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' 1 




A^lJN^y^ I 



SKETCH 

OP THE 

LIFE AND CHARACTER 

OP 

Rutherford B. Hayes. 

By WM. D. HOWELLS. 



' ALSO A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF 

WILLIAM A. WHEELER. 

WITH PORTRAITS OF BOTH CANDIDATES 



NEW YORK: 

PUBLISHED BY HURD AND HOUGHTON. 

BOSTON: H. 0. HOUGHTON AND COMPANY. 

1876. 



CopraiaHT, 1876, 
Br W. D. UOWELLS 



•" •■'■•'.NO 



STKBKOTTPKD AND PBINTKD BT 
H. 0. HOUGHTON AND COMPANT. 



PEEFAOE. 



This book is my own enterprise, and has been in 
nowise adopted or patronized by the man whose life 
and character I have tried to portray. 

It differs chiefly from the biographies already before 
the public, in the large use made of original letters, 
diaries, note-books and scrap-books placed at my dis- 
posal without restriction and without instruction. In 
this use I have been guided solely by my own sense of 
fitness and my respect for the just limits of personality, 
on which I hope not to have trenched, though I might 
have printed every word of his, and only the more com- 
mended Rutherford B. Hayes to the honor and affec- 
tion of the people. 

Written within four weeks after the material came 
to my hand, the book has, I know, very many faults of 
haste ; but it was not in the power of any writer, how- 
ever hurried or feeble, wholly to obscure the interest of 
Uiat material ; and whatever is the result of the political 



IV PREFACE. 

contest, I cannot think that people will quickly forget 
the story of a life so true and high. 

I wish distinctly to say that General Hayes is re- 
sponsible for no comment or construction of mine upon 
any word or act of his ; and whatever is ambitious, or 
artificial, or unwise in my book is doubly my misfor- 
tune, for it is altogether false to him. 

W. D. HOWELLS. 
Caubridob, September 7, 1876. 



CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER L 

PAGl 
AilCESTBT AND CHILDHOOD 1 

CHAPTER n. 
CoLLSOfi Days U 

CHAPTER ni 
The Student in the Habyard Law School .... 21 

CHAPTER IV. 

Tsayels in New England and Texas, and First 
Years in Cincinnati 30 

CHAPTER V. 
First Public Services 47 

CHAPTER VL 
The Education op a Soldier ......... 53 

CHAPTER VIL 
The Camp on thb Kanawha and the Morgan Raid . 71 

CHAPTER Vin. 
Cloyd Mountain and Winchester 76 



VI CONTENTS. 

CHAPTER IX. 

PAOS 

Opequan, Fisheb's Hill, and Cedab Creek .... 87 

CHAPTER X. 

Twice Congressman, Thrice Gk)VERNOR, and Nominee 
FOR President 98 

CHAPTER XL 
Hayes's Political Positions and Opinions .... 121 

CHAPTER Xn. 

Character : Politician, Orator, Public Servant, 
Soldier, Citizen, Man 162 



LIFE AND CHARACTER 

OP 

. ETJTHEEFOED B. HATES. 

CHAPTER I. 

ANCESTRY AND CHILDHOOD. 

" The name of Hayes began by valor," wrote Mr. 
Ezekiel Hayes, of New Haven, scythe-maker, some- 
time in the last century ; and he goes on to tell how 
once, in a fight with the Danes, the retreating Scots 
came upon a husbandman and his two sons at work in 
the fields. '' Pull your plow and harrow to pieces and 
fight ! " said the father, and with this timely succor 
— more remarkable for quality than quantity — the 
Danes were beaten ; and lands were bestowed upon the 
father for his bravery. " This man (my father's 
grandfather, George Hayes)," continues the too zeal- 
ous genealogist, " went from Scotland to Derbyshire, 
in England, and lived with his uncle. He was anxious 
to see London, whither he went. Having received 
some account of America, he took passage and came to 
this country." 

It was in 1682 that George Hayes settled in Wind* 



fi THE CONNECTICUT HAYESES. 

•or, ConnooUout, at which time, according to the ir- 
WTOwnt computations of a modern descendant of Mr. 
Riokiol Hayes, the veteran must have been some seven 
hundred years old, since the battle in question took place 
about 980. But the brave tradition is^well found at 
least ; it was heartily accepted as part of the family 
annals by the early Puritan Hayeses of Connecticut, and 
its veracity ought not to be impeached because of their 
J confusion of mind respecting dates. It is, however, of 
small importance to us who hope to elect General 
Hayes President of the United States, how his name 
began in Scotland so long ago. It continues in valor, 
no matter how it began, and a man of his good New 
England ancestry has nothing to crave of the Herald's 
College. We hold rather by the Connecticut Hayeses 
than by those of Scotland, and we need but briefly con- 
cern ourselves with any of the forefathers of a man 
who is himself ancestor in the Napoleonic sense. 

Little is known of George Hayes, who emigrated in 
1682, beyond the fact that he settled first at Wind- 
sor and afterwards removed to that part of Simsbury 
which is now Granby. His son Daniel was taken by 
the Indians about the year 1712, and carried captive to 
Canada, whence he was ransomed by act of the Colo- 
nial Assembly appropriating " seven pounds to be paid 
out of the public treasury " for that purpose. What 
daim, if any, he had upon the colony's consideration, 
by reason of civic prominence or military service, is not 
asserted even by so ardent a genealogist as his son 
Eaiekiel, whom we have already quoted ; probably he 



BUTHERFOBD BIRCHARD HAYES. 3 

was a plain, brave fanner, fighting in defense of his 
home, and was ranson:ied according to a general custom 
of the time, upon his " praying for some relief." It is 
known that he came home to Simsbury, and died there 
in 1756 ; but his son Ezekiel removed to New Haven, 
where the first Rutherford ^ Hayes, grandfather of our 
candidate, was born. This Rutherford was in due 
time apprenticed to a blacksmith, and, removing from 
New Haven first to New Hampshire and then to 
West Brattleborough, Vermont, he wrought at his trade 
there many years in a forge which the people built 
to welcome him, and became a man of substance, a 
farmer and innkeeper, dying in 1836, the father of 
eleven children. The fifth of these, Rutherford, was 
an active and enterprising spirit, and he was already 
a thrifty farmer and merchant when, in 1817, the 
West, which was even then beginning to be the Great 
West, tempted his energies. He emigrated to Dela- 
ware, Ohio, bought land, established himself in pros- 
perous business, and five years later died of a typhoid 
fever, leaving a wife and two children. Some three 
months after, on the 4th of October, 1822, a son was 
born to him, and the widow called the child's name 
Rutherford Birchard Hates, in memory of the 
father whose loss was yet so terribly new, and in grate- 
ful affection for that most loving brother ^ who was 

1 The surname of an ancestor on the female side, who came to New 
Haven in 1643, and from whose daughter's marriage proceed the New 
Haven Trowbridges. 

* Sardis Birchard, who died a few years since, at Fremont, Ohio. 
He had lived anmarried, and in the course of a long life had amassed 



4 FAMILY NAMES. 

thereafter a tender and devoted guardian of her father- 
less children. 

It is of this Rutherford Birchard Hayes that the 
present sketch treats, with an inadequacy which the 
reader may feel, though he cannot know the keen re- 
gret of the writer, whom the rich material in the 
family records, the letters, and the diaries placed at his 
service tempts to a work far beyond the scope and 
limits of this. 

The Hayeses of the colonial times, from whom we 
have here traced Rutherford B. Hayes's descent in the 
direct line, were a strong, brave, simple race, following 
the plow, wielding the hammer, and hewing out their 
way as plain men must in a new land. After the first 
emigrant, George Hayes, of Scotland, who may have 
been of a less rigid faith, they seem to have taken 
the prevailing tint of Connecticut Puritanism — alwavs 
less blue than it has been painted ; and thereafter, 
till Rutherford's time, the evangelists, and the judges, 
the prophets, and the kings of Israel supply the serious 
names of their Daniels, Ezekiels, Aarons, Joels, Mar- 
thas, Zilpahs, and Rebeccas; there was, indeed, one 
Silence Hayes of the third generation, but the conces- 
sion to imagination in her name is not in the liveliest 
spirit, and, considering that she was a woman, might 

a large property, which General Hayes inherits. He was a man not 
only of good heart and of great practical force of character, bat of the 
best public spirit and of cultivated tastes. He gave a library and a 
park to the town of Fremont, and left to his nephew a gallery of pict- 
ures including works by some of the best American and modern 
French and German painters. 



A NOTED ANCESTOR. 6 

appear a stroke of that grim irony which the auster- 
est faith permits itself. So far as we can learn, the 
Hayeses were never in public station and never en- 
joyed uncommon social distinction. But they had 
qualities of a sort apt, in an honest and thrifty stock, 
when the moment comes, to flower into greatness ; and 
they had the gift, not yet extinct in their line, of win- 
ning superior women for their wives, through whom 
they united themselves with families of worth, learn- 
ing, and piety. Ezekiel married a Russell, of those 
Russells who, first sojourning in Cambridge after their 
emigration from England, followed the Reverend Mr. 
Hooker into the Connecticut wilderness, when its first 
church troubles distracted our good town. They re- 
mained men of character and of a consideration which 
their Connecticut descendants still enjoy ; but none has 
80 distinct a claim upon our honor as that son of the 
original emigrant who concealed the fugitive Regicides 
at Hadley many year% and of whom it is written by 
the town historiographer, " He feared not to do what 
he thought to be right.*' 

In his turn, Rutherford, the son of Daniel, wedded 
Chloe Smith, the daughter of Israel Smith, originally of 
Hadley, Massachusetts, but at the time of his daughter's 
marriage a principal citizen of Southwestern Vermont. 
The first of the family out of England was Leftenant 
Samuel Smith, who left his native town of Ipswich 
in 1663 and settled in Connecticut, where he was for 
twelve years a member of the Colonial Assembly. 
After his removal to Hadley, where he died in great 



6 ISRAEL SMITH. 

esteem, he held many public trusts and was often chosen 
to the General Court The family was always one of 
local distinction and unusual culture, and in a later 
generation one of Chloe's uncles went from college to 
preach to the Indians in Pennsylvania. He and one 
of his brothers, from becoming Sandemanians (^ I don't 
know as there is any such in the country now,*' con- 
fesses Chloe Hayes in her diary, " nor do I know what 
their belief is") became loyalists, and fled to Nova 
Scotia at the outbreak of the Revolution ; but Chloe's 
father, Israel, was a staunch Whig and served under 
Washington, by whom he was entrusted with the arrest 
of certain Tories of that day, suspected of intriguing 
with the British in Vermont. He had lands specially 
granted him for his services, and he was one of three 
commissioners appointed to take charge of the property 
of refugee Tories ; he was also a prominent partisan of 
the State of New York in her disputes with the new 
State of Vermont; he was employed on much public 
business connected with that now forgotten controversy, 
and he and his son-in-law both received lands from the 
grateful elder commonwealth. 

Chloe Smith was the eldest of nine children, and, 
becoming the mother of eleven, lived to so great an 
age as to have left upon the memory of many surviv- 
ing grandchildren and great-grandchildren the personal 
impression of her strong and resolute character, and her 
rugged Puritan virtues, tempered and softened by aes- 
thetic gifts amounting almost to genius. It is to her that 
her posterity are fond of ascribing in vast measure what- 



CHLOE SMITH HAYES. 7 

ever is best in their hereditary traits, and she certainly 
merits more than passing notice in the most carsory 
characterization of her grandson. Above all and first 
of all she was deeply religious, after the fashion of the 
days that we now think so grim, and she set her duty 
to Grod, as she knew it, before every earthly concern 
and affection. With a devotion almost as deep, she 
dedicated her days to incessant work, and her toil often 
saved the spirit that faltered in its religious gloom. 
She ros» early and wrought late, as the wife of a 
farmer and innkeeper, and the mother of eleven chil- 
dren, must, and as a woman of her temperament 
would ; and she was as intolerant of idleness in others 
as in herself. Even the great-grandchildren had their 
tasks set them in their visits to this inveterate worker, 
who could not rest from her labors after eighty years. 
She was a famous cook, and the triumphs of her skill 
at Thanksgivings and other sufferable holidays were no 
less her own pride than the solace of her guests. But 
she shone even more in needle- work and the now ob- 
solete arts of the wheel and loom. " She knit more 
stockings, mittens, and gloves, wove more rag carpets, 
spun and wove more cloth, elaborated more wonderful 
rugs, lamp-mats, and bags, than any other woman of 
her generation," writes one of her grandsons ; and the 
reminiscence of a granddaughter, at once touching and 
amusing, gives the color of the Puritanism which 
steeped in fear and misgiving the indulgence of such 
love of beauty as she permitted herself. " I spoke of 
her passion for worsted work. I have heard her say 



8 A QUAINT DIARY. 

that Saturday afternoon she put it all into her work- 
basket, and pushed it under the bed as far as she could ; 
then, taking out her prosy knitting-work, she tried to 
get it all out of her mind for Sunday ! '* Yet she was 
a true artist in this passion ; her devices in worsted were 
her greatest delight, and she studied them from nature, 
going into her garden and copying the leaf or flower 
she meant to embroider.^ She had an almost equal 
passion for flowers, for which, doubtless, she suffered 
the same qualms. In her old age she kept a diary, 
which remains to her descendants and completely re- 
flects her stern, resolute, duteous. God-fearing, yet most 
tender and loving soul. In a sketch of family history, 
with which she prefaces her journals, she laments, with 
a simple pathos which no words can reproduce with- 
out the context, her possible error in setting work and 
duty before some other things. " My husband .... 
would sometimes say, ' The horse is standing in the barn, 
doing nothing. We will go and ride ; it 's no matter 
whether we stop anywhere.' But I would say, * I can't 
leave my work.* So he would not go, or go alone. 
Oh, now I would say to every woman that has a good 
husband. Enjoy them while they are spared to you, or 
it will grieve you to the heart when it is too late — 
when all is over ! " But this cry of regret, in a sor- 
row as keen as if the husband she had lost had been 

1 Most of her grandchildren inherited her artistic skill ; among her 
great-grandchildren are Larkin G\ Mead, the sculptor, and his brother, 
John Mead, who died in his Junior year at Harvard, and had already 
given promise in art. A series of lithographs illustrating student 
life were published after his death. 



GENEBAL HAYES'S MOTHEB. 9 

oat off in his prime, aud not. in the f uUness of his 
eighty years, is almost the sole expression of misgiving 
in a diary to which she confesses everythiog, commits 
every hope, fear, doubt, and imparts every mood of her 
soul. The faded pages, recording so vividly a type of 
high character which has passed away with the chang- 
ing order of things, are of almost unique interest, but 
this is not the time or place to explore them. Work, 
faith, duty, self-sacrifice, continual self-abasement in 
the presence of the Divine perfection, are the ideal of 
life which they embody — the old New England ideal. 
It was a stem and unlovely thing often in its real- 
ization ; it must have made gloomy weeks and terrible 
Sabbaths ; but out of the true stuff it shaped charac- 
ter of insurpassable uprightness and strength. It is to 
the indomitable will, the tireless industry, the rectitude, 
the whole, ever-vigilant conscience, which it fostered 
in his austere ancestress, that this man of our choice 
doubtless owes the virtues on which our hopes rest. 
From other progenitors come the genial traits, the fine 
and joyous humor, the quick cordiality, the amiable 
presence, which a superficial observation has mistaken 
for the whole man ; but from her the keen sarcasm, the 
active intellect, the ever-present sense of duty, the im- 
movable purpose, the practical religiousness, now no 
longer bound to creeds but fully surviving in the 
blameless and useful life. 

