginia Attorney General of Virginia
(1877–1882)
1,026,595 (8.5%)
22 EV
[98]
1896  
William Jennings Bryan
  Nebraska Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Nebraska's 1st congressional district
(1891–1895)
 
Thomas E. Watson
  Georgia Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Georgia's 10th congressional district
(1891–1893)
222,583 (1.6%)
27 EV
[99]
1900  
Wharton Barker
  Pennsylvania Financier, publicist  
Ignatius L. Donnelly
  Minnesota Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota
(1860–1863)
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Minnesota's 2nd congressional district
(1863–1869)
Member of the Minnesota Senate
(1875–1879; 1891–1895)
Member of the Minnesota House of Representatives
(1887–1889; 1897–1899)
50,989 (0.4%)
0 EV
[100]
1904  
Thomas E. Watson
  Georgia (see above)  
Thomas Tibbles
  Nebraska Journalist 114,070 (0.8%)
0 EV
[101]
1908  
Thomas E. Watson
  Georgia (see above)  
Samuel Williams
  Indiana Judge 28,862 (0.2%)
0 EV
[102]

Seats in Congress

people, party, united, states, confused, with, movement, people, party, people, party, also, known, populist, party, simply, populists, left, wing, agrarian, populist, political, party, united, states, late, 19th, century, populist, party, emerged, early, 1890. Not to be confused with Movement for a People s Party The People s Party also known as the Populist Party or simply the Populists was a left wing 2 agrarian populist 3 political party in the United States in the late 19th century The Populist Party emerged in the early 1890s as an important force in the Southern and Western United States but collapsed after it nominated Democrat William Jennings Bryan in the 1896 United States presidential election A rump faction of the party continued to operate into the first decade of the 20th century but never matched the popularity of the party in the early 1890s People s PartyPopulist PartyLeaderJames B Weaver Thomas E WatsonFounded1892 131 years ago 1892 Dissolved1909 114 years ago 1909 Merger ofFarmers Alliance Greenback PartyPreceded byFarmers Alliance Greenback Party Union Labor PartyMerged intoDemocratic PartyIdeologyAgrarianism Bimetallism Cooperativism 1 Populism Radicalism ProgressivismPolitical positionLeft wingPolitics of United StatesPolitical partiesElectionsThe Populist Party s roots lay in the Farmers Alliance an agrarian movement that promoted economic action during the Gilded Age as well as the Greenback Party an earlier third party that had advocated fiat money The success of Farmers Alliance candidates in the 1890 elections along with the conservatism of both major parties encouraged Farmers Alliance leaders to establish a full fledged third party before the 1892 elections The Ocala Demands laid out the Populist platform collective bargaining federal regulation of railroad rates an expansionary monetary policy and a Sub Treasury Plan that required the establishment of federally controlled warehouses to aid farmers Other Populist endorsed measures included bimetallism a graduated income tax direct election of Senators a shorter workweek and the establishment of a postal savings system These measures were collectively designed to curb the influence of monopolistic corporate and financial interests and empower small businesses farmers and laborers In the 1892 presidential election the Populist ticket of James B Weaver and James G Field won 8 5 of the popular vote and carried four Western states becoming the first third party since the end of the American Civil War to win electoral votes Despite the support of labor organizers like Eugene V Debs and Terence V Powderly the party largely failed to win the vote of urban laborers in the Midwest and the Northeast Over the next four years the party continued to run state and federal candidates building up powerful organizations in several Southern and Western states Before the 1896 presidential election the Populists became increasingly polarized between fusionists who wanted to nominate a joint presidential ticket with the Democratic Party and mid roaders like Mary Elizabeth Lease who favored the continuation of the Populists as an independent third party After the 1896 Democratic National Convention nominated William Jennings Bryan a prominent bimetallist the Populists also nominated Bryan but rejected the Democratic vice presidential nominee in favor of party leader Thomas E Watson In the 1896 election Bryan swept the South and West but lost to Republican William McKinley by a decisive margin After the 1896 presidential election the Populist Party suffered a nationwide collapse The party nominated presidential candidates in the three presidential elections after 1896 but none came close to matching Weaver s performance in 1892 Former Populists became inactive or joined other parties Other than Debs and Bryan few politicians associated with the Populists retained national prominence Historians see the Populists as a reaction to the power of corporate interests in the Gilded Age but they debate the degree to which the Populists were anti modern and nativist Scholars also continue to debate the magnitude of influence the Populists exerted on later organizations and movements such as the progressives of the early 20th century Most of the Progressives such as Theodore Roosevelt Robert La Follette and Woodrow Wilson were bitter enemies of the Populists In American political rhetoric populist was originally associated with the Populist Party and related to left wing movements but beginning in the 1950s it began to take on a more generic meaning describing any anti establishment movement regardless of its position on the left right political spectrum Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Third party antecedents 1 2 Farmer s Alliance 2 Formation 3 1892 election 4 Between presidential elections 1893 1895 4 1 Populist Republican fusion in North Carolina 4 2 Women and African Americans 4 3 Conspiratorial tendencies 5 Presidential election of 1896 6 Collapse 7 Legacy 7 1 Debate by historians 7 2 Influence on later movements 7 3 Populism as a generic term 8 Electoral history and elected officials 8 1 Presidential tickets 8 2 Seats in Congress 8 3 Governors 8 4 Members of Congress 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 12 1 Secondary sources 12 2 Contemporary accounts 13 External linksOrigins EditThird party antecedents Edit Further information Greenback Party and Farmers movement Economist Edward Kellogg was an early advocate of fiat money Ideologically the Populist Party originated in the debate over monetary policy in the aftermath of the American Civil War In order to fund that war the U S government had left the gold standard by issuing fiat paper currency known as Greenbacks After the war the Eastern financial establishment strongly favored a return to the gold standard for both ideological reasons they believed that money must be backed by gold which they argued had intrinsic value and economic gain a return to the gold standard would make their government bonds more valuable 4 Successive presidential administrations favored hard money policies that retired the greenbacks thereby shrinking the amount of currency in circulation 5 Financial interests also won passage of the Coinage Act of 1873 which barred the coinage of silver thereby ending a policy of bimetallism 6 The deflation caused by these policies