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Thaddeus Stevens

Thaddeus Stevens (April 4, 1792 – August 11, 1868) was an American politician and lawyer who served as a member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania, being one of the leaders of the Radical Republican faction of the Republican Party during the 1860s. A fierce opponent of slavery and discrimination against black Americans, Stevens sought to secure their rights during Reconstruction, leading the opposition to U.S. President Andrew Johnson. As chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee during the American Civil War, he played a leading role, focusing his attention on defeating the Confederacy, financing the war with new taxes and borrowing, crushing the power of slave owners, ending slavery, and securing equal rights for the freedmen.

Thaddeus Stevens
Portrait by Brady-Handy, c. 1860–1868
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania
In office
March 4, 1859 – August 11, 1868
Preceded byAnthony Roberts
Succeeded byOliver Dickey
Constituency9th district
In office
March 4, 1849 – March 3, 1853
Preceded byJohn Strohm
Succeeded byHenry A. Muhlenberg
Constituency8th district
Chair of the House Ways and Means Committee
In office
March 4, 1861 – March 3, 1865
Preceded byJohn Sherman
Succeeded byJustin Smith Morrill
Chair of the House Appropriations Committee
In office
December 11, 1865 – August 11, 1868
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byElihu B. Washburne
Personal details
Born(1792-04-04)April 4, 1792
Danville, Vermont, U.S.
DiedAugust 11, 1868(1868-08-11) (aged 76)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Resting placeShreiner-Concord Cemetery
Political partyRepublican (from 1855)
Other political
affiliations
Federalist (before 1828)
Anti-Masonic (1828–1838)
Whig (1838–1853)
Know Nothing (1853–1855)
Domestic partnerLydia Hamilton Smith (1848–1868)
EducationUniversity of Vermont
Dartmouth College (BA)
Signature
Nickname(s)The Old Commoner
The Great Commoner

Stevens was born in rural Vermont, in poverty, and with a club foot, which left him with a permanent limp. He moved to Pennsylvania as a young man and quickly became a successful lawyer in Gettysburg. He interested himself in municipal affairs and then in politics. He was an active leader of the Anti-Masonic Party, as a fervent believer that Freemasonry in the United States was an evil conspiracy to secretly control the republican system of government. He was elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, where he became a strong advocate of free public education. Financial setbacks in 1842 caused him to move his home and practice to the larger city of Lancaster. There, he joined the Whig Party and was elected to Congress in 1848. His activities as a lawyer and politician in opposition to slavery cost him votes, and he did not seek reelection in 1852. After a brief flirtation with the Know-Nothing Party, Stevens joined the newly formed Republican Party and was elected to Congress again in 1858. There, with fellow radicals such as Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner, he opposed the expansion of slavery and concessions to the South as the war came.

Stevens argued that slavery should not survive the war; he was frustrated by the slowness of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln to support his position. He guided the government's financial legislation through the House as Ways and Means chairman. As the war progressed towards a Northern victory, Stevens came to believe that not only should slavery be abolished, but that black Americans should be given a stake in the South's future through the confiscation of land from planters to be distributed to the freedmen. His plans went too far for the Moderate Republicans and were not enacted.

After the assassination of Abraham Lincoln in April 1865, Stevens came into conflict with the new president, Johnson, who sought rapid restoration of the seceded states without guarantees for freedmen. The difference in views caused an ongoing battle between Johnson and Congress, with Stevens leading the Radical Republicans. After gains in the 1866 election, the radicals took control of Reconstruction away from Johnson. Stevens's last great battle was to secure in the House articles of impeachment against Johnson, acting as a House manager in the impeachment trial, though the Senate did not convict the President.

Historiographical views of Stevens have dramatically shifted over the years, from the early 20th-century view of Stevens as reckless and motivated by hatred of the white South to the perspective of the neoabolitionists of the 1950s and afterward, who lauded him for his commitment to equality.

Early life and education edit

Stevens was born in Danville, Vermont, on April 4, 1792. He was the second of four children, all boys, and was named to honor the Polish general who served in the American Revolutionary War, Tadeusz "Thaddeus" Kościuszko.[1] His parents were Baptists who had emigrated from Massachusetts around 1786. Thaddeus was born with a club foot which, at the time, was seen by some as a judgment from God for secret parental sin. His older brother was born with the same condition in both feet. The boys' father, Joshua Stevens, was a farmer and cobbler who struggled to make a living in Vermont. After fathering two more sons (born without disability), Joshua abandoned the children and his wife Sarah (née Morrill). The circumstances of his departure and his subsequent fate are uncertain; he may have died at the Battle of Oswego during the War of 1812.[2]

Sarah Stevens struggled to make a living from the farm even with the increasing aid of her sons.[3] She was determined that her sons improve themselves, and in 1807 moved the family to the neighboring town of Peacham, Vermont, where she enrolled young Thaddeus in the Caledonia Grammar School (often called the Peacham Academy). He suffered much from the taunts of his classmates for his disability. Later accounts describe him as "wilful, headstrong" with "an overwhelming burning desire to secure an education."[4]

After graduation, he enrolled at the University of Vermont, but suspended his studies due to the federal government's appropriation of campus buildings during the War of 1812.[5] Stevens then enrolled in the sophomore class at Dartmouth College. At Dartmouth, despite a stellar academic career, he was not elected to Phi Beta Kappa; this was reportedly a scarring experience for him.[6][7]

Stevens graduated from Dartmouth in 1814 and spoke at the commencement ceremony. Afterward, he returned to Peacham and briefly taught there. Stevens also began to read law in the office of John Mattocks. In early 1815, correspondence with a friend, Samuel Merrill, a fellow Vermonter who had moved to York, Pennsylvania to become preceptor of the York Academy, led to an offer for Stevens to join the academy faculty. He moved to York to teach, and continued the study of law in the offices of David Cossett.[8]

Pennsylvania attorney and politician edit

Gettysburg lawyer edit

In Pennsylvania, Stevens taught school at the York Academy and continued his studies for the bar.[9] Local lawyers passed a resolution barring from membership anyone who had "followed any other profession while preparing for admission,"[5] a restriction likely aimed at Stevens. Undaunted, he reportedly (according to a story he often retold) presented himself and four bottles of Madeira wine to the examining board in nearby Harford County, Maryland. Few questions were asked, but much wine was drunk. He left Bel Air the next morning with a certificate allowing him, through reciprocity, to practice law anywhere. Stevens then went to Gettysburg, the seat of Adams County,[9][10] where he opened an office in September 1816.[11]

Stevens knew no one in Gettysburg and initially had little success as a lawyer. His breakthrough, in mid-1817, was a case in which a farmer who had been jailed for debt later killed one of the constables who had arrested him. His defense, although unsuccessful, impressed the local people, and he never lacked for business thereafter.[11] In his legal career, he demonstrated the propensity for sarcasm that would later mark him as a politician, once telling a judge who accused him of manifesting contempt of court, "Sir, I am doing my best to conceal it."[12]

Many who memorialized Stevens after his death in 1868 agreed on his talent as a lawyer. He was involved in the first ten cases to reach the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania from Adams County after he began his practice and won nine. One case he later wished he had not won was Butler v. Delaplaine, in which he successfully reclaimed a slave on behalf of her owner.[13]

In Gettysburg, Stevens also began his involvement in politics, serving six one-year terms on the borough council between 1822 and 1831 and becoming its president.[14] He took the profits from his practice and invested them in Gettysburg real estate, becoming the largest landowner in the community by 1825, and had an interest in several iron furnaces outside town.[13] In addition to assets, he acquired enemies; after the death of a pregnant black woman in Gettysburg, there were anonymous letter-writers to newspapers, hinting that Stevens was culpable. The rumors dogged him for years;[15] when one newspaper opposed to Stevens printed a letter in 1831 naming him as the killer, he successfully sued for libel.[16]

Anti-Masonry edit

Stevens's first political cause was Anti-Masonry, which became widespread in 1826 after the disappearance and death of William Morgan, a Mason in upstate New York; fellow Masons were presumed to be the killers of Morgan because they disapproved of his publishing a book revealing the order's secret rites. Since the leading candidate in opposition to President John Quincy Adams was General Andrew Jackson, a Mason who mocked opponents of the order, Anti-Masonry became closely associated with opposition to Jackson and his Jacksonian democracy policies once he was elected president in 1828.[17]

Jackson's adherents were from the old Democratic–Republican Party and eventually became known as the Democrats. Stevens had been told by a fellow attorney (and future president) James Buchanan that he could advance politically if he joined them. However, Stevens could not support Jackson, out of principle.[18] For Stevens, Anti-Masonry became one means of opposing Jackson; he may also have had personal reasons as the Masons barred "cripples" from joining. Stevens took to Anti-Masonry with enthusiasm and remained loyal to it after most Pennsylvanians had dropped the cause. His biographer, Hans Trefousse, suggested that another reason for Stevens's virulence was an attack of disease in the late 1820s that cost him his hair (he thereafter wore wigs, often ill-fitting), and "the unwelcome illness may well have contributed to his unreasonable fanaticism concerning the Masons."[19]

By 1829, Anti-Masonry had evolved into a political party, the Anti-Masonic Party, that proved popular in rural central Pennsylvania. Stevens quickly became prominent in the movement, attending the party's first two national conventions in 1830 and 1831. At the latter, he pressed the candidacy of Supreme Court Justice John McLean as the party's presidential candidate, but in vain as the nomination fell to former Attorney General William Wirt. Jackson was easily reelected; the crushing defeat (Wirt won only Vermont) caused the party to disappear in most places, though it remained powerful in Pennsylvania for several years.[20][21]

In September 1833, Stevens was elected to a one-year term in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives as an Anti-Mason. Once in the capital Harrisburg, he sought to have the body establish a committee to investigate Masonry. Stevens gained attention far beyond Pennsylvania for his oratory against Masonry and quickly became an expert in legislative maneuvers. In 1835, a split among the Democrats put the Anti-Masons in control of the Pennsylvania General Assembly, the legislature. Granted subpoena powers, Stevens summoned leading state politicians who were Masons, including Governor George Wolf. The witnesses invoked their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, and when Stevens verbally abused one of them, it created a backlash that caused his own party to end the investigation. The fracas cost Stevens reelection in 1836, and the issue of Anti-Masonry died in Pennsylvania. Nevertheless, Stevens remained an opponent of the order for the rest of his life.[22][23]

Crusader for education edit

Beginning with his early years in Gettysburg, Stevens advanced the cause of universal education. At the time, no state outside New England had free public education for all. In Pennsylvania, there was free education in Philadelphia, but elsewhere in the state, those wishing to have their children educated without paying tuition had to swear a pauper's oath. Stevens opened his extensive private library to the public and gave up his presidency of the borough council, believing his service on the school board more important.[24] In 1825, he was elected by the voters of Adams County as a trustee of Gettysburg Academy. As the school was failing, Stevens got county voters to agree to pay its debt, allowing it to be sold as a Lutheran seminary. It was granted the right to award college degrees in 1831 as Pennsylvania College, and in 1921 became Gettysburg College. Stevens gave the school land upon which a building could be raised and served as a trustee for many years.[25][26][27]

 
Portrait of Stevens by Jacob Eichholtz now owned by Gettysburg College

In April 1834, Stevens, working with Governor Wolf, guided an act through the legislature to allow districts across the state to vote on whether to have public schools and the taxes to pay for them. Gettysburg's district voted in favor and also elected Stevens as a school director, where he served until 1839. Tens of thousands of voters signed petitions urging a reversal. The result was a repeal bill that easily passed the Pennsylvania Senate. It was widely believed the bill would also pass the House and be enacted despite opposition by Stevens. When he rose to speak on April 11, 1835, he defended the new educational system, stating that it would actually save money, and demonstrated how. He stated that opponents were seeking to separate the poor into a lower caste than themselves and accused the rich of greed and failure to empathize with the poor. Stevens argued, "Build not your monuments of brass or marble, but make them of everliving mind!"[28][29] The repeal bill was defeated; Stevens was given wide credit. Trefousse suggested that the victory was not due to Stevens's eloquence, but due to his influence, combined with that of Governor Wolf.[30]

Political change; move to Lancaster edit

In 1838, Stevens ran again for the legislature. He hoped that if the remaining Anti-Masons and the emerging Whig Party gained a majority, he could be elected to the United States Senate, whose members until 1913 were chosen by state legislatures. A campaign, dirty even by the standards of the times, followed. The result was a Democrat elected as governor, Whig control of the state Senate, and the state House in dispute, with several seats from Philadelphia in question. Stevens won his seat in Adams County, and sought to have those Philadelphia Democrats excluded, which would create a Whig majority that could elect a Speaker and himself as a senator. Amid rioting in Harrisburg – later known as the "Buckshot War" – Stevens's ploy backfired, with the Democrats taking control of the House. Stevens remained in the legislature for most years through 1842 but the episode cost him much of his political influence. The Whigs blamed him for the debacle and were increasingly unwilling to give leadership to someone who had not yet joined their party. Nevertheless, he supported the pro-business and pro-development Whig stances.[31] He campaigned for the Whig candidate in the 1840 presidential election, former general William Henry Harrison. Though Stevens later alleged that Harrison had promised him a Cabinet position if elected, he received none, and any influence ended when Harrison died after a month in office, to be succeeded by John Tyler, a southerner hostile to Stevens's stances on slavery.[31][32]

Although Stevens was the most successful lawyer in Gettysburg, he had accrued debt due to his business interests. Refusing to take advantage of the bankruptcy laws, he felt he needed to move to a larger municipality to gain the money to pay his obligations. In 1842, Stevens moved his home and practice to Lancaster. He knew Lancaster County was an Anti-Mason and Whig stronghold, which ensured that he retained a political base. Within a short period, he was earning more than any other Lancaster attorney; by 1848, he had reduced his debts to $30,000 (~$825,175 in 2022) and paid them off soon after. It was in Lancaster that he engaged the services of Lydia Hamilton Smith, a housekeeper, whose racial makeup was described as mulatto, and who remained with him the rest of his life.[33]

Abolitionist and prewar congressman edit

Evolution of views edit

In the 1830s, few sought the immediate eradication of slavery. The abolitionist movement was young and only recently had figures such as William Lloyd Garrison taken on the fight.[34] Stevens's reason for adopting slavery as a cause has been disputed among his recent biographers. Richard N. Current, in 1942, suggested it was out of ambition; Fawn Brodie, in her controversial 1959 psychobiography of Stevens, suggested it was out of identification with the downtrodden, based on his handicap.[35] Trefousse, in his 1997 work, also suggested that Stevens's feelings towards the downtrodden were a factor, combined with remorse over the Butler case, but that ambition was unlikely to have been a significant motivator, as Stevens's fervor in the anti-slavery cause inhibited his career.[36]

 
Stevens's home on Queen Street, Lancaster, Pennsylvania

At the 1837 Pennsylvania constitutional convention, Stevens, who was a delegate, fought against the disenfranchisement of African-Americans (see Black suffrage in Pennsylvania).[37] According to historian Eric Foner, "When Stevens refused to sign the 1837 constitution because of its voting provision, he announced his commitment to a non-racial definition of American citizenship to which he would adhere for the remainder of his life."[38] After he moved to Lancaster, a city not far from the Mason–Dixon line, he became active in the Underground Railroad, not only defending people believed to be fugitive slaves, but coordinating the movements of those seeking freedom.[39] A 2003 renovation at his former home in Lancaster disclosed that there was a hidden cistern, attached to the main building by a concealed tunnel, in which escaped slaves hid.[40][41]

Until the outbreak of the American Civil War, Stevens took the public position that he supported slavery's end and opposed its expansion. Nevertheless, he would not seek to disturb it in the states where it existed, because the Constitution protected their internal affairs from federal interference.[34] He also supported slave-owning Whig candidates for president: Henry Clay in 1844[42] and Zachary Taylor in 1848.[43]

First tenure in Congress edit

In 1848, Stevens ran for election to Congress from Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district. There was opposition to him at the Whig convention. Some delegates felt that because Stevens had been late to join the party, he should not receive the nomination; others disliked his stance on slavery. He narrowly won the nomination. In a strong year for Whigs nationally, Taylor was chosen as president and Stevens was elected to Congress.[44]

It is my purpose nowhere in these remarks to make personal reproaches; I entertain no ill-will toward any human being, nor any brute, that I know of, not even the [Democratic] skunk across the way to which I referred. Least of all would I reproach the South. I honor her courage and fidelity. Even in a bad, a wicked cause, she shows a united front. All her sons are faithful to the cause of human bondage, because it is their cause. But the North – the poor, timid, mercenary, driveling North – has no such united defenders of her cause, although it is the cause of human liberty ... She is offered up a sacrifice to propitiate southern tyranny – to conciliate southern treason.

—Stevens in the House debate over the
Fugitive Slave Act, June 10, 1850[45]

When the 31st United States Congress convened in December 1849, Stevens took his seat, joining other newly elected slavery opponents such as Salmon P. Chase. Stevens spoke out against the Compromise of 1850, crafted by Kentucky Senator Henry Clay, that gave victories to both North and South, but would allow for some of the territories of the United States recently gained from Mexico to become slave states.[46] As the debates continued, in June he said, "This word 'compromise' when applied to human rights and constitutional rights I abhor."[47] Nevertheless, the pieces of legislation that made up the Compromise passed, including the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, which Stevens found particularly offensive.[48] Although many Americans hoped that the Compromise would bring sectional peace, Stevens warned that it would be "the fruitful mother of future rebellion, disunion, and civil war."[49]

Stevens was easily renominated and reelected in 1850, even though his stance caused him problems among pro-Compromise Whigs.[50] In 1851, Stevens was one of the defense lawyers in the trial of 38 African-Americans and three others in federal court in Philadelphia on treason charges. The defendants had been implicated in the so-called Christiana Riot: an attempt to enforce a Fugitive Slave Act warrant had resulted in the killing of the slaveowner. Justice Robert Grier of the U.S. Supreme Court, as circuit justice, tried the case, and instructed the jury to acquit because though the defendants might be guilty of murder or riot, they were not charged with that and were not guilty of treason. The well-publicized incident (and others like it) increased polarization over the issue of slavery, and made Stevens a prominent face of Northern abolitionism.[50][51]

Despite this trend, Stevens suffered political problems. He left the Whig caucus in December 1851, when his colleagues would not join him in seeking the repeal of the offensive elements of the Compromise. Nevertheless, he supported its unsuccessful 1852 candidate for president, General Winfield Scott. His political opposition, and local dislike of his stance on slavery and participation in the treason trial, made him unlikely to win renomination, and he sought only to pick his successor. His choice was defeated for the Whig nomination.[52]

Know-Nothing and Republican edit

Out of office, Stevens concentrated on the practice of law in Lancaster, remaining one of the leading attorneys in the state. He stayed active in politics, and in 1854, to gain more votes for the anti-slavery movement, he joined the nativist Know Nothing Party. The members were pledged not to speak of party deliberations (thus, they knew nothing), and Stevens was attacked for his membership in a group with similar secrecy rules as the Masons. In 1855, Stevens joined the new Republican Party. Other former Whigs who were anti-slavery joined as well, including William H. Seward of New York, Charles E. Sumner of Massachusetts, and Abraham Lincoln of Illinois.[53]

Stevens was a delegate to the 1856 Republican National Convention, where he supported Justice McLean, as he had in 1832. However, the convention nominated John C. Frémont, whom Stevens actively supported in the race against his fellow Lancastrian, the Democratic candidate James Buchanan. Nonetheless, Pennsylvania helped elect Buchanan.[54] Stevens returned to the practice of law, but in 1858, with the President and his party unpopular and the nation torn by such controversies as the Dred Scott decision, Stevens saw an opportunity to return to Congress. As the Republican nominee, he was easily elected. Democratic papers were appalled. One banner headline read, "Niggerism Triumphant."[55]

1860 election; secession crisis edit

Stevens took his seat in the 36th United States Congress in December 1859, only days after the hanging of John Brown, who had attacked the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry hoping to cause a slave insurrection. Stevens opposed Brown's violent actions at the time, though later, he was more approving. Sectional tensions spilled over into the House, which proved unable to elect a Speaker of the United States House for eight weeks. Stevens was active in the bitter flow of invective from both sides; at one point, Mississippi Congressman William Barksdale drew a knife on him, though no blood was spilled.[56]

 
Southern view of the proposed compromises of 1860 and 1861, with "Dr. North" (Stevens) proposing to cut the South's legs off using a constitutional amendment. Stevens actually opposed such measures.

