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William Jennings Bryan

William Jennings Bryan (March 19, 1860 – July 26, 1925) was an American lawyer, orator and politician. Beginning in 1896, he emerged as a dominant force in the Democratic Party, running three times as the party's nominee for President of the United States in the 1896, 1900, and the 1908 elections. He served in the House of Representatives from 1891 to 1895 and as the Secretary of State under Woodrow Wilson. Because of his faith in the wisdom of the common people, Bryan was often called "The Great Commoner",[1] and because of his rhetorical power and early fame as the youngest presidential candidate, "The Boy Orator".[2]

William Jennings Bryan
Bryan, c. 1910
41st United States Secretary of State
In office
March 5, 1913 – June 9, 1915
PresidentWoodrow Wilson
Preceded byPhilander C. Knox
Succeeded byRobert Lansing
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Nebraska's 1st district
In office
March 4, 1891 – March 3, 1895
Preceded byWilliam James Connell
Succeeded byJesse Burr Strode
Personal details
Born(1860-03-19)March 19, 1860
Salem, Illinois, U.S.
DiedJuly 26, 1925(1925-07-26) (aged 65)
Dayton, Tennessee, U.S.
Resting placeArlington National Cemetery
Political partyDemocratic
Other political
affiliations
Populist
Spouse
(m. 1884)
Children3, including Ruth
Parent
Relatives
Education
Signature

Born and raised in Illinois, Bryan moved to Nebraska in the 1880s. He won election to the U.S. House of Representatives in the 1890 elections, served two terms, and made an unsuccessful run for the U.S. Senate in 1894. At the 1896 Democratic National Convention, Bryan delivered his "Cross of Gold" speech which attacked the gold standard and the eastern moneyed interests and crusaded for inflationary policies built around the expanded coinage of silver coins. In a repudiation of incumbent President Grover Cleveland and his conservative Bourbon Democrats, the Democratic convention nominated Bryan for president, making Bryan the youngest major party presidential nominee in U.S. history. Subsequently, Bryan was also nominated for president by the left-wing Populist Party, and many Populists would eventually follow Bryan into the Democratic Party. In the intensely-fought 1896 presidential election, the Republican nominee, William McKinley, emerged triumphant. At age 36, Bryan remains the youngest person in United States history to receive an electoral vote for president.[3] Bryan gained fame as an orator, as he invented the national stumping tour when he reached an audience of 5 million people in 27 states in 1896.

Bryan retained control of the Democratic Party and again won the presidential nomination in 1900. After the Spanish–American War, Bryan became a fierce opponent of American imperialism, and much of his campaign centered on that issue. In the election, McKinley again defeated Bryan and won several Western states that Bryan had won in 1896. Bryan's influence in the party weakened after the 1900 election, and the Democrats nominated the conservative Alton B. Parker in the 1904 presidential election. Bryan regained his stature in the party after Parker's resounding defeat by Theodore Roosevelt and voters from both parties increasingly embraced some of the progressive reforms that had long been championed by Bryan. Bryan won his party's nomination in the 1908 presidential election, but he was defeated by Roosevelt's chosen successor, William Howard Taft. Along with Henry Clay, Bryan is one of the two individuals who never won a presidential election despite receiving electoral votes in three separate presidential elections held after the ratification of the Twelfth Amendment.

After the Democrats won the presidency in the 1912 election, Woodrow Wilson rewarded Bryan's support with the important cabinet position of Secretary of State. Bryan helped Wilson pass several progressive reforms through Congress. In 1915, he considered that Wilson was too harsh on Germany and finally resigned after Wilson had sent Germany a note of protest with a veiled threat of war in response to the sinking of the Lusitania by a German U-boat. After leaving office, Bryan retained some of his influence within the Democratic Party, but he increasingly devoted himself to Prohibition, religious matters, and anti-evolution activism. He opposed Darwinism on religious and humanitarian grounds, most famously in the 1925 Scopes Trial, dying soon after. Bryan has elicited mixed reactions from various commentators, but is acknowledged by historians as one of the most influential figures of the Progressive Era.

Early life and education

 
Bryan's birthplace in Salem, Illinois
 
Attorney Mary Baird Bryan, the wife of William Jennings Bryan

William Jennings Bryan was born in Salem, Illinois, on March 19, 1860, to Silas Lillard Bryan and Mariah Elizabeth (Jennings) Bryan.[4] Silas Bryan had been born in 1822 and had established a legal practice in Salem in 1851. He married Mariah, a former student of his at McKendree College, in 1852.[5] Of Scots-Irish and English ancestry,[a] Silas Bryan was an avid Jacksonian Democrat. He won election as a state circuit judge and in 1866 moved his family to a 520-acre (210.4 ha) farm north of Salem. He lived in a ten-room house that was the envy of Marion County.[7] Silas served in various local positions and sought election to Congress in 1872, but was narrowly defeated by the Republican candidate.[8] An admirer of Andrew Jackson and Stephen A. Douglas, Silas passed on his Democratic affiliation to his son, William, who would remain a life-long Democrat.[9] William's cousin, William Sherman Jennings,[10] was also a prominent Democrat.

William was the fourth child of Silas and Mariah, but all three of his older siblings died during infancy. He also had five younger siblings, four of whom lived to adulthood.[11] William was home-schooled by his mother until the age of ten. Demonstrating a precocious talent for oratory, he gave public speeches as early as the age of four.[12] Silas was a Baptist and Mariah was a Methodist, but William's parents allowed him to choose his own church. At age fourteen, he had a conversion experience at a revival. He said that it was the most important day of his life.[13] At 15, he was sent to attend Whipple Academy, a private school in Jacksonville, Illinois.[14]

 
A young Bryan

After graduating from Whipple Academy, Bryan entered Illinois College, which was also located in Jacksonville. During his time at Illinois College, Bryan served as chaplain of the Sigma Pi literary society.[15] He also continued to hone his public speaking skills, taking part in numerous debates and oratorical contests.[16] Bryan graduated from Illinois College in 1881 at the top of his class.[15] In 1879, while still in college, Bryan met Mary Elizabeth Baird, the daughter of an owner of a nearby general store, and began courting her.[17] Bryan and Mary Elizabeth married on October 1, 1884.[18] Mary Elizabeth would emerge as an important part of Bryan's career by managing his correspondence and helping him prepare speeches and articles.[17]

Bryan then studied law in Chicago at Union Law College (now Northwestern University School of Law).[19] While attending law school, Bryan worked for the attorney Lyman Trumbull, a former senator and friend of Silas Bryan who would serve as an important political ally to the younger Bryan until his death in 1896.[20] Bryan graduated from law school in 1883 with a Bachelor of Laws and returned to Jacksonville to take a position with a local law firm. Frustrated by the lack of political and economic opportunities in Jacksonville, Bryan and his wife moved west to Lincoln in 1887, the capital of the fast-growing state of Nebraska.[21]

Early political career

Congressional service

Bryan established a successful legal practice in Lincoln with partner Adolphus Talbot, a Republican whom Bryan had known in law school.[22] Bryan also entered local politics by campaigning for Democrats like Julius Sterling Morton and Grover Cleveland.[23] After earning notoriety for his effective speeches in 1888, Bryan ran for Congress in the 1890 election.[24] Bryan called for a reduction in tariff rates, the coinage of silver at a ratio equal to that of gold and action to stem the power of trusts. In part because of a series of strong debate performances, Bryan defeated incumbent Republican William James Connell, who had campaigned on the orthodox Republican platform, centered around the protective tariff.[25] Bryan's victory made him only the second Democrat who ever represented Nebraska in Congress.[26] Nationwide, Democrats picked up 76 seats in the House and so obtained a majority in that chamber. The Populist Party, a third party that drew support from agrarian voters in the West, also won several seats in Congress.[27]

With the help of Representative William McKendree Springer, Bryan secured a coveted spot on the House Ways and Means Committee. He quickly earned a reputation as a talented orator and set out to gain a strong understanding of the key economic issues of the day.[28] During the Gilded Age, the Democratic Party had begun to separate into two groups. The conservative northern "Bourbon Democrats", along with some allies in the South, sought to limit the size and power of the federal government. Another group of Democrats, drawing its membership largely from the agrarian movements of the South and West, favored greater federal intervention to help farmers, regulate railroads, and limit the power of large corporations.[29] Bryan became affiliated with the latter group and advocated for the free coinage of silver ("free silver") and the establishment of a progressive federal income tax. That endeared him to many reformers, but Bryan's call for free silver cost him the support of Morton and some other conservative Nebraska Democrats.[30] Free silver advocates were opposed by banks and bondholders who feared the effects of inflation.[31]

Bryan sought re-election in 1892 with the support of many Populists and backed the Populist presidential candidate James B. Weaver over the Democratic presidential candidate, Grover Cleveland. Bryan won re-election by just 140 votes, and Cleveland defeated Weaver and incumbent Republican President Benjamin Harrison in the 1892 presidential election. Cleveland appointed a cabinet consisting largely of conservative Democrats like Morton, who became Cleveland's secretary of agriculture. Shortly after Cleveland had taken office, a series of bank closures brought on the Panic of 1893, a major economic crisis. In response, Cleveland called a special session of Congress to call for the repeal of the 1890 Sherman Silver Purchase Act, which required the federal government to purchase several million ounces of silver every month. Bryan mounted a campaign to save the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, but a coalition of Republicans and Democrats successfully repealed it.[32] Bryan, however, was successful in passing an amendment that provided for the establishment of the first peacetime federal income tax.[33][b]

As the economy declined after 1893, the reforms favored by Bryan and the Populists became more popular among many voters. Rather than running for re-election in 1894, Bryan sought election to the United States Senate. He also became the editor-in-chief of the Omaha World-Herald although most editorial duties were performed by Richard Lee Metcalfe and Gilbert Hitchcock. Nationwide, the Republican Party won a huge victory in the elections of 1894 by gaining over 120 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. In Nebraska, despite Bryan's popularity, the Republicans elected a majority of the state legislators, and Bryan lost the Senate election to Republican John Mellen Thurston.[c] Bryan, nonetheless, was pleased with the result of the 1894 election, as the Cleveland wing of the Democratic Party had been discredited, and Bryan's preferred gubernatorial candidate, Silas A. Holcomb, had been elected by a coalition of Democrats and Populists.[34]

After the 1894 elections, Bryan embarked on a nationwide speaking tour designed to boost free silver, move his party away from the conservative policies of the Cleveland administration, lure Populists and free silver Republicans into the Democratic Party, and raise Bryan's public profile before the next election. Speaking fees allowed Bryan to give up his legal practice and devote himself full-time to oratory.[35]

Presidential candidate and party leader

Presidential election of 1896

Democratic nomination

If they dare to come out in the open field and defend the gold standard as a good thing, we shall fight them to the uttermost, having behind us the producing masses of the nation and the world. Having behind us the commercial interests and the laboring interests and all the toiling masses, we shall answer their demands for a gold standard by saying to them, you shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns. You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.

By 1896, free silver forces were ascendant within the party. Though many Democratic leaders were not as enthusiastic about free silver as Bryan was, most recognized the need to distance the party from the unpopular policies of the Cleveland administration. By the start of the 1896 Democratic National Convention, Representative Richard P. Bland, a long-time champion of free silver, was widely perceived to be the frontrunner for the party's presidential nomination. Bryan hoped to offer himself as a presidential candidate, but his youth and relative inexperience gave him a lower profile than veteran Democrats like Bland, Governor Horace Boies of Iowa, and Vice President Adlai Stevenson. The free silver forces quickly established dominance over the convention, and Bryan helped draft a party platform that repudiated Cleveland, attacked the conservative rulings of the Supreme Court, and called the gold standard "not only un-American but anti-American".[37]

 
"UNITED SNAKES OF AMERICA" "IN BRYAN WE TRUST" political satire token of 1896, known as "Bryan Money"

Conservative Democrats demanded a debate on the party platform, and on the third day of the convention, each side put forth speakers to debate free silver and the gold standard. Bryan and Senator Benjamin Tillman of South Carolina were chosen as the speakers who would advocate for free silver, but Tillman's speech was poorly received by delegates from outside the South because of its sectionalism and references to the Civil War. Charged with delivering the convention's last speech on the topic of monetary policy, Bryan seized his opportunity to emerge as the nation's leading Democrat. In his "Cross of Gold" speech, Bryan argued that the debate over monetary policy was part of a broader struggle for democracy, political independence and the welfare of the "common man". Bryan's speech was met with rapturous applause and a celebration on the floor of the convention that lasted for over half an hour.[38]

 
Bryan campaigning for president, October 1896

The following day, the Democratic Party held its presidential ballot. With the continuing support of Governor John Altgeld of Illinois, Bland led the first ballot of the convention, but he fell far short of the necessary two-thirds vote. Bryan finished in a distant second on the convention's first ballot, but his Cross of Gold speech had left a strong impression on many delegates. Despite the distrust of party leaders like Altgeld, who was wary of supporting an untested candidate, Bryan's strength grew over the next four ballots. He gained the lead on the fourth ballot and won his party's presidential nomination on the fifth ballot.[39] At the age of 36, Bryan became and still remains the youngest presidential nominee of a major party in American history.[40] The convention nominated Arthur Sewall, a wealthy Maine shipbuilder who also favored free silver and the income tax, as Bryan's running mate.[39]

General election

Conservative Democrats, known as the "Gold Democrats", nominated a separate ticket. Cleveland himself did not publicly attack Bryan but privately favored the Republican candidate, William McKinley, over Bryan. Many urban newspapers in the Northeast and Midwest that had supported previous Democratic tickets also opposed Bryan's candidacy.[41] Bryan, however, won the support of the Populist Party, which nominated a ticket consisting of Bryan and Thomas E. Watson of Georgia. Though Populist leaders feared that the nomination of the Democratic candidate would damage the party in the long term, they shared many of Bryan's political views and had developed a productive working relationship with Bryan.[42]

The Republican campaign painted McKinley as the "advance agent of prosperity" and social harmony and warned of the supposed dangers of electing Bryan. McKinley and his campaign manager, Mark Hanna, knew that McKinley could not match Bryan's oratorical skills. Rather than giving speeches on the campaign trail, the Republican nominee conducted a front porch campaign. Hanna, meanwhile, raised an unprecedented amount of money, dispatched campaign surrogates and organized the distribution of millions of pieces of campaign literature.[43]

 
1896 electoral vote results

Facing a huge campaign finance disadvantage, the Democratic campaign relied largely on Bryan's oratorical skills. Breaking with the precedent set by most major party nominees, Bryan gave some 600 speeches, primarily in the hotly-contested Midwest.[44] Bryan invented the national stumping tour, reaching an audience of 5 million in 27 states.[45] He was building a coalition of the white South, poor northern farmers and industrial workers and silver miners against banks and railroads and the "money power". Free silver appealed to farmers, who would be paid more for their products, but not to industrial workers, who would not get higher wages but would pay higher prices. The industrial cities voted for McKinley, who won nearly the entire East and industrial Midwest and did well along the border and the West Coast. Bryan swept the South and Mountain states and the wheat growing regions of the Midwest. Revivalistic Protestants cheered at Bryan's semi-religious rhetoric. Ethnic voters supported McKinley, who promised they would not be excluded from the new prosperity, as did more prosperous farmers and the fast-growing middle class.[46][47]

McKinley won the election by a fairly comfortable margin by taking 51 percent of the popular vote and 271 electoral votes.[48] Democrats remained loyal to their champion after his defeat; many letters urged him to run again in the 1900 presidential election. William's younger brother, Charles W. Bryan, created a card file of supporters to whom the Bryans would send regular mailings to for the next thirty years.[49] The Populist Party fractured after the election; many Populists, including James Weaver, followed Bryan into the Democratic Party, and others followed Eugene V. Debs into the Socialist Party.[50]

1896 United States presidential election[51]
Party Candidate Votes Percentage Electoral votes
Republican William McKinley 7,108,480 50.99% 271
Democratic William Jennings Bryan 5,588,462 40.09%
Populist William Jennings Bryan 907,717 6.51%
Silver William Jennings Bryan 12,873 0.09%
Total William Jennings Bryan 6,509,052 46.69% 176
National Democratic John Palmer 134,645 0.97% 0
Prohibition Joshua Levering 131,312 0.94% 0
Socialist Labor Charles Matchett 36,373 0.26% 0
National Prohibition Charles Bentley 19,367 0.14% 0
No party Write-ins 1,570 0.01% 0
Totals 13,940,799 100.00% 447

War and peace: 1898–1900

Spanish–American War

Because of better economic conditions for farmers and the effects of the Klondike Gold Rush in raising prices, free silver lost its potency as an electoral issue in the years after 1896. In 1900, President McKinley signed the Gold Standard Act, which put the United States on the gold standard. Bryan remained popular in the Democratic Party and his supporters took control of party organizations throughout the country, but he initially resisted shifting his political focus from free silver.[52] Foreign policy emerged as an important issue due to the ongoing Cuban War of Independence against Spain, as Bryan and many Americans supported Cuban independence. After the explosion of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor, the United States declared war on Spain in April 1898, which began the Spanish–American War. Though wary of militarism, Bryan had long favored Cuban independence and so supported the war.[53] He argued that "universal peace cannot come until justice is enthroned throughout the world. Until the right has triumphed in every land and love reigns in every heart, government must, as a last resort, appeal to force".[54]

 
The United States and its colonial possessions after the Spanish–American War

At Governor Silas A. Holcomb's request, Bryan recruited a 2000-man regiment for the Nebraska National Guard and the soldiers of the regiment elected Bryan as their leader. Under Colonel Bryan's command, the regiment was transported to Camp Cuba Libre in Florida, but the fighting between Spain and the United States ended before the regiment had been deployed to Cuba. Bryan's regiment remained in Florida for months after the end of the war, which prevented Bryan from taking an active role in the 1898 midterm elections. Bryan resigned his commission and left Florida in December 1898 after the United States and Spain had signed the Treaty of Paris.[53]

Bryan had supported the war to gain Cuba's independence, but he was outraged that the Treaty of Paris granted the United States control over the Philippines. Many Republicans believed that the United States had an obligation to "civilize" the Philippines, but Bryan strongly opposed what he saw as American imperialism. Despite his opposition to the annexation of the Philippines, Bryan urged his supporters to ratify the Treaty of Paris. He wanted to quickly bring an official end to the war and then to grant independence to the Philippines as soon as possible. With Bryan's support, the treaty was ratified in a close vote, bringing an official end to the Spanish–American War. In early 1899, the Philippine–American War broke out as the established Philippine government, under the leadership of Emilio Aguinaldo, sought to stop the American invasion of the archipelago.