affected farmers especially strongly since deflation made it more difficult to pay debts and led to lower prices for agricultural products 7 Angered by these developments some farmers and other groups began calling for the government to permanently adopt fiat currency These advocates of soft money were influenced by economist Edward Kellogg and Alexander Campbell both of whom advocated for fiat money issued by a central bank 8 Despite fierce partisan rivalries the two major parties were both closely allied with business interests and supported largely similar economic policies including the gold standard 9 The Democratic Party s 1868 platform endorsed the continued use of greenbacks but the party embraced hard money policies after the 1868 election 10 Though soft money forces were able to win some support in the West launching a third party proved difficult in the rest of the country The United States was deeply polarized by the sectional politics of the post Civil War era most Northerners remained firmly attached to the Republican Party while most Southerners identified with the Democratic Party 11 In the 1870s advocates of soft money formed the Greenback Party which called for the continued use of paper money as well as the restoration of bimetallism 10 Greenback nominee James B Weaver won over three percent of the vote in the 1880 presidential election but the Greenback Party was unable to build a durable base of support and it collapsed in the 1880s 11 Many former Greenback Party supporters joined the Union Labor Party but it also failed to win widespread support citation needed Farmer s Alliance Edit Further information Farmers Alliance Charles W Macune one of the leaders of the Farmers Alliance A group of farmers formed the Farmers Alliance in Lampasas Texas in 1877 and the organization quickly spread to surrounding counties The Farmers Alliance promoted collective economic action by farmers in order to cope with the crop lien system which left economic power in the hands of a mercantile elite that furnished goods on credit 12 The movement became increasingly popular throughout Texas in the mid 1880s and membership in the organization grew from 10 000 in 1884 to 50 000 at the end of 1885 At the same time the Farmer s Alliance became increasingly politicized with members attacking the money trust as the source and beneficiary of both the crop lien system and deflation 13 In the hopes of cementing an alliance with labor groups the Farmer s Alliance supported the Knights of Labor in the Great Southwest railroad strike of 1886 14 That same year a Farmer s Alliance convention issued the Cleburne Demands a series of resolutions that called for among other things collective bargaining federal regulation of railroad rates an expansionary monetary policy and a national banking system administered by the federal government 15 President Grover Cleveland s veto of a Texas seed bill in early 1887 outraged many farmers encouraging the growth of a northern Farmer s Alliance in states like Kansas and Nebraska 16 That same year a prolonged drought began in the West contributing to the bankruptcy of many farmers 17 In 1887 the Farmer s Alliance merged with the Louisiana Farmers Union and expanded into the South and the Great Plains 18 In 1889 Charles Macune launched the National Economist which became the national paper of the Farmer s Alliance 19 Macune and other Farmer s Alliance leaders helped organize a December 1889 convention in St Louis the convention met with the goal of forming a confederation of the major farm and labor organizations 20 Though a full merger was not achieved the Farmer s Alliance and the Knights of Labor jointly endorsed the St Louis Platform which included many of the long standing demands of the Farmer s Alliance The Platform added a call for Macune s Sub Treasury Plan under which the federal government would establish warehouses in agricultural counties farmers would be allowed to store their crops in these warehouses and borrow up to 80 percent of the value of their crops 21 The movement began to expand into the Northeast and the Great Lakes region while Macune led the establishment of the National Reform Press Association a network of newspapers sympathetic to the Farmer s Alliance 22 Formation Edit People s Party candidate nominating convention held at Columbus Nebraska July 15 1890 The Farmer s Alliance had initially sought to work within the two party system but by 1891 many party leaders had become convinced of the need for a third party that could challenge the conservatism of both major parties 23 In the 1890 elections Farmer s Alliance backed candidates won dozens of races for the U S House of Representatives and gained majorities in several state legislatures 24 Many of these individuals were elected in coalition with Democrats in Nebraska the Farmer s Alliance forged an alliance with newly elected Congressman William Jennings Bryan while in Tennessee local Farmer s Alliance leader John P Buchanan was elected governor on the Democratic ticket 25 As most leading Democrats refused to endorse the Sub Treasury many leaders of the Farmer s Alliance remained dissatisfied with both major parties 26 In December 1890 a Farmer s Alliance convention re stated the organization s platform with the Ocala Demands Farmer s Alliance leaders also agreed to hold another convention in early 1892 to discuss the possibility of establishing a third party if Democrats failed to adopt their policy goals 27 Among those who favored the establishment of a third party were Farmer s Alliance president Leonidas L Polk Georgia newspaper editor Thomas E Watson and former Congressman Ignatius L Donnelly of Minnesota 28 1892 People s Party campaign poster promoting James Weaver for President of the United States The February 1892 Farmer s Alliance convention was attended by supporters of Edward Bellamy and Henry George 29 as well as current and former members of the Greenback Party Prohibition Party Anti Monopoly Party Labor Reform Party Union Labor Party United Labor Party Workingmen Party and dozens of other minor parties Delivering the final speech of the convention Ignatius L Donnelly stated We meet in the midst of a nation brought to the verge of moral political and material ruin We seek to restore the government of the republic to the hands of the plain people with whom it originated Our doors are open to all points of the compass The interests of rural and urban labor are the same their enemies are identical 30 Following Donnelly s speech delegates agreed to establish the People s Party and hold a presidential nominating convention on July 4 in Omaha Nebraska 31 Journalists covering the fledgling party began referring to it as the Populist Party and that term quickly became widely popular 2 1892 election Edit 1892 electoral vote results The initial front runner for the Populist Party s presidential nomination was Leonidas Polk who had served as the chairman of the convention in St Louis but he died of an illness weeks before the Populist convention 32 The party instead turned to former Union General and 1880 Greenback presidential nominee James B Weaver of Iowa nominating him on a ticket with former Confederate army officer James G Field of Virginia 33 The convention agreed to a party platform known as the Omaha Platform which proposed the implementation of the Sub Treasury and other longtime