With the Democrats unable to agree on a single presidential candidate, the 1860 Republican National Convention in Chicago became crucial, as the nominee would be in a favorable position to become president. Prominent figures in the party, such as Seward and Lincoln, sought the nomination. Stevens continued to support the 75-year-old Justice McLean. Beginning on the second ballot, most Pennsylvania delegates supported Lincoln, helping to win him the nomination. As the Democrats put up no candidate in his district, Stevens was assured of reelection to the House and campaigned for Lincoln in Pennsylvania. Lincoln won a majority in the Electoral College. The President-elect's known opposition to the expansion of slavery caused immediate talk of secession in the southern states, a threat that Stevens had downplayed during the campaign.[57][58]

Congress convened in December 1860, with several of the southern states already pledging to secede. Stevens was unyielding in opposing efforts to appease the southerners, such as the Crittenden Compromise, which would have enshrined slavery as beyond constitutional amendment.[59] He stated, in a remark widely quoted both North and South, that rather than offer concessions because of Lincoln's election, he would see "this Government crumble into a thousand atoms," and that the forces of the United States would crush any rebellion.[60] Despite Stevens's protests, the lame-duck Buchanan administration did little in response to the secession votes, allowing most federal resources in the South to fall into rebel hands. Even in the abolition movement, many were content to let it be so and let the South go its own way. Stevens disagreed, and the congressman was "undoubtedly pleased" by Lincoln's statement in his first inaugural address on March 4, 1861, that he would "hold, occupy and possess the property and places belonging to the Government."[61][62]

American Civil War edit

Slavery edit

When the war began in April 1861, Stevens argued that the Confederates were revolutionaries to be crushed by force. He also believed that the Confederacy had placed itself beyond the protection of the U.S. Constitution by making war, and that in a reconstituted United States, slavery should have no place. Speaker Galusha Grow, whose views placed him with Stevens among the members becoming known as the Radical Republicans (for their position on slavery, as opposed to the liberal or moderate Republicans), appointed him as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. This position gave him power over the House's agenda.[63]

Abolition – Yes! abolish everything on the face of the earth, but this Union; free every slave – slay every traitor – burn every rebel mansion if these things are necessary to preserve this temple of freedom to the world and to our posterity.

—Stevens accepting renomination
for his congressional seat,
September 1, 1862[64]

In July 1861, Stevens secured the passage of an act to confiscate the property, including slaves, of certain rebels. In November 1861, Stevens introduced a resolution to emancipate all slaves; it was defeated.[40] However, legislation did pass that abolished slavery in the District of Columbia and in the territories. By March 1862, to Stevens's exasperation, the most Lincoln had publicly supported was gradual emancipation in the Border states, with the slave owners compensated by the federal government.[65]

Stevens and other radicals were frustrated at how slow Lincoln was to adopt their policies for emancipation; according to Brodie, "Lincoln seldom succeeded in matching Stevens's pace, though both were marching towards the same bright horizon."[66] In April 1862, Stevens wrote to a friend, "As for future hopes, they are poor as Lincoln is nobody."[67] The radicals aggressively pushed the issue, provoking Lincoln to comment: "Stevens, Sumner and [Massachusetts Senator Henry] Wilson simply haunt me with their importunities for a Proclamation of Emancipation. Wherever I go and whatever way I turn, they are on my tail, and still in my heart, I have the deep conviction that the hour [to issue one] has not yet come."[68] The President stated that if it came to a showdown between the radicals and their enemies, he would have to side with Stevens and his fellows, and deemed them "the unhandiest devils in the world to deal with" but "with their faces ... set Zionwards."[69] Although Lincoln composed his proclamation in June and July 1862, the secret was held within his Cabinet, and the President turned aside radical pleadings to issue one until after the Union victory at the Battle of Antietam in September. Stevens quickly adopted the Emancipation Proclamation for use in his successful re-election campaign.[70] When Congress returned in December, Stevens maintained his criticism of Lincoln's policies, calling them "flagrant usurpations, deserving the condemnation of the community."[71] Stevens generally opposed Lincoln's plans to colonize freed slaves abroad, though sometimes he supported emigration proposals for political reasons.[72] Stevens wrote to a nephew in June 1863 saying, "The slaves ought to be incited to insurrection and give the rebels a taste of real civil war."[73]

... the adoption of the measures I advocated at the outset of the war, the arming of the negroes, the slaves of the rebels, is the only way left on earth in which these rebels can be exterminated. They will find that they must treat those States now outside of the Union as conquered provinces and settle them with new men, and drive the present rebels as exiles from this country. ... They have such determination, energy, and endurance, that nothing but actual extermination or exile or starvation will ever induce them to surrender to this Government.

—Thaddeus Stevens, U.S. House of Representatives,
January 8, 1863[74]

During the Confederate incursion into the North in mid-1863 that culminated in the Battle of Gettysburg, Confederates twice sent parties to Stevens's Caledonia Forge. Stevens, who had been there supervising operations, was hastened away by his workers against his will. General Jubal Early looted and vandalized the Forge, causing a loss to Stevens of about $80,000. Early said that the North had done the same to southern figures and that Stevens was well known for his vindictiveness towards the South.[75] Asked if he would have taken the congressman to Libby Prison in Richmond, Early replied that he would have hanged Stevens and divided his bones among the Confederate states.[76]

Stevens pushed Congress to pass a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery. The Emancipation Proclamation was a wartime measure, did not apply to all slaves, and might be reversed by peacetime courts; an amendment would be slavery's end.[40] The Thirteenth Amendment[a] – which outlawed slavery and involuntary servitude except as a punishment for crime – easily passed the Senate but failed in the House in June; fears that it might not pass delayed a renewed attempt there.[78] Lincoln campaigned aggressively for the amendment after his re-election in 1864, and Stevens described his December annual message to Congress as "the most important and best message that has been communicated to Congress for the last 60 years".[79] Stevens closed the debate on the amendment on January 13, 1865. Illinois Representative Isaac Arnold wrote: "distinguished soldiers and citizens filled every available seat, to hear the eloquent old man speak on a measure that was to consummate the warfare of forty years against slavery."[80]

The amendment passed narrowly after heavy pressure exerted by Lincoln himself, along with offers of political appointments from the "Seward lobby". Democrats made allegations of bribery;[81][82] Stevens stated: "the greatest measure of the nineteenth century was passed by corruption, aided and abetted by the purest man in America."[83] The amendment was declared ratified on December 18, 1865. Stevens continued to push for a broad interpretation of it that included economic justice in addition to the formal end of slavery.[84][85]

After passing the Thirteenth Amendment, Congress debated the economic rights of the freedmen. Urged on by Stevens,[51] it voted to authorize the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, with a mandate (though no funding) to set up schools and to distribute "not more than forty acres" [16 ha] of confiscated Confederate land to each family of freed slaves.[86]

Financing the war edit

Stevens worked closely with Lincoln administration officials on legislation to finance the war. Within a day of his appointment as Ways and Means chairman, he had reported a bill for a war loan. Legislation to pay the soldiers Lincoln had already called into service and to allow the administration to borrow to prosecute the war quickly followed. These acts and more were pushed through the House by Stevens. To defeat the delaying tactics of Copperhead opponents, he had the House set debate limits as short as half a minute.[87]

Stevens played a major part in the passage of the Legal Tender Act of 1862 when for the first time, the United States issued currency backed only by its own credit, not by gold or silver. Early makeshifts to finance the war, such as war bonds, had failed as it became clear the war would not be short.[88] In 1863, Stevens aided the passage of the National Banking Act, which required that banks limit their currency issues to the number of federal bonds that they were required to hold. The system endured for half a century until supplanted by the Federal Reserve System in 1913.[89]

Although the Legal Tender legislation allowed for the payment of government obligations in paper money, Stevens was unable to get the Senate to agree that interest on the national debt should be paid with greenbacks.[90] As the value of paper money dropped, Stevens railed against gold speculators, and in June 1864, after consultation with Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase, proposed what became known as the Gold Bill – to abolish the gold market by forbidding its sale by brokers or for future delivery. It passed Congress in June; the chaos caused by the lack of an organized gold market caused the value of paper to drop even faster. Under heavy pressure from the business community, Congress repealed the bill on July 1, twelve days after its passage.[91] Stevens was unrepentant even as the value of paper currency recovered in late 1864 amid the expectation of Union victory, proposing legislation to make paying a premium in greenbacks for an amount in gold coin a criminal offense. It did not pass.[92]

Like most Pennsylvania politicians of both parties, Stevens was a major proponent of tariffs, which increased from 19% to 48% from fiscal 1861 to fiscal 1865.[93][94] According to activist Ida Tarbell in "The Tariff in Our Times:" [Import] duties were never too high for [Stevens], particularly for iron, for he was a manufacturer and it was often said in Pennsylvania that the duties he advocated in no way represented the large iron interests of the state, but were hoisted to cover the needs of his own ... badly managed works."[95]

Reconstruction edit

Problem of reconstructing the South edit

As Congress debated how the U.S. would be organized after the war, the status of freed slaves and former Confederates remained undetermined.[96][97] Stevens stated that what was needed was a "radical reorganization of southern institutions, habits, and manners."[98] Stevens, Sumner, and other radicals argued that the southern states should be treated like conquered provinces without constitutional rights. Lincoln, on the contrary, said that only individuals, not states, had rebelled.[99] In July 1864, Stevens pushed Lincoln to sign the Wade–Davis Bill, which required at least half of prewar voters to sign an oath of loyalty for a state to gain readmission. Lincoln, who advocated his more lenient ten percent plan, pocket vetoed it.[100]

Stevens reluctantly voted for Lincoln at the convention of the National Union Party, a coalition of Republicans and War Democrats. He would have preferred to vote for the sitting vice president, Hannibal Hamlin, as Lincoln's running mate in 1864. However, his delegation voted to cast the state's ballots for the administration's favored candidate, Military Governor of Tennessee Andrew Johnson, a War Democrat who had been a Tennessee senator and elected governor. Stevens was disgusted at Johnson's nomination, complaining, "can't you get a candidate for Vice-President without going down into a damned rebel province for one?"[101] Stevens campaigned for the Lincoln–Johnson ticket; it was elected, as was Stevens for another term in the House.[102] When in January 1865 Congress learned that Lincoln had attempted peace talks with Confederate leaders, an outraged Stevens declared that if the American electorate could vote again, they would elect General Benjamin Butler instead of Lincoln.[103]

Presidential Reconstruction edit

Before leaving town after Congress adjourned in March 1865, Stevens privately urged Lincoln to press the South hard militarily, though the war was ending. Lincoln replied, "Stevens, this is a pretty big hog we are trying to catch and to hold when we catch him. We must take care that he does not slip away from us."[104] Never to see Lincoln again, Stevens left with "a homely metaphor but no real certainty of having left as much as a thumbprint on Lincoln's policy."[105] On the evening of April 14, 1865, Lincoln was assassinated by Confederate sympathizer John Wilkes Booth. Stevens did not attend the ceremonies when Lincoln's funeral train stopped in Lancaster; he was said to be ill. Trefousse speculated that he had avoided the rites for other reasons. According to Lincoln biographer Carl Sandburg, Stevens stood at a railroad bridge and lifted his hat.[106]

In May 1865, Andrew Johnson began what came to be known as "Presidential Reconstruction": recognizing a provisional government of Virginia led by Francis Harrison Pierpont, calling for other former rebel states to organize constitutional conventions, declaring amnesty for many southerners, and issuing individual pardons to even more. Johnson did not push the states to protect the rights of freed slaves, and immediately began to counteract the land reform policies of the Freedmen's Bureau. These actions outraged Stevens and others who took his view. The radicals saw that freedmen in the South risked losing the economic and political liberty necessary to sustain emancipation from slavery. They began to call for universal male suffrage and continued their demands for land reform.[107][108]

Stevens wrote to Johnson that his policies were gravely damaging the country and that he should call a special session of Congress, which was not scheduled to meet until December. When his communications were ignored, Stevens began to discuss with other radicals how to prevail over Johnson when the two houses convened. Congress has the constitutional power to judge whether those seeking to be its members are properly elected; Stevens urged that no senators or representatives from the South be seated.[109] He argued that the states should not be readmitted as thereafter Congress would lack the power to force race reform.[110]

In September, Stevens gave a widely reprinted speech in Lancaster in which he set forth what he wanted for the South. He proposed that the government confiscate the estates of the largest 70,000 landholders there, those who owned more than 200 acres (81 ha). Much of this property he wanted distributed in plots of 40 acres (16 ha) to the freedmen; other lands would go to reward loyalists both North and South, or to meet government obligations. He warned that under the President's plan, the southern states would send rebels to Congress who would join with northern Democrats and Johnson to govern the nation and perhaps undo emancipation.[111]

Through late 1865, the southern states held white-only balloting and, in congressional elections, chose many former rebels, most prominently Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens, voted as senator by the Georgia Legislature. Violence against African-Americans was common and unpunished in the South; the new legislatures enacted Black Codes, depriving the freedmen of most civil rights. These actions, seen as provocative in the North, both privately dismayed Johnson and helped turn northern public opinion against the president.[109] Stevens proclaimed that "This is not a 'white man's Government'! ... To say so is political blasphemy, for it violates the fundamental principles of our gospel of liberty."[112]

Congressional Reconstruction edit

 
Stevens in a thoughtful pose

By this time, Stevens was past age seventy and in poor health; he was carried everywhere in a special chair. When Congress convened in early December 1865, Stevens made arrangements with the Clerk of the House that when the roll was called, the names of the Southern electees be omitted. The Senate also excluded Southern claimants. A new congressman, Ohio's Rutherford B. Hayes, described Stevens: "He is radical throughout, except, I am told, he don't [recte doesn't] believe in hanging. He is [a] leader."[113]

As the responsibilities of the Ways and Means chairman had been divided, Stevens took the post of Chairman of the House Committee on Appropriations, retaining control over the House's agenda.[114] Stevens focused on legislation that would secure the freedom promised by the newly ratified Thirteenth Amendment.[115] He proposed and then co-chaired the Joint Committee on Reconstruction with Maine Senator William Pitt Fessenden.[116] This body, also called the Committee of Fifteen, investigated conditions in the South. It heard not only of the violence against African-Americans but against Union loyalists and against what southerners termed "carpetbaggers". Northerners who had journeyed south after the restoration of peace. Stevens declared: that "our loyal brethren at the South, whether they be black or white," required urgent protection "from the barbarians who are now daily murdering them".[115]

The Committee of Fifteen began to consider what would become the Fourteenth Amendment. Stevens had begun drafting versions in December 1865, before the Committee had even formed.[117] In January 1866, a subcommittee including Stevens and John Bingham proposed two amendments: one giving Congress the unqualified power to secure equal rights, privileges, and protections for all citizens; the other explicitly annulling all racially discriminatory laws.[118] Stevens believed that the Declaration of Independence and Organic Acts already bound the federal government to these principles, but that an amendment was necessary to allow enforcement against discrimination at the state level.[119] The resolution providing for what would become the Fourteenth Amendment was watered down in Congress; during the closing debate, Stevens said these changes had shattered his lifelong dream in equality for all Americans.[120][121] Nevertheless, stating that he lived among men, not angels, he supported the passage of the compromise amendment.[122] Still, Stevens told the House: "Forty acres of land and a hut would be more valuable to [the African-American] than the immediate right to vote."[123]

 
Based on ill-considered exchanges between Johnson and hecklers during the Swing Around the Circle, this excerpt from the Thomas Nast cartoon Andy's Trip shows Johnson delivering a pardon to Davis as Stevens and Wendell Phillips hang in the background.