The mother of General Hayes was Sophia Birchard, 
whose family had removed from Connecticut to Ver- 
mont near the close of the last century. She too has 



10 EARLY CHILDHOOD. 

left a diary, in which we recognize many of the same 
religious traits so strongly marked in her mother- 
in-law. The circumstances of her widowhood, in the 
strange new country (Mrs. Chloe Hayes, on her daugh- 
ter's departure for the West, speaks of her " leaving her 
native land," as if " the Ohio," so called in that day, 
were some unattainable foreign strand) whither she had 
followed her husband, no doubt tended to deepen the 
sad aspects of her faith at the expense of those happier 
hereditary instincts which in her brother became a 
strong love of art. She and her husband united with 
the Presbyterian Church, — the Western Puritanism, — 
and their children were reared in that faith, but the 
sole survivor of her family is not now a member of the 
sect in question, nor of any other, though a regular at- 
tendant, with his wife, at the Methodist services. Not 
many years after her husband's death, their oldest son 
was drowned, and there remained to the widowed 
mother only two of her children: a brother and sister, 
who grew up in a friendship most tender and affection- 
ate on her par6, and of passionate reverence and admi- 
ration on his. In a manuscript memoir of this adored 
sister, which must be sacred from more than a passing 
allusion. General Hayes recorded, shortly after her 
death, the simple facts of their early childhood in Del- 
aware. It is now a pretty town of some eight thousand 
souls, seat of a Methodist college, and deriving its pros- 
perity chiefly from one of the richest farming regions 
of Central Ohio. Its situation on the borders of the 
Olentangy is charmingly picturesque, and the painter 



DESIRE FOR BOOKS. 11 

Griswold drew his first inspirations from the surpass- 
ingly lovely country in which it lies. At the early 
period of which the memoir treats, the land was yet 
new, though the pioneer period had quite passed. 
Mrs. Hayes dwelt in a substantial brick house in the 
village, and drew a large part of her income from a 
farm left her by her husband in the neighborhood. 
Besides the guardianship of her brother, she had in 
the care of her children and house the help of one 
of those faithful friends whom it is cruel to call serv- 
ants, and whom in this case the children both re- 
garded with filial affection. But life in that time 
and country was necessarily very simple ; this early 
home was in no sense an establishment; when the 
faithful Asenath married and set up for herself in 
life, the mother and the sister did all the work of the 
household themselves. The greatest joys of a happy 
childhood were the visits the brother and sister made 
to the farm in the sugar season, in cherry time, at cider- 
making, and when the walnuts and hickory-nuts were 
ripe ; and its greatest cross was the want of children's 
books, with which the village lawyer's family was sup- 
plied. When their uncle Birchard began in business 
he satisfied their hearts' desire for this kind of litera- 
ture, and books of a graver and maturer sort seem al- 
ways to have abounded with them. They read Hume's 
and Smollett's English history together ; the sister of 
twelve years interpreted Shakespeare to the brother of 
ten ; they read the poetry of Mr. Thomas Moore (then 
80 much finer and grander than now), and they paid 



IS HIS sister's influenge. 

NIr Wttltor Scott the tribute of dramatizing together 
hU " \,n\\y of the Lake," and were duly astonished and 
i1inttiH)-pit to louru afterwards that they were not the 
biiIp lMVni»ti»rn of tho dramatization of poems, — that 
»»vph iIipIi' Hiltttlit'd " l-ndy of the Lake" had long been 
UpMH I Up uttt^p. *l'ho inthionce of an elder sister upon 
tt ^t^tmhtMH M\\\ m\\\\y hoy im always very great ; and it 
\^ \fS\%p\\ to thU nUtorV unfuiliiig instincts and ardent 
t^MttntftirtuM) fo»M»ookn thwt hor hnUhor owes his life-long 
|*l»irt«>M»^ \\\ th«* Imul Ihrmiuiv. Slio not only read with 
\\\\\\t fthp AtMUitM At homo tlio 8iuno lessons in Latin 
rtH»1 UippK whioh h«^ in^oltod privately to a gentleman of 
thi> plnod i fiho longod to ho a boy, that she might go to 
imlU^^o with htiui In tho futilo way she must, so remote 
fi'Mtu hII luHtr\totloit, Mho HtiH)vo to improve herself in 
th'iiwlhg nud palutlug. One of their first school-mas- 
torn wan Duniol (Granger, "a little, thin, wiry Yankee," 
o( terrible presence but of good enough heart, whom 
•* tlie love he bore to learning " obliged to flog boys 
of twice his own bulk, with furious threats of throw- 
ing them through the school-house walls, and of mak- 
ing them "dance like parched peas," — which dreadful 
behavior and menaces rendered " all the younger chil- 
dren horribly afraid of him," and perhaps did not so 
mu*.h advance the brother's and sister's education as 
their private studies and reading had done: that is 
frequently the result of a too athletic zeal for letters 
on the part of instructors. The children were not 
separated for any length of time until the brother's 
fourteenth year, when he went away to the Academy 



AN IRREPARABLE ^OSS. 13 

at Norwalk, Ohio, aijd after that they were little to- 
gether daring his preparation for college in Middle- 
town, Connecticut, and his college years at Kenyon 
College, Ohio. But throughout this time they wrote 
regularly to each other ; she took the deepest interest 
in all his studies, their devoted affection continued in 
their maturer life, and when her death parted them it 
left him with the sorrow of an irreparable loss. 



CHAPTER n. 

COLLEGE DATS. 

It was the wish of his preceptor at Middletown that 
Hayes should enter Yale College. " I was educated 
there myseK," writes the worthy Mr. Isaac Webb, in 
a letter to the boy's mother, most commendatory of 
her son, " and feel a strong attachment to the institu- 
tion ; and I know its advantages He says he 

has perhaps given you an exaggerated idea of the 
expenses of Yale College. The necessary expenses, in- 
cluding everything except clothing and pocket-money, 
range from $150 to $200 only,'* — which the frugalest 
mother would not think very exorbitant even now. 
Then the writer adds testimony on a certain point in 
which our candidate has been painfully contrasted 
with the agricultural simplicity of Mr. Tilden : " I tell 
Rutherford that plain, decent dress is as much re- 
spected at New Haven as anywhere else ; and a dandy 
is as much despised, and as great an object of ridicule 
and contempt, as he is in Ohio. I think Rutherford 
is judicious in his taste, and has as little ambition to 
be a fop as any of the rest of us." That such a man 
should in after life abandon himself to the excesses 
of fashion would, if true, be a fact really regrettable, 



AT KENYON COLLEGE. 15 

except as the sole refage of opponents who have found 
nothing else to allege against him. 

It was settled, however, that Hayes should enter col- 
lege in his native State, and he was therefore exam- 
ined for the Freshman class at Kenyon College, Gam- 
bier, Ohio, in November, 1838. Possibly because of 
his fitness for entering an institution of severer re- 
quirements, he records his passing the examination, 
and considers his Freshman studies at Kenyon with 
a coolness approaching nonchalance; and his fellow- 
students of that day remember his overflowing jollity 
and drollery more distinctly than his ardor in study, 
though his standing was always good. Even in the 
serious .shades of Middletown his mirthful spirit and 
his love of humor bubbled over into his exercise books, 
where his translations from Homer are interspersed with 
mock-heroic law-pleas in Western courts, evidently tran- 
scribed from newspapers, and every sort of grotesque 
extravagance in prose or rhyme. The increased dig- 
nity of a collegian seems to have rebuked this school- 
boyish fondness for crude humor : a commonplace- 
book of the most unexceptionable excerpts from classic 
authors of various languages records the taste of this 
time, and the reflections on abstract questions in 
young Hayes's journals are commonly of that final 
wisdom which the experience of mankind has taught 
us to expect in the speculations of Freshmen and 
Sophomores. They are good fellows, hearty, happy, 
running over with pranks and jests, and joyous and 
original in everything but their philosophy, which must 



16 FIRST STUDIES OF CHARACTER. 

be forgiven them for the sake of the many people who 
remain Sophomores all their lives. Hayes was a boy 
who loved all honest, manly sports. He was a capital 
shot with the rifle, and he allotted a due share of his 
time to hunting, as well as fishing, — to which he was 
even more devoted, — swimming, and skating. Shortly 
after he went to Kenyon he records that he broke 
through the ice where the water was eight feet deep, 
and " was not scared much." His companions helped 
him out "without much trouble," and he adds, with 
something like indignant scorn, " I could have got up 
without any help." At Christmas time he walked forty 
miles home to Delaware in twelve hours, and after 
Christmas walked back to Gambler in four inches of 
snow. 

There are few incidents, and none of importance, 
set down in these early journals. What distinguishes 
them from other collegian diaries, and gives them their 
peculiar value in any study of the man, is the evi- 
dence they afford of his life-long habit of rigid self- 
accountability and of close, shrewd study of character 
in others. At the end of his third year he puts in 
writing his estimate of the traits, talents, and pros- 
pects of his fellow-students ; and in a diary opened at 
the same time he begins those searching examinations 
of his own motives, purposes, ideas, and aspirations 
without which no man can know other men. These in- 
quiries are not made by the young fellow of nineteen 
in any spirit of dreamy or fond introspection ; him- 
self interests him, of course, but he is not going to give 



EARLY ASPIRATIONS AND INTROSPECTIONS. 17 

himself any quarter on that account : he has got to 
stand up before his own conscience, and be judged for 
his suspected conceit, for his procrastinations, for his 
neglect of several respectable but disagreeable branches 
of learning, for his tendency to make game of a certain 
young college poet who supposes himself to look like 
Byron; for his fondness, in -fine, for trying the edge of 
his wit upon all the people about him. Upon consid- 
eration he reaches the conclusion that he is not a per- 
son of genius, and that if he is to succeed he must work 
hard, and make the very most of the fair abilities with 
which he accredits himself. He has already chosen his 
future profession, and he is concerned about his slip- 
shod style, and his unreadiness of speech, which will 
never do for an orator. He is going to look carefully 
to his literature, and he takes an active interest in the 
literary societies of the college ; about this time also he 
is one of " a few select friends " who found a club 
having for its stately object " the promotion of firm and 
enduring friendship among its members,'* and though 
he doubts whether the friendships thus systematically 
promoted will endure much beyond the graduation of 
the allies, he will do what he can for the club. He 
has to accuse himself at the mature age of nineteen of 
being still a boy in many things ; even after he is 
legally a man, he shrewdly suspects, the law will have 
somewhat deceived itself in regard to him. He also 
finds that he is painfully bashful in society, but that 
great relief may be found by making fun of his own 
embarrassments. It is a frank, simple, generous reo- 
2 



18 POLITICAL IDEAS AT NINETEEN. 

ord, unconscious even in its consciousness, and full 
of the most charming qualities of heart and mind. No- 
where is the trace of any low ideal or sordid motive ; 
nowhere the self -betrayal of an egoistic or narrow spirit. 
There is uncommonly little of the rhetoric of youth- 
fulness ; a good sense, as kindly-hearted as it is hard- 
headed, characterizes the boy's speculations and aspira- 
tions and criticisms. The ancestral tendency to exam- 
ine, consider, accuse, approve, or blame the springs of 
thought and action is here in accumulated force, but 
the trial goes on through all the diaries, not so much 
with regard to' duty to God, as in the case of the Puri- 
tan diarist, but duty to one's self and to other men ; the 
stand-point is moral, not spiritual ; the aim is to be a 
good man of this world. Not that the young fellow 
has any doubts of the theology in which he has been 
reared ; he writes with large satisfaction of how he has 
labored to show a fellow-student the folly of skepticism. 
As for political affairs, he does not, he affirms, take 
any interest in them. He intends to be a lawyer and 
to let politics alone. Yet he cannot help saying in 
1841 that the Whigs " should be careful how they 
hazard all by casting loose from John Tyler for a con- 
scientious discharge of duty " in vetoing the Bank Bill. 
*' I was never more rejoiced than when it was ascer- 
tained that Harrison's election was certain. I hoped 
that we should then have a stable currency of uniform 
value," — a hope to which thirty-five years later he is 
still loyal, — " but since Tyler has vetoed one way of 
accomplishing this, I would not hesitate to try others.** 



TAKING A STAND FOR LIFE. 19 

A little later we find that he has ^^ aspirations which he 
woald not conceal from himself," and of which one 
may readily infer the political nature from what fol- 
lows. But what follows is more important for the re- 
lation it bears to his whole career, than for the light 
it throws upon any part of it. " The reputation which 
I desire is not that momentary eminence which is gained 
without merit and lost without regret," he says with a 
collegian's swelling antithesis ; and then solidly places 
himself in the attitude from which he has never since 
faltered : " Give me the popularity that runs after, not 
that which is sought for.*' So early was the principle of 
his political life fixed and formulated! Every ofiice 
that he has held has sought him; at every step of 
his advancement popularity, the only sort he cared to 
have, has followed him ; he is and has always been a 
leader of the people's unprompted choice. 

He has much to say, from time to time, of the pro- 
fession which he has determined to adopt, and he tries 
to measure, as a college lad may, the difficulties before 
him. Success will be hard, very hard, and will cobae 
only of long and patient endeavor ; he knows that, but 
he is not dismayed ; nor when he casually listens to the 
arguments " of some of the first lawyers of the State," 
in the United States Circuit CJourt, is he out of heart. 
" They did not equal my expectations ; some were in- 
deed most excellent, yet none were so superior as to 
discourage one from striving to equal them." He 
never disparages any antagonist or difficulty, but he 
quietly takes account of his own powers, and decides 



20 LAW STUDIES AT COLUMBUS. 

that he can probably stand up against the worst. That 
is Rutherford Hityes at nineteen, and that is Ruther- 
ford Hayes at fifty-four. 

In spite of the misgivings he has had concerning his 
scholarship, and in spite of the ridicule which his diary 
heaps upon college exhibitions, he is the valedictorian 
of his graduating class ; and then, after a few weeks' in- 
terval, he begins his legal studies in the office of Messrs. 
, Sparrow and Matthews, prominent lawyers in Colum- 
bus, in the year 1842. Thereafter his diary is largely 
concerned with the progress he makes, or fails to make, 
in Blackstone, Chitty, and the rest ; and with what he 
is doing in German, which be has taken up with his 
customary vigor. He has to lament that, besides read- 
ing such good literature as Milton and Shakespeare, he 
spends his leisure in reading a great deal of trash ; he 
deplores the unprofitable fascination of the newspapers; 
and he presently sets down his " rules for the month," 
which, as he never was a prig in his life, we may 
safely suppose he regularly violated : — 

" First, Read no newspapers. 

" Second, Rise at seven and retire at ten. 

" Third, Study law six hours, Grerman two, and Ch. 
two. 

" Fourth, In reading * Black.'s C'y,' to record my 
difficulties." 

There is not the slightest record of these difficulties. 
In fact, the scene abruptly changes from Columbus, and 
the next entry is made at Cambridge, in August, 1843. 



CHAPTER HI. 

THE STUDENT IN THE HARYABD LA.W SCHOOL. 

Hayes had been ten months in the office of Messrs. 
Sparrow and Matthews when it was decided that he 
should enter the Harvard Law School, where the spe- 
cial advantages to which he looked forward were " the 
instructions of those eminent jurists and teachers, Story 
and Greenleaf." Within the first week he has found 
that he likes the institution, professors, and students ; he 
likes his room-mate. Hedges of Tiffin ; he likes his as 
sociates, mostly " Buckeyes," like himself. He is in 
state of hopeful and joyous content with everybody 
and everything but himself. His irresolution, his neg- 
lect of opportunities, ought to grieve him, but he is 
perfectly cheerful in spite of his regrets, and he be- 
gins at once to sketch the lectures and lecturers, and 
first of all Judge Story and his introductory remarks. 
'^ He spoke at some length of the advantage and ne- 
cessity of possessing complete control of the temper, 
illustrating his view with anecdotes of his own experi- 
ence and observation. His manner is very pleasant, 
betraying great good-humor and fondness for jesting. 
His most important directions were : Keep a constant 
guard upon temper and tongue. Always have in read- 



22 ' GBEENLEAF AND STORY. 

iness some of those unmeaning but respectful formula- 
ries as, 'per ex,, * The learned gentleman on the opposite 
side,' ' My learned friend opposite,' etc. When in the 
library, employ yourself in reading the title-pages and 
table of contents of the books of reports which it con- 
tains, and endeavor to get some notion of their relative 
value. Read Blackstone again and again — incompa- 
rable for the beauty and chasteness of its style, the 
amount and profundity of its learning." 

" We have no formal lectures," he writes after the end 
of the first week. " Professors Story and Greenleaf 
illustrate and explain as they proceed. Mr. G. is very 
searching and logical in examination. • It is impossible 
for one who has not studied the text to escape expos- 
ing his ignorance ; he keeps the subject constantly in 
view, never stepping out of his way for the purpose of 
introducing his own experience. Judge Story, on the 
other hand, is very general in his questions, so that per- 
sons well skilled in nods affirmative, and negative shak- 
ings of the head, need never more than glance at the 
text to be able to answer his interrogatories. He is 
very fond of digressions to introduce amusing anec- 
dotes, high-wrought eulogies of the sages of the law, 
and fragments of his own experience. He is generally 
very interesting, and often quite eloquent. His man- 
ner of speaking is almost precisely like that of Corwin. 
In short, as a lecturer he is a very different man from 
what you would expect of an old and eminent judge ; 
not but that he is great, but he is so interesting and 
fond of good stories. His amount of knowledge is 



story's versatility and fflGH-MINDEDNESS. 28 

prodigious. Talk of * many irons in the fire ' ! Why, 
he keeps up with the news of the day of all sorts, 
from political to Wellerisms, and new works of all sorts 
he reads at least enough to form an opinion of, and all 
the while enjoys himself with a flow of spirits equal to 
a school-boy in the holidays. So ho ! the measures of 
literature are not so small after all ! " 

He quotes from Judge Story, whose enthusiasm for 
Chief Justice Marshall all the old graduates of the 
Harvard Law School remember, the belief that Mar- 
shall was "the growth of a century. Providence 
grants such men to the human family only on great 
occasions. ..... Such men are found only when our 

need is the greatest; " and the diarist gives, from one of 
Judge Story's discursive addresses, a personal reminis- 
cence which affords a glimpse, too valuable to be lost, 
of the noble and lofty mind whose ideals and impulses 
found a quick response in that of his unknown young 
listener: — 

" When a young lawyer, I was told by a member of 
the bar at which I practiced, who was fifteen years my 
senior in the profession, that he wished to consult me 
in a case of conscience. Said he, ' You are a young 
man, and I can trust you. I viTant an opinion ; the case 
is this : I am engaged in an important cause, my adver- 
sary is an obstinate, self-willed, self-sufiicient man, and 
I have him completely in my power. I can crush his 
whole case ; it is in my hand, and he does not know it, 
does not suspect it. I can gain the case by taking ad- 
vantage of this man's ignorance and overweening oonfi- 



24 EFFECT UPON HAYES. 

dence. Now the point is, shall I do it ? ' I answered, 
* I think not' * I think not, too,' he replied. * I have 
determined to go into court to-morrow, show him his 
error, and set him right' He did it. This was forty- 
five years ago, but I have never forgotten that act nor 
that man. He is still living, and I have looked upon 
him and his integrity as beyond all estimate. I would 
trust him with untold millions, nay, with life, with 
reputation, with all that is dear." 