Farmer s Alliance goals 34 The platform also called for a graduated income tax direct election of Senators a shorter workweek restrictions on immigration to the United States and public ownership of railroads and communication lines 35 The Populists appealed most strongly to voters in the South the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains 36 In the Rocky Mountains Populist voters were motivated by support for free silver bimetallism opposition to the power of railroads and clashes with large landowners over water rights 37 In the South and the Great Plains Populists had a broad appeal among farmers but relatively little support in cities and towns Businessmen and to a lesser extent skilled craftsmen were appalled by the perceived radicalism of Populist proposals Even in rural areas many voters resisted casting aside their long standing partisan allegiances 38 Turner concludes that Populism appealed most strongly to economically distressed farmers who were isolated from urban centers 39 Linda Slaughter a prominent women s rights advocate from the Dakota Territory also participated in the convention making her the first American woman to vote for a presidential candidate at a national convention 40 One of the Populist Party s central goals was to create a coalition between farmers in the South and West and urban laborers in the Midwest and Northeast In the latter regions the Populists received the support of union officials like Knights of Labor leader Terrence Powderly and railroad organizer Eugene V Debs as well as author Edward Bellamy s Nationalist Clubs But the Populists lacked compelling campaign planks that appealed specifically to urban laborers and were largely unable to mobilize support in urban areas Corporate leaders had largely been successful in preventing labor from organizing politically and economically and union membership did not rival that of the Farmer s Alliance Some unions including the fledgling American Federation of Labor refused to endorse any political party 41 Populists were also largely unable to win the support of farmers in the Northeast and the more developed parts of the Midwest 42 In the 1892 presidential election Democratic nominee Grover Cleveland a strong supporter of the gold standard defeated incumbent Republican President Benjamin Harrison 43 Weaver won over one million votes carried Colorado Kansas Idaho and Nevada and received electoral votes from Oregon and North Dakota He was the first third party candidate since the Civil War to win electoral votes 44 while Field was first Southern candidate to win electoral votes since the 1872 election citation needed The Populists performed strongly in the West but many party leaders were disappointed by the results in parts of the South and the entire Great Lakes Region 45 Weaver failed to win more than 5 of the vote in any state east of the Mississippi River and north of the Mason Dixon line 46 Between presidential elections 1893 1895 EditSee also Second presidency of Grover Cleveland Shortly after Cleveland took office the country fell into a deep recession known as the Panic of 1893 In response Cleveland and his Democratic allies repealed the Sherman Silver Purchase Act and passed the Wilson Gorman Tariff Act which provided for a minor reduction in tariff rates 46 The Populists denounced the Cleveland administration s continued adherence to the gold standard and they angrily attacked the administration s decision to purchase gold from a syndicate led by J P Morgan Millions fell into unemployment and poverty and groups like Coxey s Army organized protest marches in Washington D C 47 Party membership grew in several states historian Lawrence Goodwyn estimates that in the mid 1890s the party had a following of anywhere from 25 to 45 percent of the electorate in twenty odd states 48 Partly due to the growing popularity of the Populist movement the Democratic Congress included a provision to re implement a federal income tax in the 1894 Wilson Gorman Tariff Act 49 a The Populists faced challenges from both the established major parties and the Silverites who generally disregarded the Omaha Platform in favor of bimetallism These Silverites who formed groups like the Silver Party and the Silver Republican Party became particularly strong in Western mining states like Nevada and Colorado 50 In Colorado Populists elected Davis Hanson Waite as governor but the party divided over the Waite s refusal to break the Cripple Creek miners strike of 1894 51 Silverites were also strong in Nebraska where Democratic Congressman William Jennings Bryan continued to enjoy the support of many Nebraska Populists A coalition of Democrats and Populists elected Populist William V Allen to the Senate 50 The 1894 elections were a massive defeat for the Democratic Party throughout the country and a mixed result for the Populists Populists performed poorly in the West and Midwest where Republicans dominated but won elections in Alabama and other states In the aftermath some party leaders particularly those outside the South became convinced of the need to fuse with Democrats and adopt bimetallism as the party s key issue Party chairman Herman Taubeneck declared that the party should abandon the Omaha Platform and unite the reform forces of the nation behind bimetallism 52 Meanwhile leading Democrats increasingly distanced themselves from Cleveland s gold standard policies in the aftermath of their performance in the 1894 elections 53 The Populists became increasingly polarized between moderate fusionists like Taubeneck and radical mid roaders named for their desire to take a middle road between Democrats and Republicans like Tom Watson 54 Fusionists believed the perceived radicalism of the Omaha Platform limited the party s appeal whereas a platform based on free silver would resonate with a wide array of groups 55 The mid roaders believed that free silver did not represent serious economic reform and continued to call for government ownership of railroads major changes to the financial system and resistance to the influence of large corporations 56 One Texas Populist wrote that free silver would leave undisturbed all the conditions which give rise to the undue concentration of wealth The so called silver party may prove a veritable Trojan Horse if we are not careful 57 In an attempt to get the party to repudiate the Omaha Platform in favor of free silver Taubeneck called a party convention in December 1894 Rather than repudiating the Omaha Platform the convention expanded it to include a call for the municipal ownership of public utilities 58 Populist Republican fusion in North Carolina Edit Main article Fusionism in North Carolina In 1894 1896 the Populist wave of agrarian unrest swept through the cotton and tobacco regions of the South 59 The most dramatic impact was in North Carolina where the poor white farmers who comprised the Populist party formed a working coalition with the Republican Party then largely controlled by blacks in the low country and poor whites in the mountain districts They took control of the state legislature in both 1894 and 1896 and the governorship in 1896 Restrictive rules on voting were repealed In 1895 the legislature rewarded its black allies with patronage naming 300 black magistrates in eastern districts as well as deputy sheriffs and city policemen They also received some federal