When Illinois Senator Lyman Trumbull introduced legislation to reauthorize and expand the Freedmen's Bureau, Stevens called the bill a "robbery" because it did not include sufficient provisions for land reform or protect the property of refugees given them by the military occupation of the South.[124] Johnson vetoed the bill anyway, calling the Freedmen's Bureau unconstitutional, and decrying its cost: Congress had never purchased land, established schools, or provided financial help for "our own people."[125][126] Congress was unable to override Johnson's veto in February, but five months later passed a similar bill. Stevens criticized the passage of the Southern Homestead Act of 1866, arguing that the low-quality land it made available would not drive real economic growth for black families.[124]

Congress overrode a Johnson veto to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1866 (also introduced by Trumbull), granting African-Americans citizenship and equality before the law and forbidding any action by a state to the contrary. Johnson made the gap between him and Congress wider when he accused Stevens, Sumner, and Wendell Phillips of trying to destroy the government.[127]

After Congress adjourned in July, the campaigning for the fall elections began. Johnson embarked on a trip by rail, dubbed the "Swing Around the Circle" that won him few supporters; his arguments with hecklers were deemed undignified. He attacked Stevens and other radicals during this tour. Stevens campaigned for firm measures against the South, his hand strengthened by violence in Memphis and New Orleans, where African-Americans and white Unionists had been attacked by mobs, including the police. Stevens was returned to Congress by his constituents; Republicans would have a two-thirds majority in both houses in the next Congress.[128]

Radical Reconstruction edit

In January 1867, Stevens introduced legislation to divide the South into five districts, each commanded by an army general empowered to override civil authorities. These military officers were to supervise elections with all males of whatever race, entitled to vote, except for those who could not take an oath of past loyalty – most white Southerners could not. The states were to write new constitutions (subject to approval by Congress) and hold elections for state officials. Only if a state ratified the Fourteenth Amendment would its delegation be seated in Congress.[129] The system gave power to a Republican coalition of freedmen (mobilized by the Union League), carpetbaggers, and co-operative Southerners (the last dubbed scalawags by indignant ex-rebels) in most southern states.[130] These states ratified the Fourteenth Amendment, which became part of the Constitution in mid-1868.[131]

Stevens introduced a Tenure of Office Act, restricting Johnson from firing officials who had received Senate confirmation without getting that body's consent. The Tenure of Office Act was ambiguous since it could be read to protect officeholders only during the tenure of the president who appointed them, and most of the officials the radicals sought to protect had been named by Lincoln. Chief among these was Secretary of War Edwin Stanton, a radical himself.[132]

Stevens steered a bill to enfranchise African-Americans in the District of Columbia through the House. The Senate passed it in 1867, and it was enacted over Johnson's veto. Congress was downsizing the Army for peacetime; Stevens offered an amendment, which became part of the bill as enacted, to have two regiments of African-American cavalry. His solicitude for African-Americans extended to the Native American; Stevens was successful in defeating a bill to place reservations under state law, noting that the native people had often been abused by the states.[133] An expansionist, he supported the railroads.[134] He added a stipulation into the [Transcontinental] Pacific Railroad Act requiring the applicable railroads to buy iron "of American manufacture" of the top price qualities.[135] Although he sought to protect manufacturers with high tariffs, he also sought unsuccessfully to get a bill passed to protect labor with an eight-hour day in the District of Columbia. Stevens advocated a bill to give government workers raises; it did not pass.[136]

Impeaching President Johnson edit

With Stevens' agreement, James Mitchell Ashley introduced a resolution on January 7, 1867, for a Judiciary Committee-run inquiry on impeachment, which passed the House.[137][138] The 40th Congress, which convened on March 4, 1867, proved to be less aggressive in opposing Johnson than Stevens had hoped. It soon adjourned until July, though the Judiciary Committee remained to hold hearings on impeachment.[139] Stevens (who believed that impeachment was a "purely political proceeding intended as a remedy for malfeasance in office and to prevent continuance thereof"[140]) firmly supported impeachment, but others were less enthusiastic once the Senate elected Ohio's Benjamin Wade as its president pro tempore, next in line to the presidency in the absence of a vice president. Wade was a radical who supported wealth redistribution; a speech of his in Kansas so impressed Karl Marx that he mentioned it in the first German edition of Das Kapital.[141] Also a supporter of women's suffrage, Wade was widely mistrusted for his views;[142] the prospect of his succession made some advocates of Johnson's removal more hesitant. Stevens, though, strongly supported the removal of the president, and when the Judiciary Committee failed to report, tried to keep Congress in session until it did.[143] Despite his opposition to its leader, Stevens worked with the administration on matters both supported; he obtained an appropriation for the purchase of Alaska and urged Secretary of State Seward to seek other territories into which to expand .[144]

Most of Johnson's Cabinet supported him, but Secretary of War Stanton did not, and with the General of the Army, war hero Ulysses S. Grant, worked to undermine Johnson's Reconstruction policies. Johnson obeyed the laws that Congress had passed, sometimes over his veto, but often interpreted them in ways contrary to their intent. After Stanton refused Johnson's request that he resign in August 1867, Johnson suspended Stanton, as permitted by the Tenure of Office Act, and made General Grant interim Secretary of War.[145] Republicans campaigned in that year's election on the issue of African-American suffrage, but were met with a voter surge towards the Democrats, who opposed it. Although no seats at Congress were directly at stake, voters in Ohio both defeated a referendum on black suffrage and elected the Democrats to the majority in the legislature, meaning that Wade, whose term was due to expire in 1869, would not be reelected.[146]

When Congress met again, on December 7, 1867 Stevens voted for an impeachment resolution that was heavily defeated,[147] though the Judiciary Committee had voted 5–4 for impeachment.[148]

 
Color print of a Harper's Weekly woodcut by Theodore R. Davis depicting Stevens making his final argument to the House during March 2, 1868, debate on the articles of impeachment

Stevens was chairman of the House Select Committee on Reconstruction,[149] which was tasked by the House on January 27, 1868, with running a second impeachment inquiry.[150][151] Only four of the nine members (three Republicans and a Democrat) had supported impeachment in December 1867.[147][149][152] On February 13, 1868, Stevens presented to the committee a report accusing Johnson of actions that intended to violate the Tenure of Office Act. The committee tabled it by a 5–4 vote.[153][154][155]

The prospects of impeachment took new life on February 21, 1868. The Senate had previously, on January 13, 1868, overturned Johnson's suspension of Stanton. Grant then resigned as Secretary of War, and Stanton reclaimed his place.[156] However, on February 21, the president ousted Stanton from his position, appointing General Lorenzo Thomas in his place – though Stanton barricaded himself in his office.[157][158] These actions caused great excitement in Washington, and in the House of Representatives, Stevens went from group to group on the floor, repeating, "Didn't I tell you so? What good did your moderation do you? If you don't kill the beast, it will kill you."[159] On February 22, Stevens reported from the Select Committee on Reconstruction a resolution and a report opining that Johnson should be impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors.[150][160][161][162] Stevens concluded the debate on the impeachment resolution on February 24, though due to his poor health, he could not complete his speech and gave it to the Clerk to read aloud. In the speech, he accused Johnson of usurping the powers of other branches of government and ignoring the people's will. He did not deny impeachment was a political matter, but "this is not to be the temporary triumph of a political party, but is to endure in its consequence until the whole continent shall be filled with a free and untrammeled people or shall be a nest of shrinking, cowardly slaves."[163][164] The House voted 126–47 to impeach the president.[165]

 
Illustration from Harper's Weekly of Stevens (right) and John A. Bingham formally notifying the Senate of Johnson's impeachment

Stevens led the delegation of House members sent the following day to inform the Senate of the impeachment, though he had to be carried to its doors by his bearers. Elected to the committee charged with drafting articles of impeachment, his illness limited his involvement. Nevertheless, dissatisfied with the committee's proposed articles, Stevens suggested another that would become Article XI. This grounded the various accusations in statements Johnson had made denying the legitimacy of Congress due to the exclusion of the southern states and stated that Johnson had tried to disobey the Reconstruction Acts.[166] Stevens also urged Benjamin Butler to, independent of the committee, write his own impeachment article, which would ultimately be adopted as Article X.[167]

 
Johnson impeachment managers
Seated L-R: Benjamin Butler, Stevens, Thomas Williams, John Bingham;
Standing L-R: James F. Wilson, George S. Boutwell, John A. Logan

Stevens was one of the House impeachment managers (prosecutors) elected by the House to present its case in the impeachment trial. Although Stevens was too ill to appear in the Senate on March 3, when the managers requested that Johnson be summoned (the president would appear only by his counsel or defense managers), he was there ten days later when the summons was returnable. The New York Herald described him as having a "face of corpselike color, and rigidly twitching lips ... a strange and unearthly apparition – a reclused remonstrance from the tomb ... the very embodiment of fanaticism, without a solitary leaven of justice or mercy ... the avenging Nemesis of his party – the sworn and implacable foe of the Executive of the nation."[166]

Increasingly ill, Stevens took little part in the impeachment trial, at which the leading House manager was Massachusetts Representative Benjamin F. Butler. Stevens nourished himself on the Senate floor with raw eggs and terrapin, port and brandy. He spoke only twice before making a closing argument for the House managers on April 27. As he spoke, his voice weakened, and finally, he allowed Butler to read the second half of his speech for him. Stevens focused on Article XI, taking the position that Johnson could be removed for political crimes; he need not have committed an offense against the law. The president, having sworn to faithfully execute the laws, had intentionally disobeyed the Tenure of Office Act after the Senate had refused to uphold his removal of Stanton, "and now this offspring of assassination turns upon the Senate who have ... rebuked him in a constitutional manner and bids them defiance. How can he escape the just vengeance of the law?"[168][169]

Most radicals were confident that Johnson would be convicted and removed from office. Stevens, though, was never certain of the result as Chief Justice Chase (the former Treasury Secretary) made rulings that favored the defense, and he had no great confidence Republicans would stick together. On May 11, the Senate met in secret session, and senators gave speeches explaining how they intended to vote. All Democrats were opposed, but an unexpectedly large number of Republicans also favored acquittal on some or all of the articles. Counting votes, managers realized their best chance of gaining the required two-thirds for conviction was on the Stevens-inspired Article XI, and when the Senate assembled to give its verdict, they scheduled it to be voted upon first. The suspense was broken when Kansas Senator Edmund Ross, whose position was uncertain, voted for acquittal. This meant that, with the votes of those who remained, the president would not be convicted on that article. The article failed, 35 in favor to 19 opposed. In the hope that delay would bring a different result, Republicans adjourned the Senate for ten days. Stevens was carried from the Senate in his chair – one observer described him as "black with rage and disappointment" – and when those outside clamored for the result, Stevens shouted, "The country is going to the devil!"[170][171]

Final months and death edit

 
Stevens's grave in Lancaster

During the recess of the impeachment court, the Republicans met in convention in Chicago and nominated Grant for president. Stevens did not attend and was dismayed by the exclusion of African-American suffrage from the party platform as radical influence began to fade in the Republican Party. When the Senate returned to session, it voted down Articles II and III by the same 35–19 margin as before, and Chase declared the President acquitted. Stevens did not give up on the idea of removing Johnson; in July, he proffered several more impeachment articles (the House refused to adopt them).[172] He offered a bill to divide Texas into several parts to gain additional Republican senators to vote out Johnson. It was defeated; the Herald stated, "It is lamentable to see this old man, with one foot in the grave, pursuing the President with such vindictiveness."[173] Nevertheless, Stevens planned to revisit the question of impeachment when Congress met again in late 1868.[174]

Brodie suggested that Stevens's hatred of Johnson was the only thing keeping him from despair, aware as he was of the continued violence in the South, some of which was committed by the Ku Klux Klan. Several of the southern states had been re-admitted by this time. The murders and intimidation were aiding the Democrats there in restoring white rule. With the Republicans unwilling to embrace black suffrage in their platform and the Democrats opposed to it, Stevens feared Democratic victory in the 1868 elections might even bring back slavery. He told his fellow Pennsylvania politician, Alexander McClure, "My life has been a failure. With all this great struggle of years in Washington and the fearful sacrifice of life and treasure, I see little hope for the Republic." Stevens took pride in his role in establishing free public education in Pennsylvania.[175] When interviewed by a reporter seeking to gain his life story, Stevens replied, "I have no history. My life-long regret is that I have lived so long and so uselessly."[176] Nevertheless, in his last formal speech to the House, Stevens stated that "man still is vile. But such large steps have lately been taken in the true direction, that the patriot has a right to take courage."[177]

I repose in this quiet and secluded spot
Not from any natural preference for solitude
But, finding other Cemeteries limited as to Race
by Charter Rules
I have chosen this that I might illustrate
in my death
The Principles which I advocated
through a long life;
EQUALITY OF MAN BEFORE HIS CREATOR

—The inscription on Stevens's grave[178]

When Congress adjourned in late July, Stevens remained in Washington, too ill to return to Pennsylvania. Stevens was in pain from his stomach ailments, from swollen feet, and from dropsy. By early August, he was unable to leave the house. He still received some visitors, though, and correctly predicted to his friend and former student Simon Stevens (no relation) that Grant would win the election. On the afternoon of August 11, his doctor warned that he would probably not last through the night. His longtime housekeeper and companion, Lydia Hamilton Smith, his nephew Thaddeus, and friends gathered by him. Two black preachers came to pray by him, telling him that he had the prayers of all their people. He sucked on ice to try to soothe the pain; his last words were a request for more of it. Thaddeus Stevens died on the night of August 11, 1868, as the old day departed.[179]

President Johnson issued no statement upon the death of his enemy.[180] Newspaper reaction was generally along partisan lines, though sometimes mixed. The Detroit Post stated that "if to die crowned with noble laurels, and ... secure of [recte in] the respect of the world ... is an end worthy the ambition of a well spent life, then the veteran Radical may lie down with the noblest of the fathers to a well contented sleep."[181] The New York Times stated that Stevens had "discerned the expediency of emancipation, and urged it long before Mr. Lincoln issued his proclamation" but that after the war, "on the subject of Reconstruction, then, Mr. Stevens must be deemed the Evil Genius of the Republican Party.[182] The [Franklin, Louisiana] Planter's Banner exulted, "The prayers of the righteous have at last removed the Congressional curse! May ... the fires of his new furnace never go out!"[183]

 
Stevens's casket lying in state in the Capitol Rotunda, guarded by black soldiers.

Stevens's body was conveyed from his house to the Capitol by white and black pallbearers together. Thousands of mourners, of both races, filed past his casket as he lay in state at the United States Capitol rotunda;[180][184] Stevens was the third man, after Clay and Lincoln, to receive that honor. African-American soldiers constituted the guard of honor. After a service there, his body was taken by funeral train to Lancaster, a city draped in black for the funeral. Stevens was laid to rest in Shreiner's Cemetery (today the Shreiner-Concord Cemetery); it allowed the burial of people of all races, although, at the time of Stevens's interment, only one African-American was buried there. The people of his district posthumously renominated him to Congress. They elected his former student Oliver J. Dickey to succeed him. When Congress convened in December 1868, there were several speeches in tribute to Stevens; they were afterward collected in book form.[185]

Personal life edit

Stevens never married, though there were rumors about his twenty-year relationship (1848–1868) with his widowed housekeeper, Lydia Hamilton Smith (1813–1884).[186][187] She was a light-skinned African-American; her husband Jacob and at least one of her sons were much darker than she was.[188]

 
Lydia Hamilton Smith

It is uncertain if the Stevens-Smith relationship was romantic. The Democratic press, especially in the South, assumed so, and when he brought Mrs. Smith to Washington in 1859, she managed his household, which did nothing to stop their insinuations.[189] In the one brief surviving letter from Stevens to her, Stevens addresses her as Mrs. Lydia Smith.[190] Stevens insisted that his nieces and nephews refer to her as Mrs. Smith, deference towards an African-American servant almost unheard of at that time. They do so in surviving letters, warmly, asking Stevens to see that she comes with him next time he visits.[191]

As evidence that their relationship was sexual, Brodie pointed to an 1868 letter in which Stevens compares himself to Richard M. Johnson, vice president under Martin Van Buren, who lived openly with a series of African-American slave mistresses. Johnson was elected even though this became known during the 1836 campaign, a fact that Stevens notes, and expresses his bitterness about his inability to gain election by the legislature to the Senate, or to secure a Cabinet position.[192]

When Stevens died, Smith was at his bedside, along with his friend Simon Stevens, nephew Thaddeus Stevens Jr., two black nuns, and several other individuals. Under Stevens's will, Smith was allowed to choose between a lump sum of $5,000 or a $500 annual allowance; she could also take any furniture in his house.[193] With the inheritance, she purchased Stevens's house, where she had lived for many years. A Roman Catholic, she chose to be buried in a Catholic cemetery, not near Stevens, although she left money for the upkeep of his grave.[194]

Stevens had taken custody of his two young nephews, Thaddeus (often called "Thaddeus Jr.") and Alanson Joshua Stevens, after their parents died in Vermont. Alanson was sent to work at Stevens's business, Caledonia Forge; Thaddeus Jr. was expelled from Dartmouth College, though he subsequently graduated and was taken into his uncle's law practice.[195] Alanson during the Civil War rose to be commanding captain of a Pennsylvania Volunteers field artillery unit and was killed in action at Chickamauga.[196] After Alanson's death, his uncle used his influence to have Thaddeus Jr. made provost marshal of Lancaster.[197]

 
Thaddeus Stevens School, also known as Thaddeus Stevens Elementary School, located at 1050 21st Street, NW in Washington, D.C. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

Buildings associated with Stevens and with Smith in Lancaster are being renovated by the local historical society, LancasterHistory.org.[198] In his will, Stevens made several bequests, with much of his estate to his nephew Thaddeus Jr., on condition that he refrain from alcohol. If he did not, that bequest would establish an orphanage in Lancaster open to all races and nationalities without discrimination. A legal fight over his estate ensued, and it was not until 1894 that the courts settled the matter, awarding $50,000 (~$1.52 million in 2022) to found the orphanage.[193] The school today is the Thaddeus Stevens College of Technology, in Lancaster.[199]

Schools named after Stevens include Thaddeus Stevens Elementary School in Washington, D.C., founded in 1868 as the first school built for African-American children there. It was segregated for the first 86 years of its existence. In 1977, Amy Carter, daughter of President Jimmy Carter, a Georgian, was enrolled there, the first child of a sitting president to attend public school in almost 70 years.[200]

Historical and popular view edit

As Stevens' biographer Richard N. Current put it, "to find out what really made the man go, the historian would need the combined aid of two experts from outside the profession – a psychoanalyst and a spiritualist."[201] The historical view of Thaddeus Stevens has fluctuated widely since his death, generally in a manner inverse to that of Andrew Johnson. Early biographical works on Stevens were composed by men who knew him and reflected their viewpoints. Biographies at the turn of the twentieth century, such as those by Samuel McCall in 1899 and by James Albert Woodburn in 1913, presented Stevens favorably, as a sincere man, motivated by principle.[202] Early African-American historian W. E. B. Du Bois called Stevens "a leader of the common people" and "a stern believer in democracy, both in politics and in industry."[203] Pulitzer Prize-winning historian James Ford Rhodes argued that though Stevens had a "profound sympathy" towards the African-American, "coming straight from the heart," he also showed "virulence toward the South" and was "bitter and vindictive."[203] This view of a vengeful Stevens originated during Reconstruction and persisted well into the 20th century.[204]

 
Ralph Lewis as Austin Stoneman and Mary Alden as Lydia Brown, The Birth of a Nation, 1915

With the advent of the Dunning School's view of Reconstruction after 1900, Stevens continued to be viewed negatively and generally as motivated by hatred. These historians, led by William Dunning, taught that Reconstruction had been an opportunity for radical politicians, motivated by ill will towards the South, to destroy what little of southern life and dignity the war had left.[205][206][207] Dunning himself deemed Stevens "truculent, vindictive, and cynical".[205] Lloyd Paul Stryker, who wrote a highly favorable 1929 biography of Johnson, labeled Stevens as a "horrible old man ... craftily preparing to strangle the bleeding, broken body of the South" and who thought it would be "a beautiful thing" to see "the white men, especially the white women of the South, writhing under negro domination".[207][208] In 1915, D. W. Griffith's film The Birth of a Nation (based on the 1905 novel The Clansman, by Thomas Dixon Jr.) was released, containing the influenceable and ill-advised Congressman Austin Stoneman, who resembles Stevens down to the ill-fitting wig, limp, and African-American lover, Lydia Brown. This popular treatment reinforced and reinvigorated public prejudices towards Stevens.[209][210] According to Foner, "as historians exalted the magnanimity of Lincoln and Andrew Johnson, Stevens came to symbolize Northern malice, revenge, and irrational hatred of the South."[211] The highly popular historian James Truslow Adams described Stevens as "perhaps the most despicable, malevolent, and morally deformed character who has ever risen to high power in America".[212]

Historians who penned biographies of Stevens in the late 1930s sought to move away from this perspective, seeking to rehabilitate him and his political career. Thomas F. Woodley, writing in 1937, shows admiration of Stevens, but he attributed Stevens's driving force to bitterness over his clubfoot. In his 1939 biography, Alphonse Miller found that the former congressman was motivated by a desire for justice. Both men were convinced that recent books had not treated him fairly. Richard Current's 1942 work reflected current Beardian historiography, which saw all American history, including Reconstruction, as a three-way economic struggle between the industrialists of the Northeast (represented by Stevens), the planters of the South, and the farmers of the Midwest. Current argued that Stevens was motivated in his Reconstruction policies by frustrated ambitions and a desire to use his political position to promote industrial capitalism and advance the Republican Party. He concluded that despite Stevens's egalitarian beliefs, he promoted inequality, for "none had done more than he to bring on the age of Big Business, with its concentration of wealth."[213]