Judge Story, indeed, seems to have had a far greater 
influence than any other professor, at this time, on 
the young Ohio student, who sets down so diligently 
the characteristic points of the great jurist's discoursej*. 
The two men, with all the vast disparity of their years, 
traditions, opportunities, and experiences, had so many 
principles in bommon that the younger could not but 
follow the elder mind in quick and admiring sympathy. 
They had the same high purposes, balanced and ordered 
by the same cool good sense ; they both regarded noble 
ideals of their profession in the same practical way, and 
found them practicable. Whatever law was lost upon 
Hayes in Story's lectures (and it is certain that he was 
never the negligent student he too rigorously thinks 
himself from time to time), no lesson concerning the 
humanity, the grandeur, the rights and duties of the 
conscientious lawyer's life, whs wasted in his hearing. 
He is even glad to find that his law library, which cost 
$300, is sufiicient for all legal necessities according to 
Judge Story, who has been saying that $10,000 would 
furnish sucli a library abundantly, and $3000 con- 



STORY'S ADVICE TO STUDENTS. 25 

Toniently; and he is proud to record all the facts in 
the professor's knowledge which elevate his vocation. 
" Lawyers, so far as his observation extended, were 
more eminent for morality and a nice sense of honor 
than any other class of men. They have the most im- 
portant and delicate secrets intrusted to them ; they 
have more power of doing mischief, and are more in- 
strumental in liealing family dissensions, neighborhood 
feuds, and general ill-blood, than any other profession." 
He gives a synopsis of Story's closing lecture for the 
term, in which the students were urged to lay a broad 
and deep foundation of legal reading ; to remember 
that the law was a jealous mistress, and to have nothing 
to do with the charmer Politics before forty ; to use 
their young hopes, desires, confidence, ambition, and en- 
ergy only for useful and noble ends ; and were assured 
that their master had a pride and interest beyond their 
conception in their future success. " Pshaw ! " the dia- 
rist feels constrained to add at the close of his entry, 
" how my haste (indecent !) spoils the Old Man Elo- 
quent I " 

Life had opened at Cambridge in a richness and 
variety which was vastly interesting to the eager, 
quick-witted, whole-hearted young Westerner, and he 
strove to take in as much of it as he could. The 
child who had read Shakespeare at eleven with his 
young sister, out in the new Ohio country, remote from 
literature, the youth who had nourished his love of 
letters all through his college-days upon the best En- 



26 LONGFELLOW: BANCROFT; SPARKS. DANA. 

glish poets and essayists, the law student who takes up 
Grerman with his Blackstone and keeps his Shake- 
speare and Milton fresh along with his law -reports 
and Chitty, and finds even his love of lighter literature 
allowed and encouraged by the example of Justice 
Story, now comes, at Cambridge, face to face with au- 
thorship for the first time, and sees and hears the men 
whose books have been his friends. He has the great 
pleasure, long denied us Cantabrigians of later times, 
of hearing Mr. Longfellow lecture, now on Anglo- 
Saxon literature, now on Goethe, now on other sub- 
jects in the range of his professorship, and is vastly 
content with **his style, manner, and matter." He 
hears Mr. Bancroft address a Democratic meeting in 
Boston ; he hears President Sparks lecture on colonial 
history, and the younger Dana on American loyalty ; 
he goes often to hear Dr. Walker, of whose sermons 
he never fails to give the drift, or to testify to his 
great enjoyment in them ; going to the theatre for the 
first time in his life, he sees Macready in Hamlet. 

But in spite of many virtuous resolutions and protesta- 
tions to the contrary, Hayes takes a predominant inter- 
est in politics, in public men, and public affairs. He 
fulfills all the duties of the law student ; he is instant 
at all lectures, and a conscientious reader of law ; he 
belongs to a law club and a debating club ; he is busy 
in the Moot Court ; but he cannot keep away from the 
political meetings at which Webster, and Choate, and 
John Quincy Adams, and Winthrop, and Bancroft are 



REGRETS UPON CLAY'S DEFEAT. 27 

speaking. He listens, sketches, and judges them alL-^ 
But all this interest in politics came to the end which 
was so tragical with the young Whigs of 1844. Their 
support of Henry Clay was a generous passion ; his 
defeat was almost a heart-break. "I would start in 
the world without a penny," writes Hayes on the 9th 
of November, " if by my sacrifice Clay could be elected 
President. Not that the difiEerence to the country is 
likely to be great, in my opinion ; but then, to 4;hink 
that so good and great a man should be defeated ! 
Slandered as he has been, it would have been such a 
triumph to have elected him. But it cannot be," he 
continues with as hot a regret as if it were a personal 
sorrow. "Now I must withdraw my thoughts from 
party politics, and apply my whole energies to the 
law." 

At Cambridge Hayes had been not only pursuing his 
law studies ; he had been keeping up his German, and 
reviewing his French and Greek, as well as widening 
his acquaintance with literature in all directions. The 
continual strain began to tell upon his health, although 
from many self-accusing entries in his journal the 
reader might infer that he was anything but a diligent 
student. He proposes, in the six weeks' vacation fol- 
lowing the spring of 1844, to throw his books aside en- 
tirely for a season. " Since I commenced the study of 
the law I have taken no sufficient recreation." He 

1 " I heard some speakers in Marlboro' Chapel address the Whigs 
of Boston,*' he writes on one occasion. "They were good speakers. 
but no better than the good speakers of Ohio.** 



28 LAW PARTNERSHIP ; FAILING HEALTH. 

spent this vacation at Columbus, with his family, and 
returned again to Cambridge in the fall. Shortly after, 
he graduated from the law school and went to begin 
the practice of his profession in Lower Sandusky, now 
Fremont, Ohio. There he formed a partnership with 
Mr. Ralph P. Buckland, since a well-known public 
man in Ohio, and the colleague of Hayes in Congress. 
The co-partnership was of brief duration. Hayes had 
not yet taken the recreation he had so long denied 
himself, and he began to pay the penalty of overwork. 
His health gave way entirely ; he had even the pre- 
monitions of consumption, and there was nothing for it 
but to make an absolute change. 



CHAPTER IV. 

TRAVELS IN NEW ENGLAND AND TEXAS, AND FIUST 
TEARS IN CINCINNATI. 

In June, 1847, Hayes had resolved to go to Mexico 
and take any part in the conduct of the war that could 
be assigned to the sort of detached volunteer he pro- 
posed to be. His failing health obliged him to give up 
his profession, and it seems to have been his reluctance 
to appear idle, rather than his desire to fight in that 
unjust cause, on which he acted. " I have no views 
about war other than those of the best Christians," he 
writes, " and my opinion of this war with Mexico is 
that which is common to the Whigs of the North, — 
Tom Corwin and his admirers, of whom I am one." 
He even went so far as to join, or take the first 
steps towards joining, a company of volunteers going 
from Fremont. He consented, however, at the urgence 
of his friends, to take medical advice before finally de- 
ciding ; his physician in Cincinnati resolutely forbade 
his enterprise, and ordered him to go not South but 
North. He very unwillingly gave up the design on 
which he had set his mind, but he obeyed, and spent the 
next sununer in New England and Canada, camping 
out in the mountains, and visiting all the scenes of that 



30 SOJOURN IN TEXAS. 

family history which attached him so warmly to tho 
East. The journey failed to restore his broken health, 
and he recurred to his former purpose of going South, 
but he had now relinquished his design of taking part 
in a war offensive to the political and moral ideas of a 
Corwin Whig. 

Among the college acquaintance whose characters he 
had sketched in his first diary was the young Texan, 
Guy M. Bryan, of whom Hayes recorded, with boyish 
admiration and tenderness, '' He is a real gentleman, 
holds his honor dear, respects the wishes and feelings of 
others, is a warm and constant friend. Has good tal- 
ents He will, I trust, figure largely in Texan 

history ; he is a true patriot." The two friends had 
never lost sight of each other ; and in the Rebellion 
they met in arms on opposing sides. But in 1847 their 
friendship was still far from this, and Hayes resolved to 
visit his old fellow-student in Texas, where his thou- 
sands upon thousands of acres gave a manorial vastness 
and state to his home. The record of this visit is a 
continuous story of delights of every kind : balls and 
parties at Bryan's house, where the troops of guests 
come at two o'clock in the afternoon and stay till the 
next day at noon ; rides to and fro over the prairies to 
call upon Texan ladies, who all have the brilliancy and 
beauty that all ladies have when one is twenty-five ; 
visits and parties in every direction ; shooting in a land 
richly stocked with every kind of game, and excursions 
to the wild Texan towns, picturesque with the admired 
disorder of life on the borders of a great war, their 



A TEXAN SPORTSMAN. 31 

streets full of backwoodsmen, soldiers, gamblers, advent- 
urers, and dramatic with the occasional exploits of a 
Texan statesman, who electioneers for the United 
States Senate by riding through the capital and exhibit- 
ing all the feats of Comanche horsemanship. These 
amusements, and a long gallop through Northwestern 
Texas to visit a distant estate of the Bryans', form 
the perfect change and the entire rest from study 
needed to accomplish the end desired, and Hayes 
goes home restored to health which has never since 
broken. 

He had gone to Texas by way of the Mississippi and 
the Gulf, and his diary abounds with sketches, slight 
but graphic, of the life and character on a Western 
steamboat, which he sees with Dickens-like quickness, 
but paints as if merely to secure his own sense of it, 
and not for any literary effect. In Texas he had less 
time or disposition to write, but here, as elsewhere, he 
was a keen and constant observer. One's surprise 
is therefore all the greater not to find in his journal 
a single expression directly referring to slavery. He 
may have felt it a sort of disloyalty to his hospitable 
friend to criticise the institution with which his pros- 
perity was bound up ; he is the man to have obeyed 
such a chivalrous instinct ; at any rate, the only passage 
touching slavery, or its influence on either race, occurs 
in an account of a visit to a remote planter, whom he 
found " very fond of telling his own experience and 

talking of his own affairs The haughty and 

imperious port of a man develops rapidly on one of 



32 NOT AN ORIGINAL ABOLITIONIST. 

these lonely sugar plantations, where the owner rarely 
meets with any except his slaves and minions." 

In those reminiscences of Chloe Hayes by her grand- 
children, from which we have already quoted, one of 
the granddaughters says, " When grandfather would 
boast that he was not shifted about with every new 
tide of opinion, she would remind him that he was con- 
verted in one hour from faith in colonization to rank 
abolitionism. This, I think, was from reading some- 
thing on the subject." Probably Hayes had received 
the right principles by inheritance ; he showed often 
enough afterwards what his sympathies had always 
been ; nevertheless it was long before he became an act- 
ive political opponent of slavery, though he had been 
a Whig of the Clay and Corwin antislavery school from 
the first. His mind is essentially legal and conserva- 
tive, and the respect for law and fidelity to the consti- 
tution and its guarantees inherent in him had been 
strengthened by his admiration for Story and his opin- 
ions. He might think at least one of the constitutional 
guarantees atrocious, but he did not question its exist- 
ence, and it was not till slavery became openly aggress- 
ive that he began to fight it. He remained, with 
whatever misgivings, a Whig till the formation of the 
anti-Nebraska party upon the repeal of the Missouri 
Compromise. 

The first indication of what may long have been in 
his thought upon the subject is in an entry in his jour- 
nal in 1850. Even this is indirect, and is one of many 
passages he quotes from Mrs. Adams's Letters, which 
he was then reading : " Speaking of a conspiracy among 



COMMENT ON WEBSTER'S FALL. 38 

the negroes to aid the British against their masters, she 
says, ' I wish most sincerely there was not a slave in 
the Province. It always appeared a most iniqnitoas 
scheme to me to %ht, ourselves, for what we are daily 
robbing and plandering from those who have as good a 
right to freedom as we have.' " 

A few months later he copies into his journal, as if 
it had made a deep impression on him, the whole of 
Whittier's poem of " Ichabod," which he introduces with 
a significant passage : '^ There is much discussion in the 
political circles as to Mr. Webster's recent movements 
on the slavery question. I am one of those who ad- 
mire his genius but have little confidence in his integ- 
rity. I regret that he has taken a course so contrary 
to that which he has hitherto pursued on this subject 
I saw the following lines by Whittier in ' The New Era,' 
which can only refer to the godlike Daniel." 

In spite of all this, however, he remained a Whig, 
and doubtless still hoped good things from a party that 
had meant so much good. The next year he meets 
General Scott, and in his fashion describes the person 
and bearing of the soldier, of whom he pronounces, at 
the dose of his entry, ^^ He^U do for President.** Un- 
happily, he did not do ; but — 

"God fulfills himself in many ways,*' 

and doubtless the Democratic success was in his prov- 
idence. 

On his way back to his former residence in North- 
ern Ohio, after the Texan sojourn already mentioned. 



34 LITERARY CLUB ; EMERSON. 

Hayes had stopped in Cincinnati, and decided to 
make that city his home. He formed a law partner- 
ship, and in the leisure of waiting for business reviewed 
his legal studies, and read widely of the current liter- 
ature, comments and criticisms on which occupy a large 
space in his journal. He early became a member of 
the Literary Club of Cincinnati, established nearly half 
a century ago, and including jurists and statesmen like 
Chase, Cor win, Ewing, Charles P. James, Hoadley, and 
Matthews, artists like Baird, clergymen like Conway, 
with journalists, and whoever else loved letters in a 
city always first in culture in the West. With many 
registered vows " to speak regularly at the club," 
Hayes rarely shared in its discussions, but its meetings 
were always times of the greatest pleasure to him, and 
for twelve years the club was " an important part of 
his life," as he wrote one " club-night " in his camp on 
the Kanawha, fondly recalling the club-nights of the 
past, and dwelling on their associations and enjoyments. 
He was, indeed, one of those non-literary men who 
take a purer and finer delight in literature than is, per- 
haps possible to the professional litt&rateur ; and such 
an event as Mr. Emerson's delivery, in Cincinnati, of a 
course of lectures, in 1850, finds an ampler record in 
his diary than any other event of the time. He heard 
every one of the lectures, and he reports the leading 
points of all in his journal. He had from his college 
days had a great love of metaphysics, Und his reading 
had embraced the German as well as the English philos- 



OBJECT m BEADING. S6 

ophy. But his favorite author (liked, however, with 
his own critical reservations) was Emerson, whom he 
read with an enjoyment equaled only by the delight 
he took in another supreme genius, — Hawthorne. 

The general reading of this young lawyer, even 
after business began to accumulate on his hands, was 
as great as that of most men of literary life ; but the 
difference was that he never read for a literary pur- 
pose, as men of letters do. He is as far as possible 
removed from the merely literary temperament. It 
was to find out what an author had to say, not to see 
how hef said it, that Hayes read books, and his criticisms 
on what he read, though they show his sensibility to the 
charms of style, are always more concerned with mat- 
ter than with manner. Men, character, life, are his 
study, not art; and it is observable that the books 
which most interest him are those whose substance is 
of vastly greater importance than their form. He 
delights in the novelists, and each new fiction of 
Hawthorne, Thackeray, Dickens, Bulwer, is a sensa- 
tion marked in his diary ; but when he comes casually 
and tardily upon the life and writings of Channing, 
page after page of comment and quotation manifests 
his intenser interest. He views the whole matter of 
reading from an unliterary point, yet there is a shrewd 
suggestiveness in many of his references to it which 
could not have been more aptly appreciative if he had 
— shall we say? — been writing a book-notice. " I 
am going to sip a little from Sterne's < Tristram 
Shandy,' " he writes ; " enough to test its qualities. 