patronage from the coalition congressman and state patronage from the governor 60 Women and African Americans Edit Due to the prevailing racist attitudes of the late 19th century any political alliance of Southern blacks and Southern whites was difficult to construct but shared economic concerns allowed some transracial coalition building 61 After 1886 black farmers started organizing local agricultural groups along the lines the Farmer s Alliance advocated and in 1888 the national Colored Alliance was established 62 Some southern Populists including Watson openly spoke of the need for poor blacks and poor whites to set aside their racial differences in the name of shared economic interests The Populists followed the Prohibition Party in actively including women in their affairs But regardless of these appeals racism did not evade the People s Party Prominent Populist Party leaders such as Marion Butler at least partially demonstrated a dedication to the cause of white supremacy and there appears to have been some support for this viewpoint in the party s rank and file membership 63 After 1900 Watson himself became an outspoken white supremacist Conspiratorial tendencies Edit Historians continue to debate the degree to which the Populists were bigoted against foreigners and Jews 64 Members of the anti Catholic American Protective Association were influential in California s Populist Party organization and some Populists embraced the anti Semitic conspiracy theory that the Rothschild family sought to control the United States 65 Historian Hasia Diner says Some Populists believed that Jews made up a class of international financiers whose policies had ruined small family farms they asserted owned the banks and promoted the gold standard the chief sources of their impoverishment Agrarian radicalism posited the city as antithetical to American values asserting that Jews were the essence of urban corruption 66 Presidential election of 1896 Edit In 1896 the 36 year old William Jennings Bryan was the chosen candidate resulting from the fusion of the Democrats and the People s Party In the lead up to the 1896 presidential election mid roaders fusionists and free silver Democrats all maneuvered to put their favored candidates in the best position to win Mid roaders sought to ensure that the Populists would hold their national convention before that of the Democratic Party thereby ensuring that they could not be accused of dividing reform forces 67 Defying those hopes Taubeneck arranged for the 1896 Populist National Convention to take place one week after the 1896 Democratic National Convention 67 Mid roaders mobilized to defeat the fusionists the Southern Mercury urged readers to nominate convention delegates who would support the Omaha Platform in its entirety 68 As most of the party s high ranking officeholders were fusionists the mid roaders faced difficulty in uniting around a candidate 69 The 1896 Republican National Convention nominated William McKinley a long time Republican leader who was best known for leading the passage of 1890 McKinley Tariff McKinley initially sought to downplay the gold standard in favor of campaigning on higher tariff rates but he agreed to fully endorse the gold standard at the insistence of Republican donors and party leaders 70 Meeting later in the year the 1896 Democratic National Convention nominated William Jennings Bryan for president after Bryan s Cross of Gold speech galvanized the party behind free silver For vice president the party nominated conservative shipping magnate Arthur Sewall 71 When the Populist convention met fusionists proposed that the Populists nominate the Democratic ticket while mid roaders organized to defeat fusionist efforts As Sewall was objectionable to many within the party the mid roaders successfully moved a motion to nominate the vice president first Despite a telegram from Bryan indicating that he would not accept the Populist nomination if the party did not also nominate Sewall the convention chose Tom Watson as the party s vice presidential nominee The convention also reaffirmed the major planks of the 1892 platform and added support for initiatives and referendums 72 When the convention s presidential ballot began it was still unclear whether Bryan would be nominated for president and whether Bryan would accept the nomination if offered Mid roaders put forward their own candidate obscure newspaper editor S F Norton but Norton was unable to win the support of many delegates After a long and contentious series of roll call votes Bryan won the Populist presidential nomination taking 1042 votes to Norton s 321 votes 73 Despite his earlier proclamation Bryan accepted the Populist nomination 74 Facing a massive financial and organizational disadvantage 75 Bryan embarked on a campaign that took him across the country He largely ignored major cities and the Northeast instead focusing on the Midwest which he hoped to win in conjunction with the Great Plains the Far West and the South 76 Watson ostensibly Bryan s running mate campaigned on a platform of Straight Populism and frequently attacked Sewall as an agent for the banks and railroads He delivered several speeches in Texas and the Midwest before returning to his home in Georgia for the remainder of the election 74 Ultimately McKinley won a decisive majority of the electoral vote and became the first presidential candidate to win a majority of the popular vote since the 1876 presidential election 76 Bryan swept the old Populist strongholds in the West and South and added the silverite states in the West but did poorly in the industrial heartland His strength was largely based on the traditional Democratic vote but he lost many German Catholics and members of the middle class Historians believe his defeat was partly attributable to the tactics Bryan used he had aggressively run for president while traditional candidates would use front porch campaigns 77 page needed The united opposition of nearly all business leaders and most religious leaders also hurt his candidacy as did his poor showing among Catholic groups who were alienated by Bryan s emphasis on Protestant moral values 76 Collapse Edit People s Party campaign poster from 1904 touting the candidacy of Thomas E Watson The Populist movement never recovered from the failure of 1896 and national fusion with the Democrats proved disastrous to the party In the Midwest the Populist Party essentially merged into the Democratic Party before the end of the 1890s 78 In the South the National alliance with the Democrats sapped the Populists ability to remain independent Tennessee s Populist Party was demoralized by a diminishing membership and puzzled and split by the dilemma of whether to fight the state level enemy the Democrats or the national foe the Republicans and Wall Street By 1900 the People s Party of Tennessee was a shadow of what it once was 79 page needed A similar pattern repeated throughout the South where the Populist Party had previously sought alliances with the Republican Party against the dominant state Democrats including in Watson s Georgia In North Carolina the state Democratic Party orchestrated a propaganda campaign in newspapers across the state and created a brutal and violent white supremacy election campaign to defeat the North Carolina Populists and GOP the Fusionist revolt in North Carolina collapsed in 