With Ralph Korngold's 1955 biography of Stevens, the neoabolitionist school of historians began to consider the former congressman. These professors rejected the earlier view that those who had gone South to aid the African-Americans after the war were "rapscallion carpetbaggers" defeated by "saintly redeemers." Instead, they applauded those who had sought to end slavery and forward civil rights and castigated Johnson for obstructionism. They believed that the African-American was central to Reconstruction, and the only things wrong with the congressional program were that it did not go far enough and that it stopped too soon. Brodie's 1959 biography of Stevens was of this school. Controversial in its conclusions for being a psychobiography, it found that Stevens was a "consummate underdog who identified with the oppressed" and whose intelligence won him success, while his consciousness of his clubfoot stunted his social development.[214][215] According to Brodie, this also made him unwilling to marry a woman of his social standing.[216]

Scholars who followed Brodie continued to chip away at the idea of Stevens as a vindictive dictator who dominated Congress to get his way. In 1960, Eric McKitrick deemed Stevens "a picturesque and adroit politician, but a very limited one," whose career was "a long comic sequence of devilish schemes which, one after another, kept blowing up in his face."[217] From the mid-1970s onward, Foner argued that Stevens's role was in staking out a radical position, though events, not Stevens, caused the Republicans to support him. Michael Les Benedict in 1974 suggested that Stevens's reputation as a dictator was based more on his personality than on his influence. In 1989, Allan Bogue found that as chairman of Ways and Means, Stevens was "less than complete master" of his committee.[218]

Historian Hans Trefousse stated in a 1969 study of the Radical Republicans that Stevens's "one abiding passion was equality".[219] In 1991, he noted that Stevens "was one of the most influential representatives ever to serve in Congress. [He dominated] the House with his wit, knowledge of parliamentary law, and sheer willpower, even though he was often unable to prevail."[220] In his 1997 biography of Stevens, though, he took a position similar to McKitrick's: that Stevens was a relatively marginal figure, with his influence often limited by his extremism.[221] Trefousse believed Brodie went too far – in deeming Stevens's clubfoot responsible for so much about him and in giving full credence to the Stevens-Smith relationship – both those things cannot now be determined with certainty.[222]

Stevens was celebrated for his wit and sarcasm. When Lincoln appointed rival Pennsylvania Republican leader Simon Cameron as Secretary of War, Stevens expressed disgust at Cameron's reputed corruption. Asked whether Cameron was a thief, Stevens supposedly replied, "I don't think he would steal a red-hot stove." When Cameron objected to this characterization, Stevens said "I believe I told you he would not steal a red hot stove. I will now take that back."[223] Stevens's ill-fitting wigs were a well-known topic of discussion in Washington, but when a female admirer who apparently did not know asked for a lock of Stevens's hair as a keepsake, he removed his hairpiece, held it out to her, and "invited her to help herself."[224]

Steven Spielberg's 2012 film Lincoln, in which Stevens was portrayed by Tommy Lee Jones, brought new public interest in Stevens. Jones's character is portrayed as the central figure among the radicals, responsible in large part for the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment. Historian Matthew Pinsker notes that Stevens is referred to only four times in Doris Kearns Goodwin's 2005 book Team of Rivals, on which screenwriter Tony Kushner based the film's screenplay; other radicals were folded into the character. Stevens is depicted as unable to moderate his views for the sake of gaining passage of the amendment until after he is urged to do so by the ever-compromising Lincoln.[225] According to Aaron Bady in his article about the film and how it portrays the radicals, "he's the uncle everyone is embarrassed of, even if they love him too much to say so. He's not a leader, he's a liability, one whose shining heroic moment will be when he keeps silent about what he really believes."[226] The film depicts a Stevens-Smith sexual relationship; Pinsker comments that "it may well have been true that they were lovers, but by injecting this issue into the movie, the filmmakers risk leaving the impression for some viewers that the 'secret' reason for Stevens's egalitarianism was his desire to legitimize his romance across racial lines."[225]

On April 2, 2022, in front of the Adams County Courthouse in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, a statue of Stevens was unveiled as part of a celebration of Stevens' 230th birthday. The statue was commissioned by the Thaddeus Stevens Society and was sculpted by multidisciplinary artist Alex Paul Loza.[227]

See also edit

General bibliography edit

  • Berlin, Jean V. (April 1993). "Thaddeus Stevens and His Biographers". Pennsylvania History. University Park: Penn State University Press. 60 (2): 153–62. JSTOR 27773615.
  • Bond, Horace Mann. "Social and Economic Forces in Alabama Reconstruction." Journal of Negro History 23(3), July 1938. Accessed via JSTOR, 7 July 2013.
  • Brodie, Fawn (1966) [1959]. Thaddeus Stevens: Scourge of the South (Norton Library ed.). New York: W. W. Norton & Co., Inc. ISBN 0393003310. online
  • Bryant-Jones, Mildred (1941). "The Political Program of Thaddeus Stevens, 1865". Phylon. Atlanta: Clark Atlanta University. 2 (2, 2nd Qtr. 1941): 147–54. doi:10.2307/271784. JSTOR 271784.
  • Castel, Albert E. (1979). The Presidency of Andrew Johnson. American Presidency. Lawrence: The Regents Press of Kansas. ISBN 0700601902.
  • Cox, LaWanda and John H. Cox. Politics, Principle, and Prejudice 1865–1866: Dilemma of Reconstruction America. London: Collier-Macmillan, 1963.
  • Current, Richard N. (October 1947). "Love, Hate, and Thaddeus Stevens". Pennsylvania History. University Park: Penn State University Press. 14 (4): 259–72. JSTOR 27766829. text
  • Donald, David Herbert (1995). Lincoln. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 0684808463.
  • Du Bois, W. E. B. Black Reconstruction: An Essay Toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America, 1860–1880. New York: Russell & Russell, 1935.
  • Epps, Garrett (2006). Democracy Reborn: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Fight for Equal Rights in post-Civil War American. New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 080507130X.
  • Foner, Eric. Politics and Ideology in the Age of the Civil War. Oxford University Press, 1980. ISBN 978-0199727087
  • Foner, Eric (2014) [1988]. Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863-1877. New York: Harper Perennial. ISBN 978-0062354518.
  • Gans, David H. (November 16, 2011). . Constitutional Accountability Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 31, 2015. Retrieved November 15, 2020.
  • Glatfelter, Charles H. (April 1993). "Thaddeus Stevens in the Cause of Education: The Gettysburg Years". Pennsylvania History. University Park: Penn State University Press. 60 (2): 163–75. JSTOR 27773616. text
  • Hamilton, Howard Devon. The Legislative and Judicial History of the Thirteenth Amendment. Political Science dissertation at the University of Illinois; accepted May 15, 1950. Accessed via ProQuest, 4 July 2013.
  • Halbrook, Stephen P. (1998). Freedmen, the Fourteenth Amendment, and the Right to Bear Arms, 1866–1876. Westport, Ct.: Greenwood. ISBN 0275963314.
  • Soifer, Aviam. "". Columbia Law Review 112(7), November 2012; pp. 1607–40.
  • Stewart, David O. (2009). Impeached: The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln's Legacy. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1416547495.
  • Andreasen, Bryon C. (Summer 2000). Review of Trefousse, Hans L., Thaddeus Stevens: Nineteenth-Century Egalitarian, in Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association, vol. 21, no. 2 (Summer 2000), pp. 75–81.
  • Tsesis, Alexander. The Thirteenth Amendment and American Freedom: A Legal History. New York University Press, 2004. ISBN 0814782760
  • Vorenberg, Michael. Final Freedom: The Civil War, the Abolition of Slavery, and the Thirteenth Amendment. Cambridge University Press, 2001. ISBN 978-1139428002.
  • Woodley, Thomas F. Great Leveler: The Life of Thaddeus Stevens (1937) online

Notes edit

  1. ^ James Ashley introduced the amendment in December 1863. In March 1864, Stevens proposed a version that added "forever" to the conditional prohibition and explicitly annulled the Fugitive Slave Clause in Article 4, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution. The version which ultimately passed had already been crafted by the Senate Judiciary Committee.[77]

References edit

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Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Beale, Howard K. The Critical Year: A Study of Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction (1967 [1930]), New York: F. Ungar, OCLC 491147473
  • Belz, Herman. Reconstructing the Union: Theory and Practice During the Civil War (1979 [1969]), Westport, Ct.: Greenwood Press, ISBN 978-0313208621, OCLC 4494724
  • Benedict, Michael Les. A Compromise of Principle: Congressional Republicans and Reconstruction 1863–1869 (1974), New York: Norton, ISBN 978-0393055245, OCLC 879050178
  • Birkner, Michael J., et al. eds. The Worlds of James Buchanan and Thaddeus Stevens: Place, Personality, and Politics in the Civil War Era (Louisiana State University Press, 2019)
  • Bordewich, Fergus M. How Republican Reformers Fought the Civil War, Defied Lincoln, Ended Slavery, and Remade America (2020), pro=Stevens
  • Bowers, Claude G. The Tragic Era: The Revolution After Lincoln (1929), Cambridge, Ma.: Houghton Mifflin, an intense attack on Stevens from Dunning School perspective.
  • Current, Richard N. "Love, Hate, and Thaddeus Stevens." Pennsylvania History 14.4 (1947): 259–272. online
  • Current, Richard Nelson. Old Thad Stevens: A Story of Ambition (1980 [1942]), Westport, Ct.: Greenwood Press, ISBN 978-0313225697, OCLC 256434391, a scholarly biography that argues Stevens was primarily concerned with enhancing his power, the power of the Republican Party, and the needs of big business, especially iron-making and railroads.
  • Delle, James A.; Levine, Mary Ann (2015). "'Equality of man before his creator': Thaddeus Stevens and the struggle against slavery". In Delle, James A. (ed.). The limits of tyranny: archaeological perspectives on the struggle against new world slavery. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. pp. 121–46. ISBN 978-1621900870.
  • Foner, Eric. "Thaddeus Stevens, Confiscation, and Reconstruction," in Stanley Elkins and Eric McKitrick, eds. The Hofstadter Aegis (1974). [1]
  • Foner, Eric. "Thaddeus Stevens and the Imperfect Republic." Pennsylvania History, vol. 60, no. 2, pp. 140–52 (April 1993) in JSTOR
  • Everdell, William R. "Thaddeus Stevens: The Legacy of the America Whigs" in The End of Kings: A History of Republics and Republicans. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0226224824, OCLC 42080394
  • Goldenberg, Barry M. The Unknown Architects of Civil Rights: Thaddeus Stevens, Ulysses S. Grant, and Charles Sumner. Los Angeles, CA: Critical Minds Press. (2011).
  • Graber, Mark A. "". Columbia Law Review 112(7), November 2012; pp. 1501–49.
  • Hoelscher, Robert J. Thaddeus Stevens as a Lancaster Politician, 1842-1868 (Lancaster County Historical Society, 1974) online.
  • Korngold, Ralph. Thaddeus Stevens: A Being Darkly Wise and Rudely Great (1955) online
  • Lawson, Elizabeth. Thaddeus Stevens. New York: International Publishers. 1942. (1962 reprint)
  • Lee, James F. (June 10, 2021). "On the trail of Thaddeus Stevens, Pennsylvania's equal rights champion". Washington Post.
  • McCall, Samuel Walker. Thaddeus Stevens (1899) 369 pages; outdated biography online
  • Parra, Fernando. "Thaddeus Stevens: Early Civil Rights Leader." Footnotes: A Journal of History 1 (2017): 184–203. online
  • Pitts, Joe (April 24, 2002). . United States House of Representatives. Archived from the original on January 16, 2003. Retrieved January 16, 2003. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • Shepard, Christopher, "Making No Distinctions between Rich and Poor: Thaddeus Stevens and Class Equality", Pennsylvania History, 80 (Winter 2013), 37–50. online
  • Simpson, Brooks D. (April 1993). "Land and the Ballot: Securing the Fruits of Emancipation?". Pennsylvania History. University Park: Penn State University Press. 60 (2): 176–88. JSTOR 27773617.
  • Stryker, Lloyd Paul. Andrew Johnson: A Study in Courage (1929), New York: Macmilliam, OCLC 1184750151, hostile to Stevens.
  • Woodburn, James Albert. The Life of Thaddeus Stevens: A Study in American Political History, Especially in the Period of the Civil War and Reconstruction. (1913) online version
  • Woodburn, James Albert. "The Attitude of Thaddeus Stevens Toward the Conduct of the Civil War", American Historical Review, Vol. 12, no. 3 (April 1907), pp. 567–83 in JSTOR
  • Zeitz, Josh. "Stevens, Thaddeus", American National Biography Online. February 2000. ISBN 978-0198606697, Unique Identifier: 4825694186

Historiography edit

  • Berlin, Jean V. "Thaddeus Stevens and His Biographers," Pennsylvania History 60.2 (1993): 153–162. online
  • Foner, Eric. "Thaddeus Stevens and the Imperfect Republic," Pennsylvania History 60.2 (1993): 140–152. online
  • Jolly, James A. "The Historical Reputation of Thaddeus Stevens," Journal of the Lancaster County Historical Society (1970) 74:33–71, online
  • Pickens, Donald K. "The Republican Synthesis and Thaddeus Stevens," Civil War History (1985) 31:57–73, ISSN 0009-8078, Unique Identifier: 5183399288; argues that Stevens was committed to Republicanism and capitalism in terms of self-improvement, the advance of society, equal distribution of land, and economic liberty for all; to achieve that he had to destroy slavery and the aristocracy.

Primary sources edit

  • Kendrick, Benjamin B. The Journal of the Joint Committee of Fifteen on Reconstruction. New York: Columbia University, 1914.
  • Palmer, Beverly Wilson and Holly Byers Ochoa, eds. The Selected Papers of Thaddeus Stevens. Two vol. (1998), 900 pages; his speeches plus letters to and from Stevens. ISBN 978-0822940524, OCLC 806290019 excerpt vol 1
    • online review
  • Stevens, Thaddeus, et al. Report of the Joint Committee on Reconstruction, at the First Session ... by United States Congress. Joint Committee on Reconstruction, (1866) 791 pages; online edition
  • Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of Thaddeus Stevens: Delivered ... by United States 40th Cong., 3d sess., 1868–1869. (1869) 84 pages; online edition

External links edit

  •   Media related to Thaddeus Stevens at Wikimedia Commons
  • Lydia Hamilton Smith, Abolitionist And African American Businesswoman
  • Stevens and Smith Historic Site
  • Thaddeus Stevens Society
  • United States Congress. "Thaddeus Stevens (id: S000887)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Includes Guide to Research Collections where his papers are located.
  • Mr. Lincoln and Freedom: Thaddeus Stevens December 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Mr. Lincoln's White House: Thaddeus Stevens March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district

1849–1853
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Pennsylvania's 9th congressional district

1859–1868
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the House Ways and Means Committee
1861–1865
Succeeded by
New office Chair of the House Appropriations Committee
1865–1868
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Persons who have lain in state or honor in the United States Capitol rotunda
1868
Succeeded by