86 ALWAYS A THOROUGH STUDENT OF POLITICS. 

0d6 ought to read these ^of-oodrse' books, which 
every one reads, or claims to have read, as ^Don 
Quixote,* which is good, ^ Gil Bias,' which is n*t good, 
etc,** — a judgment which evipoes a dear, if too se- 
vere, sense of the difference between the solid Spanish 
silver and the French plate. 

lie seems, like Justice Story, to have always es- 
teemed his love of Literature a comparatively guiltless 
treason to that jealous mistress, the Law; it is the 
otlier siren, Politics, that he is always protesting his 
immovable purpose of having nothing to do with. Yet 
it requires no great penetration in the reader of his 
diary to perceive that from first to last his heart was 
largely given to what must in every republic occupy 
the natural leader of men. This shows itself in many 
ways, in none more distinctly than in his very resolu- 
tions against the tendency ; and the note-books, diaries, 
and scrap-books placed at the present writer's disposal 
testify that no public man now living has made a fuller, 
carefuller study of politics — which is but another name 
for contemporary history — than this man who has al- 
ways refused to be a professional politician. They tes- 
tify to two qualities more important to us in a Presi- 
dent than any other except that clean conscience and 
high purpose which all concede to be his : a thorough 
knowledge of the situation and of tffe events tending 
to it during the last thirty years ; and the gift, long cul- 
tivated and exercised, 6f judging men. 

In 1852 Hayes supported Scott with the self-devo- 
tion characteristic of the Whigs in that canvas, but 



CONSOLATIONS IN DIFEAT. 37 

with no hopefalness, and with n» effort to conceal 
from himself the fact that it was. only a question be- 
tween men. During the summer he made some polit- 
ical speeches, " neither very good nor very bad," accord- 
ing to his thinking, but ^ enough to satisfy me that 
with a motive in my heart and work, I could do it 
creditably. I would like to see General Scott elected 
President, but there is so little interest felt by the great 
body of thinking men that I shall not be surprised 
at his defeat. Indeed, my mind is prepared for such 
a result The real grounds of difference upon impor. 
tant political questions no longer correspond with party 
lines. The progressive Whig is nearer in sentiment 
to the radical Democrat than the radical Democrat 
is to fogies of his own party, and vice versa." After 
the election he writes, " My candidate. General Scott, 
is defeated by the most overwhelming vote ever re- 
corded in this country. A good man, a kind man, a 
brave man, a true patriot, General Scott no doubt 
deserves defeal^ if undue anxiety to be elected can be 
said to deserve such treatment ; " which is not at all 
the fervent regret with which he had chronicled the de- 
feat of Clay, but sufficiently well reflects the mood of 
most Whigs of the time. 

Neither then, nor at any time, as we have already 
expressed, did Hayes cease to care for politics of the 
higher sort But at this time his best energies were 
given to different work. They were devoted to saving 
from juridical injustice a wretched girl on trial for her 
life. 



38 HIS FIRST GREAT LAW CASE. 

The Nancy Farrer case was one that in its time 
caused intense sensation throughout Ohio, and its event 
established in law the principle which medicine had 
long recognized, that an insane person is not morally 
responsible for a criminal act, although entirely sen- 
sible of the difference between right and wrong. This 
hapless creature, wholly in the power of the man who 
instigated her crimes, poisoned two families ; the really 
responsible author of her act escaped, never to be 
found, and she remained, with her helpless admission of 
all the facts, the subject of the greatest popular ex- 
citement, and the object of a horror that prejudged 
her from the first, and seemed to make her fate certain. 

By a chance which gave her life, and her advocate 
reputation and standing among the first of his profes- 
sion, Hayes was appointed by the judge of the criminal 
court to conduct her defense. He instantly recognized 
his opportunity. " It is the criminal case of the term," 
he writes ; " will attract more notice than any other, and 
if I am well prepared will give me a better opportunity 
to exert and exhibit whatever pith there is in me than 
any case I ever appeared in ; " and he goes on at once 
to sketch the line of his defense, to make memoranda 
of what he shall read, and how he shall bring to bear 
on the case his "favorite notions as to the effect of 
original constitution and early training in forming char- 
acter " and diminishing responsibility. 

In Nancy Farrer, origin, training, and associations 
were all of the worst sort ; her father had died a sot in 
the hospital, her mother was insane ; with such parent- 



NANCY FABBEB AND HEB CRIME. 89 

age what must her life, her miud be ? Once under the 
sway of the real murderer, who had won the wretched 
creature's love in order the better to enslave her will, 
she had no volition of her own, and she had poisoned 
half a score of persons without compunction or any ap- 
parent sense of the crime. 

In court the popular feeling against her was height- 
ened by the repulsive plainness and brutality of her 
face. Yet her advocate was firmly convinced that she 
was not morally a free agent, and he rested her defense 
entirely upon that fact ; every other fact of the case he 
fully and freely conceded. Till that time it had been 
the custom of the courts to demand of the medical ex- 
perts whether they believed the prisoner under trial 
knew right from wrong, and on the admission of such 
a belief jurors were charged to find according to the 
facts. Hayes took his stand with the humaner science 
upon the higher ground. He studied the whole subject 
of insanity in its relation to crime, and among the des- 
ultory memoranda of his diary is a passage that seems 
to have formed thQ nucleus of his argument: "Dr. 
Bell, of the McLean Asylum, testifies, ^ I consider that 
insane persons generally know the difference between 
right and wrong.' " His argument made a vivid impres- 
sion upon the jury and the public, and gave him name 
and fame at once. He seems (we infer again from 
the data mentioned) to have told the jury the pathetic 
story of Mary Lamb, impelled against her own will to 
slay her father and mother, and adjured them to see 
the parity between her case and that of the wretch 



40 FLEA BEFORE THE JURY. 

before them. ^ Awful as are the tragedies which she 
has been the instrument — as I believe, the uncon- 
scious instrument — of committing, their horror sinks 
into insignificance when compared with the solemn and 
deliberate execution, by reasoning, thinking men, of 
such a being as she. On the subject of insanity I have 
asked more than is sustained by the weight of judicial 
opinion even in this country. But I suppose that 
when the facts and principles of any science come to 
be so well established that they are universally recog- 
nized and adopted by the most intelligent as well as the 
most conservative members of the profession which 
deals with that science, it is in strict harmony with the 
expansive and liberal rules of the common law that 
courts should also recognize and adopt those facts and 
principles. The calamity of insanity is one which may 
touch very nearly the happiness of the best of our citi- 
zens. We all know that in some of its thousand forms 
it has carried grief and agony unspeakable into many a 
happy home ; and we must all wish to see such rules 
in regard to it established as would satisfy an intelligent 
man if, instead of this friendless girl, his own sister or 
his own daughter were on trial. And surely to establish 
such rules will be a most noble achievement of that in- 
telligence and reason which God has given to you, but 
denied to her whose fate is in your hands." 

In spite of the sober eloquence and the logic of his 
plea, the girl was found guilty on the old ground that 
if she knew right from wrong she was answerable for 
her crime. He applied for ^ a writ of error, and the 



SUCCESS IN THE SUPREME COURT. 41 

question was reserved for decision in the Ohio supreme 
court, before which Hayes appeared in her Ijehalf, in 
December, 1853, more than a year after the convic- 
tion. 

He had already argued his £u:st case in the supreme 
court, on a similar appeal, when an incident occurred 
which bears witness at once to his power and his mod- 
esty. In that day it was the custom for lawyers argu- 
ing before that court to take their places at a certain 
table in the centre of the court-room. It is related by 
one of the eye-witnesses that Hayes laid down his pa- 
pers on a desk in one comer and began to speak. As 
he went on, the closeness and clearness of his argument 
fixed the attention of all. Presently one of the judges 
interrupted him. " Mr. Hayes," he said, " the court is 
desirous not to lose a word of what you are saying. 
Will you be kind enough to come forward to the table 
in the centre of the room ? " The young advocate ad- 
vanced and finished a plea which, though unsuccessful, 
was pronounced by Thomas Ewing '^ the best first 
speech " he had ever heard in the supreme court. His 
plea in behalf of Nancy Farrer was triumphant, a^d 
convinced the judges while it moved every listener by 
its profound pathos. The decision of the court estab- 
lished a point to which all similar defenses for insanity 
have since referred and must refer ; the motion for a 
new trial was granted. But a new trial did not take 
place. An inquest of lunacy found Nancy Farrer of un- 
sound mind, and she was sent to an asylum, where she 
died a few years after. On the day when the result of 



42 PRINCIPLE ESTABLISHED BY THE RESULT. 

the inquest was reached, Hayes recorded the fact with 
modest satisfaction, and his usual temperance of state- 
ment ; and we cannot better indicate the effect upon him- 
self and his interests than by giving his own straightfor- 
ward phrase : " She will now go to a lunatic asylum, 
and so my first case involving life is ended successfully. 
It has been a pet case with me ; has caused me much 
anxiety, given me some prominence in my profession, 
and indeed was the first case which brought me practice 
in the city. It has turned out fortunately for me — 
very, and I am greatly gratified that it is so. I argued 
the case in December, *53, before the supreme court, at 
Columbus ; made a successful argument. The judgment 
of the court below was reversed in an opinion fully sus- 
taining my leading positions. The case is reported in 
2d Ohio State Reps., Farrer versus State." 

Among the notes in Hayes's diary apparently sketch- 
ing the line of his argument before the supreme court, 
a point is made which we could not leave untouched 
without doing injustice to his attitude in the case; 
an attitude which distinguishes his defense from mul- 
tiplied instances in which the plea of insanity has 
been made before and since. " There is no fact," 
he says, "more essential to crime than the posses- 
sion of reason. The existence of this fact the law 
properly presumes. But if that presumption is denied, 
if there is evidence tending to overthrow it, why not 
apply to that evidence the same humane maxim which 
is extended to every other presumption of the law ? 
The only answer I find to this inquiry is that the safety 



ARGUMENT BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT. 43 

and protection of society require this departure from 
principle, that otherwise the defense of insanity would 
be successfully interposed in cases where, in truth, de- 
pravity, not insanity, -was at the bottom of the crime. 
It is needless to remark, in reply, that every presump- 
tion for the protection of innocence is liable to be used 
as a shield for guilt. The question is still to be an- 
swered, Why is the defense of insanity to be treated 
as odious by the law ? Is it so peculiarly liable to. 
abuse that fundamental rules are to be changed to guard « 
society against it ? On the contrary, I believe it has 
been shown by those who have investigated the subject, 
the danger is in the opposite direction ; that until a re- 
cent period there were ten insane, and therefore inno- 
cent, persons who sufPered punishment to one criminal 
who escaped on the pretext of insanity ; and that now, 
in view of the state of the law and the prejudices of 
the community, injustice is more frequently done to the 
insane accused than to the public. I admit that cases 
are occurring frequently in which this defense is set 
up and the accused acquitted, when there is in truth 
very little that looks like permanent and real insanity. 
But what are these cases ? Are they cases of feigned 
insanity, cases in which the jury are deceived, and 
acquit the accused because they are deceived? Far 
from it. They are cases in which verdicts of acquit- 
tal are rendered against the rigorous requirements of 
the law, because- the juries are satisfied that the acts 
charged .... do not evince ^ a heart regardless of 
social duty, and fatally bent on mischief.' They are 



44 DEFENSE OF INSANITY NOT ODIOUS. 

cases in which the accused has snjffered some great 
wrong for which the law provides no adequate remedy." 
Then, citing several cases in which women have killed 
their seducers, he continues : ^< In> all these cases the 
defense was insanity, the verdict acquittal; but the 
verdict would have been the same on any other plea. 
Nobody is deceived by the defense. Insanity is set up 
because under that defense more conveniently than 
under any other the story of the wrong suffered by the 
accused can be spread before the jury. The general 
sense of the community approves these verdicts of ac- 
quittal, because it is felt that the best person in the 
community might, under the same circumstances, com- 
mit the same act; because there is no other redress for 
such a wrong ; because, finally, the slain deserves his 
fate. We submit that the defense of insanity is not 
to be regarded as odious in the law because of these 
cases. The same verdict would be rendered in the 
same cases if the plea of self-defense were set up." 

His success in Nancy Farrer*s case not only brought 
her advocate reputation and much general business, 
but naturally attracted to him other cases involving 
life. During the times of the fugitive slave cases Hayes 
appeared in a good many, and notably in' the famous 
Rosetta case, when he was associated with Chief-Jus- 
tice Chase and Judge Timothy Walker. The former 
referred to him, in a letter written a friend, as " Mr. R. 

B. Hayes, a young lawyer of great promise T 

was most ably supported by Judge Walker, while Hayes 
acquitted himself with great distinction in the defense 
of Rosetta before Pendery." 



LAW PARTNERSHIPS ; MARRIAGE. 46 

At the close of the Nancy Farrer case, Mr. Hayes 
had been five years in the practice of the law at 
Cincinnati, at first alone and afterwards with various 
partners. In 1854 he went into partnership with 
Messrs. R. M. Corwine and W. K. Rogers, both law- 
yers of note ; and with the latter he formed one of 
those lasting friendships characteristic of a man who 
has had few intimacies; his friends have been those 
who valued him for himself, not for what he could do 
for them ; and such alone know the Hepth and cor- 
diality of his regard. 

On the 80th of December, 1852, he was united in a 
marriage which has formed the crowning happiness of 
a singularly prosperous and happy life, with Miss Lucy 
Ware Webb, of Cincinnati. Her family was Ken- 
tuckian, of that sort which seems to assemble in itself 
whatever is fine and good in the Southern civilization, 
but she was herself bom in Chillicothe, Ohio, where 
her father, Dr. James Webb, formerly of Lexington, 
Kentucky, had been long in practice. Her great-grand- 
father had, like her husband's, been an officer of the 
Revolution; and other ancestors had been people of 
note and substance in their native State. Her father 
was for many years a colonizationist, but he died with- 
out carrying out his plans regarding the slaves on the 
family estate in Kentucky, and his children, after his 
death, freed them without conditions. The grateful 
blacks at once came to Ohio and settled as near their 
late owners as possible, where they long remained in 
the performance of all kinds of imaginary services. 



46 SURVIVING CHILDREN. 

and the receipt of a substantial support, — as no doubt 
justly happened in many other cases of manumission. 

Of the eight children of Governor Hayes, five are 
living ; the eldest is now a student of the Cambridge 
Law School, as his father was before him, though the 
younger Hayes is a graduate of Cornell. 



CHAPTER V. 

FIBST PUBLIC SERVICES. 

It is the reeollection of those who best remember 
Hayes as a lawyer that, though he could rise equal to 
occasion and make a great argument in a great case 
like that of Nancy Farrer, he preferably shunned fo- 
rensic displays in the conduct of his cases. He was 
one of those lawyers, not at all so rare as the general 
fame of the profession would imply, who discourage 
litigation in their clients. When clients would go to 
law, he sought if possible to transact their business in 
court by the plainest statements to the jury, by quiet 
conferences with the judge and sober argument with 
the opposing counsel. 

He was a successful lawyer, but the time was coming 
when, according to the testimony of some in his confi- 
dence, he found mere legal success unsatisfying. From 
1856 to 1860 were the years when any man conscious 
of the power to direct and influence the popular feeling 
for good could hardly remain quiescent without self- 
reproach. Yet the temperament, the self-education, 
the inherited and sturdily trained character of Hayes, 
all forbade him to seek office. He could follow and 
he could lead without that, and during the days of the 



48 THE FREMONT CAMPAIGN. 

Bepublican party's fomiatioQ we find him taking part 
in the general movement, privately and publicly, with- 
oat view to any personal result. 
♦ In his journals there is little record of his share in 
the Fremont campaign of 1856. Nevertheless he very 
actively engaged in the canvass, and addressed public 
meetings at Cincinnati and elsewhere, with constantly 
mounting enthusiasm for the work. Under a wood en- 
graving of Fremont in his diary he briefly writes, " Not 
a good picture, but will do to indicate my politics this 
year : free States against new slave States ; " and a little 
later he says, ^^ I feel seriously the probable defeat of 
the cause of freedom in the approaching presidential 
election. Before the October elections in Pennsylvania 
and Indiana, I was confident Colonel Fremont would be 

elected But after all, the good cause has made 

great progress. Antislavery sentiment has been cre- 
ated, and the people have been educated, to a large 
extent. I did hope that this election would put an 
end to angry discussion upon this exciting topic, by 
placing the general government in the right position in 
regard to it, and thereby securing to antislavery effort a 
foothold among those who have the evil in their midst. 
But further work is to be done, and my sense of duty 
determines me .... to aid in forming a public opinion 
on this subject which will ' mitigate and finally eradicate 
the evil.' I must study the subject, and am now begin- 
ning with Clarkson's 'History of the Abolition of the 
Slave Trade.' " Then follow entries showing how thor- 
oughly he does study the subject in the whole history of 



A THOROUGH ANTISLAVERY MAN. 49 

the antislavery moyement from its commencement in 
England. ^ How similar the struggle to that now going 
on here ! The same arguments pro and con, the same 
prejudices appealed to, the same epithets of reproach, 
the same topics I On one side justice, humanity, free- 
dom ; on the other, prejudice, interest, selfishness, timid- 
ity, conservatism; the advocates of right called en- 
thusiasts, fanatics, and incendiaries Thousands 

whose hearts and judgment were on the side of aboli- 
tion were silent because loss of trade, of practice, of 
social or political position, was likely to follow an open 
avowal of their opinions. In short, the parallel be- 
tween that struggle and this is complete thus far. I 
shatil be content if it so continue to the end. The elec- 
tion of day after to-morrow is the first pitched battle. 
However fares the cause, I am enlisted for the war." 