Presidential election of 1900

 
Conservatives in 1900 ridiculed Bryan's eclectic platform.

The 1900 Democratic National Convention met in Kansas City, Missouri, where some Democratic leaders opposed to Bryan had hoped to nominate Admiral George Dewey for president. Nevertheless, Bryan faced no significant opposition by the time of the convention and he won his party's nomination unanimously. Bryan did not attend the convention but exercised control of the convention's proceedings via telegraph.[55] Bryan faced a decision regarding which issue his campaign would focus on. Many of his most fervent supporters wanted Bryan to continue his crusade for free silver, and Democrats from the Northeast advised Bryan to center his campaign on the growing power of trusts. Bryan, however, decided that his campaign would focus on anti-imperialism, partly to unite the factions of the party and win over some Republicans.[56] The party platform contained planks supporting free silver and opposing the power of trusts, but imperialism was labeled as the "paramount issue" of the campaign. The party nominated former Vice President Adlai Stevenson to serve as Bryan's running mate.[57]

In his speech accepting the Democratic nomination, Bryan argued that the election represented "a contest between democracy and plutocracy". He also strongly criticized the U.S. annexation of the Philippines and compared it to the British rule of the Thirteen Colonies. Bryan argued that the United States should refrain from imperialism and should seek to become the "supreme moral factor in the world's progress and the accepted arbiter of the world's disputes".[58] By 1900, the American Anti-Imperialist League, which included individuals like Benjamin Harrison, Andrew Carnegie, Carl Schurz and Mark Twain, had emerged as the primary domestic organization opposed to the continued American control of the Philippines. Many of the leaders of the League had opposed Bryan in 1896 and continued to distrust Bryan and his followers.[59] Despite the distrust, Bryan's strong stance against imperialism convinced most of the league's leadership to throw their support behind the Democratic nominee.[58]

 
1900 electoral vote results

Once again, the McKinley campaign established a massive financial advantage, and the Democratic campaign relied largely on Bryan's oratory.[60] In a typical day Bryan gave four hour-long speeches and shorter talks that added up to six hours of speaking. At an average rate of 175 words a minute, he turned out 63,000 words a day, enough to fill 52 columns of a newspaper.[61] The Republican Party's superior organization and finances boosted McKinley's candidacy and, as in the previous campaign, most major newspapers favored McKinley. Bryan also had to contend with the Republican vice presidential nominee, Theodore Roosevelt, who had emerged a national celebrity in the Spanish–American War and proved to be a strong public speaker. Bryan's anti-imperialism failed to register with many voters and as the campaign neared its end, Bryan increasingly shifted to attacks on corporate power. He once again sought the voter of urban laborers by telling them to vote against the business interests that had "condemn[ed] the boys of this country to perpetual clerkship".[62]

By election day, few believed that Bryan would win, and McKinley ultimately prevailed once again over Bryan. Compared to the results of the 1896 election, McKinley increased his popular vote margin and picked up several Western states, including Bryan's home state of Nebraska.[63] The Republican platform of victory in war and a strong economy proved to be more important to voters than Bryan's questioning the morality of annexing the Philippines.[64] The election also confirmed the continuing organizational advantage of the Republican Party outside of the South.[63]

Between presidential campaigns, 1901–1907

 
William J Bryan in 1906 as Moses with new 10 commandments; Puck 19 Sept 1906 by Joseph Keppler. Tablet reads: l-Thou shalt have no other leaders before me. II—Thou shalt not make unto thyself any high Protective Tariff. Ill—Eight hours, and no more, shalt thou labor and do all thy work. IV—Thou shalt not graft. V—Thou shalt not elect thy Senators save by Popular Vote. VI—Thou shalt not grant rebates unto thy neighbor. VII—Thou shalt not make combinations in restraint of trade. VIII—Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's income, but shall make him pay a tax upon it. IX—There shall be no more government by injunction. X—Remember Election Day to vote it early. P.S.— When in doubt, ask Me.[65]

After the election, Bryan returned to journalism and oratory and frequently appeared on the Chautauqua circuits to give well-attended lectures across the country.[66] In January 1901, Bryan published the first issue of his weekly newspaper, The Commoner, which echoed his favorite political and religious themes. Bryan served as the editor and publisher of the newspaper; Charles Bryan, Mary Bryan and Richard Metcalfe also performed editorial duties when Bryan was traveling. The Commoner became one of the most widely-read newspapers of its era and boasted 145,000 subscribers approximately five years after its founding. Though the paper's subscriber base heavily overlapped with Bryan's political base in the Midwest, content from the papers was frequently reprinted by major newspapers in the Northeast. In 1902, Bryan, his wife and his three children moved into Fairview, a mansion located in Lincoln; Bryan referred to the house as the "Monticello of the West", and frequently invited politicians and diplomats to visit.[67]

Bryan's defeat in 1900 cost him his status as the clear leader of the Democratic Party and conservatives such as David B. Hill and Arthur Pue Gorman moved to re-establish their control over the party and return it to the policies of the Cleveland era. Meanwhile, Roosevelt succeeded McKinley as president after the latter's assassination in September 1901. Roosevelt prosecuted antitrust cases and implemented other progressive policies, but Bryan argued that Roosevelt did not fully embrace progressive causes. Bryan called for a package of reforms, including a federal income tax, pure food and drug laws, a ban on corporate financing of campaigns, a constitutional amendment providing for the direct election of senators, local ownership of utilities, and the state adoption of the initiative and the referendum,[68] and provisions for old age.[69] He also criticized Roosevelt's foreign policy and attacked Roosevelt's decision to invite Booker T. Washington to dine at the White House in 1901.[70]

Prior to the 1904 Democratic National Convention, Alton B. Parker, a New York and conservative ally of David Hill, was the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination. Conservatives feared that Bryan would join with the publisher William Randolph Hearst to block Parker's nomination. Seeking to appease Bryan and other progressives, Hill agreed to a party platform that omitted mention of the gold standard and criticized trusts.[71] In the event, Bryan did not support Parker or Hearst, but rather Francis Cockrell, a Missouri senator whose career had almost wholly unremarkable.[72] Bryan's motivation was not any belief that Cockrell could defeat Roosevelt in the election, but rather that he would lose decisively, thus paving the way for Bryan to be re-nominated in 1908. However, the possibility of Hearst getting the nomination alarmed the party's moderates enough that they moved to support Parker, who was narrowly nominated on the first ballot at the convention, with Cockrell finishing a distant third place.[73] Bryan would nonetheless get his desired outcome when Roosevelt won by the biggest popular vote margin since James Monroe was re-elected without opposition in 1820. Afterwards, Bryan published a post-election edition of The Commoner that advised its readers: "Do not Compromise with Plutocracy".[74]

Bryan traveled to Europe in 1903, meeting with figures such as Leo Tolstoy, who shared some of Bryan's religious and political views.[75] In 1905, Bryan and his family embarked on a trip around the globe and visited eighteen countries in Asia and Europe. Bryan funded the trip with public speaking fees and a travelogue that was published on a weekly basis.[76] Bryan’s travels abroad were documented in a study called "The Old World and its Ways," in which he shared his thoughts on different topics such as those related to progressive politics and labor legislation. Bryan was greeted by a large crowd upon his return to the United States in 1906 and was widely seen as the likely 1908 Democratic presidential nominee. Partly due to the efforts of muckraking journalists, voters had become increasingly open to progressive ideas since 1904. President Roosevelt himself had moved to the left, favoring federal regulation of railroad rates and meatpacking plants.[77] However, Bryan continued to favor more far-reaching reforms, including federal regulation of banks and securities, protections for union organizers and federal spending on highway construction and education. Bryan also briefly expressed support for the state and federal ownership of railroads in a manner similar to Germany but backed down from that policy in the face of an intra-party backlash.[78]

Presidential election of 1908

 
 
Presidential Campaign button for Bryan
Speech by Bryan on the railroad question, 1908.

Roosevelt, who enjoyed wide popularity among most voters even while he alienated some corporate leaders, anointed Secretary of War William Howard Taft as his successor.[79] Meanwhile, Bryan re-established his control over the Democratic Party and won the endorsement of numerous local and state organizations. Conservative Democrats again sought to prevent Bryan's nomination, but were unable to unite around an alternative candidate. Bryan was nominated for president on the first ballot of the 1908 Democratic National Convention. He was joined by John W. Kern, a former state senator from the swing state of Indiana.[80]

Bryan campaigned on a party platform that reflected his long-held beliefs, but the Republican platform also advocated for progressive policies, which left relatively few major differences between the two major parties. One issue that the two parties differed on concerned deposit insurance, as Bryan favored requiring national banks to provide deposit insurance. Bryan largely unified the leaders of his own party and his pro-labor policies won him the first presidential endorsement ever issued by the American Federation of Labor.[81] As in previous campaigns, Bryan embarked on a public speaking tour to boost his candidacy but was later joined on the trail by Taft.[82]

Defying Bryan's confidence in his own victory, Taft decisively won the 1908 presidential election. Bryan won just a handful of states outside of the Solid South, as he failed to galvanize the support of urban laborers.[83] Bryan remains the only individual since the Civil War to lose three separate U.S. presidential elections as a major party nominee.[84] Since the ratification of the Twelfth Amendment, Bryan and Henry Clay are the lone individuals who received electoral votes in three separate presidential elections but lost all three elections.[85] The 493 cumulative electoral votes cast for Bryan across three separate elections are the most received by a presidential candidate who was never elected.

 
1908 electoral vote results

Bryan remained an influential figure in Democratic politics, and after Democrats took control of the House of Representatives in the 1910 midterm elections, he appeared in the House of Representatives to argue for tariff reduction.[86] In 1909, Bryan came out publicly for the first time in favor of Prohibition. A lifelong teetotaler, Bryan had refrained from embracing Prohibition earlier because of the issue's unpopularity among many Democrats.[87] According to biographer Paolo Colletta, Bryan "sincerely believed that prohibition would contribute to the physical health and moral improvement of the individual, stimulate civic progress and end the notorious abuses connected with the liquor traffic".[88]

In 1910, he also came out in favor of women's suffrage.[89] Bryan crusaded as well for legislation to support the introduction of the initiative and referendum as a means of giving voters a direct voice while he made a whistle-stop campaign tour of Arkansas in 1910.[90] Although some observers, including President Taft, speculated that Bryan would make a fourth run for the presidency, Bryan repeatedly denied that he had any such intention.[91]

Wilson presidency

1912 election

An escalating split in the Republican Party gave Democrats their best chance in decades to win the presidency. Bryan did not seek the Democratic presidential nomination; his continuing influence gave him a major voice in choosing the nominee. Bryan was intent on preventing the conservatives in the party from nominating their candidate, as they had done in 1904. For a mix of practical and ideological reasons, Bryan ruled out supporting the candidacies of Oscar Underwood, Judson Harmon, and Joseph W. Folk, which left two major candidates competing for his backing: New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson and Speaker of the House Champ Clark. As Speaker, Clark could lay claim to progressive accomplishments, including the passage of constitutional amendments providing for the direct election of senators and the establishment of a federal income tax. However, Clark had alienated Bryan for his failure to lower the tariff and Bryan viewed the Speaker as overly friendly to conservative business interests. Wilson had criticized Bryan but had compiled a strong progressive record as governor. As the 1912 Democratic National Convention approached, Bryan continued to deny that he would seek the presidency, but many journalists and politicians suspected that Bryan hoped a deadlocked convention would turn to him.[92]

After the start of the convention, Bryan engineered the passage of a resolution stating that the party was "opposed to the nomination of any candidate who is a representative of, or under any obligation to, J. Pierpont Morgan, Thomas F. Ryan, August Belmont, or any other member of the privilege-hunting and favor-seeking class". Clark and Wilson won the support of most delegates on the first several presidential ballots of the Democratic convention, but each fell short of the necessary two-thirds majority. After Tammany Hall came out in favor of Clark and the New York delegation threw its support behind the Speaker, Bryan announced that he would support Wilson. In explaining his decision, Bryan stated that he could "not be a party to the nomination of any man... who will not, when elected, be absolutely free to carry out the anti-Morgan-Ryan-Belmont resolution". Bryan's speech marked the start of a long shift away from Clark: Wilson would finally clinch the presidential nomination after over 40 ballots. Journalists attributed much of the credit for Wilson's victory to Bryan.[93]

In the 1912 presidential election, Wilson faced off against President Taft and former President Roosevelt, the latter of whom ran on the Progressive Party ticket. Bryan campaigned throughout the West for Wilson and also offered advice to the Democratic nominee on various issues. The split in the Republican ranks helped give Wilson the presidency; he won over 400 electoral votes but only 41.8 percent of the popular vote. In the concurrent congressional elections, Democrats expanded their majority in the House and gained control of the Senate, which gave the party unified control of Congress and the presidency for the first time since the early 1890s.[94]

Secretary of State

 
Bryan served as Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson
 
Cartoon of Secretary of State Bryan reading war news in 1914

President Wilson named Bryan as Secretary of State, the most prestigious appointive position. Bryan's extensive travels, popularity in the party, and support for Wilson in the election made him the obvious choice. Bryan took charge of a State Department that employed 150 officials in Washington and an additional 400 employees in embassies abroad. Early in Wilson's tenure, the president and the secretary of state broadly agreed on foreign policy goals, including the rejection of Taft's Dollar diplomacy.[95] They also shared many priorities in domestic affairs and, with Bryan's help, Wilson orchestrated passage of laws that reduced tariff rates, imposed a progressive income tax, introduced new antitrust measures, and established the Federal Reserve System. Bryan proved particularly influential in ensuring that the president, rather than private bankers, was empowered to appoint the members of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.[96]

Secretary of State Bryan pursued a series of bilateral treaties that required both signatories to submit all disputes to an investigative tribunal. He quickly won approval from the president and the Senate to proceed with his initiative. In mid-1913, El Salvador became the first nation to sign one of Bryan's treaties, and 29 other countries, including every great power in Europe other than Germany and Austria-Hungary, also agreed to sign the treaties.[97] Despite Bryan's stated aversion to conflict, he oversaw U.S. interventions in Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Mexico.[98]

After World War I broke out in Europe, Bryan consistently advocated for American neutrality between the Entente and the Central Powers. With Bryan's support, Wilson initially sought to stay out of the conflict, urging Americans to be "impartial in thought as well as action".[99] For much of 1914, Bryan attempted to bring a negotiated end to the war, but the leaders of both the Entente and the Central Powers were ultimately uninterested in American mediation. Bryan remained firmly committed to neutrality, but Wilson and others within the administration became increasingly sympathetic to the Entente.