1898 and white Democrats returned to power The gravity of the crisis was underscored by a major race riot in Wilmington in 1898 two days after the election Knowing they had just retaken control of the state legislature the Democrats were confident they could not be overcome They attacked and overcame the Fusionists mobs roamed the black neighborhoods shooting killing burning buildings and making a special target of the black newspaper 80 There were no further insurgencies in any Southern states involving a successful black coalition at the state level By 1900 the gains of the populist Republican coalition were reversed and the Democrats ushered in disfranchisement 81 practically all blacks lost their vote and the Populist Republican alliance fell apart In 1900 many Populist voters supported Bryan again though Marion Butler s home county of Sampson swung heavily to Republican McKinley in a backlash against the state Democratic party but the weakened party nominated a separate ticket of Wharton Barker and Ignatius L Donnelly and disbanded afterward citation needed The prosperity of the first decade of the 1900s helped ensure that the party continued to fade away 82 Populist activists retired from politics joined a major party or followed Debs into the Socialist Party In 1904 the party was reorganized and Watson was its nominee for president in 1904 and 1908 after which the party disbanded again In A Preface to Politics published in 1913 Walter Lippmann wrote As I write a convention of the Populist Party has just taken place Eight delegates attended the meeting which was held in a parlor 83 This may record the last gasp of the party organization Legacy EditAccording to Gene Clanton s study of Kansas populism and progressivism had a few similarities but different bases of support Both opposed corruption and trusts Populism emerged earlier and came out of the farm community It was radically egalitarian in favor of the disadvantaged classes It was weak in the towns and cities except in labor unions Progressivism on the other hand was a later movement It emerged after the 1890s from the urban business and professional communities Most of its activists had opposed populism It was elitist and emphasized education and expertise Its goals were to enhance efficiency reduce waste and enlarge the opportunities for upward social mobility However some former Populists changed their emphasis after 1900 and supported progressive reforms 84 Debate by historians Edit Since the 1890s historians have vigorously debated the nature of Populism 85 Some historians see the populists as forward looking liberal reformers others as reactionaries trying to recapture an idyllic and utopian past For some they were radicals out to restructure American life and for others they were economically hard pressed agrarians seeking government relief Much recent scholarship emphasizes Populism s debt to early American republicanism 86 Clanton 1991 stresses that Populism was the last significant expression of an old radical tradition that derived from Enlightenment sources that had been filtered through a political tradition that bore the distinct imprint of Jeffersonian Jacksonian and Lincolnian democracy This tradition emphasized human rights over the cash nexus of the Gilded Age s dominant ideology 87 Frederick Jackson Turner and a succession of western historians depicted the Populist as responding to the closure of the frontier Turner wrote The Farmers Alliance and the Populist demand for government ownership of the railroad is a phase of the same effort of the pioneer farmer on his latest frontier The proposals have taken increasing proportions in each region of Western Advance Taken as a whole Populism is a manifestation of the old pioneer ideals of the native American with the added element of increasing readiness to utilize the national government to effect its ends 88 The most influential Turner student of Populism was John D Hicks who emphasized economic pragmatism over ideals presenting Populism as interest group politics with have nots demanding their fair share of America s wealth which was being leeched off by nonproductive speculators Hicks emphasized the drought that ruined so many Kansas farmers but also pointed to financial manipulations deflation in prices caused by the gold standard high interest rates mortgage foreclosures and high railroad rates Corruption accounted for such outrages and Populists presented popular control of government as the solution a point that later students of republicanism emphasized 89 In the 1930s C Vann Woodward stressed the southern base seeing the possibility of a black and white coalition of poor against the overbearing rich 90 In the 1950s scholars such as Richard Hofstadter portrayed the Populist movement as an irrational response of backward looking farmers to the challenges of modernity Though Hofstadter wrote that the Populists were the first modern political movement of practical importance in the United States to insist that the federal government had some responsibility for the common weal he criticized the movement as anti Semitic conspiracy minded nativist and grievance based 9 According to Hofstadter the antithesis of anti modern Populism was the modernizing nature of Progressivism Hofstadter noted that leading progressives like Theodore Roosevelt Robert La Follette Sr George Norris and Woodrow Wilson were vehement enemies of Populism though Bryan cooperated with them and accepted the Populist nomination in 1896 91 page needed Reichley 1992 sees the Populist Party primarily as a reaction to the decline of the political hegemony of white Protestant farmers the share of farmers in the workforce had fallen from about 70 in the early 1830s to about 33 in the 1890s Reichley argues that while the Populist Party was founded in reaction to economic hardship by the mid 1890s it was reacting not simply against the money power but against the whole world of cities and alien customs and loose living they felt was challenging the agrarian way of life 65 Goodwyn 1976 92 page needed and Postel 2007 reject the notion that the Populists were traditionalistic and anti modern Rather they argue the Populists aggressively sought self consciously progressive goals Goodwyn criticizes Hofstadter s reliance on secondary sources to characterize the Populists working instead with material generated by the Populists themselves Goodwyn determines that the farmers cooperatives gave rise to a Populist culture and their efforts to free farmers from lien merchants revealed to them the political structure of the economy which propelled them into politics The Populists sought diffusion of scientific and technical knowledge formed highly centralized organizations launched large scale incorporated businesses and pressed for an array of state centered reforms Hundreds of thousands of women committed to Populism seeking a more modern life education and employment in schools and offices A large section of the labor movement looked to Populism for answers forging a political coalition with farmers that gave impetus to the regulatory state Progress however was also menacing and inhumane Postel notes White Populists embraced social Darwinist notions of racial improvement Chinese exclusion and separate but equal 93 page needed Influence on later movements Edit Populist voters remained active in the electorate long