thaddeus, stevens, april, 1792, august, 1868, american, politician, lawyer, served, member, united, states, house, representatives, from, pennsylvania, being, leaders, radical, republican, faction, republican, party, during, 1860s, fierce, opponent, slavery, d. Thaddeus Stevens April 4 1792 August 11 1868 was an American politician and lawyer who served as a member of the United States House of Representatives from Pennsylvania being one of the leaders of the Radical Republican faction of the Republican Party during the 1860s A fierce opponent of slavery and discrimination against black Americans Stevens sought to secure their rights during Reconstruction leading the opposition to U S President Andrew Johnson As chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee during the American Civil War he played a leading role focusing his attention on defeating the Confederacy financing the war with new taxes and borrowing crushing the power of slave owners ending slavery and securing equal rights for the freedmen Thaddeus StevensPortrait by Brady Handy c 1860 1868Member of the U S House of Representatives from PennsylvaniaIn office March 4 1859 August 11 1868Preceded byAnthony RobertsSucceeded byOliver DickeyConstituency9th districtIn office March 4 1849 March 3 1853Preceded byJohn StrohmSucceeded byHenry A MuhlenbergConstituency8th districtChair of the House Ways and Means CommitteeIn office March 4 1861 March 3 1865Preceded byJohn ShermanSucceeded byJustin Smith MorrillChair of the House Appropriations CommitteeIn office December 11 1865 August 11 1868Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byElihu B WashburnePersonal detailsBorn 1792 04 04 April 4 1792Danville Vermont U S DiedAugust 11 1868 1868 08 11 aged 76 Washington D C U S Resting placeShreiner Concord CemeteryPolitical partyRepublican from 1855 Other politicalaffiliationsFederalist before 1828 Anti Masonic 1828 1838 Whig 1838 1853 Know Nothing 1853 1855 Domestic partnerLydia Hamilton Smith 1848 1868 EducationUniversity of VermontDartmouth College BA SignatureNickname s The Old CommonerThe Great CommonerStevens was born in rural Vermont in poverty and with a club foot which left him with a permanent limp He moved to Pennsylvania as a young man and quickly became a successful lawyer in Gettysburg He interested himself in municipal affairs and then in politics He was an active leader of the Anti Masonic Party as a fervent believer that Freemasonry in the United States was an evil conspiracy to secretly control the republican system of government He was elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives where he became a strong advocate of free public education Financial setbacks in 1842 caused him to move his home and practice to the larger city of Lancaster There he joined the Whig Party and was elected to Congress in 1848 His activities as a lawyer and politician in opposition to slavery cost him votes and he did not seek reelection in 1852 After a brief flirtation with the Know Nothing Party Stevens joined the newly formed Republican Party and was elected to Congress again in 1858 There with fellow radicals such as Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner he opposed the expansion of slavery and concessions to the South as the war came Stevens argued that slavery should not survive the war he was frustrated by the slowness of U S President Abraham Lincoln to support his position He guided the government s financial legislation through the House as Ways and Means chairman As the war progressed towards a Northern victory Stevens came to believe that not only should slavery be abolished but that black Americans should be given a stake in the South s future through the confiscation of land from planters to be distributed to the freedmen His plans went too far for the Moderate Republicans and were not enacted After the assassination of Abraham Lincoln in April 1865 Stevens came into conflict with the new president Johnson who sought rapid restoration of the seceded states without guarantees for freedmen The difference in views caused an ongoing battle between Johnson and Congress with Stevens leading the Radical Republicans After gains in the 1866 election the radicals took control of Reconstruction away from Johnson Stevens s last great battle was to secure in the House articles of impeachment against Johnson acting as a House manager in the impeachment trial though the Senate did not convict the President Historiographical views of Stevens have dramatically shifted over the years from the early 20th century view of Stevens as reckless and motivated by hatred of the white South to the perspective of the neoabolitionists of the 1950s and afterward who lauded him for his commitment to equality Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Pennsylvania attorney and politician 2 1 Gettysburg lawyer 2 2 Anti Masonry 2 3 Crusader for education 2 4 Political change move to Lancaster 3 Abolitionist and prewar congressman 3 1 Evolution of views 3 2 First tenure in Congress 3 3 Know Nothing and Republican 3 4 1860 election secession crisis 4 American Civil War 4 1 Slavery 4 2 Financing the war 5 Reconstruction 5 1 Problem of reconstructing the South 5 2 Presidential Reconstruction 5 3 Congressional Reconstruction 5 4 Radical Reconstruction 6 Impeaching President Johnson 7 Final months and death 8 Personal life 9 Historical and popular view 10 See also 11 General bibliography 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Bibliography 14 Further reading 14 1 Historiography 14 2 Primary sources 15 External linksEarly life and education editStevens was born in Danville Vermont on April 4 1792 He was the second of four children all boys and was named to honor the Polish general who served in the American Revolutionary War Tadeusz Thaddeus Kosciuszko 1 His parents were Baptists who had emigrated from Massachusetts around 1786 Thaddeus was born with a club foot which at the time was seen by some as a judgment from God for secret parental sin His older brother was born with the same condition in both feet The boys father Joshua Stevens was a farmer and cobbler who struggled to make a living in Vermont After fathering two more sons born without disability Joshua abandoned the children and his wife Sarah nee Morrill The circumstances of his departure and his subsequent fate are uncertain he may have died at the Battle of Oswego during the War of 1812 2 Sarah Stevens struggled to make a living from the farm even with the increasing aid of her sons 3 She was determined that her sons improve themselves and in 1807 moved the family to the neighboring town of Peacham Vermont where she enrolled young Thaddeus in the Caledonia Grammar School often called the Peacham Academy He suffered much from the taunts of his classmates for his disability Later accounts describe him as wilful headstrong with an overwhelming burning desire to secure an education 4 After graduation he enrolled at the University of Vermont but suspended his studies due to the federal government s appropriation of campus buildings during the War of 1812 5 Stevens then enrolled in the sophomore class at Dartmouth College At Dartmouth despite a stellar academic career he was not elected to Phi Beta Kappa this was reportedly a scarring experience for him 6 7 Stevens graduated from Dartmouth in 1814 and spoke at the commencement ceremony Afterward he returned to Peacham and briefly taught there Stevens also began to read law in the office of John Mattocks In early 1815 correspondence with a friend Samuel Merrill a fellow Vermonter who had moved to York Pennsylvania to become preceptor of the York Academy led to an offer for Stevens to join the academy faculty He moved to York to teach and continued the study of law in the offices of David Cossett 8 Pennsylvania attorney and politician editGettysburg lawyer edit In Pennsylvania Stevens taught school at the York Academy and continued his studies for the bar 9 Local lawyers passed a resolution barring from membership anyone who had followed any other profession while preparing for admission 5 a restriction likely aimed at Stevens Undaunted he reportedly according to a story he often retold presented himself and four bottles of Madeira wine to the examining board in nearby Harford County Maryland Few questions were asked but much wine was drunk He left Bel Air the next morning with a certificate allowing him through reciprocity to practice law anywhere Stevens then went to Gettysburg the seat of Adams County 9 10 where he opened an office in September 1816 11 Stevens knew no one in Gettysburg and initially had little success as a lawyer His breakthrough in mid 1817 was a case in which a farmer who had been jailed for debt later killed one of the constables who had arrested him His defense although unsuccessful impressed the local people and he never lacked for business thereafter 11 In his legal career he demonstrated the propensity for sarcasm that would later mark him as a politician once telling a judge who accused him of manifesting contempt of court Sir I am doing my best to conceal it 12 Many who memorialized Stevens after his death in 1868 agreed on his talent as a lawyer He was involved in the first ten cases to reach the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania from Adams County after he began his practice and won nine One case he later wished he had not won was Butler v Delaplaine in which he successfully reclaimed a slave on behalf of her owner 13 In Gettysburg Stevens also began his involvement in politics serving six one year terms on the borough council between 1822 and 1831 and becoming its president 14 He took the profits from his practice and invested them in Gettysburg real estate becoming the largest landowner in the community by 1825 and had an interest in several iron furnaces outside town 13 In addition to assets he acquired enemies after the death of a pregnant black woman in Gettysburg there were anonymous letter writers to newspapers hinting that Stevens was culpable The rumors dogged him for years 15 when one newspaper opposed to Stevens printed a letter in 1831 naming him as the killer he successfully sued for libel 16 Anti Masonry edit Stevens s first political cause was Anti Masonry which became widespread in 1826 after the disappearance and death of William Morgan a Mason in upstate New York fellow Masons were presumed to be the killers of Morgan because they disapproved of his publishing a book revealing the order s secret rites Since the leading candidate in opposition to President John Quincy Adams was General Andrew Jackson a Mason who mocked opponents of the order Anti Masonry became closely associated with opposition to Jackson and his Jacksonian democracy policies once he was elected president in 1828 17 Jackson s adherents were from the old Democratic Republican Party and eventually became known as the Democrats Stevens had been told by a fellow attorney and future president James Buchanan that he could advance politically if he joined them However Stevens could not support Jackson out of principle 18 For Stevens Anti Masonry became one means of opposing Jackson he may also have had personal reasons as the Masons barred cripples from joining Stevens took to Anti Masonry with enthusiasm and remained loyal to it after most Pennsylvanians had dropped the cause His biographer Hans Trefousse suggested that another reason for Stevens s virulence was an attack of disease in the late 1820s that cost him his hair he thereafter wore wigs often ill fitting and the unwelcome illness may well have contributed to his unreasonable fanaticism concerning the Masons 19 By 1829 Anti Masonry had evolved into a political party the Anti Masonic Party that proved popular in rural central Pennsylvania Stevens quickly became prominent in the movement attending the party s first two national conventions in 1830 and 1831 At the latter he pressed the candidacy of Supreme Court Justice John McLean as the party s presidential candidate but in vain as the nomination fell to former Attorney General William Wirt Jackson was easily reelected the crushing defeat Wirt won only Vermont caused the party to disappear in most places though it remained powerful in Pennsylvania for several years 20 21 In September 1833 Stevens was elected to a one year term in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives as an Anti Mason Once in the capital Harrisburg he sought to have the body establish a committee to investigate Masonry Stevens gained attention far beyond Pennsylvania for his oratory against Masonry and quickly became an expert in legislative maneuvers In 1835 a split among the Democrats put the Anti Masons in control of the Pennsylvania General Assembly the legislature Granted subpoena powers Stevens summoned leading state politicians who were Masons including Governor George Wolf The witnesses invoked their Fifth Amendment right against self incrimination and when Stevens verbally abused one of them it created a backlash that caused his own party to end the investigation The fracas cost Stevens reelection in 1836 and the issue of Anti Masonry died in Pennsylvania Nevertheless Stevens remained an opponent of the order for the rest of his life 22 23 Crusader for education edit Beginning with his early years in Gettysburg Stevens advanced the cause of universal education At the time no state outside New England had free public education for all In Pennsylvania there was free education in Philadelphia but elsewhere in the state those wishing to have their children educated without paying tuition had to swear a pauper s oath Stevens opened his extensive private library to the public and gave up his presidency of the borough council believing his service on the school board more important 24 In 1825 he was elected by the voters of Adams County as a trustee of Gettysburg Academy As the school was failing Stevens got county voters to agree to pay its debt allowing it to be sold as a Lutheran seminary It was granted the right to award college degrees in 1831 as Pennsylvania College and in 1921 became Gettysburg College Stevens gave the school land upon which a building could be raised and served as a trustee for many years 25 26 27 nbsp Portrait of Stevens by Jacob Eichholtz now owned by Gettysburg CollegeIn April 1834 Stevens working with Governor Wolf guided an act through the legislature to allow districts across the state to vote on whether to have public schools and the taxes to pay for them Gettysburg s district voted in favor and also elected Stevens as a school director where he served until 1839 Tens of thousands of voters signed petitions urging a reversal The result was a repeal bill that easily passed the Pennsylvania Senate It was widely believed the bill would also pass the House and be enacted despite opposition by Stevens When he rose to speak on April 11 1835 he defended the new educational system stating that it would actually save money and demonstrated how He stated that opponents were seeking to separate the poor into a lower caste than themselves and accused the rich of greed and failure to empathize with the poor Stevens argued Build not your monuments of brass or marble but make them of everliving mind 28 29 The repeal bill was defeated Stevens was given wide credit Trefousse suggested that the victory was not due to Stevens s eloquence but due to his influence combined with that of Governor Wolf 30 Political change move to Lancaster edit Further information William Henry Harrison 1840 presidential campaign In 1838 Stevens ran again for the legislature He hoped that if the remaining Anti Masons and the emerging Whig Party gained a majority he could be elected to the United States Senate whose members until 1913 were chosen by state legislatures A campaign dirty even by the standards of the times followed The result was a Democrat elected as governor Whig control of the state Senate and the state House in dispute with several seats from Philadelphia in question Stevens won his seat in Adams County and sought to have those Philadelphia Democrats excluded which would create a Whig majority that could elect a Speaker and himself as a senator Amid rioting in Harrisburg later known as the Buckshot War Stevens s ploy backfired with the Democrats taking control of the House Stevens remained in the legislature for most years through 1842 but the episode cost him much of his political influence The Whigs blamed him for the debacle and were increasingly unwilling to give leadership to someone who had not yet joined their party Nevertheless he supported the pro business and pro development Whig stances 31 He campaigned for the Whig candidate in the 1840 presidential election former general William Henry Harrison Though Stevens later alleged that Harrison had promised him a Cabinet position if elected he received none and any influence ended when Harrison died after a month in office to be succeeded by John Tyler a southerner hostile to Stevens s stances on slavery 31 32 Although Stevens was the most successful lawyer in Gettysburg he had accrued debt due to his business interests Refusing to take advantage of the bankruptcy laws he felt he needed to move to a larger municipality to gain the money to pay his obligations In 1842 Stevens moved his home and practice to Lancaster He knew Lancaster County was an Anti Mason and Whig stronghold which ensured that he retained a political base Within a short period he was earning more than any other Lancaster attorney by 1848 he had reduced his debts to 30 000 825 175 in 2022 and paid them off soon after It was in Lancaster that he engaged the services of Lydia Hamilton Smith a housekeeper whose racial makeup was described as mulatto and who remained with him the rest of his life 33 Abolitionist and prewar congressman editEvolution of views edit In the 1830s few sought the immediate eradication of slavery The abolitionist movement was young and only recently had figures such as William Lloyd Garrison taken on the fight 34 Stevens s reason for adopting slavery as a cause has been disputed among his recent biographers Richard N Current in 1942 suggested it was out of ambition Fawn Brodie in her controversial 1959 psychobiography of Stevens suggested it was out of identification with the downtrodden based on his handicap 35 Trefousse in his 1997 work also suggested that Stevens s feelings towards the downtrodden were a factor combined with remorse over the Butler case but that ambition was unlikely to have been a significant motivator as Stevens s fervor in the anti slavery cause inhibited his career 36 nbsp Stevens s home on Queen Street Lancaster PennsylvaniaAt the 1837 Pennsylvania constitutional convention Stevens who was a delegate fought against the disenfranchisement of African Americans see Black suffrage in Pennsylvania 37 According to historian Eric Foner When Stevens refused to sign the 1837 constitution because of its voting provision he announced his commitment to a non racial definition of American citizenship to which he would adhere for the remainder of his life 38 After he moved to Lancaster a city not far from the Mason Dixon line he became active in the Underground Railroad not only defending people believed to be fugitive slaves but coordinating the movements of those seeking freedom 39 A 2003 renovation at his former home in Lancaster disclosed that there was a hidden cistern attached to the main building by a concealed tunnel in which escaped slaves hid 40 41 Until the outbreak of the American Civil War Stevens took the public position that he supported slavery s end and opposed its expansion Nevertheless he would not seek to disturb it in the states where it existed because the Constitution protected their internal affairs from federal interference 34 He also supported slave owning Whig candidates for president Henry Clay in 1844 42 and Zachary Taylor in 1848 43 First tenure in Congress edit In 1848 Stevens ran for election to Congress from Pennsylvania s 8th congressional district There was opposition to him at the Whig convention Some delegates felt that because Stevens had been late to join the party he should not receive the nomination others disliked his stance on slavery He narrowly won the nomination In a strong year for Whigs nationally Taylor was chosen as president and Stevens was elected to Congress 44 It is my purpose nowhere in these remarks to make personal reproaches I entertain no ill will toward any human being nor any brute that I know of not even the Democratic skunk across the way to which I referred Least of all would I reproach the South I honor her courage and fidelity Even in a bad a wicked cause she shows a united front All her sons are faithful to the cause of human bondage because it is their cause But the North the poor timid mercenary driveling North has no such united defenders of her cause although it is the cause of human liberty She is offered up a sacrifice to propitiate southern tyranny to conciliate southern treason Stevens in the House debate over theFugitive Slave Act June 10 1850 45 When the 31st United States Congress convened in December 1849 Stevens took his seat joining other newly elected slavery opponents such as Salmon P Chase Stevens spoke out against the Compromise of 1850 crafted by Kentucky Senator Henry Clay that gave victories to both North and South but would allow for some of the territories of the United States recently gained from Mexico to become slave states 46 As the debates continued in June he said This word compromise when applied to human rights and constitutional rights I abhor 47 Nevertheless the pieces of legislation that made up the Compromise passed including the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 which Stevens found particularly offensive 48 Although many Americans hoped that the Compromise would bring sectional peace Stevens warned that it would be the fruitful mother of future rebellion disunion and civil war 49 Stevens was easily renominated and reelected in 1850 even though his stance caused him problems among pro Compromise Whigs 50 In 1851 Stevens was one of the defense lawyers in the trial of 38 African Americans and three others in federal court in Philadelphia on treason charges The defendants had been implicated in the so called Christiana Riot an attempt to enforce a Fugitive Slave Act warrant had resulted in the killing of the slaveowner Justice Robert Grier of the U S Supreme Court as circuit justice tried the case and instructed the jury to acquit because though the defendants might be guilty of murder or riot they were not charged with that and were not guilty of treason The well publicized incident and others like it increased polarization over the issue of slavery and made Stevens a prominent face of Northern abolitionism 50 51 Despite this trend Stevens suffered political problems He left the Whig caucus in December 1851 when his colleagues would not join him in seeking the repeal of the offensive elements of the Compromise Nevertheless he supported its unsuccessful 1852 candidate for president General Winfield Scott His political opposition and local dislike of his stance on slavery and participation in the treason trial made him unlikely to win renomination and he sought only to pick his successor His choice was defeated for the Whig nomination 52 Know Nothing and Republican edit Out of office Stevens concentrated on the practice of law in Lancaster remaining one of the leading attorneys in the state He stayed active in politics and in 1854 to gain more votes for the anti slavery movement he joined the nativist Know Nothing Party The members were pledged not to speak of party deliberations thus they knew nothing and Stevens was attacked for his membership in a group with similar secrecy rules as the Masons In 1855 Stevens joined the new Republican Party Other former Whigs who were anti slavery joined as well including William H Seward of New York Charles E Sumner of Massachusetts and Abraham Lincoln of Illinois 53 Stevens was a delegate to the 1856 Republican National Convention where he supported Justice McLean as he had in 1832 However the convention nominated John C Fremont whom Stevens actively