The March 1915 Thrasher incident, in which a German U-boat sank a British passenger ship with an American citizen on board, provided a major blow to the cause of American neutrality. The May 1915 sinking of RMS Lusitania by another German U-boat further galvanized anti-German sentiment, as 128 Americans died in the incident. Bryan argued that the British blockade of Germany was as offensive as the German U-boat Campaign.[100] He also maintained that by traveling on British vessels, "an American citizen can, by putting his own business above his regard for this country, assume for his own advantage unnecessary risks and thus involve his country in international complications".[101] After Wilson sent an official message of protest to Germany and refused to warn Americans publicly not to travel on British ships, Bryan delivered his letter of resignation to Wilson on June 8, 1915.[102]

Later career

Political involvement

During the 1916 presidential election, members of the Prohibition Party attempted to place Bryan into consideration for its presidential nomination, but he rejected the offer via telegram.[103][104]

Bryan supported Wilson's 1916 re-election campaign. Bryan did not attend as an official delegate, but the 1916 Democratic National Convention suspended its own rules to allow Bryan to address the convention; Bryan delivered a well-received speech that strongly defended Wilson's domestic record. Bryan served as a campaign surrogate for Wilson by delivering dozens of speeches, primarily to audiences west of the Mississippi River. Ultimately, Wilson narrowly prevailed over the Republican candidate, Charles Evans Hughes.[105] When the United States entered World War I in April 1917, Bryan wrote to Wilson: "Believing it to be the duty of the citizen to bear his part of the burden of war and his share of the peril, I hereby tender my services to the Government. Please enroll me as a private whenever I am needed and assign me to any work that I can do."[106] Wilson declined to appoint Bryan to a federal position, but Bryan agreed to Wilson's request to provide public support for the war effort through his speeches and articles.[107] After the war, despite some reservations, Bryan supported Wilson's unsuccessful effort to bring the United States into the League of Nations.[108]

Crusade for Prohibition

After leaving office, Bryan spent much of his time advocating for the eight-hour day, a minimum wage, the right of unions to strike and increasingly women's suffrage.[109] However, his main crusades focused on support for prohibition and opposition to the teaching of evolution.[110][111] Congress passed the Eighteenth Amendment, which provided for nationwide Prohibition, in 1917. Two years later, Congress passed the Nineteenth Amendment, which granted women the right to vote nationwide. Both amendments were ratified in 1920.[112] In 1916 Bryan expressed his belief to John Reed that the government "may properly impose a minimum wage, regulate hours of labor, pass usury laws, and enforce inspection of food, sanitation and housing conditions.”[113] During the 1920s, Bryan called for further reforms, including agricultural subsidies, the guarantee of a living wage, full public financing of political campaigns and an end to legal gender discrimination.[114]

Some Prohibitionists and other Bryan supporters tried to convince the three-time presidential candidate to enter the 1920 presidential election, and a Literary Digest poll taken in mid-1920 ranked Bryan as the fourth-most popular potential Democratic candidate. Bryan, however, declined to seek public office and wrote, "if I can help this world to banish alcohol and after that to banish war... no office, no Presidency, can offer the honors that will be mine". He attended the 1920 Democratic National Convention as a delegate from Nebraska but was disappointed by the nomination of Governor James M. Cox, who had not supported ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment. Bryan declined the presidential nomination of the Prohibition Party and refused to campaign for Cox, which made the 1920 campaign the first presidential contest in over thirty years in which he did not actively campaign.[115]

Though he became less involved in Democratic politics after 1920, Bryan attended the 1924 Democratic National Convention as a delegate from Florida.[116] He helped defeat a resolution condemning the Ku Klux Klan because he expected that the organization would soon fold. Bryan disliked the Klan but never publicly attacked it.[117] He also strongly opposed the candidacy of Al Smith due to Smith's hostility towards Prohibition. After over 100 ballots, the Democratic convention nominated John W. Davis, a conservative Wall Street lawyer. To balance the conservative Davis with a progressive, the convention nominated Bryan's brother, Charles W. Bryan, for vice president. Bryan was disappointed by the nomination of Davis but strongly approved of the nomination of his brother and he delivered numerous campaign speeches in support of the Democratic ticket. Davis suffered one of the worst losses in the Democratic Party's history, taking just 29 percent of the vote against Republican President Calvin Coolidge and the third-party candidate Robert M. La Follette.[118]

 
William Jennings Bryan autographed drawing by Manuel Rosenberg, 1921

Florida real estate promoter

 
Villa Serena, Bryan's home built in 1913 in Miami, Florida

To help Mary cope with her worsening health during the harsh winters of Nebraska, the Bryans bought a farm in Mission, Texas, in 1909.[119] Due to Mary's arthritis the Bryans in 1912 began to build a new home in Miami, Florida, known as Villa Serena. The Bryans made Villa Serena their permanent home, and Charles Bryan continued to oversee The Commoner from Lincoln. The Bryans were active citizens in Miami, leading a fundraising drive for the YMCA and frequently hosting the public at their home.[120] Bryan undertook lucrative speaking engagements, often serving as a spokesman for George E. Merrick's new planned community of Coral Gables.[121] His promotions probably contributed to the Florida real estate boom of the 1920s, which collapsed within months of Bryan's death in 1925.[citation needed]

Trustee of American University

Bryan served as a member of the Board of Trustees at American University in Washington, D.C., from 1914 to his death.[122] For some of these years, he served concurrently with Warren G. Harding and Theodore Roosevelt.

Anti-evolution activism

 
William J. Bryan (right) with his younger brother Charles W.

In the 1920s, Bryan shifted his focus away from politics, becoming one of the most prominent religious figures in the country.[123] He held a weekly Bible class in Miami and published several religiously-themed books.[124] He was one of the first individuals to preach religious faith on the radio, which let him reach audiences across the country.[125] Bryan welcomed the proliferation of faiths other than Protestant Christianity, but he was deeply concerned by the rejection of Biblical literalism by many Protestants.[126] According to the historian Ronald L. Numbers, Bryan was not nearly as much a fundamentalist as many modern-day creationists of the 21st century. Instead, he is more accurately described as a "day-age creationist".[127] Bradley J. Longfield posits Bryan was a "theologically conservative Social Gospeler".[128]

In the final years of his life, Bryan became the unofficial leader of a movement that sought to prevent public schools from teaching Charles Darwin's theory of evolution.[123] Bryan had long expressed skepticism and concern regarding Darwin's theory; in his famous 1909 Chautauqua lecture, "The Prince of Peace", Bryan had warned that the theory of evolution could undermine the foundations of morality.[129] Bryan opposed Darwin's theory of evolution through natural selection for two reasons. He believed what he considered a materialistic account of the descent of man (and all life) through evolution to be directly contrary to the Biblical creation account. Also, he considered Darwinism as applied to society (social Darwinism) to be a great evil force in the world by promoting hatred and conflicts and inhibiting upward social and economic mobility of the poor and oppressed.[130]

As part of his crusade against Darwinism, Bryan called for state and local laws banning public schools from teaching evolution.[131] He requested that lawmakers refrain from attaching a criminal penalty to the anti-evolution laws and also urged that educators be allowed to teach evolution as a "hypothesis", rather than as a fact. Only five southern states responded to Bryan's call to bar the teaching of evolution in public schools.[132]

Bryan was worried that the theory of evolution was gaining ground not only in the universities, but also within the church. The developments of 19th century liberal theology, specifically higher criticism, had allowed many clergymen to be willing to embrace the theory of evolution and claim that it was not contradictory to Christianity. Determined to put an end to this, Bryan, who had long served as a Presbyterian elder, decided to run for the position of Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, which was at the time embroiled in the Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy. Bryan's main competition in the race was the Rev. Charles F. Wishart, president of the College of Wooster in Ohio, who had loudly endorsed the teaching of the theory of evolution in the college. Bryan lost to Wishart by a vote of 451–427. Bryan failed in gaining approval for a proposal to cut off funds to schools in which the theory of evolution was taught. Instead, the General Assembly announced disapproval of materialistic, as opposed to theistic, evolution.[citation needed]

Scopes Trial

 
At the Scopes Trial, William Jennings Bryan (seated, left) being questioned by Clarence Darrow (standing, right).

From July 10 to 21, 1925, Bryan participated in the highly-publicized Scopes Trial. The defendant, John T. Scopes, had violated the Butler Act, a Tennessee law barring the teaching of evolution in public schools, while serving as a substitute biology teacher in Dayton, Tennessee. His defense was funded by the American Civil Liberties Union and led in court by the famed lawyer Clarence Darrow. No one disputed that Scopes had violated the Butler Act, but Darrow argued that the statute violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. Bryan defended the right of parents to choose what schools teach, argued that Darwinism was merely a "hypothesis", and claimed that Darrow and other intellectuals were trying to invalidate "every moral standard that the Bible gives us".[133] The defense called Bryan as a witness and asked him about his belief in the literal word of the Bible, though the judge later expunged Bryan's testimony.[134]

Ultimately, the judge instructed the jury to render a verdict of guilty, and Scopes was fined $100 for violating the Butler Act.[135] The national media reported the trial in great detail, with H. L. Mencken ridiculing Bryan as a symbol of Southern ignorance and anti-intellectualism.[136] Even many Southern newspapers criticized Bryan's performance in the trial; the Memphis Commercial Appeal reported that "Darrow succeeded in showing that Bryan knows little about the science of the world". Bryan had been prevented from delivering a final argument at trial, but he arranged for the publication of the speech he had intended to give. In that publication, Bryan wrote that "science is a magnificent material force, but it is not a teacher of morals".[137]

Death

In the days following the Scopes Trial, Bryan delivered several speeches in Tennessee. On Sunday, July 26, 1925, Bryan died in his sleep from apoplexy[1] after he had attended a church service in Dayton.[138] Bryan's body was transported by rail from Dayton to Washington, D.C. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, with an epitaph that read, "Statesman, yet Friend to Truth! Of Soul Sincere, in Action Faithful, and in Honor Clear"[139] and on the other side "He Kept the Faith".[140][141]

Family

Bryan remained married to his wife, Mary, until his death in 1925. Mary served as a very important adviser to her husband; she passed the bar exam and learned German to help his career.[142] She was buried next to Bryan after her death in 1930. William and Mary had three children: Ruth (1886–1954), William Jr. (1889–1978), and Grace Dexter (1891–1945). Ruth won election to Congress from Florida in 1928 and later served as ambassador to Denmark during the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt.[143] William Jr. graduated from Georgetown Law, established a legal practice in Los Angeles, later held several federal positions, and became an important figure in the Los Angeles Democratic Party. Grace also moved to Southern California and wrote a biography of her father.[144] William Sr.'s brother, Charles, was an important supporter of his brother until William's death, as well as an influential politician in his own right. Charles served two terms as the mayor of Lincoln and three terms as the governor of Nebraska and was the Democratic vice presidential nominee in the 1924 presidential election.[145]

 
Bryan's wife, Mary Baird Bryan
 
William Bryan Jr.
 
Grace Bryan

Legacy

Historical reputation and political legacy

 
Statue of Bryan on the lawn of the Rhea County courthouse in Dayton, Tennessee

Bryan elicited mixed views during his lifetime and his legacy remains complicated.[146] Author Scott Farris argues that "many fail to understand Bryan because he occupies a rare space in society… too liberal for today's religious [and] too religious for today's liberals".[147] Jeff Taylor rejects the view that Bryan was a "pioneer of the welfare state" and a "forerunner of the New Deal", but argues that Bryan was more accepting of an interventionist federal government than his Democratic predecessors had been.[148] Biographer Michael Kazin, however, opines that

Bryan was the first leader of a major party to argue for permanently expanding the power of the federal government to serve the welfare of ordinary Americans from the working and middle classes… he did more than any other man—between the fall of Grover Cleveland and the election of Woodrow Wilson—to transform his party from a bulwark of laissez-faire to the citadel of liberalism we identify with Franklin D. Roosevelt and his ideological descendants.[84]

Kazin argues that, compared to Bryan, "only Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson had a greater impact on politics and political culture during the era of reform that began in the mid-1890s and lasted until the early 1920s".[149] Writing in 1931, former Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs McAdoo stated that "with the exception of the men who have occupied the White House, Bryan… had more to do with the shaping of the public policies of the last forty years than any other American citizen".[150] Historian Robert D. Johnston notes that Bryan was "arguably [the] most influential politician from the Great Plains".[151] In 2015, political scientist Michael G. Miller and historian Ken Owen ranked Bryan as one of the four most influential American politicians who never served as president, alongside Alexander Hamilton, Henry Clay, and John C. Calhoun.[152]

Kazin also emphasizes the limits of Bryan's influence by noting that "for decades after [Bryan]'s death, influential scholars and journalists depicted him as a self-righteous simpleton who longed to preserve an age that had already passed".[84] Writing in 2006, editor Richard Lingeman noted that "William Jennings Bryan is mainly remembered as the fanatical old fool Fredric March played in ‘’Inherit the Wind.’’[153] Similarly, in 2011, John McDermott wrote that "Bryan is perhaps best known as the sweaty crank of a lawyer who represented Tennessee in the Scopes trial. After his defence of creationism, he became a mocked caricature, a sweaty possessor of avoirdupois, bereft of bombast".[36] Kazin writes that "scholars have increasingly warmed to Bryan's motives, if not his actions" in the Scopes Trial because of Bryan's rejection of eugenics, a practice that many evolutionists of the 1920s favored.[154]

Kazin also notes the stain that Bryan's acceptance of the Jim Crow system places on his legacy, writing

His one great flaw was to support, with a studied lack of reflection, the abusive system of Jim Crow—a view that was shared, until the late 1930s, by nearly every white Democrat… After Bryan's death in 1925, most intellectuals and activists on the broad left rejected the amalgam that had inspired him: a strict populist morality based on a close read reading of Scripture… Liberals and radicals from the age of FDR to the present have tended to scorn that credo as naïve and bigoted, a remnant of an era of white Protestant supremacy that has, or should have, passed.[84]

Nonetheless, prominent individuals from both parties have praised Bryan and his legacy. In 1962, former President Harry Truman said Bryan "was a great one—one of the greatest". Truman also claimed, "If it wasn't for old Bill Bryan, there wouldn't be any liberalism at all in the country now. Bryan kept liberalism alive, he kept it going."[155][incomplete short citation] Tom L. Johnson, the progressive mayor of Cleveland, Ohio, referred to Bryan's campaign in 1896 as "the first great struggle of the masses in our country against the privileged classes".[156] In a 1934 speech dedicating a memorial to Bryan, President Franklin D. Roosevelt said:

I think that we would choose the word 'sincerity' as fitting him [Bryan] most of all… it was that sincerity that served him so well in his life-long fight against sham and privilege and wrong. It was that sincerity that made him a force for good in his own generation and kept alive many of the ancient faiths on which we are building today. We… can well agree that he fought the good fight; that he finished the course; and that he kept the faith.[157]

More recently, conservative Republicans such as Ralph Reed have hailed Bryan's legacy. Reed described Bryan as "the most consequential evangelical politician of the twentieth century".[158] Bryan's career has also been compared to that of Donald Trump.[146]

In popular culture

Memorials

The William Jennings Bryan House, in Nebraska, was named a U.S. National Historic Landmark in 1963. The Bryan Home Museum is an appointment-only museum at his birthplace in Salem, Illinois. Salem is also home to Bryan Park and a large statue of Bryan. His home at Asheville, North Carolina, from 1917 to 1920, the William Jennings Bryan House, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.[163] Villa Serena, Bryan's property in Miami, Florida, is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered an address on May 3, 1934, dedicating a statue of William Jennings Bryan created by Gutzon Borglum, the sculptor of Mount Rushmore. This Bryan statue by Borglum originally stood in Washington, D.C., but was displaced by highway construction and moved by an Act of Congress in 1961 to Salem, Illinois, Bryan's birthplace.[164][165]

A statue of Bryan represented the state of Nebraska in the National Statuary Hall in the United States Capitol, as part of the National Statuary Hall Collection. In 2019, a statue of Chief Standing Bear replaced the statue of Bryan in the National Statuary Hall.[166][167]

Bryan was named to the Nebraska Hall of Fame in 1971 and a bust of him resides in the Nebraska State Capitol.[168] Bryan was honored by the United States Postal Service with a $2 Great Americans series postage stamp.

Numerous objects, places and people have been named after Bryan, including Bryan County, Oklahoma,[169] Bryan Medical Center in Lincoln, Nebraska, and Bryan College, located in Dayton, Tennessee. Omaha Bryan High School and Bryan Middle School in Bellevue, Nebraska, are also named for Bryan. During World War II the Liberty ship SS William J. Bryan was built in Panama City, Florida, and named in his honor.[170]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Asked when his family "dropped the 'O'" from his O'Bryan surname, he replied there had never been one.[6]
  2. ^ The tax would be struck down by the Supreme Court in the 1895 case of Pollock v. Farmers' Loan & Trust Co..[33]
  3. ^ U.S. senators were elected by state legislatures prior to the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913.