Two years after the defeat that gave us Mr. Bu- 
chanan for President and the enemies of the nation for 
our masters, Hayes was chosen to his first public office. 
One of the Democratic members of the City Council 
believed too firmly in Hayes's integrity and ability to 
vote against him ; he voted for Hayes, and by one ma- 
jority the Council thus elected him City Solicitor, to 
fill a vacancy occasioned in that office by death. His 
election was received with expressions of friendly re- 
gard and with acknowledgments of his fitness for the 
place even by the press of the party desiring his defeat, 
and one newspaper recorded to his honor a fact which 
throws a vivid light on his character as a politician : 
« Though ten years in the city, Mr. Hayes was never 
i 



60 CITY SOLICITOR OF CINCINNATI. 

in the chamber of the City Fathers till the day after 
his dection." ^ I like the looks of Hayes," said one 
of the coundlmen on the advent of this stranger among 
them. '^ He has the appearance of a gentleman, and 
it is some comfort to talk to him ; " a Democrat as- 
sented that he was ^ very pleasant — for a Black Re- 
publican." In the following April his personal pop- 
ularity was more substantially attested by his reelection 
to the same office with a majority larger than that 
given for any other candidate on his ticket. 

He discharged the duties of his office with signal 
ability, and with a humane sense of his obligations 
towards the accused, as well as society, novel in a pub- 
lic prosecutor, though the ends of justice were n^er 
better served. He treated the office as if it were a 
finality in his political career, and not merely '^ a step- 
ping-stone to higher things ; " and when his term ex- 
pired, in 1861, the only place he sought, the only place 
he would not have scorned to take, was a soldier's place 
in the field, wherever self-sacrifice might be most useful 
to his country. 

He had fought the good fight for Lincoln, and he 
had watched with keen anxiety the effect upon the 
States threatening to secede. He thought, on the '9th 
of November, that South Carolina might go out, but 
that the others would draw back. << But at all events 
I feel as if the time had come to test this question. If 
the threats are meant, then it is time the Union was 
dissolved or the traitors crushed out I hope Lincoln 
goes m." On the 4th of January, 1861, ^ Disunion and 



BETTER WAR THAN COMPROMISE. 51 

dvil war are at hand, and yet I fear disunion and 
war less than compromise. We can recover from 

them Crittenden's compromise ! Windham, 

speaking of the rumor that Bonaparte' was about to 
inyade England, said, < The danger of invasion is by 
no means equal to that of peace. A man may escape 
a pistol, however near his head, but not a dose of poi- 
son.' '* ** Six States have seceded," he adds on the 
27th. " Let them go ! If the Union is now dissolved, 
it does not prove that the experiment of popular gov- 
ernment is a failure," he makes haste to say, with his 
abiding faith in the democratic idea. ^ In all the free 
States, and in a majority, if not in all the slaveholding 
States, popular government has been successful. But 
the experiment of uniting free States and slaveholding 
States in one nation is perhaps a failure. Freedom 
and slavery can perhaps not exist side by side under 
the j3ame popular government. There probably t* an 
* irrepressible conflict ' between freedom and slavery. 
It may as well be admitted, and our new relations 
formed with that as an admitted fact." 

In April Sumter fell, and Lincoln's call for troops 
came, and with it came an end of all theories, all spec- 
ulations beyond the question of the hour. At Gncin- 
nati, as throughout the whole North, a wild outburst of 
the instantly embattled public sentiment answered the 
call. " I shall never forget," Hayes writes, " that Sun- 
day evening," when the summons came. He was him- 
self a leader of the popular enthusiasm, and wrote the 
resolutions of the largest of the public meetings held 



52 MEMORABLE WORDS. 

to- welcome the summons. " Let what evils may follow, 
I shall not soon cease to rejoice over this event." 

Then on the 15th of May, in words that seem still to 
burn with the "sublime impulses of that hour, he records 
the purpose from which he never faltered throughout the 
four years of war that followed : ** Judge Matthews ^ an(J 
I have agreed to go into the service for the war — if 
possible, into the same regiment. I spoke my feelings 
to him, iwrhich he said were his own, that this was a just 
and necessary war, and that it demanded the whole power 
of the country ; that i would prefer to go into 

IT IF I KNEW I WAS TO BE KILLED IN THE COURSE 

OF IT, rather than to live through and after it without 
taking any part in it,** 

1 Afterwards a distinguished officer of the Union army, and now 
one of the leaders of the Ohio bar. He has been renominated for 
Congress hy the Republicans of Hayeses former district. 



CHAPTER VI. 

THE EDUCATION OF A SOLDIER. 

Hates was in his thirty-ninth year when the war 
began. His character, rounded by time and experi- 
ence, embodied the same traits and qualities which had 
marked it from the years when he first began to think 
and act for himself. Intellectually of solid rather than 
rapid growth, he was morally in his ripened manhood 
what he had always been, neither more nor less than 
just, honest, and sincere, a man at once circumspect and 
decided, self-respectful ly modest, cautious, and brave, 
careful as he was hopeful, and sustained in whatever 
emergency b^ the indomitable good spirits with which 
he was born. His wide acquaintance with men had 
given him keener and deeper insight into himself, with- 
out changing at all the methods or the motives of his 
action. His conscience was, as it had always been, 
more alert against what he conceived his own short- 
comings than those of other men, though he never 
failed to judge others accurately and fairly. He had 
worked deliberately, with brain as well as heart, into 
sympathy with the antislavery movement, and had 
taken his final stand upon the ground that slavery must 
not become the national principle. When he saw the 



54 OFFERED A COLONELCY BY LINCOLN. 

defeatsd partisans of the system prepared to revenge 
themselves by the destruction of the nation which they 
could not rule, the logic of his whole life permitted 
him but one conclusion. War he abhorred, but there 
were worse things than war ; and when once he knew 
that he would rather be killed in the course of the war 
that was coming — that was come — than not go into 
it, there remained but a single question — how best to 
fight in it He had made up his mind to fight. There 
were many semi-civil offices, honorable and necessary to 
the conduct of the war, which he could have performed 
with credit to himself and advantage to the country, 
but it was not his idea of duty to accept any of these. 
With him war meant service in the field, danger, death, 
if need be : the same chances that the simple country 
lads, springing to arms all over the country by tens of 
thousands, accepted, invited, in a rapture of patriotism 
that now seems incredible. 

There came to him in this mood a colonel's comniis- 
sion from President Lincoln, probably at the sugges- 
tion of Secretary Chase, who knew the mettle of the 
man ; and the quick sense of responsibility in him to 
which the honor appealed gave him sudden pause. 

Doubtless no one knew better than he his inherent 
qualities of leadership, but no one knew better his 
ignorance of war. In a letter to a friend, who has 
communicated these facts, hitherto unpublished, to the 
writer, he states that he has considered the case, ques- 
tioned his present fitness, and decided to decline the 
oommission : he could not take in his hands, unused to 



MAJOB OF THE TWENTY-THIBD OHIO. 65 

the tremendous responsibility involved, the lives of a 
thousand men, whom his inexperience might uselessly 
Sacrifice in the first battle, or waste through sickness 
before they saw the enemy's face. He adds, ^ I intend, 
however, to enter the service immediately, but in some 
capacity less responsible. Meanwhile, I am studying 
military tactics ; have bought a copy of Hardee, and 
am drilling with the club company," -r a company 
formed almost entirely of members of the Literary Club, 
who chose him their captain. 

In fine, he declined the colonelcy, and he set about 
the work of studying war as he had set about 
studying abolition history when he became a Repub- 
lican, as he had all his life studied the thing, what- 
ever it was, he had to do. He mastered so much of 
the science as his trained and penetrating mind, aided 
by energies aroused to the last degree, enabled him 
to achieve, in a period so brief, and in the beginning 
of June, 1861, he accepted from Gk)vemor Dennison, 
of Ohio, the mayorship of the twenty-third Ohio volun- 
teer infantry. His superior officers were Colonel W. 
B. Rosecrans, who was in dvil life in Cincinnati at tbe 
beginning of the war, and Lieutenant-Colonel Stanley 
Matthews, that friend to whom Hayes had spoken his 
feelings about going into the army, and who had '^ said 
they were his own." 

Two days after the acceptance of his commission, 
Hayes was in camp with his regiment at Columbus, 
and writing a letter of excellent content — content 
with his regiment, content with the present, Content 



66 AT CAMP CHAS£. 

with the future of action and danger before him. 
'^I am much happier in this business than I could be 
fretting away in the old office near the court house. 
It IS living.'* 

Within ten days after going into camp with his reg- 
iment, Colonel Rosecrans was appointed a brigadier- 
general, and took command of the Ohio forces in West 
Virginia, while Colonel E. P. Scammon, an old West 
Pointer, succeeded him in command of the twenty- 
third. Hayes could not have desired a better school 
than camp service under another educated soldier. 

No part, indeed, of his brief experience in camp at 
Columbus was lost upon Hayes, who would so willingly 
have gone through a longer training for his new duties. 
The anomaly of his position in some things struck 
him as it must have struck many other sincere and 
modest officers, suddenly called from civil life to the 
strange responsibilities of military leadership in war. 
" All matters of discretion, of common judgment," he 
writes four days after first going into camp, "I get 
along with easily; but I was for an instant puzzled 
when a captain of the twenty-fourth, of West Point 
education, asked me formally, as I sat in my tent, for 

his orders, he being officer of the day I merely 

remarked that I thought of nothing requiring special 
attention ; that if anything was wanted out of the 
usual routine I would let him know I " 

The news of the calamitous defeat at Bull Run came 
with crushing effect to the novices at Camp Chase, who 
could hardly have been less amazed by the tranquillity 



THE COOLNESS OP THE VETERANS. 57 

with which the intelligence was received by those of 
their superiors to whom war was business. ''Last 
evening Adjutant-General B. took tea with Colonel S. 
My mind was full of the great disaster ; they talked 
of school-boy times at West Point, gave the bill of fare 
of different days, — beef on Sunday, fish on such a 
day, etc., — with anecdotes of Billy Cozzens, the cook 
and steward, never once alluding to the events just an- 
nounced, of which we were all full ; " and we may be 
sure that Major Hayes was not the man to mention 
them, with his humorous sense of the not altogether 
amusing contrast. The universal, kind-hearted unfa- 
miliarity with all things military in those first warlike 
days found infinitely various expression, and one phase 
of it was hardly more absurd than another : " The 
mother of one of our officers, at Camp Chase, seeing a 
boy walking upon his sentinel's beat, took pity on him, 
sent him out a glass of wine and a piece of cake, with 
a stool to sit on while he ate and drank. She told him 
not to keep walking so, to sit down and rest ; she 
also advised him to resign 1 " 

But the time for preparation was cut very short, 
and on the 25 th of July, some six weeks after going 
into camp, the regiment, with all its imperfections on 
its head, was ordered to West Virginia to help drive out 
the rebel General Floyd. Raw as were the officers and 
men of the twenty-third, they were probably marvels of 
discipline and experience in the eyes of the loyal West 
Virginians, to whose succor they had come. " Every- 
where, in the cornfields and hayfields," runs one of the 



68 THE TWENTY-THIRD IN WEST VIRGINIA. 

major's letters home, ^ in the houses, in the roads, on 
the hills, wherever a haman being met as, we saw such 
honest, spontaneous demonstrations of joy as we never 
beheld elsewhere. Old men and women, boys and chil- 
dren, — some fervently prayed for us, some laughed, 
and some cried ; all did something that told the story. 
The secret of it is, the defeat at Washington and the 
departure of some thousands of three months' men of 
Ohio and Indiana had led them to fear that they were 
to be left to the rebels of Eastern Virginia : we were 
the first three years' men filling the places of those who 

had left Our men enjoyed it beyond measure. 

Many" — from the long Ohio levels bordering and 
stretching back from the lake — ^' had never seen a 
mountain ; none had ever seen such a reception. They 
stood on top of the cars, and danced and shouted with 
delight." War had begun like a holiday for the brave 
poor fellows who were to leave their bones on many 
a battle-field ^nd in the graves of hospital grounds and 
prison-pens ; but the cool-headed, steady-hearted leader 
whose fame was to be forever identified with theirs 
never lost sight, for a moment, of the wrinkled front 
beneath the smiling mask. He shared, with a subtler 
sense, their wild rapture in the beauty of the land ; 
letters and journals glow with his joy in the magnifi- 
cent scenery, the delicious weather ; and he likes the 
life in that first camp at Weston immensely. ^ The 
effect is curious of this fine mountain air ; everybody 
complains of heat, but everybody is in a laughing hu- 
mor ; " ^ the soldiers fare very well here, and stand in 



LIFE AND CHARACTER IN WEST VIRGINIA. 69 

little ne6d of sympathy, but when I have an op^rtu- 
nity to smooth matters for them, I try to do it, always 
remembering how you " — the reader will know to 
whom this must have been addressed — ^ would wish 
it done." There is little or no sickness in camp, the 
men are gay and full of high hopes; but the major 
is not so gay for them as he feigns, and in a few days 
he has to write home of the first blood they have shed, 
— in a fight with guerrillas, who infest the beautiful 
hills, and '< rob and murder the Union men " in the 
charming valleys. ^ Nevertheless, these marchings and 
campings in the hills of Western Virginia will always 
be among the pleasantest things I can remember. I 
know we are in frequent perils, that we may never 
return, and all that, but the feeling that I Am where I 
ought to be is a full compensation for all that is sin- 
ister, leaving me free to enjoy as if on a pleasure 
tour." In the mean time he is interested, as usual, by 
the character about him, in the officers and men, and 
in the local life : in a settlement of Yankees, who had 
come to Weston forty years before, and had kept 
intact the thrift, morality, and loyalty of their native 
Massachusetts ; in the admirable stufE among the native 
Union men ; in the simple-heartedness and good nat- 
ure among the better class of the Floyd soldiers taken 
prisoners, '< friendly, civil fellows, whom it seems so 
absurd to be fighting ; " in the cowardice, cunning, and 
laziness of the baser sort of rebels, whose ^ highest am- 
bition is to shoot a Yankee from some place of safety." 
The little army of Western Virginia had on the 



60 FLOYD ATTACKED AT CARNIFEX FERRY. 

1st of September, after a succession of slight brushes 
with the enemy, marched upon Carnifex Ferry, where 
Floyd's force was strongly posted,^ and on the evening 
of the 10th attacked him. The same night Floyd 
abandoned his post and fled with all his army across 
Gauley River, sharply pursued, in spite of heavy rains 
rendering pursuit almost impossible, by the Union 
troops, who took a large number of the rebels. Noth- 
ing but the approach of night saved Floyd's army 
from capture, and his rout left all Western Virginia 
in the possession of our troops. 

In this first affair Major Hayes was ordered, half an 
hour after the attack began, to follow an aid of Rose- 
crans, and form with four companies of the twenty-third 
the extreme left of the attacking force. Pushing on 
over a hill and through a cornfield they arrived within 
three quarters of a mile of the enemy's work, when the 
aid took a friendly leave of them. He had no orders to 
give Major Hayes ; Major Hayes was an ofiicer, and 
would know what to do in circumstances and localities 
of which the aid frankly confessed himself entirely ig- 
norant. The situation might have been embarrassing; 
Major Hayes simplified it in the only possible way by 
leading his men forward against the enemy. They had 
a tough scramble through the dense laurel thickets of the 
hillside, and the major reached the bottom at the head 

1 For a clear and succinct history of the twenty-third Ohio, see Mr. 
Wbitelaw Reid's admirablie work on " Ohio in the War," — a really 
monumental work which is yet to be fully appreciated. The writer 
gladly acknowledges his obligations to Mr. Reid*s volumes for the out- 
line of the present sketch of General Hayes's career. 



HAYES UNDER FIRE THE FIRST TIME. 61 

of four or five men. As soon as others could join bim, 
he formed his little force and followed his skirmishing 
line in the enemy's direction, arriving in time, near 
the dose of the fight, to be exposed to the rebels' fire. 
Some of the men were wounded ; it had been growing 
dark ; the firing now ceased, and the major's com- 
mand made its way back to the rest of the twenty-third 
through confused and broken regiments and companies 
straggling about over the field, and talking of the 
slaughter, — thirteen killed and some seventy wounded, 
as it afterwards appeared. At dawn loud shouts pro- 
claimed the flight of the enemy from his works, and the 
pursuit began. 

The victory was greater than the battle, and Major 
Hayes's part, useful and difficult as it was, gave him 
but a slight foretaste of war. What was better, it 
enabled him to test himself in doing a duty which he 
had to discover for himself ; and holding himself coolly 
in hand, as he has always done in every crisis of life, 
he perceived that he went into action with the same 
sensations that he commonly experienced on entering 
upon an exciting law case. With him, too, war had 
become business. The affair also taught our troops self- 
reliance, and showed them that such at least of the 
enemy as were under Floyd were no match for them, 
even with the odds in the rebels' favor. 