after 1896 but historians continue to debate which party if any absorbed the largest share of them In a case study of California Populists historian Michael Magliari found that Populist voters influenced reform movements in California s Democratic Party and Socialist Party but had a smaller impact on California s Republican Party 94 In 1990 historian William F Holmes wrote an earlier generation of historians viewed Populism as the initiator of twentieth century liberalism as manifested in Progressivism but over the past two decades we have learned that fundamental differences separated the two movements 95 Most of the leading progressives except Bryan fiercely opposed Populism Theodore Roosevelt Norris La Follette William Allen White and Wilson all strongly opposed Populism It is debated whether any Populist ideas made their way into the Democratic Party during the New Deal era The New Deal farm programs were designed by experts like Henry A Wallace who had nothing to do with Populism Michael Kazin s The Populist Persuasion 1995 argues that Populism reflected a rhetorical style that manifested itself in spokesmen like Father Charles Coughlin in the 1930s and Governor George Wallace in the 1960s Long after the dissolution of the Populist Party other third parties including a People s Party founded in 1971 and a Populist Party founded in 1984 took on similar names These parties were not directly related to the Populist Party Populism as a generic term Edit Further information Populism In the United States the term populist originally referred to the Populist Party and related left wing movements of the late 19th century that wanted to curtail the power of the corporate and financial establishment Later the term populist began to apply to any anti establishment movement 2 The original generic definition of the term which has held consistently since the emergence of its post Populist Party genericness describes a populist as a believer in the rights wisdom or virtues of the common people 96 97 In the 21st century the term once again began to be used Politicians as diverse as independent left wing Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Republican President Donald Trump have been labeled populists Electoral history and elected officials EditPresidential tickets Edit Year Presidential nominee Home state Previous positions Vice presidential nominee Home state Previous positions Votes Notes1892 James B Weaver Iowa Member of the U S House of Representatives from Iowa s 6th congressional district 1879 1881 1885 1889 Greenback Party nominee for President of the United States 1880 James G Field Virginia Attorney General of Virginia 1877 1882 1 026 595 8 5 22 EV 98 1896 William Jennings Bryan Nebraska Member of the U S House of Representatives from Nebraska s 1st congressional district 1891 1895 Thomas E Watson Georgia Member of the U S House of Representatives from Georgia s 10th congressional district 1891 1893 222 583 1 6 27 EV 99 1900 Wharton Barker Pennsylvania Financier publicist Ignatius L Donnelly Minnesota Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota 1860 1863 Member of the U S House of Representatives from Minnesota s 2nd congressional district 1863 1869 Member of the Minnesota Senate 1875 1879 1891 1895 Member of the Minnesota House of Representatives 1887 1889 1897 1899 50 989 0 4 0 EV 100 1904 Thomas E Watson Georgia see above Thomas Tibbles Nebraska Journalist 114 070 0 8 0 EV 101 1908 Thomas E Watson Georgia see above Samuel Williams Indiana Judge 28 862 0 2 0 EV 102 Seats in Congress Edit Seats in Congress Electionyear House of Representatives SenateSeats afterelection Seats afterelection 1890 8 356 New 1 88 New1892 11 356 3 3 88 11894 9 357 2 4 88 11896 22 357 13 5 90 11898 6 357 16 4 90 11900 5 357 1 4 90 11902 0 357 5 0 90 2Governors Edit Colorado Davis Hanson Waite 1893 1895 Idaho Frank Steunenberg 1897 1901 fusion of Democrats and Populists Kansas Lorenzo D Lewelling 1893 1895 Kansas John W Leedy 1897 1899 Nebraska Silas A Holcomb 1895 1899 fusion of Democrats and Populists Nebraska William A Poynter 1899 1901 fusion of Democrats and Populists North Carolina Daniel Lindsay Russell 1897 1901 coalition of Republicans and Populists Oregon Sylvester Pennoyer 1887 1895 fusion of Democrats and Populists South Dakota Andrew E Lee 1897 1901 Tennessee John P Buchanan 1891 1893 Washington John Rogers 1897 1901 fusion of Democrats and Populists Members of Congress Edit Approximately forty five members of the party served in the U S Congress between 1891 and 1902 These included six United States Senators William A Peffer and William A Harris from Kansas Marion Butler of North Carolina James H Kyle from South Dakota Henry Heitfeld of Idaho William V Allen from NebraskaThe following were Populist members of the U S House of Representatives 52nd United States Congress Thomas E Watson Georgia s 10th congressional district Benjamin Hutchinson Clover Kansas s 3rd congressional district John Grant Otis Kansas s 4th congressional district John Davis Kansas s 5th congressional district William Baker Kansas s 6th congressional district Jerry Simpson Kansas s 7th congressional district Kittel Halvorson Minnesota s 5th congressional district William A McKeighan Nebraska s 2nd congressional district Omer Madison Kem Nebraska s 3rd congressional district53rd United States Congress Haldor Boen Minnesota s 7th congressional district Marion Cannon California s 6th congressional district Lafayette Pence Colorado s 1st congressional district John Calhoun Bell Colorado s 2nd congressional district Thomas Jefferson Hudson Kansas s 3rd congressional district John Davis Kansas 5th congressional district William Baker Kansas 6th congressional district Jerry Simpson Kansas 7th congressional district William A Harris Kansas Member at large William A McKeighan Nebraska s 5th congressional district Omer Madison Kem Nebraska s 6th congressional district Alonzo C Shuford North Carolina s 7th congressional district54th United States Congress Albert Taylor Goodwyn Alabama s 5th congressional district Milford W Howard Alabama s 7th congressional district William Baker Kansas 6th congressional district Omer Madison Kem Nebraska s 6th congressional district Harry Skinner North Carolina s 1st congressional district William F Strowd North Carolina s 4th congressional district Charles H Martin 1848 1931 North Carolina s 6th congressional district Alonzo C Shuford North Carolina s 7th congressional district55th United States Congress Albert Taylor Goodwyn Alabama s 5th congressional district Charles A Barlow California s 6th congressional district Curtis H Castle California s 7th congressional district James Gunn Idaho s 1st congressional district Mason Summers Peters Kansas s 2nd congressional district Edwin Reed Ridgely Kansas s 3rd congressional district William Davis Vincent Kansas s 5th congressional district Nelson B McCormick Kansas s 6th congressional district Jerry Simpson Kansas s 7th congressional district Jeremiah Dunham Botkin Kansas Member at large Samuel Maxwell Nebraska s 3rd congressional district William Ledyard Stark Nebraska s 4th congressional district Roderick Dhu Sutherland Nebraska s 5th congressional district William Laury Greene Nebraska s 6th congressional district Harry Skinner North Carolina s 1st congressional district John E Fowler North Carolina s 3rd congressional district