References

  1. ^ a b Nimick, John (July 27, 1925). "Great Commoner Bryan dies in sleep, apoplexy given as cause of death". UPI Archives. Retrieved December 26, 2017.
  2. ^ Morgan, Michael. "'The Boy Orator' presidential candidate attracted crowds but not their votes". Delmarva Now. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  3. ^ "Youngest & Oldest Electoral Vote recipients". Talk Elections. July 7, 2015. Retrieved April 18, 2020.
  4. ^ [Usurped!] Nebraska State Historical Society
  5. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 4–5
  6. ^ Bryan Memoirs of William Jennings Bryan, pp. 22–26.
  7. ^ Colletta (1964), pp. 3–5.
  8. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 5
  9. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 4–5, 9
  10. ^ "Florida International University: Reclaiming the Everglades-biography of William Sherman Jennings".
  11. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 8
  12. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 10–11
  13. ^ . PCA History. March 19, 2012. Archived from the original on December 1, 2020. Retrieved August 22, 2018.
  14. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 8–9
  15. ^ a b Kazin (2006), pp. 9–10
  16. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 12
  17. ^ a b Kazin (2006), pp. 13–14
  18. ^ Colletta (1964), p. 30.
  19. ^ Colletta (1964), p. 21.
  20. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 15–17
  21. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 17–18
  22. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 17–19
  23. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 22–24
  24. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 25
  25. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 25–27
  26. ^ Colletta (1964), p. 48.
  27. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 27
  28. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 31–34
  29. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 20–22
  30. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 33–36
  31. ^ Hibben (1929), p. 175.
  32. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 35–38
  33. ^ a b Kazin (2006), p. 51
  34. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 40–43
  35. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 46–48
  36. ^ a b McDermott, John (August 19, 2011). "The life of Bryan, or what did monetary policy ever do for us?". Financial Times.
  37. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 53–55, 58
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  39. ^ a b Kazin (2006), pp. 62–63
  40. ^ Glass, Andrew (March 19, 2012). "William Jennings Bryan born, March 19, 1860". Politico. Retrieved August 3, 2018.
  41. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 63
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  44. ^ William Safire (2004). Lend Me Your Ears: Great Speeches in History. W.W. Norton. p. 922. ISBN 978-0-393-05931-1.
  45. ^ Richard J. Ellis And Mark Dedrick, "The Presidential Candidate, Then and Now" Perspectives on Political Science (1997) 26#4 pp. 208–216 online
  46. ^ Michael Nelson (2015). Guide to the Presidency. Routledge. p. 363. ISBN 978-1-135-91462-2.
  47. ^ Karl Rove (2016). The Triumph of William McKinley: Why the Election of 1896 Still Matters. pp. 367–369. ISBN 978-1-4767-5296-9.
  48. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 76–79
  49. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 80–82
  50. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 202–203
  51. ^ David Leip. "1896 Presidential General Election Results – Pennsylvania". Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas. Retrieved March 24, 2018.
  52. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 83–86
  53. ^ a b Kazin (2006), pp. 86–89
  54. ^ Sicius (2015), p. 182
  55. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 98–99
  56. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 95–98
  57. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 99–100
  58. ^ a b Kazin (2006), pp. 102–103
  59. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 91–92
  60. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 104–105
  61. ^ Coletta (1964), p. 272
  62. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 105–107
  63. ^ a b Kazin (2006), pp. 107–108
  64. ^ Clements (1982), p. 38.
  65. ^ source Joseph Keppler in Puck (magazine) Sept 19, 1906; reprinted in: Smylie, James H. "William Jennings Bryan and the Cartoonists: A Pictorial Lampoon, 1896—1925". Journal of Presbyterian History 53.2 (1975): 83–92 at p 88 online.
  66. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 122
  67. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 111–113
  68. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 113–114
  69. ^ William Jennings Bryan Volume 1 By Paolo Enrico Coletta, 1964, P.441
  70. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 114
  71. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 114–116
  72. ^ "HarpWeek | Elections | 1904 Large Cartoons". elections.harpweek.com.
  73. ^ Kennedy, Robert C. "Citizen Parker". The New York Times. Retrieved October 8, 2015.
  74. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 119–120
  75. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 126–128
  76. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 121–122
  77. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 142–143
  78. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 145–149
  79. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 151–152
  80. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 152–154
  81. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 154–157
  82. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 159–160
  83. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 163–164
  84. ^ a b c d Kazin (2006), p. xix
  85. ^ Klotter, James C. (2018). Henry Clay: The Man Who Would Be President. Oxford University Press. p. xvii. ISBN 978-0-19-049805-4.
  86. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 179–181
  87. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 172–173
  88. ^ Coletta (1969, Vol. 2), p. 8
  89. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 177
  90. ^ Steven L. Piott, Giving Voters a Voice: The Origins of the Initiative and Referendum in America (2003) pp. 126–132
  91. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 173
  92. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 181–184
  93. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 187–191
  94. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 191–192, 215
  95. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 215–217, 222–223
  96. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 223–227
  97. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 217–218
  98. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 229–231
  99. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 232–233
  100. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 234–236
  101. ^ Levine (1987), p. 8
  102. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 237–238
  103. ^ Richardson, Darcy (2008). Page 69 Others: Fighting Bob La Follette and the Progressive Movement: Third-party Politics in the 1920s. p. 69. ISBN 978-0595481262 – via Google Books.
  104. ^ "May Select William J. Bryan". The Johnson City Comet. May 25, 1916. p. 1. from the original on March 19, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  105. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 248–252
  106. ^ Hibben (1929), p. 356
  107. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 254–255
  108. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 258–260
  109. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 245
  110. ^ Lawrence W. Levine, Defender of the faith: William Jennings Bryan, the last decade, 1915–1925 (Oxford UP, 1965) ch 6–9.
  111. ^ Paolo E. Coletta, William Jennings Bryan". Vol. 3: Political Puritan, 1915–1925 1969) pp 282–299.
  112. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 258
  113. ^ Defender of the Faith: William Jennings Bryan, the Last Decade, 1915-1925 By Lawrence W. Levine, P.198
  114. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 267–268
  115. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 269–271
  116. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 282–283
  117. ^ Coletta (1969, Vol. 3), pp. 162, 177, 184
  118. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 283–285
  119. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 170
  120. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 245–247
  121. ^ George, Paul S. "Brokers, Binders & Builders: Greater Miami's Boom of the Mid-1920s". Florida Historical Quarterly, vol. 59, no. 4. 1981. pp. 440–463.
  122. ^ American University website
  123. ^ a b Kazin (2006), pp. 262–263
  124. ^ Florida Memory. "William Jennings Bryan Conducting a Bible Class in Royal Palm Park – Miami, Florida". Retrieved August 17, 2018.
  125. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 271–272
  126. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 272–273
  127. ^ Ronald L. Numbers, The Creationists: From Scientific Creationism to Intelligent Design, (2006), p. 13
  128. ^ Longfield, Bradley J. (1993). The Presbyterian Controversy. ISBN 978-0-19-508674-4. Retrieved August 17, 2018.
  129. ^ See The Prince of Peace
  130. ^ Coletta, (1969, Vol. 3), ch. 8
  131. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 274–275
  132. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 280–281
  133. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 285–288
  134. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 292–293
  135. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 293–295
  136. ^ H.L. Mencken – In Memoriam – W.J.B. July 31, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  137. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 294–295
  138. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 294
  139. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 296–297
  140. ^ Marty, Martin E. (2011). Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3110974362 – via Google Books.
  141. ^ Burial Detail: Bryan, William J (Section 4, Grave 3118-3121) – ANC Explorer
  142. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 14, 296
  143. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 3 (1891–1945). 00–301
  144. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 266–267, 300–301
  145. ^ Kazin (2006), pp. 198–199
  146. ^ a b Rothman, Lily (February 24, 2017). "The Man Steve Bannon Compared to President Trump, as Described in 1925". Time. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  147. ^ Farris (2013), pp. 93–94
  148. ^ Taylor (2006), pp. 187–88
  149. ^ Kazin (2006), p. xiv
  150. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 304
  151. ^ Johnston, Robert D. (2011). ""There's No 'There' There": Reflections on Western Political Historiography". Western Historical Quarterly. 42 (3): 334. doi:10.2307/westhistquar.42.3.0331. JSTOR westhistquar.42.3.0331.
  152. ^ Masket, Seth (November 19, 2015). "A bracket to determine the most influential American who never became president". Vox. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  153. ^ Lingeman, Richard (March 5, 2006). "The Man With the Silver Tongue". The New York Times.
  154. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 263
  155. ^ Merle Miller, pp. 118–19
  156. ^ Miller, Kenneth E. (2010). From Progressive to New Dealer: Frederic C. Howe and American Liberalism. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0-271-03742-4.
  157. ^ . UCSB. Archived from the original on May 25, 2015. Retrieved June 25, 2013.
  158. ^ Kazin (2006), p. 302
  159. ^ Rockoff, Hugh (1990). "The "Wizard of Oz" as a Monetary Allegory". Journal of Political Economy. 98 (4): 739–760. doi:10.1086/261704. JSTOR 2937766. S2CID 153606670.
  160. ^ Geer, John G.; Rochon, Thomas R. (1993). "William Jennings Bryan on the Yellow Brick Road". The Journal of American Culture. 16 (4): 59–63. doi:10.1111/j.1542-734X.1993.00059.x.
  161. ^ Dighe, Ranjit S. (2002). The Historian's Wizard of Oz: Reading L. Frank Baum's Classic as a Political and Monetary Allegory. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 31–32. ISBN 978-0-275-97418-3.
  162. ^ Dos Passos, John (1896–1970). U.S.A. Daniel Aaron & Townsend Ludington, eds. New York: Library of America, 1996.
  163. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  164. ^ http://moses.law.umn.edu/darrow/documents/Address_President_Dedication_Bryan_Memorial_05_03_1934.pdf "Address of the President at the Dedication of the Bryan Memorial".
  165. ^ http://moses.law.umn.edu/darrow/trials.php?tid=7 July 12, 2017, at the Wayback Machine "Government Documents: Address of the President at the Dedication of the Bryan Memorial May, 1934.".
  166. ^ "The civil rights leader 'almost nobody knows about' gets a statue in the U.S. Capitol". The Washington Post.
  167. ^ . Archived from the original on July 12, 2017. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  168. ^ . nebraskahistory.org. Archived from the original on July 14, 2006.
  169. ^ Oklahoma Historical Society. "Origin of County Names in Oklahoma", Chronicles of Oklahoma 2:1 (March 1924) 7582 (retrieved August 18, 2006).
  170. ^ Williams, Greg H. (2014). The Liberty Ships of World War II: A Record of the 2,710 Vessels and Their Builders, Operators and Namesakes, with a History of the Jeremiah O'Brien. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-1754-1. Retrieved December 7, 2017.

Works cited

  • Clements, Kendrick A. (1982). William Jennings Bryan, Missionary Isolationist. University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 978-0-87049-364-5.
  • Coletta, Paolo E. William Jennings Bryan (3 vols.). Vol. 1. Online vol. 2; online vol. 3.
    • ——— (1964). William Jennings Bryan, Vol. 1: Political Evangelist, 1860–1908. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-0022-7.
    • ——— (1969). William Jennings Bryan, Vol. 2: Progressive Politician and Moral Statesman. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-0023-4.
    • ——— (1969). William Jennings Bryan, Vol. 3: Political Puritan, 1915–1925. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-0024-1.
  • ——— (1984). "Will the Real Progressive Stand Up? William Jennings Bryan and Theodore Roosevelt to 1909". Nebraska History. 65: 15–57.
  • Farris, Scott (2013). Almost President: The Men Who Lost the Race but Changed the Nation. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7627-8421-9.
  • Hibben, Paxton (1929). The Peerless leader, William Jennings Bryan. Farrar & Rinehart, Inc.
  • Kazin, Michael (2006). A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-375-41135-9.
  • Levine, Lawrence W. (1965). Defender of The Faith: William Jennings Bryan: The Last Decade 1915–1925. Oxford University Press.
  • Rove, Karl (2016). The Triumph of William McKinley: Why the Election of 1896 Still Matters. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4767-5296-9.
  • Thompson, Charles Willis (June 13, 1925). "Silver-Tongue". Profiles. The New Yorker. Vol. 1, no. 17. pp. 9–10.
  • Sicius, Francis J. (2015). The Progressive Era: A Reference Guide. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-61069-447-6.
  • Taylor, Jeff (2006). Where Did the Party Go?: William Jennings Bryan, Hubert Humphrey, and the Jeffersonian Legacy. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-8262-1659-5.

Further reading

Biographies

  • Ashby, LeRoy. William Jennings Bryan: champion of democracy (1987) online
  • Cherny, Robert W. (1985). A Righteous Cause: The Life of William Jennings Bryan. Little Brown & Co. ISBN 978-0-316-13854-3.. brief scholarly overview; online
  • Clements, Kendrick A. William Jennings Bryan, missionary isolationist (U of Tennessee Press, 1982) online; focus on foreign policy.
  • Coletta, Paolo E. William Jennings Bryan. I: Political Evangelist, 1860–1908 (U of Nebraska Press, 1964), the most detailed of the standard scholarly biographies; online review
    • Coletta, Paolo E. William Jennings Bryan. Volume II, Progressive Politician and Moral Statesman, 1909 1915 (1969)
    • Coletta, Paolo E. William Jennings Bryan". Vol. 3: Political Puritan, 1915–1925 1969)
  • Glad, Paul W. (1960). The trumpet soundeth; William Jennings Bryan and his democracy, 1896–1912. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 9780803250734. OCLC 964829.
  • Kazin, Michael. A godly hero : the life of William Jennings Bryan (2006) online
  • Koenig, Louis William (1971). Bryan: A Political Biography of William Jennings Bryan. Putnam Pub Group. ISBN 978-0-399-10104-5.
  • Leinwand, Gerald (2006). William Jennings Bryan: An Uncertain Trumpet. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7425-5158-9.
  • Levine, Lawrence W. Defender of the faith: William Jennings Bryan, the last decade, 1915-1925 (Oxford UP, 1965) online
  • Werner, M. R. (1929). William Jennings Bryan. Harcourt, Brace. OCLC 1517464., outdated.

Specialized studies

  • Barnes, James A. (1947). "Myths of the Bryan Campaign". Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 34 (3): 367–404. doi:10.2307/1898096. JSTOR 1898096. on 1896
  • Bensel, Richard Franklin (2008). Passion and Preferences: William Jennings Bryan and the 1896 Democratic National Convention. Cambridge U.P. ISBN 978-0-521-71762-5. online
  • Cherny, Robert W. (1996). "William Jennings Bryan and the Historians" (PDF). Nebraska History. 77 (3–4): 184–193. ISSN 0028-1859. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Analysis of the historiography.
  • Clements, Kendrick A. (1992). The Presidency of Woodrow Wilson. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0523-1.
  • Edwards, Mark (2000). "Rethinking the Failure of Fundamentalist Political Antievolutionism after 1925". Fides et Historia. 32 (2): 89–106. ISSN 0884-5379. PMID 17120377. Argues that fundamentalists thought they had won Scopes trial but death of Bryan shook their confidence.
  • Folsom, Burton W. (1999). No More Free Markets Or Free Beer: The Progressive Era in Nebraska, 1900–1924. Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-0014-1.
  • Glad, Paul W. (1964). McKinley, Bryan and the People. Lippincott. ISBN 9780397470488. OCLC 559539520.
  • Hannigan, Robert E. The New World Power, U of Pennsylvania Press, 2013.
  • ——— (2016), The Great War and American Foreign Policy, 1914–24.
  • Hohenstein, Kurt (2000). "William Jennings Bryan and the Income Tax: Economic Statism and Judicial Usurpation in the Election of 1896". Journal of Law & Politics. 16 (1): 163–92. ISSN 0749-2227.
  • Jeansonne, Glen (1988). "Goldbugs, Silverites, and Satirists: Caricature and Humor in the Presidential Election of 1896". Journal of American Culture. 11 (2): 1–8. doi:10.1111/j.1542-734X.1988.1102_1.x. ISSN 0191-1813.
  • Larson, Edward (1997). Summer for the Gods: The Scopes trial and America's continuing debate over science and religion. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-07509-6.
  • Longfield, Bradley J. (2000). "For Church and Country: the Fundamentalist-modernist Conflict in the Presbyterian Church". Journal of Presbyterian History. 78 (1): 34–50. ISSN 0022-3883. Puts Scopes in larger religious context.
  • Maddux, Kristy. "Fundamentalist fool or populist paragon? William Jennings Bryan and the campaign against evolutionary theory". Rhetoric and Public Affairs 16.3 (2013): 489–520.
  • Magliocca, Gerard N. (2011). The Tragedy of William Jennings Bryan: Constitutional Law and the Politics of Backlash. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-20582-4.
  • Mahan, Russell L. (2003). "William Jennings Bryan and the Presidential Campaign of 1896". White House Studies. 3 (2): 215–227. ISSN 1535-4768.
  • Morton, Richard Allen (2015), "'It Was Bryan and Sullivan Who did the Trick': How William Jennings Bryan and Illinois' Roger C. Sullivan Brought About the Nomination of Woodrow Wilson in 1912", Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, vol. 108, no. 2, pp. 147–81
  • Murphy, Troy A. (2002). "William Jennings Bryan: Boy Orator, Broken Man, and the 'Evolution' of America's Public Philosophy". Great Plains Quarterly. 22 (2): 83–98. ISSN 0275-7664.
  • Rove, Karl (2015) The Triumph of William McKinley: Why the Election of 1896 Still Matters, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 978-1-4767-5295-2. Detailed popular narrative of the entire campaign by Karl Rove, a prominent 21st-century Republican campaign advisor.
  • Scroop, Daniel (2013). "William Jennings Bryan's 1905–1906 World Tour" (PDF). Historical Journal. 56 (2): 459–486. doi:10.1017/S0018246X12000520. S2CID 159980462.
  • Smith, Willard H. (1966). "William Jennings Bryan and the Social Gospel". The Journal of American History. 53 (1): 41–60. doi:10.2307/1893929. JSTOR 1893929.
  • Taylor, Jeff (2006), Where did the party go? : William Jennings Bryan, Hubert Humphrey, and the Jeffersonian legacy
  • Williams, R. Hal (2010). Realigning America: McKinley, Bryan, and the Remarkable Election of 1896. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-1721-0.
  • Wood, L. Maren (2002). "The Monkey Trial Myth: Popular Culture Representations of the Scopes Trial". Canadian Review of American Studies. 32 (2): 147–64. doi:10.3138/CRAS-s032-02-01. ISSN 0007-7720. S2CID 159954176.