supported in the race against his fellow Lancastrian the Democratic candidate James Buchanan Nonetheless Pennsylvania helped elect Buchanan 54 Stevens returned to the practice of law but in 1858 with the President and his party unpopular and the nation torn by such controversies as the Dred Scott decision Stevens saw an opportunity to return to Congress As the Republican nominee he was easily elected Democratic papers were appalled One banner headline read Niggerism Triumphant 55 1860 election secession crisis edit Stevens took his seat in the 36th United States Congress in December 1859 only days after the hanging of John Brown who had attacked the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry hoping to cause a slave insurrection Stevens opposed Brown s violent actions at the time though later he was more approving Sectional tensions spilled over into the House which proved unable to elect a Speaker of the United States House for eight weeks Stevens was active in the bitter flow of invective from both sides at one point Mississippi Congressman William Barksdale drew a knife on him though no blood was spilled 56 nbsp Southern view of the proposed compromises of 1860 and 1861 with Dr North Stevens proposing to cut the South s legs off using a constitutional amendment Stevens actually opposed such measures With the Democrats unable to agree on a single presidential candidate the 1860 Republican National Convention in Chicago became crucial as the nominee would be in a favorable position to become president Prominent figures in the party such as Seward and Lincoln sought the nomination Stevens continued to support the 75 year old Justice McLean Beginning on the second ballot most Pennsylvania delegates supported Lincoln helping to win him the nomination As the Democrats put up no candidate in his district Stevens was assured of reelection to the House and campaigned for Lincoln in Pennsylvania Lincoln won a majority in the Electoral College The President elect s known opposition to the expansion of slavery caused immediate talk of secession in the southern states a threat that Stevens had downplayed during the campaign 57 58 Congress convened in December 1860 with several of the southern states already pledging to secede Stevens was unyielding in opposing efforts to appease the southerners such as the Crittenden Compromise which would have enshrined slavery as beyond constitutional amendment 59 He stated in a remark widely quoted both North and South that rather than offer concessions because of Lincoln s election he would see this Government crumble into a thousand atoms and that the forces of the United States would crush any rebellion 60 Despite Stevens s protests the lame duck Buchanan administration did little in response to the secession votes allowing most federal resources in the South to fall into rebel hands Even in the abolition movement many were content to let it be so and let the South go its own way Stevens disagreed and the congressman was undoubtedly pleased by Lincoln s statement in his first inaugural address on March 4 1861 that he would hold occupy and possess the property and places belonging to the Government 61 62 American Civil War editSlavery edit When the war began in April 1861 Stevens argued that the Confederates were revolutionaries to be crushed by force He also believed that the Confederacy had placed itself beyond the protection of the U S Constitution by making war and that in a reconstituted United States slavery should have no place Speaker Galusha Grow whose views placed him with Stevens among the members becoming known as the Radical Republicans for their position on slavery as opposed to the liberal or moderate Republicans appointed him as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee This position gave him power over the House s agenda 63 Abolition Yes abolish everything on the face of the earth but this Union free every slave slay every traitor burn every rebel mansion if these things are necessary to preserve this temple of freedom to the world and to our posterity Stevens accepting renominationfor his congressional seat September 1 1862 64 In July 1861 Stevens secured the passage of an act to confiscate the property including slaves of certain rebels In November 1861 Stevens introduced a resolution to emancipate all slaves it was defeated 40 However legislation did pass that abolished slavery in the District of Columbia and in the territories By March 1862 to Stevens s exasperation the most Lincoln had publicly supported was gradual emancipation in the Border states with the slave owners compensated by the federal government 65 Stevens and other radicals were frustrated at how slow Lincoln was to adopt their policies for emancipation according to Brodie Lincoln seldom succeeded in matching Stevens s pace though both were marching towards the same bright horizon 66 In April 1862 Stevens wrote to a friend As for future hopes they are poor as Lincoln is nobody 67 The radicals aggressively pushed the issue provoking Lincoln to comment Stevens Sumner and Massachusetts Senator Henry Wilson simply haunt me with their importunities for a Proclamation of Emancipation Wherever I go and whatever way I turn they are on my tail and still in my heart I have the deep conviction that the hour to issue one has not yet come 68 The President stated that if it came to a showdown between the radicals and their enemies he would have to side with Stevens and his fellows and deemed them the unhandiest devils in the world to deal with but with their faces set Zionwards 69 Although Lincoln composed his proclamation in June and July 1862 the secret was held within his Cabinet and the President turned aside radical pleadings to issue one until after the Union victory at the Battle of Antietam in September Stevens quickly adopted the Emancipation Proclamation for use in his successful re election campaign 70 When Congress returned in December Stevens maintained his criticism of Lincoln s policies calling them flagrant usurpations deserving the condemnation of the community 71 Stevens generally opposed Lincoln s plans to colonize freed slaves abroad though sometimes he supported emigration proposals for political reasons 72 Stevens wrote to a nephew in June 1863 saying The slaves ought to be incited to insurrection and give the rebels a taste of real civil war 73 the adoption of the measures I advocated at the outset of the war the arming of the negroes the slaves of the rebels is the only way left on earth in which these rebels can be exterminated They will find that they must treat those States now outside of the Union as conquered provinces and settle them with new men and drive the present rebels as exiles from this country They have such determination energy and endurance that nothing but actual extermination or exile or starvation will ever induce them to surrender to this Government Thaddeus Stevens U S House of Representatives January 8 1863 74 During the Confederate incursion into the North in mid 1863 that culminated in the Battle of Gettysburg Confederates twice sent parties to Stevens s Caledonia Forge Stevens who had been there supervising operations was hastened away by his workers against his will General Jubal Early looted and vandalized the Forge causing a loss to Stevens of about 80 000 Early said that the North had done the same to southern figures and that Stevens was well known for his vindictiveness towards the South 75 Asked if he would have taken the congressman to Libby Prison in Richmond Early replied that he would have hanged Stevens and divided his bones among the Confederate states 76 Stevens pushed Congress to pass a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery The Emancipation Proclamation was a wartime measure did not apply to all slaves and might be reversed by peacetime courts an amendment would be slavery s end 40 The Thirteenth Amendment a which outlawed slavery and involuntary servitude except as a punishment for crime easily passed the Senate but failed in the House in June fears that it might not pass delayed a renewed attempt there 78 Lincoln campaigned aggressively for the amendment after his re election in 1864 and Stevens described his December annual message to Congress as the most important and best message that has been communicated to Congress for the last 60 years 79 Stevens closed the debate on the amendment on January 13 1865 Illinois Representative Isaac Arnold wrote distinguished soldiers and citizens filled every available seat to hear the eloquent old man speak on a measure that was to consummate the warfare of forty years against slavery 80 The amendment passed narrowly after heavy pressure exerted by Lincoln himself along with offers of political appointments from the Seward lobby Democrats made allegations of bribery 81 82 Stevens stated the greatest measure of the nineteenth century was passed by corruption aided and abetted by the purest man in America 83 The amendment was declared ratified on December 18 1865 Stevens continued to push for a broad interpretation of it that included economic justice in addition to the formal end of slavery 84 85 After passing the Thirteenth Amendment Congress debated the economic rights of the freedmen Urged on by Stevens 51 it voted to authorize the Bureau of Refugees Freedmen and Abandoned Lands with a mandate though no funding to set up schools and to distribute not more than forty acres 16 ha of confiscated Confederate land to each family of freed slaves 86 Financing the war edit Stevens worked closely with Lincoln administration officials on legislation to finance the war Within a day of his appointment as Ways and Means chairman he had reported a bill for a war loan Legislation to pay the soldiers Lincoln had already called into service and to allow the administration to borrow to prosecute the war quickly followed These acts and more were pushed through the House by Stevens To defeat the delaying tactics of Copperhead opponents he had the House set debate limits as short as half a minute 87 Stevens played a major part in the passage of the Legal Tender Act of 1862 when for the first time the United States issued currency backed only by its own credit not by gold or silver Early makeshifts to finance the war such as war bonds had failed as it became clear the war would not be short 88 In 1863 Stevens aided the passage of the National Banking Act which required that banks limit their currency issues to the number of federal bonds that they were required to hold The system endured for half a century until supplanted by the Federal Reserve System in 1913 89 Although the Legal Tender legislation allowed for the payment of government obligations in paper money Stevens was unable to get the Senate to agree that interest on the national debt should be paid with greenbacks 90 As the value of paper money dropped Stevens railed against gold speculators and in June 1864 after consultation with Treasury Secretary Salmon P Chase proposed what became known as the Gold Bill to abolish the gold market by forbidding its sale by brokers or for future delivery It passed Congress in June the chaos caused by the lack of an organized gold market caused the value of paper to drop even faster Under heavy pressure from the business community Congress repealed the bill on July 1 twelve days after its passage 91 Stevens was unrepentant even as the value of paper currency recovered in late 1864 amid the expectation of Union victory proposing legislation to make paying a premium in greenbacks for an amount in gold coin a criminal offense It did not pass 92 Like most Pennsylvania politicians of both parties Stevens was a major proponent of tariffs which increased from 19 to 48 from fiscal 1861 to fiscal 1865 93 94 According to activist Ida Tarbell in The Tariff in Our Times Import duties were never too high for Stevens particularly for iron for he was a manufacturer and it was often said in Pennsylvania that the duties he advocated in no way represented the large iron interests of the state but were hoisted to cover the needs of his own badly managed works 95 Reconstruction editMain article Reconstruction Era Problem of reconstructing the South edit As Congress debated how the U S would be organized after the war the status of freed slaves and former Confederates remained undetermined 96 97 Stevens stated that what was needed was a radical reorganization of southern institutions habits and manners 98 Stevens Sumner and other radicals argued that the southern states should be treated like conquered provinces without constitutional rights Lincoln on the contrary said that only individuals not states had rebelled 99 In July 1864 Stevens pushed Lincoln to sign the Wade Davis Bill which required at least half of prewar voters to sign an oath of loyalty for a state to gain readmission Lincoln who advocated his more lenient ten percent plan pocket vetoed it 100 Stevens reluctantly voted for Lincoln at the convention of the National Union Party a coalition of Republicans and War Democrats He would have preferred to vote for the sitting vice president Hannibal Hamlin as Lincoln s running mate in 1864 However his delegation voted to cast the state s ballots for the administration s favored candidate Military Governor of Tennessee Andrew Johnson a War Democrat who had been a Tennessee senator and elected governor Stevens was disgusted at Johnson s nomination complaining can t you get a candidate for Vice President without going down into a damned rebel province for one 101 Stevens campaigned for the Lincoln Johnson ticket it was elected as was Stevens for another term in the House 102 When in January 1865 Congress learned that Lincoln had attempted peace talks with Confederate leaders an outraged Stevens declared that if the American electorate could vote again they would elect General Benjamin Butler instead of Lincoln 103 Presidential Reconstruction edit Before leaving town after Congress adjourned in March 1865 Stevens privately urged Lincoln to press the South hard militarily though the war was ending Lincoln replied Stevens this is a pretty big hog we are trying to catch and to hold when we catch him We must take care that he does not slip away from us 104 Never to see Lincoln again Stevens left with a homely metaphor but no real certainty of having left as much as a thumbprint on Lincoln s policy 105 On the evening of April 14 1865 Lincoln was assassinated by Confederate sympathizer John Wilkes Booth Stevens did not attend the ceremonies when Lincoln s funeral train stopped in Lancaster he was said to be ill Trefousse speculated that he had avoided the rites for other reasons According to Lincoln biographer Carl Sandburg Stevens stood at a railroad bridge and lifted his hat 106 In May 1865 Andrew Johnson began what came to be known as Presidential Reconstruction recognizing a provisional government of Virginia led by Francis Harrison Pierpont calling for other former rebel states to organize constitutional conventions declaring amnesty for many southerners and issuing individual pardons to even more Johnson did not push the states to protect the rights of freed slaves and immediately began to counteract the land reform policies of the Freedmen s Bureau These actions outraged Stevens and others who took his view The radicals saw that freedmen in the South risked losing the economic and political liberty necessary to sustain emancipation from slavery They began to call for universal male suffrage and continued their demands for land reform 107 108 Stevens wrote to Johnson that his policies were gravely damaging the country and that he should call a special session of Congress which was not scheduled to meet until December When his communications were ignored Stevens began to discuss with other radicals how to prevail over Johnson when the two houses convened Congress has the constitutional power to judge whether those seeking to be its members are properly elected Stevens urged that no senators or representatives from the South be seated 109 He argued that the states should not be readmitted as thereafter Congress would lack the power to force race reform 110 In September Stevens gave a widely reprinted speech in Lancaster in which he set forth what he wanted for the South He proposed that the government confiscate the estates of the largest 70 000 landholders there those who owned more than 200 acres 81 ha Much of this property he wanted distributed in plots of 40 acres 16 ha to the freedmen other lands would go to reward loyalists both North and South or to meet government obligations He warned that under the President s plan the southern states would send rebels to Congress who would join with northern Democrats and Johnson to govern the nation and perhaps undo emancipation 111 Through late 1865 the southern states held white only balloting and in congressional elections chose many former rebels most prominently Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens voted as senator by the Georgia Legislature Violence against African Americans was common and unpunished in the South the new legislatures enacted Black Codes depriving the freedmen of most civil rights These actions seen as provocative in the North both privately dismayed Johnson and helped turn northern public opinion against the president 109 Stevens proclaimed that This is not a white man s Government To say so is political blasphemy for it violates the fundamental principles of our gospel of liberty 112 Congressional Reconstruction edit nbsp Stevens in a thoughtful poseBy this time Stevens was past age seventy and in poor health he was carried everywhere in a special chair When Congress convened in early December 1865 Stevens made arrangements with the Clerk of the House that when the roll was called the names of the Southern electees be omitted The Senate also excluded Southern claimants A new congressman Ohio s Rutherford B Hayes described Stevens He is radical throughout except I am told he don t recte doesn t believe in hanging He is a leader 113 As the responsibilities of the Ways and Means chairman had been divided Stevens took the post of Chairman of the House Committee on Appropriations retaining control over the House s agenda 114 Stevens focused on legislation that would secure the freedom promised by the newly ratified Thirteenth Amendment 115 He proposed and then co chaired the Joint Committee on Reconstruction with Maine Senator William Pitt Fessenden 116 This body also called the Committee of Fifteen investigated conditions in the South It heard not only of the violence against African Americans but against Union loyalists and against what southerners termed carpetbaggers Northerners who had journeyed south after the restoration of peace Stevens declared that our loyal brethren at the South whether they be black or white required urgent protection from the barbarians who are now daily murdering them 115 The Committee of Fifteen began to consider what would become the Fourteenth Amendment Stevens had begun drafting versions in December 1865 before the Committee had even formed 117 In January 1866 a subcommittee including Stevens and John Bingham proposed two amendments one giving Congress the unqualified power to secure equal rights privileges and protections for all citizens the other explicitly annulling all racially discriminatory laws 118 Stevens believed that the Declaration of Independence and Organic Acts already bound the federal government to these principles but that an amendment was necessary to allow enforcement against discrimination at the state level 119 The resolution providing for what would become the Fourteenth Amendment was watered down in Congress during the closing debate Stevens said these changes had shattered his lifelong dream in equality for all Americans 120 121 Nevertheless stating that he lived among men not angels he supported the passage of the compromise amendment 122 Still Stevens told the House Forty acres of land and a hut would be more valuable to the African American than the immediate right to vote 123 nbsp Based on ill considered exchanges between Johnson and hecklers during the Swing Around the Circle this excerpt from the Thomas Nast cartoon Andy s Trip shows Johnson delivering a pardon to Davis as Stevens and Wendell Phillips hang in the background When Illinois Senator Lyman Trumbull introduced legislation to reauthorize and expand the Freedmen s Bureau Stevens called the bill a robbery because it did not include sufficient provisions for land reform or protect the property of refugees given them by the military occupation of the South 124 Johnson vetoed the bill anyway calling the Freedmen s Bureau unconstitutional and decrying its cost Congress had never purchased land established schools or provided financial help for our own people 125 126 Congress was unable to override Johnson s veto in February but five months later passed a similar bill Stevens criticized the passage of the Southern Homestead Act of 1866 arguing that the low quality land it made available would not drive real economic growth for black families 124 Congress overrode a Johnson veto to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1866 also introduced by Trumbull granting African Americans citizenship and equality before the law and forbidding any action by a state to the contrary Johnson made the gap between him and Congress wider when he accused Stevens Sumner and Wendell Phillips of trying to destroy the government 127 After Congress adjourned in July the campaigning for the fall elections began Johnson embarked on a trip by rail dubbed the Swing Around the Circle that won him few supporters his arguments with hecklers were deemed undignified He attacked Stevens and other radicals during this tour Stevens campaigned for firm measures against the South his hand strengthened by violence in Memphis and New Orleans where African Americans and white Unionists had been attacked by mobs including the police Stevens was returned to Congress by his constituents Republicans would have a two thirds majority in both houses in the next Congress 128 Radical Reconstruction edit In January 1867 Stevens introduced legislation to divide the South into five districts each commanded by an army general empowered to override civil authorities These military officers were to supervise elections with all males of whatever race entitled to vote except for those who could not take an oath of past loyalty most white Southerners could not The states were to write new constitutions subject to approval by Congress and hold elections for state officials Only if a state ratified the Fourteenth Amendment would its delegation be seated in Congress 129 The system gave power to a Republican coalition of freedmen mobilized by the Union League carpetbaggers and co operative Southerners the last dubbed scalawags by indignant ex rebels in most southern states 130 These states ratified the Fourteenth Amendment which became part of the Constitution in mid 1868 131 Stevens introduced a Tenure of Office Act restricting Johnson from firing officials who had received Senate confirmation without getting that body s consent The Tenure of Office Act was ambiguous since it could be read to protect officeholders only during the tenure of the president who appointed them and most of the officials the radicals sought to protect had been named by Lincoln Chief among these was Secretary of War Edwin Stanton a radical himself 132 Stevens steered a bill to enfranchise African Americans in the District of Columbia through the House The Senate passed it in 1867 and it was enacted over Johnson s veto Congress was downsizing the Army for peacetime Stevens offered an amendment which became part of the bill as enacted to have two regiments of African American cavalry His solicitude for African Americans extended to the Native American Stevens was successful in defeating a bill to place reservations under state law noting that the native people had often been abused by the states 133 An expansionist he supported the railroads 134 He added a stipulation into the Transcontinental Pacific Railroad Act requiring the applicable railroads to buy