William F Strowd North Carolina s 4th congressional district Charles H Martin North Carolina s 5th congressional district Alonzo C Shuford North Carolina s 7th congressional district John Edward Kelley South Dakota s 1st congressional district Freeman T Knowles South Dakota s 2nd congressional district56th United States Congress William Ledyard Stark Nebraska s 4th congressional district Roderick Dhu Sutherland Nebraska s 5th congressional district William Laury Greene Nebraska s 6th congressional district John W Atwater North Carolina s 4th congressional district57th United States Congress Thomas L Glenn Idaho s 1st congressional district Caldwell Edwards Montana s 1st congressional district William Ledyard Stark Nebraska s 4th congressional district William Neville Nebraska s 6th congressional district See also Edit Left wing populism List of political parties in the United States Political interpretations of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Bryant W Bailey Louisiana Populist Annie Le Porte Diggs 1853 1916 Populist advocate Leonard M Landsborough California PopulistNotes Edit The income tax provision was struck down by the Supreme Court in the 1895 case of Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co 49 References Edit Goodwyn 1978 a b c Kazin Michael 22 March 2016 How Can Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders Both Be Populist The New York Times Retrieved 26 November 2018 Mansbridge Jane Macedo Stephen 2019 10 13 Populism and Democratic Theory Annual Review of Law and Social Science 15 1 59 77 doi 10 1146 annurev lawsocsci 101518 042843 ISSN 1550 3585 S2CID 210355727 Goodwyn 1978 pp 10 12 Brands 2010 pp 432 433 Goodwyn 1978 pp 16 17 Goodwyn 1978 pp 12 24 Goodwyn 1978 pp 13 14 a b Zeitz Joshua 14 January 2018 Historians Have Long Thought Populism Was a Good Thing Are They Wrong Politico Retrieved 17 November 2018 a b Reichley 2000 pp 133 134 a b Goodwyn 1978 pp 18 19 Goodwyn 1978 pp 24 26 Goodwyn 1978 pp 32 34 Goodwyn 1978 pp 35 41 Goodwyn 1978 pp 46 49 Brands 2010 pp 433 434 Reichley 2000 pp 134 135 Goodwyn 1978 pp 57 59 63 Goodwyn 1978 p 90 Goodwyn 1978 pp 91 92 Goodwyn 1978 pp 107 110 113 Goodwyn 1978 pp 116 117 Goodwyn 1978 pp 127 128 Brands 2010 p 438 Goodwyn 1978 pp 143 144 Goodwyn 1978 pp 147 148 159 Goodwyn 1978 p 151 Goodwyn 1978 pp 163 165 Brands 2010 p 439 Kazin 1995 pp 27 29 Goodwyn 1978 pp 167 168 171 Goodwyn 1978 pp 169 172 Brands 2010 p 440 Goodwyn 1978 pp 172 173 Brands 2010 pp 439 440 Holmes 1990 p 37 Holmes 1990 pp 30 31 Holmes 1990 pp 35 38 46 Turner 1980 pp 358 364 367 Wishart David J 2004 Encyclopedia of the Great Plains Lincoln University of Nebraska Press p 337 ISBN 978 0 8032 4787 1 Goodwyn 1978 pp 174 179 Holmes 1990 pp 38 39 Goodwyn 1978 pp 200 201 Egad He Moved His Feet When He Ran The Washington Post 2008 07 05 ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2018 09 10 Goodwyn 1978 pp 186 187 199 200 a b Reichley 2000 p 138 Goodwyn 1978 pp 207 208 Goodwyn 1978 p 233 a b Brands 2010 pp 485 486 a b Goodwyn 1978 pp 215 218 221 222 Holmes 1990 p 50 Goodwyn 1978 pp 227 229 Goodwyn 1978 pp 238 239 Goodwyn 1978 pp 230 231 Goodwyn 1978 pp 233 234 Goodwyn 1978 pp 234 235 Goodwyn 1978 pp 249 250 Goodwyn 1978 pp 241 242 Bouie Jamelle August 14 2019 America holds onto an undemocratic assumption from its founding that some people deserve more power than others The New York Times Retrieved 20 August 2019 Despite insurgencies at home the Populist Party for example swept through Georgia and North Carolina in the 1890s Helen G Edmonds The Negro and Fusion Politics in North Carolina 1894 1901 1951 pp 97 136 Goodwyn 1978 pp 121 122 Goodwyn 1978 pp 118 120 Hunt 2003 pp 3 7 Turner 1980 pp 355 356 a b Reichley 2000 p 142 Hasia R Diner 2004 The Jews of the United States 1654 to 2000 U of California Press p 170 ISBN 9780520227736 a b Goodwyn 1978 pp 247 248 Goodwyn 1978 pp 251 252 Goodwyn 1978 p 257 Reichley 2000 pp 139 141 Goodwyn 1978 pp 254 256 Goodwyn 1978 pp 256 259 Goodwyn 1978 pp 259 262 a b Goodwyn 1978 pp 274 278 Goodwyn 1978 pp 279 280 a b c Reichley 2000 pp 144 146 R Hal Williams Realigning America McKinley Bryan and the Remarkable Election of 1896 2010 Goodwyn 1978 pp 285 286 Lester 2007 Andrea Meryl Kirshenbaum The Vampire That Hovers Over North Carolina Gender White Supremacy and the Wilmington Race Riot of 1898 Southern Cultures 4 3 1998 pp 6 30 online Eric Anderson Race and Politics in North Carolina 1872 1901 1981 Brands 2010 p 529 Walter Lippmann A Preface to Politics New York and London Mitchell Kennerley 1913 p 275 Gene Clanton Populism Progressivism and Equality The Kansas Paradigm Agricultural History 1977 51 3 pp 559 581 For a summary or how historians approach the topic see Worth Robert Miller A Centennial Historiography of American Populism Kansas History 1993 16 1 54 69 See Worth Robert Miller The Republican Tradition in Miller Oklahoma Populism A History of the People s Party in the Oklahoma Territory 1987 online edition Clanton 1991 p xv Frederick Jackson Turner The Frontier in American History 1920 p 148 online edition Martin Ridge Populism Revolt John D Hicks and The Populist Revolt Reviews in American History 13 March 1985 142 54 C Vann Woodward Tom Watson Agrarian Rebel 1938 Woodward Tom Watson and the Negro in Agrarian Politics The Journal of Southern History Vol 4 No 1 Feb 1938 pp 14 33 in JSTOR Richard Hofstadter The Age of Reform From Bryan to F D R 1955 Goodwyn Lawrence 1976 Democratic Promise the Populist Moment in America Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 501996 4 Postel 2007 Magliari 1995 pp 394 411 412 Holmes 1990 p 58 Webster s ninth new collegiate dictionary Springfield MA Merriam Webster Inc 1983 Oxford English Dictionary Oxford English Dictionary Online 1989 Retrieved 16 March 2018 The ticket won 5 states its best showing was Nevada where it received 66 8 of the vote The Populists nominated Bryan the Democratic nominee but nominated Watson for Vice President instead of Democratic nominee Arthur Sewall Bryan and Sewall received an additional 6 286 469 45 1 and 149 electoral votes Bryan s best showing was Mississippi where he received 91 0 of the vote The ticket s best result was Texas where it received 5 0 of the vote The ticket s best result was Georgia where it received 17 3 The ticket s best result was Georgia where it received 12 6 Bibliography Edit Secondary sources Edit Ali Omar H 2010 In the Lion s Mouth Black Populism in the New South 1886 1900 University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781604737806 Argersinger Peter H 2015 1982 Populism and Politics William Alfred Peffer and the People s Party University Press of Kentucky ISBN 9780813162003 Beeby James M 2008 Revolt of the Tar Heels The North Carolina Populist Movement 1890 1901 University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781604733242 Berman David R 2007 Radicalism in the Mountain West 1890 1920 Socialists Populists Miners and Wobblies University Press of Colorado ISBN 9781607320067 Brands H W 2010 American Colossus The Triumph of Capitalism 1865 1900 Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 52333 2 Clanton O Gene 1991 Populism The Humane Preference in America 1890 1900 Twayne Publishers ISBN 9780805797442 Durden Robert F 2015 1965 The Climax of Populism The Election of 1896 University Press of Kentucky ISBN 9780813162652 Formisano Ronald P 2008 For the People