Writings by Bryan

  • Bryan, William Jennings (1967), Ginger, Ray (ed.), William Jennings Bryan: selections, 259 pp
  • ———, The first battle: a story of the campaign of 1896 (campaign speeches), 693 pp.
  • The Commoner Condensed, annual compilation of The Commoner magazine; full text online for 1901, 1902, 1903, 1907, 1907, 1908
  • Bryan, William Jennings (1907), The old world and its ways, 560 pp. At Project Gutenberg.
  • ——— (1909), Bryan, Mary Baird (ed.), Speeches of William Jennings Bryan
  • ——— (1922), In His image 226 pp.
  • ——— (1925), The Memoirs: of William Jennings Bryan, by himself and his wife, 560 pp.
  • ——— (1906), British Rule in India

External links

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Nebraska's 1st congressional district

1891–1895
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for President of the United States
1896, 1900
Succeeded by
Preceded by Populist nominee for President of the United States
Endorsed

1896
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic nominee for President of the United States
1908
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by United States Secretary of State
1913–1915
Succeeded by

william, jennings, bryan, confused, with, dorn, william, bryan, redirects, here, senator, from, florida, william, james, bryan, march, 1860, july, 1925, american, lawyer, orator, politician, beginning, 1896, emerged, dominant, force, democratic, party, running. Not to be confused with William Jennings Bryan Dorn William J Bryan redirects here For the Senator from Florida see William James Bryan William Jennings Bryan March 19 1860 July 26 1925 was an American lawyer orator and politician Beginning in 1896 he emerged as a dominant force in the Democratic Party running three times as the party s nominee for President of the United States in the 1896 1900 and the 1908 elections He served in the House of Representatives from 1891 to 1895 and as the Secretary of State under Woodrow Wilson Because of his faith in the wisdom of the common people Bryan was often called The Great Commoner 1 and because of his rhetorical power and early fame as the youngest presidential candidate The Boy Orator 2 William Jennings BryanBryan c 191041st United States Secretary of StateIn office March 5 1913 June 9 1915PresidentWoodrow WilsonPreceded byPhilander C KnoxSucceeded byRobert LansingMember of the U S House of Representatives from Nebraska s 1st districtIn office March 4 1891 March 3 1895Preceded byWilliam James ConnellSucceeded byJesse Burr StrodePersonal detailsBorn 1860 03 19 March 19 1860Salem Illinois U S DiedJuly 26 1925 1925 07 26 aged 65 Dayton Tennessee U S Resting placeArlington National CemeteryPolitical partyDemocraticOther politicalaffiliationsPopulistSpouseMary Baird Bryan m 1884 wbr Children3 including RuthParentSilas Bryan father RelativesCharles Bryan brother William Sherman Jennings cousin EducationIllinois College BA Northwestern University LLB SignatureWilliam Jennings Bryan s voice source source Reciting his Cross of Gold speech An original recording of the speech may exist Recorded 1921Born and raised in Illinois Bryan moved to Nebraska in the 1880s He won election to the U S House of Representatives in the 1890 elections served two terms and made an unsuccessful run for the U S Senate in 1894 At the 1896 Democratic National Convention Bryan delivered his Cross of Gold speech which attacked the gold standard and the eastern moneyed interests and crusaded for inflationary policies built around the expanded coinage of silver coins In a repudiation of incumbent President Grover Cleveland and his conservative Bourbon Democrats the Democratic convention nominated Bryan for president making Bryan the youngest major party presidential nominee in U S history Subsequently Bryan was also nominated for president by the left wing Populist Party and many Populists would eventually follow Bryan into the Democratic Party In the intensely fought 1896 presidential election the Republican nominee William McKinley emerged triumphant At age 36 Bryan remains the youngest person in United States history to receive an electoral vote for president 3 Bryan gained fame as an orator as he invented the national stumping tour when he reached an audience of 5 million people in 27 states in 1896 Bryan retained control of the Democratic Party and again won the presidential nomination in 1900 After the Spanish American War Bryan became a fierce opponent of American imperialism and much of his campaign centered on that issue In the election McKinley again defeated Bryan and won several Western states that Bryan had won in 1896 Bryan s influence in the party weakened after the 1900 election and the Democrats nominated the conservative Alton B Parker in the 1904 presidential election Bryan regained his stature in the party after Parker s resounding defeat by Theodore Roosevelt and voters from both parties increasingly embraced some of the progressive reforms that had long been championed by Bryan Bryan won his party s nomination in the 1908 presidential election but he was defeated by Roosevelt s chosen successor William Howard Taft Along with Henry Clay Bryan is one of the two individuals who never won a presidential election despite receiving electoral votes in three separate presidential elections held after the ratification of the Twelfth Amendment After the Democrats won the presidency in the 1912 election Woodrow Wilson rewarded Bryan s support with the important cabinet position of Secretary of State Bryan helped Wilson pass several progressive reforms through Congress In 1915 he considered that Wilson was too harsh on Germany and finally resigned after Wilson had sent Germany a note of protest with a veiled threat of war in response to the sinking of the Lusitania by a German U boat After leaving office Bryan retained some of his influence within the Democratic Party but he increasingly devoted himself to Prohibition religious matters and anti evolution activism He opposed Darwinism on religious and humanitarian grounds most famously in the 1925 Scopes Trial dying soon after Bryan has elicited mixed reactions from various commentators but is acknowledged by historians as one of the most influential figures of the Progressive Era Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early political career 2 1 Congressional service 3 Presidential candidate and party leader 3 1 Presidential election of 1896 3 1 1 Democratic nomination 3 1 2 General election 3 2 War and peace 1898 1900 3 2 1 Spanish American War 3 2 2 Presidential election of 1900 3 3 Between presidential campaigns 1901 1907 3 4 Presidential election of 1908 4 Wilson presidency 4 1 1912 election 4 2 Secretary of State 5 Later career 5 1 Political involvement 5 2 Crusade for Prohibition 5 3 Florida real estate promoter 5 4 Trustee of American University 5 5 Anti evolution activism 5 5 1 Scopes Trial 6 Death 7 Family 8 Legacy 8 1 Historical reputation and political legacy 8 2 In popular culture 8 3 Memorials 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Works cited 12 Further reading 12 1 Biographies 12 2 Specialized studies 12 3 Writings by Bryan 13 External linksEarly life and education Edit Bryan s birthplace in Salem Illinois Attorney Mary Baird Bryan the wife of William Jennings Bryan William Jennings Bryan was born in Salem Illinois on March 19 1860 to Silas Lillard Bryan and Mariah Elizabeth Jennings Bryan 4 Silas Bryan had been born in 1822 and had established a legal practice in Salem in 1851 He married Mariah a former student of his at McKendree College in 1852 5 Of Scots Irish and English ancestry a Silas Bryan was an avid Jacksonian Democrat He won election as a state circuit judge and in 1866 moved his family to a 520 acre 210 4 ha farm north of Salem He lived in a ten room house that was the envy of Marion County 7 Silas served in various local positions and sought election to Congress in 1872 but was narrowly defeated by the Republican candidate 8 An admirer of Andrew Jackson and Stephen A Douglas Silas passed on his Democratic affiliation to his son William who would remain a life long Democrat 9 William s cousin William Sherman Jennings 10 was also a prominent Democrat William was the fourth child of Silas and Mariah but all three of his older siblings died during infancy He also had five younger siblings four of whom lived to adulthood 11 William was home schooled by his mother until the age of ten Demonstrating a precocious talent for oratory he gave public speeches as early as the age of four 12 Silas was a Baptist and Mariah was a Methodist but William s parents allowed him to choose his own church At age fourteen he had a conversion experience at a revival He said that it was the most important day of his life 13 At 15 he was sent to attend Whipple Academy a private school in Jacksonville Illinois 14 A young Bryan After graduating from Whipple Academy Bryan entered Illinois College which was also located in Jacksonville During his time at Illinois College Bryan served as chaplain of the Sigma Pi literary society 15 He also continued to hone his public speaking skills taking part in numerous debates and oratorical contests 16 Bryan graduated from Illinois College in 1881 at the top of his class 15 In 1879 while still in college Bryan met Mary Elizabeth Baird the daughter of an owner of a nearby general store and began courting her 17 Bryan and Mary Elizabeth married on October 1 1884 18 Mary Elizabeth would emerge as an important part of Bryan s career by managing his correspondence and helping him prepare speeches and articles 17 Bryan then studied law in Chicago at Union Law College now Northwestern University School of Law 19 While attending law school Bryan worked for the attorney Lyman Trumbull a former senator and friend of Silas Bryan who would serve as an important political ally to the younger Bryan until his death in 1896 20 Bryan graduated from law school in 1883 with a Bachelor of Laws and returned to Jacksonville to take a position with a local law firm Frustrated by the lack of political and economic opportunities in Jacksonville Bryan and his wife moved west to Lincoln in 1887 the capital of the fast growing state of Nebraska 21 Early political career EditSee also Presidency of Benjamin Harrison and Presidencies of Grover Cleveland Congressional service Edit Bryan established a successful legal practice in Lincoln with partner Adolphus Talbot a Republican whom Bryan had known in law school 22 Bryan also entered local politics by campaigning for Democrats like Julius Sterling Morton and Grover Cleveland 23 After earning notoriety for his effective speeches in 1888 Bryan ran for Congress in the 1890 election 24 Bryan called for a reduction in tariff rates the coinage of silver at a ratio equal to that of gold and action to stem the power of trusts In part because of a series of strong debate performances Bryan defeated incumbent Republican William James Connell who had campaigned on the orthodox Republican platform centered around the protective tariff 25 Bryan s victory made him only the second Democrat who ever represented Nebraska in Congress 26 Nationwide Democrats picked up 76 seats in the House and so obtained a majority in that chamber The Populist Party a third party that drew support from agrarian voters in the West also won several seats in Congress 27 With the help of Representative William McKendree Springer Bryan secured a coveted spot on the House Ways and Means Committee He quickly earned a reputation as a talented orator and set out to gain a strong understanding of the key economic issues of the day 28 During the Gilded Age the Democratic Party had begun to separate into two groups The conservative northern Bourbon Democrats along with some allies in the South sought to limit the size and power of the federal government Another group of Democrats drawing its membership largely from the agrarian movements of the South and West favored greater federal intervention to help farmers regulate railroads and limit the power of large corporations 29 Bryan became affiliated with the latter group and advocated for the free coinage of silver free silver and the establishment of a progressive federal income tax That endeared him to many reformers but Bryan s call for free silver cost him the support of Morton and some other conservative Nebraska Democrats 30 Free silver advocates were opposed by banks and bondholders who feared the effects of inflation 31 Bryan sought re election in 1892 with the support of many Populists and backed the Populist presidential candidate James B Weaver over the Democratic presidential candidate Grover Cleveland Bryan won re election by just 140 votes and Cleveland defeated Weaver and incumbent Republican President Benjamin Harrison in the 1892 presidential election Cleveland appointed a cabinet consisting largely of conservative Democrats like Morton who became Cleveland s secretary of agriculture Shortly after Cleveland had taken office a series of bank closures brought on the Panic of 1893 a major economic crisis In response Cleveland called a special session of Congress to call for the repeal of the 1890 Sherman Silver Purchase Act which required the federal government to purchase several million ounces of silver every month Bryan mounted a campaign to save the Sherman Silver Purchase Act but a coalition of Republicans and Democrats successfully repealed it 32 Bryan however was successful in passing an amendment that provided for the establishment of the first peacetime federal income tax 33 b As the economy declined after 1893 the reforms favored by Bryan and the Populists became more popular among many voters Rather than running for re election in 1894 Bryan sought election to the United States Senate He also became the editor in chief of the Omaha World Herald although most editorial duties were performed by Richard Lee Metcalfe and Gilbert Hitchcock Nationwide the Republican Party won a huge victory in the elections of 1894 by gaining over 120 seats in the U S House of Representatives In Nebraska despite Bryan s popularity the Republicans elected a majority of the state legislators and Bryan lost the Senate election to Republican John Mellen Thurston c Bryan nonetheless was pleased with the result of the 1894 election as the Cleveland wing of the Democratic Party had been discredited and Bryan s preferred gubernatorial candidate Silas A Holcomb had been elected by a coalition of Democrats and Populists 34 After the 1894 elections Bryan embarked on a nationwide speaking tour designed to boost free silver move his party away from the conservative policies of the Cleveland administration lure Populists and free silver Republicans into the Democratic Party and raise Bryan s public profile before the next election Speaking fees allowed Bryan to give up his legal practice and devote himself full time to oratory 35 Presidential candidate and party leader EditPresidential election of 1896 Edit Main article William Jennings Bryan 1896 presidential campaign Democratic nomination Edit The Cross of Gold speech excerpt 36 If they dare to come out in the open field and defend the gold standard as a good thing we shall fight them to the uttermost having behind us the producing masses of the nation and the world Having behind us the commercial interests and the laboring interests and all the toiling masses we shall answer their demands for a gold standard by saying to them you shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold By 1896 free silver forces were ascendant within the party Though many Democratic leaders were not as enthusiastic about free silver as Bryan was most recognized the need to distance the party from the unpopular policies of the Cleveland administration By the start of the 1896 Democratic National Convention Representative Richard P Bland a long time champion of free silver was widely perceived to be the frontrunner for the party s presidential nomination Bryan hoped to offer himself as a presidential candidate but his youth and relative inexperience gave him a lower profile than veteran Democrats like Bland Governor Horace Boies of Iowa and Vice President Adlai Stevenson The free silver forces quickly established dominance over the convention and Bryan helped draft a party platform that repudiated Cleveland attacked the conservative rulings of the Supreme Court and called the gold standard not only un American but anti American 37 UNITED SNAKES OF AMERICA IN BRYAN WE TRUST political satire token of 1896 known as Bryan Money Conservative Democrats demanded a debate on the party platform and on the third day of the convention each side put forth speakers to debate free silver and the gold standard Bryan and Senator Benjamin Tillman of South Carolina were chosen as the speakers who would advocate for free silver but Tillman s speech was poorly received by delegates from outside the South because of its sectionalism and references to the Civil War Charged with delivering the convention s last speech on the topic of monetary policy Bryan seized his opportunity to emerge as the nation s leading Democrat In his Cross of Gold speech Bryan argued that the debate over monetary policy was part of a broader struggle for democracy political independence and the welfare of the common man Bryan s speech was met with rapturous applause and a celebration on the floor of the convention that lasted for over half an hour 38 Bryan campaigning for president October 1896 The following day the Democratic Party held its presidential ballot With the continuing support of Governor John Altgeld of Illinois Bland led the first ballot of the convention but he fell far short of the necessary two thirds vote Bryan finished in a distant second on the convention s first ballot but his Cross of Gold speech had left a strong impression on many delegates Despite the distrust of party leaders like Altgeld who was wary of supporting an untested candidate Bryan s strength grew over the next four ballots He gained the lead on the fourth ballot and won his party s presidential nomination on the fifth ballot 39 At the age of 36 Bryan became and still remains the youngest presidential nominee of a major party in American history 40 The convention nominated Arthur Sewall a wealthy Maine shipbuilder who also favored free silver and the income tax as Bryan s running mate 39 General election Edit Conservative Democrats known as the Gold Democrats nominated a separate ticket Cleveland himself did not publicly attack Bryan but privately favored the Republican candidate William McKinley over Bryan Many urban newspapers in the Northeast and Midwest that had supported previous Democratic tickets also opposed Bryan s candidacy 41 Bryan however won the support of the Populist Party which nominated a ticket consisting of Bryan and Thomas E Watson of Georgia Though Populist leaders feared that the nomination of the Democratic candidate would damage the party in the long term they shared many of Bryan s political views and had developed a productive working relationship with Bryan 42 The Republican campaign painted McKinley as the advance agent of prosperity and social harmony and warned of the supposed dangers of electing Bryan McKinley and his campaign manager Mark Hanna knew that McKinley could not match Bryan s oratorical skills Rather than giving speeches on the campaign trail the Republican nominee conducted a front porch campaign Hanna meanwhile raised an unprecedented amount of money dispatched campaign surrogates and organized the distribution of millions of pieces of campaign literature 43 1896 electoral vote results Facing a huge campaign finance disadvantage the Democratic campaign relied largely on Bryan s oratorical skills Breaking with the precedent set by most major party nominees Bryan gave some 600 speeches primarily in the hotly contested Midwest 44 Bryan invented the national stumping tour reaching an audience of 5 million in 27 states 45 He was building a coalition of the white South poor northern farmers and industrial workers and silver miners against banks and railroads and the money power Free silver appealed to farmers who would be paid more for their products but not to industrial workers who would not get higher wages but would pay higher prices The industrial cities voted for McKinley who won nearly the entire East and industrial Midwest and did well along the border and the West Coast Bryan swept the South and Mountain states and the wheat growing regions of the Midwest Revivalistic Protestants cheered at Bryan s semi religious rhetoric Ethnic voters supported McKinley who promised they would not be