The tw«nty-third went into camp on New River, 
after its return from the pursuit, and there lost naany 
by sickness. At this time Major Hayes was detadied 
from the regiment, and ordered to join General Bose- 



62 HATBS JUDGE ADVOGATfi. 

crans at his head-quarters as judge-advooate. The 
appointment was by no means to the taste of a man 
who had gone into the war to fight He submitted 
with reluctance, comforting himself with the hope of 
release after a few weeks, but going diligently about 
the duties of his office, reducing them to system, keep- 
ing a record of cases, and studying the whole business 
as was his wont with whatever he took hold of. Six 
weeks later he was, to his high satisfaction, relieved 
from the office, in which he had in the mean time done 
most acceptable service, and allowed to rejoin his regi- 
ment in Camp Ewing, on New River. 

Important changes had recently taken place in it. 
Lieutenant-Colonel Matthews had been appointed to 
the conmiand of another regiment, and Hayes succeeded 
to the vacancy, his own place being filled by another 
brave soldier, now General J. M. Comly, who had re- 
signed the lieutenant-colonelcy of a regiment in Camp 
Chase and taken the majorship of the twenty-third, 
that he might get at once into active service. His 
fortunes were thereafter closely united with those of 
Hayes, and when the lajbter became brigadier-general. 
Major Comly succeeded him in command of the twen- 
ty-third, and was himself brevetted brigadier-general 
at the close of the war, for his able and gallant sol- 
diership. 

The rest of the winter was spent at Camp Ewing 
and the subsequent camp of the regiment at Fayette- 
ville, in duties whose faithful performance endeared 
Colonel Hayes to his men as much as his bravery in 



^li^ 



CABE FOB HIS BEGIMENT. 68 

battle. He was very diligent in drill and parade, but 
he was as constant in his attention to the comfort of 
the men as to their discipline. That humane and un- 
selfish heart, to which all suffering and helplessness 
irresistibly appealed, was sensitively alive to the rights 
of the brave fellows — who were in some sort his chil- 
dren — to everything that could be done for their wel- 
fare. At the same time he wrote home indignant de- 
nunciations of the exaggerated reports of suffering in 
the army. '' I am satisfied that our army is better fed, 
better clad, and better sheltered than any other army 

in the world I am now dressed as a private, 

and I am well dressed ; I live habitually on soldier's 

rations, and I live well It is the poor families 

at home, not the soldiers, who can justly claim sympa- 
thy. I except, of course, the regiments which have 

bad officers Government is sending enough, if 

colonels would only do their part. .... We have 
sickness, which is bad enough, but it is due to causes 
inseparable from our condition." He early taught 
himself to relieve the needless ills of the soldiers' con- 
dition, and he was consequently successful in teaching 
them to bear those which could not be helped. The 
only complaint which escapes him on his own account 

is amusingly characteristic : '^ If J comes, let him 

get an assortment of late papers, * Harpers,' ' Atlantics,' 
etc., and keep them till he gets to our camp. We are 
the outermost camp, and people are coaxed out of their 
literature before they get to us." 

Hayes was never one of the Union soldiers who oon- 



64 SLAVERY THE ONLY ENEMY OF THE UNION. 

ceived it his business to enforce the fugitive slave law 
in favor of the rebels ; his mind was clear in regard to 
the slavery question from the start. No contrabands go 
back to their masters from the army of West Virginia, 
he is glad to know ; and again and again his letters 
and journals bear witness to his conviction that " the 
deadliest enemy the Union has is slavery, — in fact, its 
only enemy, — and that to strike at slavery is to strike 
at the life of the rebellion." He recurs from time to 
time, with the anxiety of a man used to watch public 
affairs, to the changing attitude of the government in 
respect to the institution, and hails with deep satisfac- 
tion, as a step towards the final result, Lincoln's recom- 
mendation that the federal aid be pledged to States 
taking measures for gradual emancipation. But for the 
most part his mind is on the business in hand, requiring 
from day to day a more vigilant devotion, and soon to 
absorb every energy. 

Early in November the twenty-third left Camp Ewing 
to join another movement against Floyd, returning from 
which they went into winter quarters at Fayetteville. 
Under command of Lieutenant-Colonel Hayes they 
quitted these quarters on the 17th of April, and led the 
advance upon the enemy, who evacuated Princeton be- 
fore them, but attacked the twenty-third with four regi- 
ments on the 8th, and forced it to retire to East River. 
It fell back in good order, and after great sufferings and 
privations, its supplies having been cut off, ab$indoned 
Princeton, and, returning to iTlat Top Mountain, re- 
mained in camp there till the Idth of July. On the 



BATTLE OF SOUTH MOUNTAIN. 65 

15th of August it was ordered from its next station, at 
Green Meadows, to Camp Piatt on the Great Kanawha, 
and made the march of one hundred miles in three days. 
Embarking in transports for Parkersburg, the regiment 
there took the cars for Washington, joined McClellan's 
force in driving the Confederates from Frederick City, 
reached Middletown on the 18th of September, and took 
part in the battles of South Mountain and Antietam. 

The battle of South Mountain was fought on the day 
after the arrival of the twenty-third in Middletown, and 
three days before the battle of Antietam. It began early 
on a lovely Sunday of September, with the advance 
of Lieutenant-Colonel Hayes's command. McClellan's 
army with Bumside in front was pressing up the mount- 
ain by the National Koad. Greneral Cox's division of 
Ohio men led General Bumside's corps, and the twenty- 
third formed the van of that division. At seven o'clock, 
Hayes was ordered to take one of the mountain paths 
and get round the right of the rebels, who were be- 
lieved to be posted there with two guns, and he started 
up the hill on this by-road, throwing out one company as 
skirmishers and two others as flankers. At nine o'clock 
he drove in a rebel picket ; he pushed forward ahd in 
a few minutes saw the rebels coming down upon him in 
strong force from a hill in front. These men were, 
,as he afterwards learned, two regiments, the twelfth 
South Carolina and twenty-third North Carolina, who 
were thus opposed to the twelfth and twenty-third Ohio. 
Hayes hurriedly formed his men in the woods and charged 
over rocks and broken ground and through under- 



66 HAYES SEVERELY WOUNDED. 

brush, while the enemy poured in a heavy fire at short 
range ; but he succeeded in driying them, after a fierce 
engagement, out of the woods into an open field near the 
top of the hill. His men stopped at a fence in the border 
of the woods and opened a brisk fire on the enemy, who 
took shelter behind the stone walls and fences along the 
crest of the hill, and returned the fire of the Ohioans 
across the field. At this juncture Lieutenant-Colonel 
Hayes, urging his men to charge the Carolinians (who 
were supported by a large rebel force with artillery, 
probably the two pieces Hayes had been sent to take), 
left the shelter of the woods. As he gave the com- 
mand, a minie ball struck him with stunning, shattering 
force in the left arm, above the elbow, crushing the bone 
to fragments and carrying part of it completely away. 
He called to a soldier near him to tie his handkerchief 
above the wound, fearing an artery might have been 
severed. Then, turning suddenly faint, he fell. His 
men pressed beyond him, and when he regained con- 
sciousness he found himself some twenty feet in their 
rear, under a heavy fire, with the balls pelting the earth 
all about him. He listened anxiously, as he lay there, 
for the approach of reenforcements, and directed the 
movements of his men. Once, seeing what appeared to 
him a false movement on their part, he struggled to 
his feet and began to countermand it, when he wa^ 
again overcome by weakness and sank down, where he 
remained for twenty minutes exposed to the enemy's 
fire, while the wounded men staggered past him or 
were carried to the rear. His men were gradually 



RESCUE OF THE WOUNDED COLONEL. 67 

forced back to coyer, and he was left lying between 
them and the rebels. He thought that they were re- 
treating, and called out, '^ £[allo, twenty-third men ! are 
you going to leave your colonel here for the enemy?" 
Half a dozen good fellows sprang from the woods, and 
the enemy, who had suspended their fire for a moment, 
opened on them, and the battle began to rage again as 
hotly as ever. Hayes ordered the men back, and then 
Lieutenant Jackson came to him and insisted on taking 
him out of range of the fire. The command now fell 
to Major Comly, who led the regiment with his accus- 
tomed bravery through the rest of the day. Beenforce- 
ments coming up at last, the twenty-third again charged 
the enemy and drove them from the hill into the woods 
beyond, killing large numbers with the bayonet. The 
regiment then rejoined its division, making three suc- 
cessful bayonet charges during the fight, and losing 
nearly two hundred men. "The colors of the regi- 
ment were riddled," says Mr. Reid, " and the blue field 
almost completely carried away by shells and bullets." 

Lieutenant Jackson led his colonel beyond the 
enemy's fire, and Hayes then growing faint from his 
wound, the lieutenant left him behind a log, with a can- 
teen of water, and in company with many wounded of 
both sides. The man nearest him was a Confederate, 
and the two fell into talk of that friendliness which 
seems to have always been the natural condition of 
the men of both armies when they were not actually 
killing each other. *< What regiment do you belong to, 
and where are you from ? " asked the Northerner ; and 



68 FRIENDLY ENEMIES. 

the Southerner answered that he was major of a North 
Carolina regiment. " "Well, you came a long way to 
fight us." " Where are you from ? " asked the major 
in his turn. " I am from Ohio." " Well, you came a 
good ways to fight m«," rejoined the major ; and the 
enemies " talked on in that pleasant, friendly way, nei- 
ther of us at that time suffering much." The South- 
erner told the Northerner that he had been a Union 
man, and saw no reason for secession, but went out with 
his section. 

The firing again died away ; Lieutenant Jackson re- 
turned and led his colonel to the regimental surgeon, 
who dressed his wound. Hayes then walked half a 
mile to a point where he found an ambulance, and 
was carried to Middletown. Here he remained, restive 
and helpless, while the army marched by under the 
Ysdndows of the house where he lay. He heard them 
going all night long and all day long, the men sing- 
ing as they marched ; and he gained what small ease 
he could, as he impatiently listened afterwards to the 
sounds of the battle of Antietam, by hiring two boys 
to stand at the window and describe the men who rode 
by from the field, striving to guess from this report of 
their looks how the battle was going. 

A curious circumstance in regard to Hayes at the 
battle of South Mountain is the fact that at the time 
he received his wound he was not in the pay or service 
of the United States. He had been appointed colonel 
of the seventy-ninth Ohio, and had been mustered out 
as lieutenant-colonel of the twenty-third without his 



HAYES PROMOTED TO BE COLONEL. 69 

knowledge. His wound prevented his taking com- 
mand of his new regiment, and on the 30th of Novem- 
ber he rejoined, as colonel, the twenty-third. Colonel 
Scammon having been appointed a brigadier-general, 
and Major Comly having received the recognition his 
conduct merited, in promotion to the lieutenant-colo- 
nelcy. 

During his convalescence in Ohio, Colonel Hayes, 
resisting the friends who thought he had '^ had his 
share '* and counseled him to remain out of the service, 
gladly returned to the command of his old regiment. 
Of his affectionate pride in it his letters and journals 
give constant proof, and the men returned his regard 
with equal devotion. 

While yet in West Virginia, the regiment was or- 
dered against a rebel force near Princeton, and, the 
1st of May, seventy-five of them were attacked by three 
hundred cavaby and guerrillas, and lost a third of their 
number in killed and wounded ; but they beat the 
enemy, who fled, leaving his wounded with them. " As 
I rode up they saluted with a present arms ; several 
were bloody with wounds as they stood in their places ; 
one boy limped to his post who had been hit three 
times. As I looked at the glow of pride on their faces 
my heart choked me ; I could n*t speak ; but a boy said, 
* All right, colonel; we know what you mean ! ' " 

Their colonel was always writing home praises of 
their prowess or their discipline, and his letters abound 
in their jokes. They were humorists in their way, as 
all unspoiled Americans are, and in their march through 



J 



70 HIS LOVE FOB HIS MEN. 

a friendly section of Maryland, where the admiring 
women, children, and negroes called out from every 
house to know what troops they were, their drollery 
bubbled out in such answers as "The twenty-third 
Utah," "The twenty-third Bushwhackers," "Drafted 
Men," "Home Guards," "Peace Men," "The Lost 
Tribes," and so forth. It was men of the Kanawha 
division who, being at home on furlough, took from its 
bearer and trampled under foot a transparency in a 
Democratic procession — a brufel and shameless cari- 
cature of their leader dodging the bullets they had seen 
him brave ; and Hayes had more than once been as quick 
in the defense of their honor. One evening a corps 
commander dashed furiously into their camp, where he 
found them taking straw from a stack for bedding, and, 
assailing them in the atrocious language which even a 
brave and skillful general could suffer himself to use to- 
wards men as good as he, demanded to see their colo- 
nel. Lieutenant-Colonel Hayes presented himself and 
respectfully but firmly defended them, saying that they 
had always taken forage and other necessaries, and that 
in a friendly country they were ready to pay for them. 
Then after some further angry words from the general 
-he added, " I trust our generals will exhibit the same 
energy in dealing with their foes that they do in the 
treatment of their friends." As the general rode away 
the men cheered their colonel, — a little rueful, per- 
haps, about his sarcasm, but glad to have defended the 
brave fellows unjustly assailed and forbidden to speak 
for themselves. 



CHAPTER Vn. 

THE OAMP ON THB KANAWHA AND THE MORGAN BAID. 

Eablt in October of 1862, the twenty-third was 
ordered with the rest of the E^anawha division to re- 
turn to West Virginia, and went into winter quarters 
near the falls of the Great Kanawha. Here, on the 
dOth of November, a party of officers welcomed back 
their colonel, and they had a jovial meeting, ^ fighting 
over again the battle of South Mountain, with many 
anecdotes, much laughter and enjoyment." 

The colonel had come home to them reestablished 
in health from the general effect of his wound,^ but his 
arm was still very weak, and easily hurt ; he could not 
raise his hand above his head. With any severe exer- 
tion, the whole limb was very painful. Under the cir- 
cumstances, Lieutenant-Colonel Comly and Major McH- 
rath relieved him of drill duty, and he interested himself 
chiefly in the superintendence of the sanitary arrange- 
ments of the camp — matters which he always looked 
to personally if possible. The men had built them- 

1 He had had the best of nursing in the family of Mr. Jacob Body 
at Middletown, before his wife conid join him, and her coming only 
intensified the care he received. Three weeks after he was f^ot he 
walked over the battle-field with Mrs. Hayes on his fortieth birth- 
day. 



72 MBS. HAYES IN CAMP. 

selves cabins of planks and logs, and prepared to pass 
the winter in as much comfort as can fall to the sol- 
dier's lot. They took peculiar pride in fitting up the 
colonel's quarters, and when, late in January, his wife 
came with her three boys to visit him, it was matter of 
rejoicing for the whole regiment. Other ladies joined 
their husbands in camp, and the winter passed gayly 
in such amusements as the life afforded : rides, fishing, 
boating, and pleasure excursions of every sort. The 
little ones became the children of the regiment so far as 
the soldier's love could adopt them ; with the colonel's 
wife and boys in camp each good fellow was nearer the 
wife and boys so far away at home. 

But these gentle women could not suffer their so- 
journ in camp to be merely a pleasure to themselves, 
and Mrs. Hayes, who remained longest, had the privilege 
of doing the most kindness to the men so proud of her 
presence. " His wife is a noble woman " (we are 
letting one of the soldiers speak for himself); "there 
was not a morning that she omitted going through 
the hospital, and she did everything she could for the 
sick and wounded." " Into our midst," writes another, 
" sitting at our camp firesj putting new heart into 
many a homesick boy, banishing the fever from many 
a bronzed cheek with her gentle touch, came this fair 
lady and her boys. We named our camp, in her honor, 
Camp Lucy Hayes, and not a man in all those thou- 
sands, but would have risked his life for her." 

Mrs. Hayes's visit ended in March. A second visit 
which she paid her husband in June, when his regiment 



MORGAN'S RAID. 73 

was encamped at Charlestown, Virginia, was saddened by 
the death of their youngest boy whom she had brought 
with her. From this sorrow Colonel Hayes was shortly 
summoned to take part in the pursuit and capture of 
John Morgan, after his famous raid through Ohio. 