iron of American manufacture of the top price qualities 135 Although he sought to protect manufacturers with high tariffs he also sought unsuccessfully to get a bill passed to protect labor with an eight hour day in the District of Columbia Stevens advocated a bill to give government workers raises it did not pass 136 Impeaching President Johnson editMain articles Efforts to impeach Andrew Johnson Impeachment of Andrew Johnson and Impeachment trial of Andrew Johnson See also 1868 impeachment managers investigation and Timeline of the impeachment of Andrew Johnson With Stevens agreement James Mitchell Ashley introduced a resolution on January 7 1867 for a Judiciary Committee run inquiry on impeachment which passed the House 137 138 The 40th Congress which convened on March 4 1867 proved to be less aggressive in opposing Johnson than Stevens had hoped It soon adjourned until July though the Judiciary Committee remained to hold hearings on impeachment 139 Stevens who believed that impeachment was a purely political proceeding intended as a remedy for malfeasance in office and to prevent continuance thereof 140 firmly supported impeachment but others were less enthusiastic once the Senate elected Ohio s Benjamin Wade as its president pro tempore next in line to the presidency in the absence of a vice president Wade was a radical who supported wealth redistribution a speech of his in Kansas so impressed Karl Marx that he mentioned it in the first German edition of Das Kapital 141 Also a supporter of women s suffrage Wade was widely mistrusted for his views 142 the prospect of his succession made some advocates of Johnson s removal more hesitant Stevens though strongly supported the removal of the president and when the Judiciary Committee failed to report tried to keep Congress in session until it did 143 Despite his opposition to its leader Stevens worked with the administration on matters both supported he obtained an appropriation for the purchase of Alaska and urged Secretary of State Seward to seek other territories into which to expand 144 Most of Johnson s Cabinet supported him but Secretary of War Stanton did not and with the General of the Army war hero Ulysses S Grant worked to undermine Johnson s Reconstruction policies Johnson obeyed the laws that Congress had passed sometimes over his veto but often interpreted them in ways contrary to their intent After Stanton refused Johnson s request that he resign in August 1867 Johnson suspended Stanton as permitted by the Tenure of Office Act and made General Grant interim Secretary of War 145 Republicans campaigned in that year s election on the issue of African American suffrage but were met with a voter surge towards the Democrats who opposed it Although no seats at Congress were directly at stake voters in Ohio both defeated a referendum on black suffrage and elected the Democrats to the majority in the legislature meaning that Wade whose term was due to expire in 1869 would not be reelected 146 When Congress met again on December 7 1867 Stevens voted for an impeachment resolution that was heavily defeated 147 though the Judiciary Committee had voted 5 4 for impeachment 148 nbsp Color print of a Harper s Weekly woodcut by Theodore R Davis depicting Stevens making his final argument to the House during March 2 1868 debate on the articles of impeachmentStevens was chairman of the House Select Committee on Reconstruction 149 which was tasked by the House on January 27 1868 with running a second impeachment inquiry 150 151 Only four of the nine members three Republicans and a Democrat had supported impeachment in December 1867 147 149 152 On February 13 1868 Stevens presented to the committee a report accusing Johnson of actions that intended to violate the Tenure of Office Act The committee tabled it by a 5 4 vote 153 154 155 The prospects of impeachment took new life on February 21 1868 The Senate had previously on January 13 1868 overturned Johnson s suspension of Stanton Grant then resigned as Secretary of War and Stanton reclaimed his place 156 However on February 21 the president ousted Stanton from his position appointing General Lorenzo Thomas in his place though Stanton barricaded himself in his office 157 158 These actions caused great excitement in Washington and in the House of Representatives Stevens went from group to group on the floor repeating Didn t I tell you so What good did your moderation do you If you don t kill the beast it will kill you 159 On February 22 Stevens reported from the Select Committee on Reconstruction a resolution and a report opining that Johnson should be impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors 150 160 161 162 Stevens concluded the debate on the impeachment resolution on February 24 though due to his poor health he could not complete his speech and gave it to the Clerk to read aloud In the speech he accused Johnson of usurping the powers of other branches of government and ignoring the people s will He did not deny impeachment was a political matter but this is not to be the temporary triumph of a political party but is to endure in its consequence until the whole continent shall be filled with a free and untrammeled people or shall be a nest of shrinking cowardly slaves 163 164 The House voted 126 47 to impeach the president 165 nbsp Illustration from Harper s Weekly of Stevens right and John A Bingham formally notifying the Senate of Johnson s impeachmentStevens led the delegation of House members sent the following day to inform the Senate of the impeachment though he had to be carried to its doors by his bearers Elected to the committee charged with drafting articles of impeachment his illness limited his involvement Nevertheless dissatisfied with the committee s proposed articles Stevens suggested another that would become Article XI This grounded the various accusations in statements Johnson had made denying the legitimacy of Congress due to the exclusion of the southern states and stated that Johnson had tried to disobey the Reconstruction Acts 166 Stevens also urged Benjamin Butler to independent of the committee write his own impeachment article which would ultimately be adopted as Article X 167 nbsp Johnson impeachment managersSeated L R Benjamin Butler Stevens Thomas Williams John Bingham Standing L R James F Wilson George S Boutwell John A LoganStevens was one of the House impeachment managers prosecutors elected by the House to present its case in the impeachment trial Although Stevens was too ill to appear in the Senate on March 3 when the managers requested that Johnson be summoned the president would appear only by his counsel or defense managers he was there ten days later when the summons was returnable The New York Herald described him as having a face of corpselike color and rigidly twitching lips a strange and unearthly apparition a reclused remonstrance from the tomb the very embodiment of fanaticism without a solitary leaven of justice or mercy the avenging Nemesis of his party the sworn and implacable foe of the Executive of the nation 166 Increasingly ill Stevens took little part in the impeachment trial at which the leading House manager was Massachusetts Representative Benjamin F Butler Stevens nourished himself on the Senate floor with raw eggs and terrapin port and brandy He spoke only twice before making a closing argument for the House managers on April 27 As he spoke his voice weakened and finally he allowed Butler to read the second half of his speech for him Stevens focused on Article XI taking the position that Johnson could be removed for political crimes he need not have committed an offense against the law The president having sworn to faithfully execute the laws had intentionally disobeyed the Tenure of Office Act after the Senate had refused to uphold his removal of Stanton and now this offspring of assassination turns upon the Senate who have rebuked him in a constitutional manner and bids them defiance How can he escape the just vengeance of the law 168 169 Most radicals were confident that Johnson would be convicted and removed from office Stevens though was never certain of the result as Chief Justice Chase the former Treasury Secretary made rulings that favored the defense and he had no great confidence Republicans would stick together On May 11 the Senate met in secret session and senators gave speeches explaining how they intended to vote All Democrats were opposed but an unexpectedly large number of Republicans also favored acquittal on some or all of the articles Counting votes managers realized their best chance of gaining the required two thirds for conviction was on the Stevens inspired Article XI and when the Senate assembled to give its verdict they scheduled it to be voted upon first The suspense was broken when Kansas Senator Edmund Ross whose position was uncertain voted for acquittal This meant that with the votes of those who remained the president would not be convicted on that article The article failed 35 in favor to 19 opposed In the hope that delay would bring a different result Republicans adjourned the Senate for ten days Stevens was carried from the Senate in his chair one observer described him as black with rage and disappointment and when those outside clamored for the result Stevens shouted The country is going to the devil 170 171 Final months and death edit nbsp Stevens s grave in LancasterDuring the recess of the impeachment court the Republicans met in convention in Chicago and nominated Grant for president Stevens did not attend and was dismayed by the exclusion of African American suffrage from the party platform as radical influence began to fade in the Republican Party When the Senate returned to session it voted down Articles II and III by the same 35 19 margin as before and Chase declared the President acquitted Stevens did not give up on the idea of removing Johnson in July he proffered several more impeachment articles the House refused to adopt them 172 He offered a bill to divide Texas into several parts to gain additional Republican senators to vote out Johnson It was defeated the Herald stated It is lamentable to see this old man with one foot in the grave pursuing the President with such vindictiveness 173 Nevertheless Stevens planned to revisit the question of impeachment when Congress met again in late 1868 174 Brodie suggested that Stevens s hatred of Johnson was the only thing keeping him from despair aware as he was of the continued violence in the South some of which was committed by the Ku Klux Klan Several of the southern states had been re admitted by this time The murders and intimidation were aiding the Democrats there in restoring white rule With the Republicans unwilling to embrace black suffrage in their platform and the Democrats opposed to it Stevens feared Democratic victory in the 1868 elections might even bring back slavery He told his fellow Pennsylvania politician Alexander McClure My life has been a failure With all this great struggle of years in Washington and the fearful sacrifice of life and treasure I see little hope for the Republic Stevens took pride in his role in establishing free public education in Pennsylvania 175 When interviewed by a reporter seeking to gain his life story Stevens replied I have no history My life long regret is that I have lived so long and so uselessly 176 Nevertheless in his last formal speech to the House Stevens stated that man still is vile But such large steps have lately been taken in the true direction that the patriot has a right to take courage 177 I repose in this quiet and secluded spot Not from any natural preference for solitude But finding other Cemeteries limited as to Raceby Charter Rules I have chosen this that I might illustratein my death The Principles which I advocatedthrough a long life EQUALITY OF MAN BEFORE HIS CREATOR The inscription on Stevens s grave 178 When Congress adjourned in late July Stevens remained in Washington too ill to return to Pennsylvania Stevens was in pain from his stomach ailments from swollen feet and from dropsy By early August he was unable to leave the house He still received some visitors though and correctly predicted to his friend and former student Simon Stevens no relation that Grant would win the election On the afternoon of August 11 his doctor warned that he would probably not last through the night His longtime housekeeper and companion Lydia Hamilton Smith his nephew Thaddeus and friends gathered by him Two black preachers came to pray by him telling him that he had the prayers of all their people He sucked on ice to try to soothe the pain his last words were a request for more of it Thaddeus Stevens died on the night of August 11 1868 as the old day departed 179 President Johnson issued no statement upon the death of his enemy 180 Newspaper reaction was generally along partisan lines though sometimes mixed The Detroit Post stated that if to die crowned with noble laurels and secure of recte in the respect of the world is an end worthy the ambition of a well spent life then the veteran Radical may lie down with the noblest of the fathers to a well contented sleep 181 The New York Times stated that Stevens had discerned the expediency of emancipation and urged it long before Mr Lincoln issued his proclamation but that after the war on the subject of Reconstruction then Mr Stevens must be deemed the Evil Genius of the Republican Party 182 The Franklin Louisiana Planter s Banner exulted The prayers of the righteous have at last removed the Congressional curse May the fires of his new furnace never go out 183 nbsp Stevens s casket lying in state in the Capitol Rotunda guarded by black soldiers Stevens s body was conveyed from his house to the Capitol by white and black pallbearers together Thousands of mourners of both races filed past his casket as he lay in state at the United States Capitol rotunda 180 184 Stevens was the third man after Clay and Lincoln to receive that honor African American soldiers constituted the guard of honor After a service there his body was taken by funeral train to Lancaster a city draped in black for the funeral Stevens was laid to rest in Shreiner s Cemetery today the Shreiner Concord Cemetery it allowed the burial of people of all races although at the time of Stevens s interment only one African American was buried there The people of his district posthumously renominated him to Congress They elected his former student Oliver J Dickey to succeed him When Congress convened in December 1868 there were several speeches in tribute to Stevens they were afterward collected in book form 185 Personal life editStevens never married though there were rumors about his twenty year relationship 1848 1868 with his widowed housekeeper Lydia Hamilton Smith 1813 1884 186 187 She was a light skinned African American her husband Jacob and at least one of her sons were much darker than she was 188 nbsp Lydia Hamilton SmithIt is uncertain if the Stevens Smith relationship was romantic The Democratic press especially in the South assumed so and when he brought Mrs Smith to Washington in 1859 she managed his household which did nothing to stop their insinuations 189 In the one brief surviving letter from Stevens to her Stevens addresses her as Mrs Lydia Smith 190 Stevens insisted that his nieces and nephews refer to her as Mrs Smith deference towards an African American servant almost unheard of at that time They do so in surviving letters warmly asking Stevens to see that she comes with him next time he visits 191 As evidence that their relationship was sexual Brodie pointed to an 1868 letter in which Stevens compares himself to Richard M Johnson vice president under Martin Van Buren who lived openly with a series of African American slave mistresses Johnson was elected even though this became known during the 1836 campaign a fact that Stevens notes and expresses his bitterness about his inability to gain election by the legislature to the Senate or to secure a Cabinet position 192 When Stevens died Smith was at his bedside along with his friend Simon Stevens nephew Thaddeus Stevens Jr two black nuns and several other individuals Under Stevens s will Smith was allowed to choose between a lump sum of 5 000 or a 500 annual allowance she could also take any furniture in his house 193 With the inheritance she purchased Stevens s house where she had lived for many years A Roman Catholic she chose to be buried in a Catholic cemetery not near Stevens although she left money for the upkeep of his grave 194 Stevens had taken custody of his two young nephews Thaddeus often called Thaddeus Jr and Alanson Joshua Stevens after their parents died in Vermont Alanson was sent to work at Stevens s business Caledonia Forge Thaddeus Jr was expelled from Dartmouth College though he subsequently graduated and was taken into his uncle s law practice 195 Alanson during the Civil War rose to be commanding captain of a Pennsylvania Volunteers field artillery unit and was killed in action at Chickamauga 196 After Alanson s death his uncle used his influence to have Thaddeus Jr made provost marshal of Lancaster 197 nbsp Thaddeus Stevens School also known as Thaddeus Stevens Elementary School located at 1050 21st Street NW in Washington D C The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 Buildings associated with Stevens and with Smith in Lancaster are being renovated by the local historical society LancasterHistory org 198 In his will Stevens made several bequests with much of his estate to his nephew Thaddeus Jr on condition that he refrain from alcohol If he did not that bequest would establish an orphanage in Lancaster open to all races and nationalities without discrimination A legal fight over his estate ensued and it was not until 1894 that the courts settled the matter awarding 50 000 1 52 million in 2022 to found the orphanage 193 The school today is the Thaddeus Stevens College of Technology in Lancaster 199 Schools named after Stevens include Thaddeus Stevens Elementary School in Washington D C founded in 1868 as the first school built for African American children there It was segregated for the first 86 years of its existence In 1977 Amy Carter daughter of President Jimmy Carter a Georgian was enrolled there the first child of a sitting president to attend public school in almost 70 years 200 Historical and popular view editAs Stevens biographer Richard N Current put it to find out what really made the man go the historian would need the combined aid of two experts from outside the profession a psychoanalyst and a spiritualist 201 The historical view of Thaddeus Stevens has fluctuated widely since his death generally in a manner inverse to that of Andrew Johnson Early biographical works on Stevens were composed by men who knew him and reflected their viewpoints Biographies at the turn of the twentieth century such as those by Samuel McCall in 1899 and by James Albert Woodburn in 1913 presented Stevens favorably as a sincere man motivated by principle 202 Early African American historian W E B Du Bois called Stevens a leader of the common people and a stern believer in democracy both in politics and in industry 203 Pulitzer Prize winning historian James Ford Rhodes argued that though Stevens had a profound sympathy towards the African American coming straight from the heart he also showed virulence toward the South and was bitter and vindictive 203 This view of a vengeful Stevens originated during Reconstruction and persisted well into the 20th century 204 nbsp Ralph Lewis as Austin Stoneman and Mary Alden as Lydia Brown The Birth of a Nation 1915With the advent of the Dunning School s view of Reconstruction after 1900 Stevens continued to be viewed negatively and generally as motivated by hatred These historians led by William Dunning taught that Reconstruction had been an opportunity for radical politicians motivated by ill will towards the South to destroy what little of southern life and dignity the war had left 205 206 207 Dunning himself deemed Stevens truculent vindictive and cynical 205 Lloyd Paul Stryker who wrote a highly favorable 1929 biography of Johnson labeled Stevens as a horrible old man craftily preparing to strangle the bleeding broken body of the South and who thought it would be a beautiful thing to see the white men especially the white women of the South writhing under negro domination 207 208 In 1915 D W Griffith s film The Birth of a Nation based on the 1905 novel The Clansman by Thomas Dixon Jr was released containing the influenceable and ill advised Congressman Austin Stoneman who resembles Stevens down to the ill fitting wig limp and African American lover Lydia Brown This popular treatment reinforced and reinvigorated public prejudices towards Stevens 209 210 According to Foner as historians exalted the magnanimity of Lincoln and Andrew Johnson Stevens came to symbolize Northern malice revenge and irrational hatred of the South 211 The highly popular historian James Truslow Adams described Stevens as perhaps the most despicable malevolent and morally deformed character who has ever risen to high power in America 212 Historians who penned biographies of Stevens in the late 1930s sought to move away from this perspective seeking to rehabilitate him and his political career Thomas F Woodley writing in 1937 shows admiration of Stevens but he attributed Stevens s driving force to bitterness over his clubfoot In his 1939 biography Alphonse Miller found that the former congressman was motivated by a desire for justice Both men were convinced that recent books had not treated him fairly Richard Current s 1942 work reflected current Beardian historiography which saw all American history including Reconstruction as a three way economic struggle between the industrialists of the Northeast represented by Stevens the planters of the South and the farmers of the Midwest Current argued that Stevens was motivated in his Reconstruction policies by frustrated ambitions and a desire to use his political position to promote industrial capitalism and advance the Republican Party He concluded that despite Stevens s egalitarian beliefs he promoted inequality for none had done more than he to bring on the age of Big Business with its concentration of wealth 213 With Ralph Korngold s 1955 biography of Stevens the neoabolitionist school of historians began to consider the former congressman These professors rejected the earlier view that those who had gone South to aid the African Americans after the war were rapscallion carpetbaggers defeated by saintly redeemers Instead they applauded those who had sought to end slavery and forward civil rights and castigated Johnson for obstructionism They believed that the African American was central to Reconstruction and the only things wrong with the congressional program were that it did not go far enough and that it stopped too soon Brodie s 1959 biography of Stevens was of this school Controversial in its conclusions for being a psychobiography it found that Stevens was a consummate underdog who identified with the oppressed and whose intelligence won him success while his consciousness of his clubfoot stunted his social development 214 215 According to Brodie this also made him unwilling to marry a woman of his social standing 216 Scholars who followed Brodie continued to chip away at the idea of Stevens as a vindictive dictator who dominated Congress to get his way In 1960 Eric McKitrick deemed Stevens a picturesque and adroit politician but a very limited one whose career was a long comic sequence of devilish schemes which one after another kept blowing up in his face 217 From the mid 1970s onward Foner argued that Stevens s role was in staking out a radical position though events not Stevens caused the Republicans to support him Michael Les Benedict in 1974 suggested that Stevens s reputation as a dictator was based more on his personality than on his influence In 1989 Allan Bogue found that as chairman of Ways and Means Stevens was less than complete master of his committee 218 Historian Hans Trefousse stated in a 1969 study of the Radical Republicans that Stevens s one abiding passion was equality 219 In 1991 he noted