excluded from the new prosperity as did more prosperous farmers and the fast growing middle class 46 47 McKinley won the election by a fairly comfortable margin by taking 51 percent of the popular vote and 271 electoral votes 48 Democrats remained loyal to their champion after his defeat many letters urged him to run again in the 1900 presidential election William s younger brother Charles W Bryan created a card file of supporters to whom the Bryans would send regular mailings to for the next thirty years 49 The Populist Party fractured after the election many Populists including James Weaver followed Bryan into the Democratic Party and others followed Eugene V Debs into the Socialist Party 50 1896 United States presidential election 51 Party Candidate Votes Percentage Electoral votesRepublican William McKinley 7 108 480 50 99 271Democratic William Jennings Bryan 5 588 462 40 09 Populist William Jennings Bryan 907 717 6 51 Silver William Jennings Bryan 12 873 0 09 Total William Jennings Bryan 6 509 052 46 69 176National Democratic John Palmer 134 645 0 97 0Prohibition Joshua Levering 131 312 0 94 0Socialist Labor Charles Matchett 36 373 0 26 0National Prohibition Charles Bentley 19 367 0 14 0No party Write ins 1 570 0 01 0Totals 13 940 799 100 00 447War and peace 1898 1900 Edit Spanish American War Edit See also Presidency of William McKinley Because of better economic conditions for farmers and the effects of the Klondike Gold Rush in raising prices free silver lost its potency as an electoral issue in the years after 1896 In 1900 President McKinley signed the Gold Standard Act which put the United States on the gold standard Bryan remained popular in the Democratic Party and his supporters took control of party organizations throughout the country but he initially resisted shifting his political focus from free silver 52 Foreign policy emerged as an important issue due to the ongoing Cuban War of Independence against Spain as Bryan and many Americans supported Cuban independence After the explosion of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor the United States declared war on Spain in April 1898 which began the Spanish American War Though wary of militarism Bryan had long favored Cuban independence and so supported the war 53 He argued that universal peace cannot come until justice is enthroned throughout the world Until the right has triumphed in every land and love reigns in every heart government must as a last resort appeal to force 54 The United States and its colonial possessions after the Spanish American War At Governor Silas A Holcomb s request Bryan recruited a 2000 man regiment for the Nebraska National Guard and the soldiers of the regiment elected Bryan as their leader Under Colonel Bryan s command the regiment was transported to Camp Cuba Libre in Florida but the fighting between Spain and the United States ended before the regiment had been deployed to Cuba Bryan s regiment remained in Florida for months after the end of the war which prevented Bryan from taking an active role in the 1898 midterm elections Bryan resigned his commission and left Florida in December 1898 after the United States and Spain had signed the Treaty of Paris 53 Bryan had supported the war to gain Cuba s independence but he was outraged that the Treaty of Paris granted the United States control over the Philippines Many Republicans believed that the United States had an obligation to civilize the Philippines but Bryan strongly opposed what he saw as American imperialism Despite his opposition to the annexation of the Philippines Bryan urged his supporters to ratify the Treaty of Paris He wanted to quickly bring an official end to the war and then to grant independence to the Philippines as soon as possible With Bryan s support the treaty was ratified in a close vote bringing an official end to the Spanish American War In early 1899 the Philippine American War broke out as the established Philippine government under the leadership of Emilio Aguinaldo sought to stop the American invasion of the archipelago Presidential election of 1900 Edit Main article William Jennings Bryan 1900 presidential campaign Conservatives in 1900 ridiculed Bryan s eclectic platform The 1900 Democratic National Convention met in Kansas City Missouri where some Democratic leaders opposed to Bryan had hoped to nominate Admiral George Dewey for president Nevertheless Bryan faced no significant opposition by the time of the convention and he won his party s nomination unanimously Bryan did not attend the convention but exercised control of the convention s proceedings via telegraph 55 Bryan faced a decision regarding which issue his campaign would focus on Many of his most fervent supporters wanted Bryan to continue his crusade for free silver and Democrats from the Northeast advised Bryan to center his campaign on the growing power of trusts Bryan however decided that his campaign would focus on anti imperialism partly to unite the factions of the party and win over some Republicans 56 The party platform contained planks supporting free silver and opposing the power of trusts but imperialism was labeled as the paramount issue of the campaign The party nominated former Vice President Adlai Stevenson to serve as Bryan s running mate 57 In his speech accepting the Democratic nomination Bryan argued that the election represented a contest between democracy and plutocracy He also strongly criticized the U S annexation of the Philippines and compared it to the British rule of the Thirteen Colonies Bryan argued that the United States should refrain from imperialism and should seek to become the supreme moral factor in the world s progress and the accepted arbiter of the world s disputes 58 By 1900 the American Anti Imperialist League which included individuals like Benjamin Harrison Andrew Carnegie Carl Schurz and Mark Twain had emerged as the primary domestic organization opposed to the continued American control of the Philippines Many of the leaders of the League had opposed Bryan in 1896 and continued to distrust Bryan and his followers 59 Despite the distrust Bryan s strong stance against imperialism convinced most of the league s leadership to throw their support behind the Democratic nominee 58 1900 electoral vote results Once again the McKinley campaign established a massive financial advantage and the Democratic campaign relied largely on Bryan s oratory 60 In a typical day Bryan gave four hour long speeches and shorter talks that added up to six hours of speaking At an average rate of 175 words a minute he turned out 63 000 words a day enough to fill 52 columns of a newspaper 61 The Republican Party s superior organization and finances boosted McKinley s candidacy and as in the previous campaign most major newspapers favored McKinley Bryan also had to contend with the Republican vice presidential nominee Theodore Roosevelt who had emerged a national celebrity in the Spanish American War and proved to be a strong public speaker Bryan s anti imperialism failed to register with many voters and as the campaign neared its end Bryan increasingly shifted to attacks on corporate power He once again sought the voter of urban laborers by telling them to vote against the business interests that had condemn ed the boys of this country to perpetual clerkship 62 By election day few believed that Bryan would win and McKinley ultimately prevailed once again over Bryan Compared to the results of the 1896 election McKinley increased his popular vote margin and picked up several Western states including Bryan s home state of Nebraska 63 The Republican platform of victory in war and a strong economy proved to be more important to voters than Bryan s questioning the morality of annexing the Philippines 64 The election also confirmed the continuing organizational advantage of the Republican Party outside of the South 63 Between presidential campaigns 1901 1907 Edit See also Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt and Alton B Parker 1904 presidential campaign William J Bryan in 1906 as Moses with new 10 commandments Puck 19 Sept 1906 by Joseph Keppler Tablet reads l Thou shalt have no other leaders before me II Thou shalt not make unto thyself any high Protective Tariff Ill Eight hours and no more shalt thou labor and do all thy work IV Thou shalt not graft V Thou shalt not elect thy Senators save by Popular Vote VI Thou shalt not grant rebates unto thy neighbor VII Thou shalt not make combinations in restraint of trade VIII Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor s income but shall make him pay a tax upon it IX There shall be no more government by injunction X Remember Election Day to vote it early P S When in doubt ask Me 65 After the election Bryan returned to journalism and oratory and frequently appeared on the Chautauqua circuits to give well attended lectures across the country 66 In January 1901 Bryan published the first issue of his weekly newspaper The Commoner which echoed his favorite political and religious themes Bryan served as the editor and publisher of the newspaper Charles Bryan Mary Bryan and Richard Metcalfe also performed editorial duties when Bryan was traveling The Commoner became one of the most widely read newspapers of its era and boasted 145 000 subscribers approximately five years after its founding Though the paper s subscriber base heavily overlapped with Bryan s political base in the Midwest content from the papers was frequently reprinted by major newspapers in the Northeast In 1902 Bryan his wife and his three children moved into Fairview a mansion located in Lincoln Bryan referred to the house as the Monticello of the West and frequently invited politicians and diplomats to visit 67 Bryan s defeat in 1900 cost him his status as the clear leader of the Democratic Party and conservatives such as David B Hill and Arthur Pue Gorman moved to re establish their control over the party and return it to the policies of the Cleveland era Meanwhile Roosevelt succeeded McKinley as president after the latter s assassination in September 1901 Roosevelt prosecuted antitrust cases and implemented other progressive policies but Bryan argued that Roosevelt did not fully embrace progressive causes Bryan called for a package of reforms including a federal income tax pure food and drug laws a ban on corporate financing of campaigns a constitutional amendment providing for the direct election of senators local ownership of utilities and the state adoption of the initiative and the referendum 68 and provisions for old age 69 He also criticized Roosevelt s foreign policy and attacked Roosevelt s decision to invite Booker T Washington to dine at the White House in 1901 70 Prior to the 1904 Democratic National Convention Alton B Parker a New York and conservative ally of David Hill was the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination Conservatives feared that Bryan would join with the publisher William Randolph Hearst to block Parker s nomination Seeking to appease Bryan and other progressives Hill agreed to a party platform that omitted mention of the gold standard and criticized trusts 71 In the event Bryan did not support Parker or Hearst but rather Francis Cockrell a Missouri senator whose career had almost wholly unremarkable 72 Bryan s motivation was not any belief that Cockrell could defeat Roosevelt in the election but rather that he would lose decisively thus paving the way for Bryan to be re nominated in 1908 However the possibility of Hearst getting the nomination alarmed the party s moderates enough that they moved to support Parker who was narrowly nominated on the first ballot at the convention with Cockrell finishing a distant third place 73 Bryan would nonetheless get his desired outcome when Roosevelt won by the biggest popular vote margin since James Monroe was re elected without opposition in 1820 Afterwards Bryan published a post election edition of The Commoner that advised its readers Do not Compromise with Plutocracy 74 Bryan traveled to Europe in 1903 meeting with figures such as Leo Tolstoy who shared some of Bryan s religious and political views 75 In 1905 Bryan and his family embarked on a trip around the globe and visited eighteen countries in Asia and Europe Bryan funded the trip with public speaking fees and a travelogue that was published on a weekly basis 76 Bryan s travels abroad were documented in a study called The Old World and its Ways in which he shared his thoughts on different topics such as those related to progressive politics and labor legislation Bryan was greeted by a large crowd upon his return to the United States in 1906 and was widely seen as the likely 1908 Democratic presidential nominee Partly due to the efforts of muckraking journalists voters had become increasingly open to progressive ideas since 1904 President Roosevelt himself had moved to the left favoring federal regulation of railroad rates and meatpacking plants 77 However Bryan continued to favor more far reaching reforms including federal regulation of banks and securities protections for union organizers and federal spending on highway construction and education Bryan also briefly expressed support for the state and federal ownership of railroads in a manner similar to Germany but backed down from that policy in the face of an intra party backlash 78 Presidential election of 1908 Edit Main article William Jennings Bryan 1908 presidential campaign Bryan speaking at the 1908 Democratic National Convention Presidential Campaign button for Bryan source Speech by Bryan on the railroad question 1908 Roosevelt who enjoyed wide popularity among most voters even while he alienated some corporate leaders anointed Secretary of War William Howard Taft as his successor 79 Meanwhile Bryan re established his control over the Democratic Party and won the endorsement of numerous local and state organizations Conservative Democrats again sought to prevent Bryan s nomination but were unable to unite around an alternative candidate Bryan was nominated for president on the first ballot of the 1908 Democratic National Convention He was joined by John W Kern a former state senator from the swing state of Indiana 80 Bryan campaigned on a party platform that reflected his long held beliefs but the Republican platform also advocated for progressive policies which left relatively few major differences between the two major parties One issue that the two parties differed on concerned deposit insurance as Bryan favored requiring national banks to provide deposit insurance Bryan largely unified the leaders of his own party and his pro labor policies won him the first presidential endorsement ever issued by the American Federation of Labor 81 As in previous campaigns Bryan embarked on a public speaking tour to boost his candidacy but was later joined on the trail by Taft 82 Defying Bryan s confidence in his own victory Taft decisively won the 1908 presidential election Bryan won just a handful of states outside of the Solid South as he failed to galvanize the support of urban laborers 83 Bryan remains the only individual since the Civil War to lose three separate U S presidential elections as a major party nominee 84 Since the ratification of the Twelfth Amendment Bryan and Henry Clay are the lone individuals who received electoral votes in three separate presidential elections but lost all three elections 85 The 493 cumulative electoral votes cast for Bryan across three separate elections are the most received by a presidential candidate who was never elected 1908 electoral vote results Bryan remained an influential figure in Democratic politics and after Democrats took control of the House of Representatives in the 1910 midterm elections he appeared in the House of Representatives to argue for tariff reduction 86 In 1909 Bryan came out publicly for the first time in favor of Prohibition A lifelong teetotaler Bryan had refrained from embracing Prohibition earlier because of the issue s unpopularity among many Democrats 87 According to biographer Paolo Colletta Bryan sincerely believed that prohibition would contribute to the physical health and moral improvement of the individual stimulate civic progress and end the notorious abuses connected with the liquor traffic 88 In 1910 he also came out in favor of women s suffrage 89 Bryan crusaded as well for legislation to support the introduction of the initiative and referendum as a means of giving voters a direct voice while he made a whistle stop campaign tour of Arkansas in 1910 90 Although some observers including President Taft speculated that Bryan would make a fourth run for the presidency Bryan repeatedly denied that he had any such intention 91 Wilson presidency EditFurther information Presidency of Woodrow Wilson 1912 election Edit Bryan attending the 1912 Democratic National Convention An escalating split in the Republican Party gave Democrats their best chance in decades to win the presidency Bryan did not seek the Democratic presidential nomination his continuing influence gave him a major voice in choosing the nominee Bryan was intent on preventing the conservatives in the party from nominating their candidate as they had done in 1904 For a mix of practical and ideological reasons Bryan ruled out supporting the candidacies of Oscar Underwood Judson Harmon and Joseph W Folk which left two major candidates competing for his backing New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson and Speaker of the House Champ Clark As Speaker Clark could lay claim to progressive accomplishments including the passage of constitutional amendments providing for the direct election of senators and the establishment of a federal income tax However Clark had alienated Bryan for his failure to lower the tariff and Bryan viewed the Speaker as overly friendly to conservative business interests Wilson had criticized Bryan but had compiled a strong progressive record as governor As the 1912 Democratic National Convention approached Bryan continued to deny that he would seek the presidency but many journalists and politicians suspected that Bryan hoped a deadlocked convention would turn to him 92 After the start of the convention Bryan engineered the passage of a resolution stating that the party was opposed to the nomination of any candidate who is a representative of or under any obligation to J Pierpont Morgan Thomas F Ryan August Belmont or any other member of the privilege hunting and favor seeking class Clark and Wilson won the support of most delegates on the first several presidential ballots of the Democratic convention but each fell short of the necessary two thirds majority After Tammany Hall came out in favor of Clark and the New York delegation threw its support behind the Speaker Bryan announced that he would support Wilson In explaining his decision Bryan stated that he could not be a party to the nomination of any man who will not when elected be absolutely free to carry out the anti Morgan Ryan Belmont resolution Bryan s speech marked the start of a long shift away from Clark Wilson would finally clinch the presidential nomination after over 40 ballots Journalists attributed much of the credit for Wilson s victory to Bryan 93 In the 1912 presidential election Wilson faced off against President Taft and former President Roosevelt the latter of whom ran on the Progressive Party ticket Bryan campaigned throughout the West for Wilson and also offered advice to the Democratic nominee on various issues The split in the Republican ranks helped give Wilson the presidency he won over 400 electoral votes but only 41 8 percent of the popular vote In the concurrent congressional elections Democrats expanded their majority in the House and gained control of the Senate which gave the party unified control of Congress and the presidency for the first time since the early 1890s 94 Secretary of State Edit See also Banana Wars and American entry into World War I Bryan served as Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson Cartoon of Secretary of State Bryan reading war news in 1914 President Wilson named Bryan as Secretary of State the most prestigious appointive position Bryan s extensive travels popularity in the party and support for Wilson in the election made him the obvious choice Bryan took charge of a State Department that employed 150 officials in Washington and an additional 400 employees in embassies abroad Early in Wilson s tenure the president and the secretary of state broadly agreed on foreign policy goals including the rejection of Taft s Dollar diplomacy 95 They also shared many priorities in domestic affairs and