On the 2d of July Morgan crossed the Cumberland at 
Burkesville with twenty-four hundred and sixty men, 
and struck through the State of Kentucky to the Ohio 
Eiver. In five days he reached the river, sixty miles 
below Louisville, seized two steamers in which he set 
his men across, and then resumed his rapid ride, push- 
ing through Southern Indiana towards Cincinnati. He 
rode fifty and sixty miles a day, leaving bridges burnt, 
telegraph wires cut, and general consternation behind 
him. By the 12th it was known that he was aiming at 
Cincinnati, where navigation and business were stopped 
and martial law proclaimed. The governor called out 
the militia of the southern part of the State, but Morgan 
came so swiftly and so secretly that, when on the morn- 
ing of the 14th he passed through the suburbs of the 
city, he met not so much as a hostile picket, and by 
four o'clock in the afternoon he had reached a point 
twenty-eight miles east of Cincinnati, having ridden 
ninety-eight miles in thirty-five hours. Desertions had 
reduced his numbers to two thousand, and any mili- 
tary object which the expedition might have had was 
defeated by the insubordination of his followers, who 
abandoned themselves to plundering. But the people 
made all haste to hide their horses, cattle, and silver, 
and Morgan's men seem to have been chiefly terrible to 



74 HAYES MEETS MORGAN AT POMEROY. 

shops abounding in calicoes. With the best disposi- 
tion in the world to steal everything, they had no time 
for research. Fifty thousand militia had taken the 
field against them, but having fully supplied themselves 
with dress goods the raiders dashed on, and outrode or 
outgeneraled the militia, and reached the Ohio Kiver at 
Pomeroy on the 19th, having met with very little fight- 
ing in their course, and only such molestation as inde- 
pendent sharp-shooters or small bodies of militia could 
offer them in passing. But by this time a body of the 
regular cavalry, under Judah, and a division of the mili- 
tia were close upon him, and at Pomeroy he first en- 
countered a disciplined force. 

On the 16th of July, Colonel Hayes heard of Mor- 
gan's presence in Ohio and prepared to head him off. 
He ordered the steamboats lying at Charleston to be 
sent on to Luke Creek on the Kanawha, the highest 
point to which boats go in that river, and prevailed on . 
his commanding officer to allow him to take men for 
his enterprise. He chose two regiments and a section of 
artillery, and embarking his force, reached GallTpolis, 
Ohio, on the 18th. On the 19th, Sunday, he had pushed 
on to Pomeroy, where he found the militia in position, 
waiting for Morgan, who came about noon from Buffing- 
ton Island. Hayes's force went out to meet him, and 
after a slight skirmish Morgan fled, pursued by the 
twenty-third. The next morning at daylight he was 
attacked by Judah's cavalry and the gunboats, together 
with the force under Hayes, and after a brief engage- 
ment entirely routed. More than half his command 



HONOB TO WHOM HONOR. 75 

was captured, and, pursued and attacked in all his 
doublings and turnings, he shortly afterwards surren- 
dered with the remnant of his men, and was sent to the 
Ohio penitentiary. 

Colonel Hayes's letters describe his share in Mor- 
gan's discomfiture as <Hhe liveliest and jolliest little 
campaign we ever had," — "a jolly time." " The 
cavalry, gunboats, militia, and our infantry, each claim 
the victory as their peculiar property. The truth is, 
all were essential parties to the success." This is the 
verdict of a just man who could always afEord to be 
generous, and we can easily render full credit to the 
other forces engaged in Morgan's defeat (he was finally 
run down by a body of Michigan cavalry), while recog- 
nizing the military insight and the personal vigor and 
decision with which Hayes planned his share of the 
movement against Morgan, and was enabled first of all 
to strike him. 



CHAPTER Vni. 

CLOTD MOUNTAIN AND WINCHESTEE. 

The twenty-third returned, with the rest of Hayes's* 
command, to Charleston, where it lay in camp till 
April 29, 1864. The interval was a season of prepara- 
tion and expectation for various services ; and in the 
mean time Colonel Hayes was more than once called 
upon to consider the subject of promotion for himself, 
which could have been easily secured if he had been 
more ambitious to advance his own interests than to do 
his duty in the station where he found himself. His 
feeling seems to have been that he would " rather be 
one of the good colonels than one of the poor generals." 
He knew very well that the colonel of a regiment had 
one of the most agreeable positions in the service, and 
one of the most useful, and he liked a good colonel's 
ability to make a good regiment. Only two things 
made him anxious : that he might have a stupid briga- 
dier put over him, or that through losses his regiment 
might disappear or be consolidated with others and that 
thus he might lose his colonelcy. But he was not very 
anxious. He did not seek promotion, and as usual pro- 
motion was seeking him. 

When the twenty-third finally moved in April, it 



RAID UPON A RAILROAD. 77 

was to join the forces under General Crook in a raid 
on the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad. " This ex- 
pedition," says the writer in " Ohio in the War," " was 
something worthy of their mettle. Their long inac- 
tion had not hardened their sinews or made them 
impervious to fatigue. But, as was their custom, the 
rank and file of the twenty-third entered into the expe- 
dition with cheerfulness and a determination if possible 
to make it signally successful. Without detailing their 
daily marches, it is sufficient to say that the regiment 
toiled on over the rugged mountains, up ravines and 
through the dense woods, meeting with snows and rain 
in sufficient volume to appal the stoutest hearts ; but 
they toiled patiently, occasionally brushing the enemy 
out of their way until, on the 9th of May, 1864, the 
Battle of Cloyd Mountain was fought." 

In this affair Colonel Hayes conmianded a brigade, 
including of course his own regiment ; the other regi- 
ments and parts of regiments were mainly Ohio troops, 
used to service under him, and eager as the twenty- 
third for the fight. Apparently the great object of the 
expedition was to destroy the Virginia and Tennessee 
Railroad bridge on New River, which would cut the 
great line of communications between Richmond and the 
Southwest ; and General Crook, whom the Sioiix now 
call the Gray Fox, brought his peculiar shrewdness to 
the undertaking. As he marched up the Kanawha he 
sent his music with one regiment towards Leesburg in 
the direction of Richmond, while he made his way in 
an entirely different direction toward the New River 



78 THE enemy's position at cloyd mountain. 

bridge, ordering the bands thus detached to play as if 
the whole army were with them. The first feat of the 
expedition was the bloodless capture of Fort Brecken- 
ridge, out of which the enemy fled at the approach of 
Crook's force. On the parapet of this fort the rebels 
had handsomely carved the words Fort Breckenridge, 
for which the Ohio men immediately substituted Fort 
Crook. When too late, the enemy found out their mis- 
take in abandoning the fort and hurried back, and 
gathered finally with a considerable force under General 
Jenkins, formerly a Democratic member of Congress. 
Jenkins placed his army across the track of Crook's 
men fifty miles southward, where they had to traverse 
a high mountain ridge. At this point there was a good 
road, a creek, and a broad, beautiful meadow stretching 
before it. The ridge was called Cloyd Mountain, and 
here the enemy intrenched themselves. Crook's men 
arrived at about eleven o'clock on the 9th, and as soon 
as they came within cannon shot the enemy opened fire 
upon them, and they formed in the woods on either side 
of the road. It was plain that Jenkins was very 
strongly fortified, and that his position could not be 
carried without severe fighting. An attack was made 
and repulsed, when General Crook came to Colonel 
Hayes and ordered him with his brigade and the brig- 
ade on its right to cross the meadow and charge up the 
hill upon the batteries, adding that he would himself 
accompany him. The two brigades formed in the bor- 
ders of the woods and marched out in perfect line. 
They were fresh from camp, where they had been 



A GALLANT CHARGE. 79 

thoroughly drilled and could march well. The enem/s 
fire opened heavily, but not a great number of men 
fell. The rest quickened their pace, keeping their line 
good until they got to the edge of the woods. They 
could not yet see the fortification, which was on a 
woody hill, and at the foot of the hill was the creek, not 
very wide or deep, which had remained equally unseen. 
They dashed through the creek, the bed of which was 
some four feet below the level of the meadow, and 
started up the hill at a point so steep that the curva- 
ture of the ground protected them from the enemy's 
fire. Here they stopped to take breath and shake the 
water out of their boots, and then they charged up the 
hill -again. As they passed the protecting curve, they 
faced a murderous fire. Men and officers fell in aw- 
ful slaughter on all sides. The whole line seemed to 
go down, but the men who were not hit did not stop. 
There was no straggling; the men responded cheer- 
fully to the encouragement of their officers, and were 
soon at the fort. It was an earthwork hastily thrown 
up and strengthened with fei\ce-rails thrust endwise 
into it and through it, forming an embankment ex- 
tremely difficult to surmount, and held by the enemy 
in perfect confidence. But Hayes's men scrambled 
over at once, the first being brave Private Kosht, a boy 
of eighteen, a new recruit, who sprang from the line 
with a shout, and hung his hat on the muzzle of a can- 
non. The fight in the fort lasted only ten minutes, 
but it was desperate while it lasted, a wild hand-to-hand 
combat, which ended by the Ohioans beating the rebels 



80 CHARACTERISTIC COMMENTS BY HAYES. 

out and taking prisoners all who could not run away. 
Then they pushed swiftly after the fugitives to keep 
them from re-forming, which they attempted at a 
second ridge of the mountain. The rebels yielded to 
the second charge here made nipon them, but formed 
again, reenforced by a body of the men who had been 
raiding under Morgan, and had lived to fight another 
day by taking care of themselves in time. They were 
promptly broken to pieces by the third terrific charge, 
and the fight was over. Our men hurried on eight miles 
further to Dublin Depot, on the railroad line, where 
they burned the bridge aimed at, and destroyed the 
road, rails, ties, and bed, for several miles, so that the 
rebels were unable to use the line for six weeks. 

In a letter written home ten days later, Colonel 
Hayes says: "This is the most completely successful 
and by all odds the pleasantest campaign I have ever had. 
Now it is over," he adds, — he was not only a bayo- 
net that thought, but a bayonet that pitied, and he never 
loved war but as a means, — "I hardly know what I 
would change in it, except to restore life and limb to the 
killed and wounded/' Then a sentence that follows is 
peculiarly like Hayes in its manly modesty : " My com- 
mand in battles and on the march behaved to my entire 
satisfaction ; none did, none could have done better. 
We had a most conspicuous part in the battle of Cloyd's 
Mountain, and were so lucky T* Lucky, indeed, as 
true and valiant men are in whatever they set their 
hands to, and lucky as Hayes has always. been, through 
being simply worthy and capable of everything he has 
undertaken in his most prosperous career. 



CONTINUAL FIGHTING. 81 

Crook's army proceeded on its course after destroy- 
ing the New River bridge, and, with some slight en- 
counters with the enemy, who constantly harassed our 
men on their march over roads rendered almost impass- 
able by the heavy rains, arrived at Staunton on the 8th 
of June, where Hayes's brigade joined General Hunter's 
command. On this march the army was encumbered 
by multitudes of contrabands, men, women, and children, 
and suffered from privation amounting almost to famine. 

On the 11th, the corps arrived before Lexington, 
which was taken after an artillery and sharp-shooter 
fight of three hours. Hayes's brigade had the advance, 
and nearly all the casualties fell to him. His brigade 
had now become as dear to him as his own regiment, 
and he was proud of it as one of the best in the army. 
On the 14th he led it within two miles of Lynch- 
burg, and drove a body of the enemy as many. miles 
up the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad. The army 
camped for the night near Lynchburg, and so near a 
body of rebels, in the dark, that the men of both sides 
took rails from the same fence for their fires. 

On the 18th, Crook's command set out to cross the 
James, and take Lynchburg in the rear, when news 
came that the enemy, heavily reenforced, was about to 
attack Hunter's centre. Crook's force met and repulsed 
the attack, a very sharp one, and the same evening -re- 
enforcements for the enemy continuing to pour in from 
Richmond, the retreat of our side began. " The men," 
says Mr. Reid, " had had no sleep for two days and 
nights, and scarcely anything to eat. In this condition 



82 A T£RRIBLE MARCH. 

they marched, frequently falling down asleep in the 
road, it being with great difficulty that they could be 
kept on their feet." The whole retreat, which continued 
till Charleston was reached on the Ist of July, was 
attended with immense suffering, suffering borne, as the 
journal of one of the officers testifies, with the most 
heroic patience. "The men had nothing to eat, the 
trains having been sent in advance. It is almost in- 
credible that men should have been able to endure so 
much, but they never faltered, and not a mtirmur es- 
caped them. Often they would drop out silently, ex- 
hausted, but not a word of complaint was spoken." 
During whole days they pushed on, skirmishing heavily 
with the enemy, who himg upon their rear, and neither 
eating nor sleeping. At last, " on the 27th, a supply 
train was met on Big Sewell Mountain, — men all 
crazy, — stopped and ate, marched and ate, camped 
about dark, and ate aU night J* 

Of this expedition and retreat. Colonel Hayes him- 
self wrote in one of his letters home, " We have had 
altogether the severest work I have yet known in the 
war. We have marched almost continually for two 
months, fighting often, with insufficient food and sleep ; 
crossed the three ranges of the Alleghanies four times, 
the ranges of the Blue Ridge twice; marched several 
times all day and all night without sleeping. We all 
believe in our general [Crook]. He is a considerate, 
humane man, a thorough soldier and disciplinarian." 

Remaining at Charleston till the 10th, Crook's com- 
mand was ordered east to meet Early, then invading 



DEFEAT AT WINCHESTER. 83 

Maryland and Pennsylvania. On the 18th, Hayes's 
brigade was sent, without cavalry and with but two 
sections of a howitzer battery, to attack more than 
twenty thousand of Early's men some ten miles beyond 
Harper's Ferry. They were surrounded by two divis- 
ions of rebel cavalry, but cut their way through and 
got safely back to camp, joining Crook at Winchester 
on- the 22d. Here, two days afterwards, Hayes shared 
in the first defeat he had known. His brigade was 
sent out to meet what was supposed to be a recon- 
noissance in force on the part of the enemy, with 
orders to join his right to that of another brigade, and 
charge with it. This brigade was commanded by 
Colonel Mulligan. Hayes rode out to the right of his 
line in an open valley, and made himself known to 
Mulligan, whose orders he found were to fight with 
him and keep the two lines together; also to attack 
whatever was in front. These coincided with Hayes's 
instructions, and the brigade prepared to attack. Two 
lines of rebels, fighting as skirmishers, were alone vis- 
ible, but there were reports of the enemy on the hills 
to the right and left, inclosing the valley in which the 
brigades were drawn up. A little closer inspection 
now developed the enemy on these hills in imniense 
force. The two colonels perceived that they were in a 
trap, but they pushed forward according to orders, and 
in five minutes Colonel Mulligan fell, pierced with five 
balls. The enemy came to meet the attack, and closing 
upon our vastly inferior force, easily drove it before 
them, Hayes's brigade retreating till it struck a rough, 



84 A RETREAT IN GOOD ORDER. 

wooded hill. Here he formed his men, Colonel Comly 
of the twenty-third being wounded at this point, and 
held the hill while the enemy pressed him hard on all 
sides. His resistance threw them into some confusion. 
He cleared his line of them, and continued his retreat 
in good order, although attacked continually for twelve 
miles. When the enemy pressed his men too hard, they 
turned and beat them back, and so made good their 
escape. They presently joined Crook's force, and the 
retreat continued till midnight, when the enemy ceased 
to pursue. From the peculiar nature of the ground, and 
the position of the opposing forces, Hayes was probably 
then in greater danger than he had ever been before, 
all the officers being exposed to the fire of the enemy's 
sharp-shooters, who could easily pick them off at short 
range ; but he lived to retrieve the disastrous fortunes 
of that day on the same field a little later. His horse 
was shot under him, and he was struck in the shoulder 
by a spent ball. His brigade, after being in the hottest 
of the fight, was in condition to cover the retreat as 
rear guard, which it did successfully for twenty-four 
hours. "We are queer beings," he writes fron^ his 
camp near Sharpsburg, two days after ; " the camp is 
now alive with laughter and good feeling — more sv 
than usual — the recoil after so much toil and anx- 
iety." 

For almost a month Hayes's brigade was engaged in 
daily skirmishing, with varying fortune, up and down 
the Shenandoah Valley, till at Hidltown, on the 23d 
of August, he repulsed an attack, dashing out and 



A BRILLIANT ACHIEVEMENT. 85 

picking up ^'a small South Carolina regiment entire." 
" This charge was brilliantly executed," says Mr. Reid, 
" and excited astonishment among the rebel prisoners," 
who expressed their surprise in the characteristic de- 
mand, "Who the are you 'uns ? " 

On the evening of the 3d of September, at Berry- 
ville, an engagement of uncommon fierceness took place 
between the South Carolina and Mississippi division 
under Kershaw and the Kanawha division, Hayes's 
brigade sustaining the hardest of it. At ten o'clock the 
fighting ceased without decided victory, though the 
rebels were killed and taken in large numbers. They 
were of Longstreet's crack division, and had charged 
with wild yells, confident of victory, but Hayes's men 
drove them back with tremendous slaughter. The 
battle had begun an hour before sunset with the at- 
tempt of the Union forces to hold a piece of turnpike 
road, by which a body of cavalry, sent to cut off the 
supplies in the rear of Early's army, were to rejoin our 
Kanawha division. Hayes posted his men behind a ter- 
race wall for quarter of a mile along the road, remain- 
ing himself on horseback in full sight, while the enemy 
charged. The enemy came within a few yards. Hayes's 
men rose with a yell, and struck them with a deadly 
Sre, every shot of which told, and then charged in their 
turn. The rebels, thrown into wild disorder, turned 
and ran, pursued to their reserve line, where they ral- 
lied and repulsed their pursuers, who took cover in a 
piece of woods. Now ensued a strange conflict. The 
commanders on either side were desirous to withdraw 



86 A STRANGE CONFLICT. 

their men. Crook sent Hayes word to let the fire die if 
he could (and the rebels for their part were willing), 
but not to stop till the enemy stopped. So the men 
were ordered to let the fire drop, and they fired more 
and more infrequently, till it came to only a shot at a 
time ; then suddenly three or four would fire by chance 
together, and on this the whole of both sides would en- 
gage again. At last, without the retirement of either 
army, the surgeons and burying parties from both sides 
began to mingle together with lanterns, looking for the 
wounded and the dead between the hosts. Only at the 
apparition of these spectral lights, fiitting hither and 
thither over the bloody field, and hovering where death 
or anguish lay, did the battle cease. 