American Populist Movements from the Revolution to the 1850s University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807831724 Goodwyn Lawrence 1978 The Populist Moment A Short History of the Agrarian Revolt in America Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199736096 Hackney Sheldon ed 1971 Populism the Critical Issues Little Brown ISBN 978 0316336901 Hicks John D The Sub Treasury A Forgotten Plan for the Relief of Agriculture Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol 15 No 3 Dec 1928 pp 355 373 in JSTOR Hicks John D The Populist Revolt A History of the Farmers Alliance and the People s Party Minneapolis MN University of Minnesota Press 1931 Hild Matthew 2007 Greenbackers Knights of Labor and Populists Farmer Labor Insurgency in the Late Nineteenth Century South University of Georgia Press ISBN 9780820328973 Hild Matthew Arkansas s Gilded Age The Rise Decline and Legacy of Populism and Working Class Protest U of Missouri Press 2018 online review Holmes William F 1990 Populism In Search of Context Agricultural History 64 4 26 58 JSTOR 3743349 Hunt James L 2003 Marion Butler and American Populism University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807862506 Jessen Nathan 2017 Populism and Imperialism Politics Culture and Foreign Policy in the American West 1890 1900 University Press of Kansas ISBN 9780700624645 Kazin Michael 1995 The Populist Persuasion Basic Books ISBN 978 0465037933 Kazin Michael 2006 A Godly Hero The Life of William Jennings Bryan Knopf ISBN 978 0375411359 Knoles George Harmon Populism and Socialism with Special Reference to the Election of 1892 Pacific Historical Review vol 12 no 3 Sept 1943 pp 295 304 In JSTOR Kuzminski Adrian Fixing the System A History of Populism Ancient amp Modern New York Continuum Books 2008 Lester Connie 2006 Up from the Mudsills of Hell The Farmers Alliance Populism and Progressive Agriculture in Tennessee 1870 1915 University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0820327624 Magliari Michael 1995 What Happened to the Populist Vote A California Case Study Pacific Historical Review 64 3 389 412 doi 10 2307 3641007 JSTOR 3641007 McMath Robert C Jr 1993 American Populism A Social History 1877 1898 Macmillan ISBN 9780374522643 Miller Worth Robert A Centennial Historiography of American Populism Kansas History 1993 16 1 54 69 online edition Miller Worth Robert Farmers and Third Party Politics in Late Nineteenth Century America in Charles W Calhoun ed The Gilded Age Essays on the Origins of Modern America 1995 online edition Nugent Walter 2013 The Tolerant Populists Kansas Populism and Nativism 2nd ed University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226054117 Ostler Jeffrey 1992 Why the Populist Party Was Strong in Kansas and Nebraska but Weak in Iowa Western Historical Quarterly 23 4 451 474 doi 10 2307 970302 JSTOR 970302 Palmer Bruce 1980 Man Over Money the Southern Populist Critique of American Capitalism University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 1427 7 Peterson James The Trade Unions and the Populist Party Science amp Society vol 8 no 2 Spring 1944 pp 143 160 In JSTOR Pollack Norman 1976 The Populist Response to Industrial America Midwestern Populist Thought Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674690516 Postel Charles 2007 The Populist Vision Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199758463 Rogers William Warren 2001 1970 The One gallused Rebellion Agrarianism in Alabama 1865 1896 University of Alabama Press ISBN 9780817311063 Stock Catherine McNicol 2017 1996 Rural Radicals Righteous Rage in the American Grain 2nd ed Cornell University Press ISBN 9781501714054 Turner James 1980 Understanding the Populists The Journal of American History 67 2 354 373 doi 10 2307 1890413 JSTOR 1890413 White Richard 2017 The Republic for Which It Stands The United States During Reconstruction and the Gilded Age 1865 1896 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190619060 Woodward C Vann 2016 1938 Tom Watson Agrarian Rebel Pickle Partner s Publishing ISBN 9781787202566 online edition Woodward C Vann Tom Watson and the Negro in Agrarian Politics The Journal of Southern History Vol 4 No 1 Feb 1938 pp 14 33 in JSTOR Contemporary accounts Edit Gompers Samuel July 1892 Organized Labor in the Campaign The North American Review 155 428 91 97 Retrieved 2006 10 09 Dolph Senator Joseph N January 1893 Does the Republican Party Need Reorganization The North American Review 156 434 54 61 Retrieved 2006 10 09 Peffer Senator William A December 1893 The Mission of the Populist Party The North American Review 157 445 665 679 Retrieved 2006 10 09 Lewelling L D January 1895 Problems Before the Western Farmer The North American Review 160 458 16 21 Retrieved 2006 10 09 Stahl John M September 1896 Are the Farmers Populists The North American Review 163 478 266 276 Retrieved 2006 10 09 Trent W P January 1897 Dominant Forces in Southern Life The Atlantic Monthly 79 471 42 53 Retrieved 2006 10 09 Turner Frederick J April 1897 Dominant Forces in Western Life The Atlantic Monthly 79 474 433 443 Retrieved 2006 10 09 Peffer Senator William A January 1898 The Passing of the People s Party The North American Review 166 494 12 24 Retrieved 2006 10 09 External links Edit From People s Party Platform Omaha Morning World Herald 5 July 1892 40 original Populist cartoons primary sources Peffer William A The Mission of the Populist Party The North American Review Dec 1993 v 157 445 pp 665 679 full text online important policy statement by leading Populist senator People s Party Hand Book of Facts Campaign of 1898 96 p official party pamphlet for North Carolina election of 1898 Populist republican and Democratic cartoons 189s election primary sources Populist Party timeline and texts edited by Professor Edwards secondary and primary sourcesParty publications and materials The People s Advocate 1892 1900 digitized copies of the Populist Party s newspaper in Washington State from The Labor Press Project Populist Cartoon Index Archived at Missouri State University Retrieved August 24 2006 Buttons tokens and ribbons of the Populist Party Reprinted from Issue 19 Buttons and Ballots Fall 1998 Retrieved August 26 2006 People s Party Hand Book of Facts Campaign of 1898 Electronic Edition Populist Party N C State Executive Committee Reformated and reprinted by the University Library The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Populist materials online courtesy University Library The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Secondary sources The Populist Movement in the United States by Anna Rochester 1943 Farmers the Populist Party and Mississippi 1870 1900 By Kenneth G McCarty Published by Mississippi History Now a project of the Mississippi Historical Society Retrieved August 24 2006 The Populist Party in Nebraska Published by the Nebraskastudies org a project of the Nebraska Department of Education Fusion Politics The Populist Party in North Carolina A project of the John Locke Foundation Retrieved August 24 2006 The Decline of the Cotton Farmer Anecdotal account of rise and fall of Farmers Alliance and Populist Party in Texas Populist Party New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title People 27s Party United States amp oldid 1142900614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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