with Bryan s help Wilson orchestrated passage of laws that reduced tariff rates imposed a progressive income tax introduced new antitrust measures and established the Federal Reserve System Bryan proved particularly influential in ensuring that the president rather than private bankers was empowered to appoint the members of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors 96 Secretary of State Bryan pursued a series of bilateral treaties that required both signatories to submit all disputes to an investigative tribunal He quickly won approval from the president and the Senate to proceed with his initiative In mid 1913 El Salvador became the first nation to sign one of Bryan s treaties and 29 other countries including every great power in Europe other than Germany and Austria Hungary also agreed to sign the treaties 97 Despite Bryan s stated aversion to conflict he oversaw U S interventions in Haiti the Dominican Republic and Mexico 98 After World War I broke out in Europe Bryan consistently advocated for American neutrality between the Entente and the Central Powers With Bryan s support Wilson initially sought to stay out of the conflict urging Americans to be impartial in thought as well as action 99 For much of 1914 Bryan attempted to bring a negotiated end to the war but the leaders of both the Entente and the Central Powers were ultimately uninterested in American mediation Bryan remained firmly committed to neutrality but Wilson and others within the administration became increasingly sympathetic to the Entente The March 1915 Thrasher incident in which a German U boat sank a British passenger ship with an American citizen on board provided a major blow to the cause of American neutrality The May 1915 sinking of RMS Lusitania by another German U boat further galvanized anti German sentiment as 128 Americans died in the incident Bryan argued that the British blockade of Germany was as offensive as the German U boat Campaign 100 He also maintained that by traveling on British vessels an American citizen can by putting his own business above his regard for this country assume for his own advantage unnecessary risks and thus involve his country in international complications 101 After Wilson sent an official message of protest to Germany and refused to warn Americans publicly not to travel on British ships Bryan delivered his letter of resignation to Wilson on June 8 1915 102 Later career EditPolitical involvement Edit During the 1916 presidential election members of the Prohibition Party attempted to place Bryan into consideration for its presidential nomination but he rejected the offer via telegram 103 104 Bryan supported Wilson s 1916 re election campaign Bryan did not attend as an official delegate but the 1916 Democratic National Convention suspended its own rules to allow Bryan to address the convention Bryan delivered a well received speech that strongly defended Wilson s domestic record Bryan served as a campaign surrogate for Wilson by delivering dozens of speeches primarily to audiences west of the Mississippi River Ultimately Wilson narrowly prevailed over the Republican candidate Charles Evans Hughes 105 When the United States entered World War I in April 1917 Bryan wrote to Wilson Believing it to be the duty of the citizen to bear his part of the burden of war and his share of the peril I hereby tender my services to the Government Please enroll me as a private whenever I am needed and assign me to any work that I can do 106 Wilson declined to appoint Bryan to a federal position but Bryan agreed to Wilson s request to provide public support for the war effort through his speeches and articles 107 After the war despite some reservations Bryan supported Wilson s unsuccessful effort to bring the United States into the League of Nations 108 Crusade for Prohibition Edit After leaving office Bryan spent much of his time advocating for the eight hour day a minimum wage the right of unions to strike and increasingly women s suffrage 109 However his main crusades focused on support for prohibition and opposition to the teaching of evolution 110 111 Congress passed the Eighteenth Amendment which provided for nationwide Prohibition in 1917 Two years later Congress passed the Nineteenth Amendment which granted women the right to vote nationwide Both amendments were ratified in 1920 112 In 1916 Bryan expressed his belief to John Reed that the government may properly impose a minimum wage regulate hours of labor pass usury laws and enforce inspection of food sanitation and housing conditions 113 During the 1920s Bryan called for further reforms including agricultural subsidies the guarantee of a living wage full public financing of political campaigns and an end to legal gender discrimination 114 Some Prohibitionists and other Bryan supporters tried to convince the three time presidential candidate to enter the 1920 presidential election and a Literary Digest poll taken in mid 1920 ranked Bryan as the fourth most popular potential Democratic candidate Bryan however declined to seek public office and wrote if I can help this world to banish alcohol and after that to banish war no office no Presidency can offer the honors that will be mine He attended the 1920 Democratic National Convention as a delegate from Nebraska but was disappointed by the nomination of Governor James M Cox who had not supported ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment Bryan declined the presidential nomination of the Prohibition Party and refused to campaign for Cox which made the 1920 campaign the first presidential contest in over thirty years in which he did not actively campaign 115 Though he became less involved in Democratic politics after 1920 Bryan attended the 1924 Democratic National Convention as a delegate from Florida 116 He helped defeat a resolution condemning the Ku Klux Klan because he expected that the organization would soon fold Bryan disliked the Klan but never publicly attacked it 117 He also strongly opposed the candidacy of Al Smith due to Smith s hostility towards Prohibition After over 100 ballots the Democratic convention nominated John W Davis a conservative Wall Street lawyer To balance the conservative Davis with a progressive the convention nominated Bryan s brother Charles W Bryan for vice president Bryan was disappointed by the nomination of Davis but strongly approved of the nomination of his brother and he delivered numerous campaign speeches in support of the Democratic ticket Davis suffered one of the worst losses in the Democratic Party s history taking just 29 percent of the vote against Republican President Calvin Coolidge and the third party candidate Robert M La Follette 118 William Jennings Bryan autographed drawing by Manuel Rosenberg 1921 Florida real estate promoter Edit Villa Serena Bryan s home built in 1913 in Miami Florida To help Mary cope with her worsening health during the harsh winters of Nebraska the Bryans bought a farm in Mission Texas in 1909 119 Due to Mary s arthritis the Bryans in 1912 began to build a new home in Miami Florida known as Villa Serena The Bryans made Villa Serena their permanent home and Charles Bryan continued to oversee The Commoner from Lincoln The Bryans were active citizens in Miami leading a fundraising drive for the YMCA and frequently hosting the public at their home 120 Bryan undertook lucrative speaking engagements often serving as a spokesman for George E Merrick s new planned community of Coral Gables 121 His promotions probably contributed to the Florida real estate boom of the 1920s which collapsed within months of Bryan s death in 1925 citation needed Trustee of American University Edit Bryan served as a member of the Board of Trustees at American University in Washington D C from 1914 to his death 122 For some of these years he served concurrently with Warren G Harding and Theodore Roosevelt Anti evolution activism Edit William J Bryan right with his younger brother Charles W In the 1920s Bryan shifted his focus away from politics becoming one of the most prominent religious figures in the country 123 He held a weekly Bible class in Miami and published several religiously themed books 124 He was one of the first individuals to preach religious faith on the radio which let him reach audiences across the country 125 Bryan welcomed the proliferation of faiths other than Protestant Christianity but he was deeply concerned by the rejection of Biblical literalism by many Protestants 126 According to the historian Ronald L Numbers Bryan was not nearly as much a fundamentalist as many modern day creationists of the 21st century Instead he is more accurately described as a day age creationist 127 Bradley J Longfield posits Bryan was a theologically conservative Social Gospeler 128 In the final years of his life Bryan became the unofficial leader of a movement that sought to prevent public schools from teaching Charles Darwin s theory of evolution 123 Bryan had long expressed skepticism and concern regarding Darwin s theory in his famous 1909 Chautauqua lecture The Prince of Peace Bryan had warned that the theory of evolution could undermine the foundations of morality 129 Bryan opposed Darwin s theory of evolution through natural selection for two reasons He believed what he considered a materialistic account of the descent of man and all life through evolution to be directly contrary to the Biblical creation account Also he considered Darwinism as applied to society social Darwinism to be a great evil force in the world by promoting hatred and conflicts and inhibiting upward social and economic mobility of the poor and oppressed 130 As part of his crusade against Darwinism Bryan called for state and local laws banning public schools from teaching evolution 131 He requested that lawmakers refrain from attaching a criminal penalty to the anti evolution laws and also urged that educators be allowed to teach evolution as a hypothesis rather than as a fact Only five southern states responded to Bryan s call to bar the teaching of evolution in public schools 132 Bryan was worried that the theory of evolution was gaining ground not only in the universities but also within the church The developments of 19th century liberal theology specifically higher criticism had allowed many clergymen to be willing to embrace the theory of evolution and claim that it was not contradictory to Christianity Determined to put an end to this Bryan who had long served as a Presbyterian elder decided to run for the position of Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America which was at the time embroiled in the Fundamentalist Modernist Controversy Bryan s main competition in the race was the Rev Charles F Wishart president of the College of Wooster in Ohio who had loudly endorsed the teaching of the theory of evolution in the college Bryan lost to Wishart by a vote of 451 427 Bryan failed in gaining approval for a proposal to cut off funds to schools in which the theory of evolution was taught Instead the General Assembly announced disapproval of materialistic as opposed to theistic evolution citation needed Scopes Trial Edit At the Scopes Trial William Jennings Bryan seated left being questioned by Clarence Darrow standing right Further information Scopes Trial From July 10 to 21 1925 Bryan participated in the highly publicized Scopes Trial The defendant John T Scopes had violated the Butler Act a Tennessee law barring the teaching of evolution in public schools while serving as a substitute biology teacher in Dayton Tennessee His defense was funded by the American Civil Liberties Union and led in court by the famed lawyer Clarence Darrow No one disputed that Scopes had violated the Butler Act but Darrow argued that the statute violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment Bryan defended the right of parents to choose what schools teach argued that Darwinism was merely a hypothesis and claimed that Darrow and other intellectuals were trying to invalidate every moral standard that the Bible gives us 133 The defense called Bryan as a witness and asked him about his belief in the literal word of the Bible though the judge later expunged Bryan s testimony 134 Ultimately the judge instructed the jury to render a verdict of guilty and Scopes was fined 100 for violating the Butler Act 135 The national media reported the trial in great detail with H L Mencken ridiculing Bryan as a symbol of Southern ignorance and anti intellectualism 136 Even many Southern newspapers criticized Bryan s performance in the trial the Memphis Commercial Appeal reported that Darrow succeeded in showing that Bryan knows little about the science of the world Bryan had been prevented from delivering a final argument at trial but he arranged for the publication of the speech he had intended to give In that publication Bryan wrote that science is a magnificent material force but it is not a teacher of morals 137 Death EditIn the days following the Scopes Trial Bryan delivered several speeches in Tennessee On Sunday July 26 1925 Bryan died in his sleep from apoplexy 1 after he had attended a church service in Dayton 138 Bryan s body was transported by rail from Dayton to Washington D C He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery with an epitaph that read Statesman yet Friend to Truth Of Soul Sincere in Action Faithful and in Honor Clear 139 and on the other side He Kept the Faith 140 141 Family EditBryan remained married to his wife Mary until his death in 1925 Mary served as a very important adviser to her husband she passed the bar exam and learned German to help his career 142 She was buried next to Bryan after her death in 1930 William and Mary had three children Ruth 1886 1954 William Jr 1889 1978 and Grace Dexter 1891 1945 Ruth won election to Congress from Florida in 1928 and later served as ambassador to Denmark during the presidency of Franklin D Roosevelt 143 William Jr graduated from Georgetown Law established a legal practice in Los Angeles later held several federal positions and became an important figure in the Los Angeles Democratic Party Grace also moved to Southern California and wrote a biography of her father 144 William Sr s brother Charles was an important supporter of his brother until William s death as well as an influential politician in his own right Charles served two terms as the mayor of Lincoln and three terms as the governor of Nebraska and was the Democratic vice presidential nominee in the 1924 presidential election 145 Bryan s wife Mary Baird Bryan Ruth Bryan Owen William Bryan Jr Grace BryanLegacy EditHistorical reputation and political legacy Edit Statue of Bryan on the lawn of the Rhea County courthouse in Dayton Tennessee Bryan elicited mixed views during his lifetime and his legacy remains complicated 146 Author Scott Farris argues that many fail to understand Bryan because he occupies a rare space in society too liberal for today s religious and too religious for today s liberals 147 Jeff Taylor rejects the view that Bryan was a pioneer of the welfare state and a forerunner of the New Deal but argues that Bryan was more accepting of an interventionist federal government than his Democratic predecessors had been 148 Biographer Michael Kazin however opines that Bryan was the first leader of a major party to argue for permanently expanding the power of the federal government to serve the welfare of ordinary Americans from the working and middle classes he did more than any other man between the fall of Grover Cleveland and the election of Woodrow Wilson to transform his party from a bulwark of laissez faire to the citadel of liberalism we identify with Franklin D Roosevelt and his ideological descendants 84 Kazin argues that compared to Bryan only Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson had a greater impact on politics and political culture during the era of reform that began in the mid 1890s and lasted until the early 1920s 149 Writing in 1931 former Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs McAdoo stated that with the exception of the men who have occupied the White House Bryan had more to do with the shaping of the public policies of the last forty years than any other American citizen 150 Historian Robert D Johnston notes that Bryan was arguably the most influential politician from the Great Plains 151 In 2015 political scientist Michael G Miller and historian Ken Owen ranked Bryan as one of the four most influential American politicians who never served as president alongside Alexander Hamilton Henry Clay and John C Calhoun 152 Kazin also emphasizes the limits of Bryan s influence by noting that for decades after Bryan s death influential scholars and journalists depicted him as a self righteous simpleton who longed to preserve an age that had already passed 84 Writing in 2006 editor Richard Lingeman noted that William Jennings Bryan is mainly remembered as the fanatical old fool Fredric March played in Inherit the Wind 153 Similarly in 2011 John McDermott wrote that Bryan is perhaps best known as the sweaty crank of a lawyer who represented Tennessee in the Scopes trial After his defence of creationism he became a mocked caricature a sweaty possessor of avoirdupois bereft of bombast 36 Kazin writes that scholars have increasingly warmed to Bryan s motives if not his actions in the Scopes Trial because of Bryan s rejection of eugenics a practice that many evolutionists of the 1920s favored 154 Kazin also notes the stain that Bryan s acceptance of the Jim Crow system places on his legacy writing His one great flaw was to support with a studied lack of reflection the abusive system of Jim Crow a view that was shared until the late 1930s by nearly every white Democrat After Bryan s death in 1925 most intellectuals and activists on the broad left rejected the amalgam that had inspired him a strict populist morality based on a close read reading of Scripture Liberals and radicals from the age of FDR to the present have tended to scorn that credo as naive and bigoted a remnant of an era of white Protestant supremacy that has or should have passed 84 Nonetheless prominent individuals from both parties have praised Bryan and his legacy In 1962 former President Harry Truman said Bryan was a great one one of the greatest Truman also claimed If it wasn t for old Bill Bryan there wouldn t be any liberalism at all in the country now Bryan kept liberalism alive he kept it going 155 incomplete short citation Tom L Johnson the progressive mayor of Cleveland Ohio referred to Bryan s campaign in 1896 as the first great struggle of the masses in our country against the privileged classes 156 In a 1934 speech dedicating a memorial to Bryan President Franklin D Roosevelt said I think that we would choose the word sincerity as fitting him Bryan most of all it was that sincerity that served him so well in his life long fight against sham and privilege and wrong It was that sincerity that made him a force for good in his own generation and kept alive many of the ancient faiths on which we are building today We can well agree that he fought the good fight that he finished the course and that he kept the faith 157 More recently conservative Republicans such as Ralph Reed have hailed Bryan s legacy Reed described Bryan as the most consequential evangelical politician of the twentieth century 158 Bryan s career has also been compared to that of Donald Trump 146 In popular culture Edit It has been suggested by some economists historians and literary critics that L Frank Baum satirized Bryan as the Cowardly Lion in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz which was published in 1900 Those assertions are based partly on Baum s history as a Republican supporter who advocated in his role as a journalist on behalf of William McKinley and his policies 159 160 161 Vachel Lindsay s 1919 singing poem Bryan Bryan Bryan Bryan is a lengthy tribute to the idol of the poet s youth Bryan played a minor role in Thomas Wolfe s Look Homeward Angel 1929 Bryan also has a biographical part in The 42nd Parallel 1930 in John Dos Passos USA Trilogy 162 Edwin Maxwell played Bryan in the 1944 film Wilson Inherit the Wind a 1955 play by Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee is a highly fictionalized account of the Scopes Trial written in response to McCarthyism A populist thrice defeated presidential candidate from Nebraska named Matthew Harrison Brady based on Bryan comes to a small town to help prosecute a young teacher for teaching evolution to his schoolchildren He is opposed by a famous trial lawyer Henry Drummond based on Darrow and mocked by a cynical newspaperman