that Stevens was one of the most influential representatives ever to serve in Congress He dominated the House with his wit knowledge of parliamentary law and sheer willpower even though he was often unable to prevail 220 In his 1997 biography of Stevens though he took a position similar to McKitrick s that Stevens was a relatively marginal figure with his influence often limited by his extremism 221 Trefousse believed Brodie went too far in deeming Stevens s clubfoot responsible for so much about him and in giving full credence to the Stevens Smith relationship both those things cannot now be determined with certainty 222 Stevens was celebrated for his wit and sarcasm When Lincoln appointed rival Pennsylvania Republican leader Simon Cameron as Secretary of War Stevens expressed disgust at Cameron s reputed corruption Asked whether Cameron was a thief Stevens supposedly replied I don t think he would steal a red hot stove When Cameron objected to this characterization Stevens said I believe I told you he would not steal a red hot stove I will now take that back 223 Stevens s ill fitting wigs were a well known topic of discussion in Washington but when a female admirer who apparently did not know asked for a lock of Stevens s hair as a keepsake he removed his hairpiece held it out to her and invited her to help herself 224 Steven Spielberg s 2012 film Lincoln in which Stevens was portrayed by Tommy Lee Jones brought new public interest in Stevens Jones s character is portrayed as the central figure among the radicals responsible in large part for the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment Historian Matthew Pinsker notes that Stevens is referred to only four times in Doris Kearns Goodwin s 2005 book Team of Rivals on which screenwriter Tony Kushner based the film s screenplay other radicals were folded into the character Stevens is depicted as unable to moderate his views for the sake of gaining passage of the amendment until after he is urged to do so by the ever compromising Lincoln 225 According to Aaron Bady in his article about the film and how it portrays the radicals he s the uncle everyone is embarrassed of even if they love him too much to say so He s not a leader he s a liability one whose shining heroic moment will be when he keeps silent about what he really believes 226 The film depicts a Stevens Smith sexual relationship Pinsker comments that it may well have been true that they were lovers but by injecting this issue into the movie the filmmakers risk leaving the impression for some viewers that the secret reason for Stevens s egalitarianism was his desire to legitimize his romance across racial lines 225 On April 2 2022 in front of the Adams County Courthouse in Gettysburg Pennsylvania a statue of Stevens was unveiled as part of a celebration of Stevens 230th birthday The statue was commissioned by the Thaddeus Stevens Society and was sculpted by multidisciplinary artist Alex Paul Loza 227 See also edit nbsp American Civil War portalList of civil rights leadersGeneral bibliography editBerlin Jean V April 1993 Thaddeus Stevens and His Biographers Pennsylvania History University Park Penn State University Press 60 2 153 62 JSTOR 27773615 Bond Horace Mann Social and Economic Forces in Alabama Reconstruction Journal of Negro History 23 3 July 1938 Accessed via JSTOR 7 July 2013 Brodie Fawn 1966 1959 Thaddeus Stevens Scourge of the South Norton Library ed New York W W Norton amp Co Inc ISBN 0393003310 online Bryant Jones Mildred 1941 The Political Program of Thaddeus Stevens 1865 Phylon Atlanta Clark Atlanta University 2 2 2nd Qtr 1941 147 54 doi 10 2307 271784 JSTOR 271784 Castel Albert E 1979 The Presidency of Andrew Johnson American Presidency Lawrence The Regents Press of Kansas ISBN 0700601902 Cox LaWanda and John H Cox Politics Principle and Prejudice 1865 1866 Dilemma of Reconstruction America London Collier Macmillan 1963 Current Richard N October 1947 Love Hate and Thaddeus Stevens Pennsylvania History University Park Penn State University Press 14 4 259 72 JSTOR 27766829 text Donald David Herbert 1995 Lincoln London Jonathan Cape ISBN 0684808463 Du Bois W E B Black Reconstruction An Essay Toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America 1860 1880 New York Russell amp Russell 1935 Epps Garrett 2006 Democracy Reborn The Fourteenth Amendment and the Fight for Equal Rights in post Civil War American New York Henry Holt and Company ISBN 080507130X Foner Eric Politics and Ideology in the Age of the Civil War Oxford University Press 1980 ISBN 978 0199727087 Foner Eric 2014 1988 Reconstruction America s Unfinished Revolution 1863 1877 New York Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0062354518 Gans David H November 16 2011 Perfecting the Declaration The Text and History of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment Constitutional Accountability Center Archived from the original PDF on January 31 2015 Retrieved November 15 2020 Glatfelter Charles H April 1993 Thaddeus Stevens in the Cause of Education The Gettysburg Years Pennsylvania History University Park Penn State University Press 60 2 163 75 JSTOR 27773616 text Hamilton Howard Devon The Legislative and Judicial History of the Thirteenth Amendment Political Science dissertation at the University of Illinois accepted May 15 1950 Accessed via ProQuest 4 July 2013 Halbrook Stephen P 1998 Freedmen the Fourteenth Amendment and the Right to Bear Arms 1866 1876 Westport Ct Greenwood ISBN 0275963314 Soifer Aviam Federal Protection Paternalism and the Virtually Forgotten Prohibition of Voluntary Peonage Columbia Law Review 112 7 November 2012 pp 1607 40 Stewart David O 2009 Impeached The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln s Legacy New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1416547495 Andreasen Bryon C Summer 2000 Review of Trefousse Hans L Thaddeus Stevens Nineteenth Century Egalitarian in Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association vol 21 no 2 Summer 2000 pp 75 81 Tsesis Alexander The Thirteenth Amendment and American Freedom A Legal History New York University Press 2004 ISBN 0814782760 Vorenberg Michael Final Freedom The Civil War the Abolition of Slavery and the Thirteenth Amendment Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 978 1139428002 Woodley Thomas F Great Leveler The Life of Thaddeus Stevens 1937 onlineNotes edit James Ashley introduced the amendment in December 1863 In March 1864 Stevens proposed a version that added forever to the conditional prohibition and explicitly annulled the Fugitive Slave Clause in Article 4 Section 2 of the U S Constitution The version which ultimately passed had already been crafted by the Senate Judiciary Committee 77 References edit Levine 2021 p 16 Trefousse 1997 pp 1 2 Meltzer 1967 pp 3 4 Brodie pp 26 27 a b Franklin Ellis Samuel Evans Everts amp Peck 1993 History of Lancaster County Pennsylvania with Biographical Sketches of Many of its Pioneers and Prominent Men Chapter XXI Salem Ma The Bench and Bar of Lancaster County OCLC 29849748 41140187 823869219 Trefousse 1997 pp 4 5 Brodie pp 27 29 Trefousse 1997 pp 5 7 a b Trefousse 1997 p 11 Meltzer 1967 p 14 a b Brodie p 32 Meltzer 1967 p 17 a b Trefousse 1997 pp 13 16 Glatfelter p 163 Trefousse 1997 pp 21 22 Brodie pp 42 45 Brodie pp 38 39 Trefousse 1997 pp 17 19 Trefousse 1997 pp 25 26 Meltzer 1967 pp 27 29 Trefousse 1997 pp 26 31 Brodie pp 57 59 Trefousse 1997 pp 33 37 42 43 Meltzer 1967 pp 31 32 Brodie p 59 Glatfelter pp 164 66 College History Gettysburg College Archived from the original on July 18 2013 Retrieved July 17 2013 Brodie pp 60 61 Trefousse 1997 pp 39 40 Trefousse 1997 p 40 a b Brodie pp 75 84 Trefousse 1997 pp 57 67 Trefousse 1997 pp 68 69 a b Brodie pp 105 06 Berlin pp 155 58 Trefousse 1997 p 46 Meltzer 1967 pp 52 53 Foner p 143 Trefousse 1997 p 73 a b c Carlson Peter February 19 2013 Thaddeus Stevens Weder History Group Retrieved July 15 2013 Delle James A Levine Mary Ann Excavations at the Thaddeus Stevens and Lydia Hamilton Smith Site Lancaster Pennsylvania Archaeological Evidence for the Underground Railroad Northeast Historical Archaeology Buffalo State University of New York College at Buffalo 33 1 Archived from the original on March 25 2014 Retrieved July 15 2013 Brodie p 103 Meltzer 1967 pp 81 82 Trefousse 1997 pp 76 77 Thaddeus Stevens quotes Thaddeus Stevens Society Archived from the original on September 20 2020 Retrieved October 3 2020 Trefousse 1997 pp 79 80 Trefousse 1997 p 81 Meltzer 1967 p 94 Brodie p 114 a b Brodie pp 116 19 a b Bond p 305 Trefousse 1997 pp 84 86 Brodie pp 121 23 Brodie pp 129 30 Trefousse 1997 pp 95 97 Brodie pp 130 32 Trefousse 1997 pp 100 03 Brodie p 133 Meltzer 1967 pp 119 21 Trefousse 1997 p 107 Trefousse 1997 p 109 Brodie p 139 Trefousse 1997 pp 109 14 Thaddeus Stevens 1997 The Selected Papers of Thaddeus Stevens January 1814 March 1865 Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press p 322 ISBN 978 0822970453 Trefousse 1997 pp 118 19 Brodie p 153 Trefousse 1997 p 119 Michael Burlingame 2012 Abraham Lincoln A Life Baltimore Md Johns Hopkins University Press p 526 ISBN 978 1421410685 David Herbert Donald 2004 We Are Lincoln Men Abraham Lincoln and His Friends New York Simon amp Schuster p 205 ISBN 978 0743254700 Trefousse 1997 pp 120 21 126 27 Donald 1995 p 424 Brodie pp 161 62 Thaddeus Stevens Selected Papers of Thaddeus Stevens Pittsburg University of Pittsburgh Press 1997 397 The Congressional Globe Volume 54 Part 1 p 243 Trefousse 1997 p 134 Brodie p 180 Hamilton pp 5 6 Trefousse 1997 p 140 Trefousse 1997 p 162 Brodie p 203 Vorenberg pp 182 202 Cox amp Cox p 28 Scovel James M 1898 Thaddeus Stevens Lippincott s Monthly Magazine A Popular Journal of General Literature Philadelphia J B Lippincott Company 550 Tsesis pp 41 43 Brodie p 204 Bond p 304 Brodie pp 150 51 Trefousse 1997 pp 121 22 Trefousse 1997 p 131 Brodie pp 174 75 Brodie pp 174 77 Brodie p 178 Census Bureau Historical Statistics of the United States from Colonial Times to 1970 Part 2 888 Steve Moyer Remarkable Radical Thaddeus Stevens Humanities Magazine vol 33 no 6 December 2012 Boston College OCLC 5014069 Ida Tarbell The Tariff in Our Times New York Macmillan 1911 15 OCLC 1031677916 Stewart pp 17 18 Bryant Jones p 148 Stewart p 17 Bryant Jones pp 148 49 Donald 1995 p 510 Trefousse 1997 pp 144 47 Trefousse 1997 pp 148 49 William C Harris The Hampton Roads Peace Conference A Final Test of Lincoln s Presidential Leadership Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 21 1 Winter 2000 Retrieved on June 30 2013 Trefousse 1997 p 157 Brodie p 216 Trefousse 1997 pp 158 59 Meltzer 1967 pp 165 67 Trefousse 1997 pp 163 64 a b Brodie pp 225 30 234 39 Brodie p 231 Brodie pp 231 33 Trefousse 1997 p 177 Brodie pp 240 42 Trefousse 1997 p 176 a b Soifer p 1616 Soifer p 1613 Gans 2011 p 10 Halbrook 1998 pp 6 8 Halbrook 1998 p 34 Stewart pp 55 57 Du Bois pp 300 07 Trefousse 1997 pp 178 79 Bond p 300 a b Foner 1980 pp 139 40 Foner pp 242 47 Trefousse 1997 pp 180 81 Trefousse 1997 pp 181 86 Brodie pp 277 89 Foner pp 273 77 Foner pp 282 83 296 99 332 33 Amendment XIV US Government Printing Office Archived from the original on February 2 2014 Retrieved June 23 2013 Brodie pp 296 303 Trefousse 1997 p 193 Trefousse 1997 pp 194 Ludwell Johnson Division and Reunion New York John Wiley 1978 110 ISBN 978 0471443506 OCLC 3415277 1200053750 Trefousse 1997 p 195 Stewart pp 85 87 Building the Case for Impeachment December 1866 to June 1867 US House of Representatives History Art amp Archives history house gov United States House of Representatives Retrieved March 2 2021 Trefousse 1997 pp 210 12 The impeachment of Andrew Johnson The Week October 19 2019 Retrieved July 28 2022 Foner p 309 Stewart p 39 Trefousse 1997 pp 217 18 Trefousse 1997 pp 213 14 Castel pp 136 37 Castel pp 146 47 a b TO PASS THE IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT RESOLUTION House Vote 119 Dec 7 1867 GovTrack us Stewart pp 103 11 a b Perros George P 1960 PRELIMINARY INVENTORY OF THE R1OC ORDS OF THE HOUSE SELECT COMMITTEE ON RECONSTRUCTIO 40TH AND 41ST CONGRESSES 1867 1871 history house gov The National Archives National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration Retrieved March 28 2022 a b Hinds Asher C March 4 1907 HINDS PRECEDENTS OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES INCLUDING REFERENCES TO PROVISIONS OF THE CONSTITUTION THE LAWS AND DECISIONS OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE PDF United States Congress pp 845 847 Retrieved March 2 2021 Journal of the United States House of Representatives 40th Congress second session pages 259 262 voteview com United States House of Representatives 1868 Retrieved March 16 2022 The Capital Philadelphia Inquirer February 10 1868 Retrieved July 22 2022 via Newspapers com Stewart pp 136 137 Staunton Spectator Tuesday February 18 1868 Staunton Spectator February 18 1868 Retrieved July 22 2022 via Newspapers com Washington Newspapers com Chicago Evening Post February 13 1868 Retrieved July 22 2022 Castel pp 158 59 Brodie p 334 Foner p 334 Trefousse 1997 pp 224 25 Impeachment Newspapers com Harrisburg Telegraph February 22 1868 Retrieved July 22 2022 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from Stephen W Stathis and David C Huckabee Congressional Resolutions on Presidential Impeachment A Historical Overview PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved December 31 2019 A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation U S Congressional Documents and Debates 1774 1875 memory loc gov Library of Congress Retrieved March 28 2022 Trefousse 1997 p 225 Meltzer 1967 p 200 Meltzer 1967 p 201 a b Trefousse 1997 pp 226 29 The House Impeaches Andrew Johnson Washington D C Office of the Historian and the Clerk of the House s Office of Art and Archives Retrieved January 13 2021 Trefousse 1997 pp 231 33 Stewart pp 233 34 Stewart pp 275 79 Trefousse 1997 pp 233 34 Trefousse 1997 pp 234 35 Brodie pp 356 57 Trefousse 1997 p 235 Brodie pp 361 63 Brodie p 363 Brodie p 364 Brodie p 366 Trefousse 1997 pp 240 41 a b Meltzer p 218 Trefousse 1997 p 242 Thaddeus Stevens The New York Times August 13 1868 Retrieved on June 14 2013 Brodie p 369 Lying in State or in Honor US Architect of the Capitol AOC Retrieved September 1 2018 Trefousse 1997 pp 242 43 Who was Lydia Hamilton Smith Stevensandsmith org February 6 2010 Archived from the original on February 6 2010 Retrieved June 22 2013 Woodley Thomas Frederick 1969 1937 The Great Leveler Thaddeus Stevens New York Stackpole Sons p 149 ISBN 978 0836951042 Brodie pp 86 87 Brodie p 87 Palmer Beverly Wilson 1997 Selected Papers of Thaddeus Stevens Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press p 219 ISBN 1555530788 Brodie p 88 Brodie pp 90 91 a b Trefousse 1997 p 244 Brodie p 92 Trefousse 1997 pp 78 90 91 Chadwick Albert G 1883 Soldiers record of the town of St Johnsbury Vermont in the War of the Rebellion 1861 5 St Johnsbury Vt C M Stone amp Co p 177 Retrieved July 15 2013 Trefousse 1997 p 136 LancasterHistory org LancasterHistory org Retrieved on June 15 2013 Legacy of Thaddeus Stevens Thaddeus Stevens College Retrieved on November 12 2022 Lelyveld Joseph Well wishers besiege Amy Carter s school The New York Times November 30 1976 p 41 Retrieved on June 17 2013 subscription required Current p 262 Berlin pp 153 54 a b Current p 260 Andreasen p 78 a b Berlin p 154 Brodie p 370 a b Castel pp 220 21 Brodie pp 369 70 Berlin p 155 Brodie p 86 Foner Eric If you wondered about Thaddeus Stevens The New York Times December 31 1976 p 14 Retrieved on June 16 2013 subscription required James Truslow Adams The Epic of America Boston Little Brown 1931 p 275 OCLC 1029937995 Berlin pp 155 57 Berlin p 157 Castel pp 222 225 Andreasen pp 76 77 Andreasen p 79 Andreasen pp 79 80 Andreasen p 75 Hans L Trefousse 1991 Historical Dictionary of Reconstruction Westport Ct Greenwood Publishing Group p 214 ISBN 0313258627 Andreasen p 80 Andreasen p 77 Glass Andrew March 12 2016 Senate Votes to Seat Pennsylvania s Simon Cameron March 13 1857 Politico com Washington D C Korngold Ralph 1974 Thaddeus Stevens A Being Darkly Wise and Rudely Great Westport Ct Greenwood Press p 18 ISBN 978 0837177335 a b Pinsker Matthew February 14 2013 Warning Artists at work Dickinson College Retrieved on June 15 2013 Bady Aaron Lincoln Against the Radicals Jacobin Retrieved on June 15 2013 Stangor Charles April 2 2022 Thaddeus Stevens statue unveiled in Gettysburg Gettysburg Connection Retrieved April 4 2022 Bibliography edit Levine Bruce C 2021 Thaddeus Stevens Civil War Revolutionary Fighter for Racial Justice New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1476793375 Meltzer Milton 1967 Thaddeus Stevens and the Fight for Negro Rights New York Thomas Y Crowell Company ISBN 978 0690809732 online Trefousse Hans L 1997 Thaddeus Stevens Nineteenth Century Egalitarian Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0807856665 onlineFurther reading editBeale Howard K The Critical Year A Study of Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction 1967 1930 New York F Ungar OCLC 491147473 Belz Herman Reconstructing the Union Theory and Practice During the Civil War 1979 1969 Westport Ct Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0313208621 OCLC 4494724 Benedict Michael Les A Compromise of Principle Congressional Republicans and Reconstruction 1863 1869 1974 New York Norton ISBN 978 0393055245 OCLC 879050178 Birkner Michael J et al eds The Worlds of James Buchanan and Thaddeus Stevens Place Personality and Politics in the Civil War Era Louisiana State University Press 2019 Bordewich Fergus M How Republican Reformers Fought the Civil War Defied Lincoln Ended Slavery and Remade America 2020 pro Stevens Bowers Claude G The Tragic Era The Revolution After Lincoln 1929 Cambridge Ma Houghton Mifflin an intense attack on Stevens from Dunning School perspective Current Richard N Love Hate and Thaddeus Stevens Pennsylvania History 14 4 1947 259 272 online Current Richard Nelson Old Thad Stevens A Story of Ambition 1980 1942 Westport Ct Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0313225697 OCLC 256434391 a scholarly biography that argues Stevens was primarily concerned with enhancing his power the power of the Republican Party and the needs of big business especially iron making and railroads Delle James A Levine Mary Ann 2015 Equality of man before his creator Thaddeus Stevens and the struggle against slavery In Delle James A ed The limits of tyranny archaeological perspectives on the struggle against new world slavery Knoxville University of Tennessee Press pp 121 46 ISBN 978 1621900870 Foner Eric Thaddeus Stevens Confiscation and Reconstruction in Stanley Elkins and Eric McKitrick eds The Hofstadter Aegis 1974 1 Foner Eric Thaddeus Stevens and the Imperfect Republic Pennsylvania History vol 60 no 2 pp 140 52 April 1993 in JSTOR Everdell William R Thaddeus Stevens The Legacy of the America Whigs in The End of Kings A History of Republics and Republicans Chicago University of Chicago Press 2000 ISBN 978 0226224824 OCLC 42080394 Goldenberg Barry M The Unknown Architects of Civil Rights Thaddeus Stevens Ulysses S Grant and Charles Sumner Los Angeles CA Critical Minds Press 2011 Graber Mark A Subtraction by Addition The Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments Columbia Law Review 112 7 November 2012 pp 1501 49 Hoelscher Robert J Thaddeus Stevens as a Lancaster Politician 1842 1868 Lancaster County Historical Society 1974 online Korngold Ralph Thaddeus Stevens A Being Darkly Wise and Rudely Great 1955 online Lawson Elizabeth Thaddeus Stevens New York International Publishers 1942 1962 reprint Lee James F June 10 2021 On the trail of Thaddeus Stevens Pennsylvania s equal rights champion Washington Post McCall Samuel Walker Thaddeus Stevens 1899 369 pages outdated biography online Parra Fernando Thaddeus Stevens Early Civil Rights Leader Footnotes A Journal of History 1 2017 184 203 online Pitts Joe April 24 2002 Thaddeus Stevens A Man Before His Time United States House of Representatives Archived from the original on January 16 2003 Retrieved January 16 2003 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Shepard Christopher Making No Distinctions between Rich and Poor Thaddeus Stevens and Class Equality Pennsylvania History 80 Winter 2013 37 50 online Simpson Brooks D April 1993 Land and the Ballot Securing the Fruits of Emancipation Pennsylvania History University Park Penn State University Press 60 2 176 88 JSTOR 27773617 Stryker Lloyd Paul Andrew Johnson A Study in Courage 1929 New York Macmilliam OCLC 1184750151 hostile to Stevens Woodburn James Albert The Life of Thaddeus Stevens A Study in American Political History Especially in the Period of the Civil War and Reconstruction 1913 online version Woodburn James Albert The Attitude of Thaddeus Stevens Toward the Conduct of the Civil War American Historical Review Vol 12 no 3 April 1907 pp 567 83 in JSTOR Zeitz Josh Stevens Thaddeus American National Biography Online February 2000 ISBN 978 0198606697 Unique Identifier 4825694186Historiography edit Berlin Jean V Thaddeus Stevens and His Biographers Pennsylvania History 60 2 1993 153 162 online Foner Eric Thaddeus Stevens and the Imperfect Republic Pennsylvania History 60 2 1993 140 152 online Jolly James A The Historical Reputation of Thaddeus Stevens Journal of the Lancaster County Historical Society 1970 74 33 71 online Pickens Donald K The Republican Synthesis and Thaddeus Stevens Civil War History 1985 31 57 73 ISSN 0009 8078 Unique Identifier 5183399288 argues that Stevens was committed to Republicanism and capitalism in terms of self improvement the advance of society equal distribution of land and economic liberty for all to achieve that he had to destroy slavery and the aristocracy Primary sources edit Kendrick Benjamin B The Journal of the Joint Committee of Fifteen on Reconstruction New York Columbia University 1914 Palmer Beverly Wilson and Holly Byers Ochoa eds The Selected Papers of Thaddeus Stevens Two vol 1998 900 pages his speeches plus letters to and from Stevens ISBN 978 0822940524 OCLC 806290019 excerpt vol 1 online review Stevens Thaddeus et al Report of the Joint Committee on Reconstruction at the First Session by United States Congress Joint Committee on Reconstruction 1866 791 pages online edition Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of Thaddeus Stevens Delivered by United States 40th Cong 3d sess 1868 1869 1869 84 pages online editionExternal links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Thaddeus Stevens nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Stevens Thaddeus nbsp Media related to Thaddeus Stevens at Wikimedia Commons Lydia Hamilton Smith Abolitionist And African American Businesswoman Stevens and Smith Historic Site Thaddeus Stevens Society United States Congress Thaddeus Stevens id S000887 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Includes Guide to Research Collections where his papers are located Mr Lincoln and Freedom Thaddeus Stevens Archived December 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Mr Lincoln s White House Thaddeus Stevens Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback MachineU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byJohn Strohm Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Pennsylvania s 8th congressional district1849 1853 Succeeded byHenry Augustus MuhlenbergPreceded byAnthony Roberts Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Pennsylvania s 9th congressional district1859 1868 Succeeded byOliver DickeyPreceded byJohn Sherman Chair of the House Ways and Means Committee1861 1865 Succeeded byJustin MorrillNew office Chair of the House Appropriations Committee1865 1868 Succeeded byElihu B WashburneHonorary titlesPreceded byAbraham Lincoln Persons who have lain in state or honor in the United States Capitol rotunda1868 Succeeded byCharles Sumner Portals nbsp Biography nbsp United States nbsp American Civil War nbsp Utah nbsp Pennsylvania nbsp History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thaddeus Stevens amp oldid 1205913201, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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