based on Mencken as the trial assumes a national profile The 1960 film adaptation was directed by Stanley Kramer and starred Fredric March as Brady and Spencer Tracy as Drummond Bryan appears as a character in Douglas Moore s 1956 opera The Ballad of Baby Doe Ainslie Pryor played Bryan in a 1956 episode of the CBS anthology series You Are There Bryan also appears in And Having Writ 1978 by Donald R Bensen Bryan appears in Gore Vidal s 1987 novel Empire The 1992 short story Plowshare by Martha Soukup and part of the 1984 novel Job A Comedy of Justice by Robert A Heinlein are set in worlds where Bryan became president Memorials Edit The William Jennings Bryan House in Nebraska was named a U S National Historic Landmark in 1963 The Bryan Home Museum is an appointment only museum at his birthplace in Salem Illinois Salem is also home to Bryan Park and a large statue of Bryan His home at Asheville North Carolina from 1917 to 1920 the William Jennings Bryan House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983 163 Villa Serena Bryan s property in Miami Florida is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places President Franklin D Roosevelt delivered an address on May 3 1934 dedicating a statue of William Jennings Bryan created by Gutzon Borglum the sculptor of Mount Rushmore This Bryan statue by Borglum originally stood in Washington D C but was displaced by highway construction and moved by an Act of Congress in 1961 to Salem Illinois Bryan s birthplace 164 165 A statue of Bryan represented the state of Nebraska in the National Statuary Hall in the United States Capitol as part of the National Statuary Hall Collection In 2019 a statue of Chief Standing Bear replaced the statue of Bryan in the National Statuary Hall 166 167 Bryan was named to the Nebraska Hall of Fame in 1971 and a bust of him resides in the Nebraska State Capitol 168 Bryan was honored by the United States Postal Service with a 2 Great Americans series postage stamp Numerous objects places and people have been named after Bryan including Bryan County Oklahoma 169 Bryan Medical Center in Lincoln Nebraska and Bryan College located in Dayton Tennessee Omaha Bryan High School and Bryan Middle School in Bellevue Nebraska are also named for Bryan During World War II the Liberty ship SS William J Bryan was built in Panama City Florida and named in his honor 170 See also EditFundamentalist Modernist Controversy Progressive Era The Rhetorical PresidencyNotes Edit Asked when his family dropped the O from his O Bryan surname he replied there had never been one 6 The tax would be struck down by the Supreme Court in the 1895 case of Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co 33 U S senators were elected by state legislatures prior to the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913 References Edit a b Nimick John July 27 1925 Great Commoner Bryan dies in sleep apoplexy given as cause of death UPI Archives Retrieved December 26 2017 Morgan Michael The Boy Orator presidential candidate attracted crowds but not their votes Delmarva Now Retrieved April 7 2022 Youngest amp Oldest Electoral Vote recipients Talk Elections July 7 2015 Retrieved April 18 2020 William Jennings Bryan Usurped Nebraska State Historical Society Kazin 2006 pp 4 5 Bryan Memoirs of William Jennings Bryan pp 22 26 Colletta 1964 pp 3 5 Kazin 2006 p 5 Kazin 2006 pp 4 5 9 Florida International University Reclaiming the Everglades biography of William Sherman Jennings Kazin 2006 p 8 Kazin 2006 pp 10 11 PCA History On This Day March 19 William Jennings Bryan PCA History March 19 2012 Archived from the original on December 1 2020 Retrieved August 22 2018 Kazin 2006 pp 8 9 a b Kazin 2006 pp 9 10 Kazin 2006 p 12 a b Kazin 2006 pp 13 14 Colletta 1964 p 30 Colletta 1964 p 21 Kazin 2006 pp 15 17 Kazin 2006 pp 17 18 Kazin 2006 pp 17 19 Kazin 2006 pp 22 24 Kazin 2006 p 25 Kazin 2006 pp 25 27 Colletta 1964 p 48 Kazin 2006 p 27 Kazin 2006 pp 31 34 Kazin 2006 pp 20 22 Kazin 2006 pp 33 36 Hibben 1929 p 175 Kazin 2006 pp 35 38 a b Kazin 2006 p 51 Kazin 2006 pp 40 43 Kazin 2006 pp 46 48 a b McDermott John August 19 2011 The life of Bryan or what did monetary policy ever do for us Financial Times Kazin 2006 pp 53 55 58 Kazin 2006 pp 56 62 a b Kazin 2006 pp 62 63 Glass Andrew March 19 2012 William Jennings Bryan born March 19 1860 Politico Retrieved August 3 2018 Kazin 2006 p 63 Kazin 2006 pp 63 65 Kazin 2006 pp 65 67 William Safire 2004 Lend Me Your Ears Great Speeches in History W W Norton p 922 ISBN 978 0 393 05931 1 Richard J Ellis And Mark Dedrick The Presidential Candidate Then and Now Perspectives on Political Science 1997 26 4 pp 208 216 online Michael Nelson 2015 Guide to the Presidency Routledge p 363 ISBN 978 1 135 91462 2 Karl Rove 2016 The Triumph of William McKinley Why the Election of 1896 Still Matters pp 367 369 ISBN 978 1 4767 5296 9 Kazin 2006 pp 76 79 Kazin 2006 pp 80 82 Kazin 2006 pp 202 203 David Leip 1896 Presidential General Election Results Pennsylvania Dave Leip s U S Election Atlas Retrieved March 24 2018 Kazin 2006 pp 83 86 a b Kazin 2006 pp 86 89 Sicius 2015 p 182 Kazin 2006 pp 98 99 Kazin 2006 pp 95 98 Kazin 2006 pp 99 100 a b Kazin 2006 pp 102 103 Kazin 2006 pp 91 92 Kazin 2006 pp 104 105 Coletta 1964 p 272 Kazin 2006 pp 105 107 a b Kazin 2006 pp 107 108 Clements 1982 p 38 source Joseph Keppler in Puck magazine Sept 19 1906 reprinted in Smylie James H William Jennings Bryan and the Cartoonists A Pictorial Lampoon 1896 1925 Journal of Presbyterian History 53 2 1975 83 92 at p 88 online Kazin 2006 p 122 Kazin 2006 pp 111 113 Kazin 2006 pp 113 114 William Jennings Bryan Volume 1 By Paolo Enrico Coletta 1964 P 441 Kazin 2006 p 114 Kazin 2006 pp 114 116 HarpWeek Elections 1904 Large Cartoons elections harpweek com Kennedy Robert C Citizen Parker The New York Times Retrieved October 8 2015 Kazin 2006 pp 119 120 Kazin 2006 pp 126 128 Kazin 2006 pp 121 122 Kazin 2006 pp 142 143 Kazin 2006 pp 145 149 Kazin 2006 pp 151 152 Kazin 2006 pp 152 154 Kazin 2006 pp 154 157 Kazin 2006 pp 159 160 Kazin 2006 pp 163 164 a b c d Kazin 2006 p xix Klotter James C 2018 Henry Clay The Man Who Would Be President Oxford University Press p xvii ISBN 978 0 19 049805 4 Kazin 2006 pp 179 181 Kazin 2006 pp 172 173 Coletta 1969 Vol 2 p 8 Kazin 2006 p 177 Steven L Piott Giving Voters a Voice The Origins of the Initiative and Referendum in America 2003 pp 126 132 Kazin 2006 p 173 Kazin 2006 pp 181 184 Kazin 2006 pp 187 191 Kazin 2006 pp 191 192 215 Kazin 2006 pp 215 217 222 223 Kazin 2006 pp 223 227 Kazin 2006 pp 217 218 Kazin 2006 pp 229 231 Kazin 2006 pp 232 233 Kazin 2006 pp 234 236 Levine 1987 p 8 Kazin 2006 pp 237 238 Richardson Darcy 2008 Page 69 Others Fighting Bob La Follette and the Progressive Movement Third party Politics in the 1920s p 69 ISBN 978 0595481262 via Google Books May Select William J Bryan The Johnson City Comet May 25 1916 p 1 Archived from the original on March 19 2020 via Newspapers com Kazin 2006 pp 248 252 Hibben 1929 p 356 Kazin 2006 pp 254 255 Kazin 2006 pp 258 260 Kazin 2006 p 245 Lawrence W Levine Defender of the faith William Jennings Bryan the last decade 1915 1925 Oxford UP 1965 ch 6 9 Paolo E Coletta William Jennings Bryan Vol 3 Political Puritan 1915 1925 1969 pp 282 299 Kazin 2006 p 258 Defender of the Faith William Jennings Bryan the Last Decade 1915 1925 By Lawrence W Levine P 198 Kazin 2006 pp 267 268 Kazin 2006 pp 269 271 Kazin 2006 pp 282 283 Coletta 1969 Vol 3 pp 162 177 184 Kazin 2006 pp 283 285 Kazin 2006 p 170 Kazin 2006 pp 245 247 George Paul S Brokers Binders amp Builders Greater Miami s Boom of the Mid 1920s Florida Historical Quarterly vol 59 no 4 1981 pp 440 463 American University website a b Kazin 2006 pp 262 263 Florida Memory William Jennings Bryan Conducting a Bible Class in Royal Palm Park Miami Florida Retrieved August 17 2018 Kazin 2006 pp 271 272 Kazin 2006 pp 272 273 Ronald L Numbers The Creationists From Scientific Creationism to Intelligent Design 2006 p 13 Longfield Bradley J 1993 The Presbyterian Controversy ISBN 978 0 19 508674 4 Retrieved August 17 2018 See The Prince of Peace Coletta 1969 Vol 3 ch 8 Kazin 2006 pp 274 275 Kazin 2006 pp 280 281 Kazin 2006 pp 285 288 Kazin 2006 pp 292 293 Kazin 2006 pp 293 295 H L Mencken In Memoriam W J B Archived July 31 2019 at the Wayback Machine Kazin 2006 pp 294 295 Kazin 2006 p 294 Kazin 2006 pp 296 297 Marty Martin E 2011 Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3110974362 via Google Books Burial Detail Bryan William J Section 4 Grave 3118 3121 ANC Explorer Kazin 2006 pp 14 296 Kazin 2006 pp 3 1891 1945 00 301 Kazin 2006 pp 266 267 300 301 Kazin 2006 pp 198 199 a b Rothman Lily February 24 2017 The Man Steve Bannon Compared to President Trump as Described in 1925 Time Retrieved August 2 2018 Farris 2013 pp 93 94 Taylor 2006 pp 187 88 Kazin 2006 p xiv Kazin 2006 p 304 Johnston Robert D 2011 There s No There There Reflections on Western Political Historiography Western Historical Quarterly 42 3 334 doi 10 2307 westhistquar 42 3 0331 JSTOR westhistquar 42 3 0331 Masket Seth November 19 2015 A bracket to determine the most influential American who never became president Vox Retrieved August 1 2018 Lingeman Richard March 5 2006 The Man With the Silver Tongue The New York Times Kazin 2006 p 263 Merle Miller pp 118 19 Miller Kenneth E 2010 From Progressive to New Dealer Frederic C Howe and American Liberalism Penn State Press ISBN 978 0 271 03742 4 Franklin D Roosevelt Address at a Memorial to William Jennings Bryan UCSB Archived from the original on May 25 2015 Retrieved June 25 2013 Kazin 2006 p 302 Rockoff Hugh 1990 The Wizard of Oz as a Monetary Allegory Journal of Political Economy 98 4 739 760 doi 10 1086 261704 JSTOR 2937766 S2CID 153606670 Geer John G Rochon Thomas R 1993 William Jennings Bryan on the Yellow Brick Road The Journal of American Culture 16 4 59 63 doi 10 1111 j 1542 734X 1993 00059 x Dighe Ranjit S 2002 The Historian s Wizard of Oz Reading L Frank Baum s Classic as a Political and Monetary Allegory Greenwood Publishing Group pp 31 32 ISBN 978 0 275 97418 3 Dos Passos John 1896 1970 U S A Daniel Aaron amp Townsend Ludington eds New York Library of America 1996 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 http moses law umn edu darrow documents Address President Dedication Bryan Memorial 05 03 1934 pdf Address of the President at the Dedication of the Bryan Memorial http moses law umn edu darrow trials php tid 7 Archived July 12 2017 at the Wayback Machine Government Documents Address of the President at the Dedication of the Bryan Memorial May 1934 The civil rights leader almost nobody knows about gets a statue in the U S Capitol The Washington Post The Clarence Darrow Collection Archived from the original on July 12 2017 Retrieved March 28 2021 Nebraska Hall of Fame Members nebraskahistory org Archived from the original on July 14 2006 Oklahoma Historical Society Origin of County Names in Oklahoma Chronicles of Oklahoma 2 1 March 1924 7582 retrieved August 18 2006 Williams Greg H 2014 The Liberty Ships of World War II A Record of the 2 710 Vessels and Their Builders Operators and Namesakes with a History of the Jeremiah O Brien McFarland ISBN 978 1 4766 1754 1 Retrieved December 7 2017 Works cited Edit Clements Kendrick A 1982 William Jennings Bryan Missionary Isolationist University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 0 87049 364 5 Coletta Paolo E William Jennings Bryan 3 vols Vol 1 Online vol 2 online vol 3 1964 William Jennings Bryan Vol 1 Political Evangelist 1860 1908 University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 0022 7 1969 William Jennings Bryan Vol 2 Progressive Politician and Moral Statesman University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 0023 4 1969 William Jennings Bryan Vol 3 Political Puritan 1915 1925 University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 0024 1 1984 Will the Real Progressive Stand Up William Jennings Bryan and Theodore Roosevelt to 1909 Nebraska History 65 15 57 Farris Scott 2013 Almost President The Men Who Lost the Race but Changed the Nation Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7627 8421 9 Hibben Paxton 1929 The Peerless leader William Jennings Bryan Farrar amp Rinehart Inc Kazin Michael 2006 A Godly Hero The Life of William Jennings Bryan Knopf ISBN 978 0 375 41135 9 Levine Lawrence W 1965 Defender of The Faith William Jennings Bryan The Last Decade 1915 1925 Oxford University Press Rove Karl 2016 The Triumph of William McKinley Why the Election of 1896 Still Matters Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4767 5296 9 Thompson Charles Willis June 13 1925 Silver Tongue Profiles The New Yorker Vol 1 no 17 pp 9 10 Sicius Francis J 2015 The Progressive Era A Reference Guide ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 61069 447 6 Taylor Jeff 2006 Where Did the Party Go William Jennings Bryan Hubert Humphrey and the Jeffersonian Legacy Columbia University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 8262 1659 5 Further reading EditBiographies Edit Ashby LeRoy William Jennings Bryan champion of democracy 1987 online Cherny Robert W 1985 A Righteous Cause The Life of William Jennings Bryan Little Brown amp Co ISBN 978 0 316 13854 3 brief scholarly overview online Clements Kendrick A William Jennings Bryan missionary isolationist U of Tennessee Press 1982 online focus on foreign policy Coletta Paolo E William Jennings Bryan I Political Evangelist 1860 1908 U of Nebraska Press 1964 the most detailed of the standard scholarly biographies online review Coletta Paolo E William Jennings Bryan Volume II Progressive Politician and Moral Statesman 1909 1915 1969 Coletta Paolo E William Jennings Bryan Vol 3 Political Puritan 1915 1925 1969 Glad Paul W 1960 The trumpet soundeth William Jennings Bryan and his democracy 1896 1912 University of Nebraska Press ISBN 9780803250734 OCLC 964829 Kazin Michael A godly hero the life of William Jennings Bryan 2006 online Koenig Louis William 1971 Bryan A Political Biography of William Jennings Bryan Putnam Pub Group ISBN 978 0 399 10104 5 Leinwand Gerald 2006 William Jennings Bryan An Uncertain Trumpet Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0 7425 5158 9 Levine Lawrence W Defender of the faith William Jennings Bryan the last decade 1915 1925 Oxford UP 1965 online Werner M R 1929 William Jennings Bryan Harcourt Brace OCLC 1517464 outdated Specialized studies Edit Barnes James A 1947 Myths of the Bryan Campaign Mississippi Valley Historical Review 34 3 367 404 doi 10 2307 1898096 JSTOR 1898096 on 1896 Bensel Richard Franklin 2008 Passion and Preferences William Jennings Bryan and the 1896 Democratic National Convention Cambridge U P ISBN 978 0 521 71762 5 online Cherny Robert W 1996 William Jennings Bryan and the Historians PDF Nebraska History 77 3 4 184 193 ISSN 0028 1859 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Analysis of the historiography Clements Kendrick A 1992 The Presidency of Woodrow Wilson University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0523 1 Edwards Mark 2000 Rethinking the Failure of Fundamentalist Political Antievolutionism after 1925 Fides et Historia 32 2 89 106 ISSN 0884 5379 PMID 17120377 Argues that fundamentalists thought they had won Scopes trial but death of Bryan shook their confidence Folsom Burton W 1999 No More Free Markets Or Free Beer The Progressive Era in Nebraska 1900 1924 Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 0014 1 Glad Paul W 1964 McKinley Bryan and the People Lippincott ISBN 9780397470488 OCLC 559539520 Hannigan Robert E The New World Power U of Pennsylvania Press 2013 2016 The Great War and American Foreign Policy 1914 24 Hohenstein Kurt 2000 William Jennings Bryan and the Income Tax Economic Statism and Judicial Usurpation in the Election of 1896 Journal of Law amp Politics 16 1 163 92 ISSN 0749 2227 Jeansonne Glen 1988 Goldbugs Silverites and Satirists Caricature and Humor in the Presidential Election of 1896 Journal of American Culture 11 2 1 8 doi 10 1111 j 1542 734X 1988 1102 1 x ISSN 0191 1813 Larson Edward 1997 Summer for the Gods The Scopes trial and America s continuing debate over science and religion New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 07509 6 Longfield Bradley J 2000 For Church and Country the Fundamentalist modernist Conflict in the Presbyterian Church Journal of Presbyterian History 78 1 34 50 ISSN 0022 3883 Puts Scopes in larger religious context Maddux Kristy Fundamentalist fool or populist paragon William Jennings Bryan and the campaign against evolutionary theory Rhetoric and Public Affairs 16 3 2013 489 520 Magliocca Gerard N 2011 The Tragedy of William Jennings Bryan Constitutional Law and the Politics of Backlash Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 20582 4 Mahan Russell L 2003 William Jennings Bryan and the Presidential Campaign of 1896 White House Studies 3 2 215 227 ISSN 1535 4768 Morton Richard Allen 2015 It Was Bryan and Sullivan Who did the Trick How William Jennings Bryan and Illinois Roger C Sullivan Brought About the Nomination of Woodrow Wilson in 1912 Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society vol 108 no 2 pp 147 81 Murphy Troy A 2002 William Jennings Bryan Boy Orator Broken Man and the Evolution of America s Public Philosophy Great Plains Quarterly 22 2 83 98 ISSN 0275 7664 Rove Karl 2015 The Triumph of William McKinley Why the Election of 1896 Still Matters Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 4767 5295 2 Detailed popular narrative of the entire campaign by Karl Rove a prominent 21st century Republican campaign advisor Scroop Daniel 2013 William Jennings Bryan s 1905 1906 World Tour PDF Historical Journal 56 2 459 486 doi 10 1017 S0018246X12000520 S2CID 159980462 Smith Willard H 1966 William Jennings Bryan and the Social Gospel The Journal of American History 53 1 41 60 doi 10 2307 1893929 JSTOR 1893929 Taylor Jeff 2006 Where did the party go William Jennings Bryan Hubert Humphrey and the Jeffersonian legacy Williams R Hal 2010 Realigning America McKinley Bryan and the Remarkable Election of 1896 University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 1721 0 Wood L Maren 2002 The Monkey Trial Myth Popular Culture Representations of the Scopes Trial Canadian Review of American Studies 32 2 147 64 doi 10 3138 CRAS s032 02 01 ISSN 0007 7720 S2CID 159954176 Writings by Bryan Edit Bryan William Jennings 1967 Ginger Ray ed William Jennings Bryan selections 259 pp The first battle a story of the campaign of 1896 campaign speeches 693 pp The Commoner Condensed annual compilation of The Commoner magazine full text online for 1901 1902 1903 1907 1907 1908 Bryan William Jennings 1907 The old world and its ways 560 pp At Project Gutenberg 1909 Bryan Mary Baird ed Speeches of William Jennings Bryan 1922 In His image 226 pp 1925 The Memoirs of William Jennings Bryan by himself and his wife 560 pp 1906 British Rule in IndiaExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Jennings Bryan Wikiquote has quotations related to William Jennings Bryan Wikisource has original works by or about William Jennings Bryan Biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Works by William Jennings Bryan at Project Gutenberg Works by or about William Jennings Bryan at Internet Archive Works by William Jennings Bryan at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Luke Schleif Bryan William Jennings in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War William Jennings Bryan cylinder recordings from the Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project at the University of California Santa Barbara Library The Deity of Christ paper by Bryan on the subject William Jennings Bryan Recognition Project WJBP William Jennings Bryan Presidential Contender from C SPAN s The ContendersU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byWilliam James Connell Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Nebraska s 1st congressional district1891 1895 Succeeded byJesse Burr StrodeParty political officesPreceded byGrover Cleveland Democratic nominee for President of the United States1896 1900 Succeeded byAlton B ParkerPreceded byJames B Weaver Populist nominee for President of the United StatesEndorsed1896 Succeeded byWharton BarkerPreceded byAlton B Parker Democratic nominee for President of the United States1908 Succeeded byWoodrow WilsonPolitical officesPreceded byPhilander C Knox United States Secretary of State1913 1915 Succeeded byRobert Lansing Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Jennings Bryan amp oldid 1153548791, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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