Speaking of the engagement afterwards, and especially 
of the moment when he sat his horse exposed to the 
full fire of the enemy, while his men lay crouched be- 
hind the terrace wall by the roadside, Hayes recognized 
the peril in which he had been. "But," he added, 
" I enjoyed the excitement more than ever, — my men 
behaved so well ! " 



CHAPTER IX. 

OPEQUAN, fisher's HILL, AND CEDAR OREEK. 

The battle of Opequan was fought on the 19th of 
September, in the neighborhood of Winchester, where 
two months before Hayes had so gallantly sustained 
his first and only defeat. Mr. Heid's vivid and stir- 
ring account of the battle gives the highest honor to 
Hayes, who had the extreme right of Crook's command 
in making a fiank attack. "The position was reached 
under cover of an almost impenetrable growth of cedar, 
crossing a swampy stream. Here the division was 
halted and formed. First brigade (Hayes's) in front, 
and second (Johnson's) in rear. Throwing out a 
light line of skirmishers, the brigade advanced rapidly 
to the front, driving the enemy's cavalry. The national 
cavalry at the same time advanced out of the woods on 
the right. After advancing in this way across two or 
three open fields under a scattering fire, the crest of a 
slight elevation was reached, when the enemy's infentry 
line came into view off diagonally to the left front, and 
he opened a brisk artillery fire. Moving forward 
double-quick under this fire, the brigade reached a thick 
fringe of underbrush, dashing through which it came 
upon a deep slough forty or fifty yards wide, and neajly 



88 HAYES AT OPEQUAN. 

waist-deep, with soft mud at the bottom, overgrown 
with a thick bed of moss nearly strong enough to bear 
the weight of a man. It seemed impossible to get 
through it, and the whole line was staggered for a mo- 
ment Just then Colonel Hayes plunged in with his 
horse, and under a shower of bullets and shells, with his 
horse sometimes down, he rode, waded, and dragged his 
way through, and after a pause long enough to partially 
re-form the line, charged forward again, yelling and 
driving the enemy. Sheridan's old cavalry kept close 
up on the right, having passed around the slough, and 
every time the enemy was driven from cover charged 
and captured a large number of prisoners. This plan 
was followed throughout the battle, by which the cavalry 
was rendered very effective. In one of these charges. 
Colonel Duval 1, the division commander, was wounded 
and carried from the field, leaving Colonel Hayes in 
command. He was everywhere, exposing himself reck- 
lessly, as usual. He was the first over the slough, he 
was in advance of the line half the time afterwards. 
Men were dropping all around bim, but he rode through 
it all as if he had a charmed life. 

*^ No reenforcements, no demonstration as promised ; 
something must be done to stop the murderohs, concen- 
trated fire that is cutting the force so dreadfully. Se- 
lecting some Saxony rifles in the twenty-third, pieces 
of seventy-one calibre, with a range of twelve hundred 
yards, Lieutenant McBride was ordered forward with 
them to kill the enemy's artillery horses in plain sight. 
They moved forward under cover as much as possible. 



THE FIRST MAN OVER THE BOG. 89 

At the first shot a horse drops; almost immediately 
another is killed ; a panic seems to seize the artillery, 
and they commence limbering up. The infantry take 
the alarm, and a few begin running from the intrench- 
ments. The whole line rises, and with a tremendous 
yell our men rush frantically from the breastwork, and 
thus, without stopping to fire another shot, the enemy 
ran in utter confusion — that terrible cavalry which 
had been hovering like a cloud on the flanks, sweeping 
down on the rebels and capturing them by regiments." 
Another account of the battle states that the fight 
began at daylight, and that at noon the tide was rather 
against the Union forces. It was at this moment, while 
the rebels in Winchester were rejoicing over the vic- 
tory, that Hayes's brigade led the charge through the- 
slough. It was in fact a deep creek, with high banks, 
very boggy margins, and some twenty -five yards in 
width. The rebel fire burst out in all its fury as the 
line reached this formidable obstacle. The men wa- 
vered, but it was death to stop now. Hayes was the 
first to take the plunge, and his horse was mired under 
him midway of the slough. He dismounted, and throw- 
ing himself forward on his hands and knees managed, 
while the shot and shell struck all round him in the 
morass, by crawling, swimming, and floundering on, to 
reach the other shore alone. When he reached the 
shore, the bank was so steep that the enemy's fire could 
not strike him, and when he had regained his feet, he 
turned about to see who was coming next. Captain Ben- 
jamin F. Stearns, of the thirty-sixth Ohio, a very brave 



90 HAYES'S INFANTRY AND SHEBIDAN'S HOBSE. 

and gallant officer, was coming next. He w^s just at 
hand as Hayes turned, and his presence undoubtedly 
brought great comfort to his commander, there within 
twenty -five feet of the rebel line. Hayes raised hi& 
cap, Stearns lifted his, and smiling, the comrades shook 
hands. Then Hayes beckoned to his men with his 
cap ; at once the morass was full of them, swarming 
over as they could; and when some two score had 
landed, they charged up the bank upon the enemy, 
who, never dreaming of an attack at this point, had 
left his artillery unsupported. The batteries were 
taken, and the whole of Crook's command having 
crossed, his men charged a strongly posted rebel line 
five hundred yards beyond the first Their charge was 
made in the teeth of a destructive fire; at times they 
wavered under the storm of grape and musketry, but 
the flags were pushed on, and the straggling crowd 
followed. The affair began to look dark, when, " at 
the most critical moment," writes Hayes, in a letter 
dated two days after the battle, " that splendid cavalry, 
with sabres drawn, moved slowly around our right, 
beyond the creek, then at a trot, and finally, with 
shouts and a gallop, charged right into the rebel lines. 
We pushed on, and away broke the rebels." 

The battle of Fisher's Hill occurred the day after 
that of Opequan. It was, in fact, rather a victory than 
a fight, and consisted simply of a wholesale capture of 
artillery by oiir forces, without the loss of a man. The 
enemy had retreated some twenty-five miles up the 
valley of the Shenandoah to a point where the valley. 



FIRST AT THE REBEL LINES. 91 

narrowing to a breadth of three miles, is traversed by 
the mountain ridge called Fisher's Hill ; and here they 
had fortified a naturally strong position, and were ap- 
parently impregnably intrenched. After consultation 
between Crook and Sheridan, it was, upon Crook's in- 
sistance, resolved not to attack them in front, though it 
was believed that an army demoralized by so recent 
defeat could be broken even in that position, but to 
turn their left. Crook took Hayes's division (by the 
wounding of Duvall, Hayes was in command of both 
brigades), and the general and colonel rode together 
at the head of the men. As the steeper ascent began, 
all the officers dismounted eicept Hayes, but he had 
replaced the charger mired in the slough at Opequan 
with a teamster's horse, whose surefootedness enabled 
him to carry his rider anywhere. The force clambered 
up and down mountain sides and through ravines till 
they struck the gorge in which the rebels were posted, 
when Hayes led the charge by galloping right down 
upon the rebel lines. The whole division followed 
with a yell, and the rebels — men of Jackson's old 
corps and Early's veterans — broke and ran in hope- 
less panic, losing every gun. 

Early on the 19th of October the famous battle of 
Cedar Creek began with the disastrous defeat of our 
troops under Greneral Wright, who commanded in Sher- 
idan's absence, and suffered himself to be surprised by 
Early and Longstreet. Anxious for his right fiank, he 
found himself suddenly struck on the left, under cover 
of a heavy fog, in which his assailants had all the ad- 



92 WINNING BACK THE BATTLE. 

vantages. In fifteen minutes the enemy was in his 
camps, and his force thrown into utter confusion and 
in fight towards Winchester. A few miles from that 
place the first fugitives met a major-general on a black 
horse gayly trotting down the road, who at sight of 
them quickened his trot to a gallop. He swung his 
cap, smiled cheerily, and said, " Face the other way, 
boys. We are going back to our camps ; " and as he 
met regiment after regiment, " Boys, this never would 
have happened if I had been here. And now we are 
going back to our camps." It was Sheridan, and the 
rout became a march to victory. The beaten army 
turned, drove the enemy from their camp, and broke 
him to atoms along the whole line, capturing nearly all 
his transportation, and retaking their lost artillery. 
This is the story in brief, but it cannot be too fully 
told, nor too often. Mr. Reid's accounts of it in his 
sketch of Sheridan's life, and his narrative of the 
twenty-third regiment, are, like all the battle-pieces of 
his " Ohio in the War," graphic and dramatic, and at 
the same time admirably clear. "The situation," he 
says, "in a few minutes after the attack, was about 
this : Crook's command, overpowered and driven from 
their advanced position, were forming on the left of 
the nineteenth corps, which corps was just getting into 
action, the left being hotly engaged, but not so much 
so as Crook's command yet The right of the line had 
not been engaged at all, and was not for some time 
after. While the line was in this situation, the trains 
were all slowly moving off. A desperate stand was 



ENTER SHERIDAN. 93 

made by the shattered lines of Crook's command to 
save the head-quarters' train of the army, which came 

last from the right, and it succeeded From 

this time the whole line fell slowly back, fighting stub- 
bornly, to a new position which had been selected. 
There they halted, and the enemy seemed content with 
shelling us. 

" General Crook lay a couple of rods away from tho 
line, in a place which seemed more particularly exposed 
than any other part of the line. Colonel Hayes lay close 
by, badly bruised from his fall, and grumbling because 
the troops did not charge the enemy's line instead of 
waiting to be charged. Suddenly there is a dash in the 
rear, on the Winchester pike ; and almost before they 
are aware, a young man in full major-general's uniform, 
and riding furiously a magnificent black horse, literally 
* flecked with foam,' reins up and springs ofF by Gen- 
eral Crook's side. There is a perfect roar as everybody 
recognizes — Sheridan ! He talks with Crook a little 
while, cutting away at the tops of the weeds with his 
riding-whip. General Crook speaks half a dozen sen- 
tences that sound a good deal like the crack of the 
whip ; and by that time some of the staff are up. They 
are sent flying in different directions. Sheridan and 
Crook lie down and seem to be talking, and all is quiet 
again, except the vicious shells of the different batteries, 
and the roar of artillery along the line. After a while 
Colonel Forsyth comes down in front, and shouts to the 
general: "The nineteenth corps is closed up, sir!" 
Sheridan jumps up, gives one more cut with his whip, 



94 HAYES'S STAND AT THE HEAD-QUARTERS. 

whirls himseK round once, jumps on his horse, and 
starts up the line. Just as he starts oS. he says to the 
men, *We are going to have a good thing on them 
now, boys ! ' and so he rode off." 

In this battle Hayes comndanded the Kanawha divis- 
ion, and being in reserve a mile back from the main line, 
did not share in its disaster when the rebels attacked. 
In the stand made by his division to save the head-quar- 
ters, the fighting was very severe, though the men were 
disheartened by the belief that the enemy were in the 
rear, and were held to their work with difficulty. At a 
certain moment of the fight Hayes saw his right break- 
ing, and rode rapidly down to rally his men, but they 
melted away from around him, and left him exposed 
alone to the fire of the enemy, who filled the air with a 
hail of lead. He was galloping forward at full speed, 
when his horse, struck with a score of balls, was kiUed 
under him ; as the horse dropped, the rider was flung 
over his head and terribly bruised from crown to heel, 
while the ankle of his left foot, catching in the stirrup, 
was dislocated. He lay conscious, but perfectly still, 
well knowing that the slightest movement would bring 
him a shower of bullets ; then at length, watching his 
chance, he leaped to his feet and regained his own lines, 
after a sharp chase, and mounted his orderly's horse. 
He kept his men in some order and shook off the en- 
emy, till the fog lifted, when they began to fight with 
more confidence, continually pressed by the enemy, but 
retreating slowly and in good order. After retiring 
three or four miles, Hayes joined his force with another 



HAYES X BRIGADIER-GENERAL. 95 

body and succeeded in checking the enemy's advance ; 
his men took rails from the fences and made fires for cof- 
fee, and he lay down on the creek bank with Crook and 
other officers, and talked of the shame of defeat by forces 
they had beaten so often. Crook wished to attack them, 
but Wright being in command, nothing was done. At 
this juncture Sheridan came up, and after a brief parley 
with Crook, said, " Boys, we will have a good thing, 
for we will be in our camp before night. Set your 
watches," and he fixed the minute when they were to 
move out. At three o'clock they attacked the enemy 
and surprised him in turn, and the victory followed. In 
spite of his dislocated ankle and the injuries received in 
his fall, Hayes was able to keep the saddle throughout 
the day ; before the close he received another wound, 
but it was slight ; he was struck in the head by a spent 
ball. 

That night, Sheridan, denouncing the manner in 
which his army had been used by having so many 
divisions commanded by colonels, said to Hayes, " You 
will be a brigadier-general from this time." When 
the promotion actually came, he wrote home a letter 
so like himself, in due sense of the honor and in de- 
cent self-respect, that we shall need no excuse, with the 
reader at least, in giving it here in full. 

" Greneral Crook gave me a very agreeable present 
this afternoon — a pair of his old brigadier-general 
straps. The stars are somewhat dinmied with hard 
service, but will correspond pretty well with my rusty 
old blouse. Of course, I am very much gratified with 



96 ODDS IK BRIGADIERS. 

the promotion. I know perfectly well that the rank 
has been conferred on all sorts of small people, and so 
cheapened shamefully, but I can't help feeling that 
getting it at the close of a most bloody campaign, on 
the recommendation of fighting generals like Crook 
and Sheridan, is a different thing from the same rank 
conferred — well, as it has been in some instances." 

Whilst he was doing all that hard fighting in the 
valley of the Shenandoah, he had been elected to 
Congress from the second Ohio district, and he got the 
news after the battle of Cedar Creek. In one of his 
admirable letters home he expresses his gratification, but 
adds : " My particular gratification is much less than it 
would be if I were not so much more gratified by my 
good luck in winning * golden opinions ' in the more 
stirring scenes around me here. My share of notoriety 
here is nothing at all, and my real share of merit is 
also small enough, I know ; but the consciousness that I 
am doing my part in these brilliant actions, is far more 
gratifying than anything the election brings me." 

Between the beginning of May and end of October, 
1864, Hayes was under fire on sixty days, and he was 
under fire on seven hundred days in the course of the 
war. He was four times wounded, the severest wound 
being that received at Soutlf Mountain. Yet the 
wound from which he has suffered most is hardly to 
be called a wound at all. A fragment of shell struck 
80 close to his knee as to cut his pantaloons clean 
away ai that point ; he rode through the day, and never 
made anything of the affair, but now, after twelve 



A WOUND THAT WILL NOT DISABLE. 



97 



years, this merely approximate hurt troubles him more 
than all the rest, especially in going up stairs. 

It is believed, however, that it will not prevent his 
* ascent of the Capitol steps, on the 4th of March next. 
7 




CHAPTER X. 

TWICE CONGRESSMAN, THRICE GOVERNOR, AND NOMI- 
NEE FOR PRESIDENT. 

BLates was first nominated for Congress by the Re- 
publicans of the second Cincinnati district in August, 
and elected in October, 1864, in the very hottest of 
the Shenandoah Valley fighting, when nearly every day 
brought its battle, and every day was full of suffering 
and danger. The letter which he wrote when the 
news of his nomination reached him, with a hint that 
his presence in Cincinnati would secure his election, is 
as magnanimous as Clay's "I would rather be right 
than be President," and its words are such as deserve 
to live long after this political campaign, whatever its 
results may be, is forgotten. He confesses that though 
he had cared very little about being a candidate, he pre- 
fers now to succeed after having consented to the use 
of his name, but as to the matter of going home on fur- 
lough, he adds : " An officer Jit for duty^ who at this 
crisis would abandon his post to electioneer for Congress, 
ought to he scalped. You may feel perfectly sure I shall 
do no such thingP 

He. had not, of course, sought the nomination, but at 
the nrgence of his friends he had let the matter take 



ELECTED TO CONGRESS WHILE IN THE FIELD. 99 

its course, and he was elected by a majority which 
showed that no other Republican could have carried the 
district. But he did not take his seat in Congress till 
after the war was over, and the faithful troops he had 
so long commanded no longer had a foe to face. 

After the Shenandoah Valley campaign, his command 
went into winter quarters and was not engaged after- 
wards. In the comparative quiet of this time he felt free 
to ask leave of absence, and he went to Washington to 
see Lincoln inaugurated, on the 4th of March, 1865 (hav- 
ing first paid a brief visit to his family in Ohio), and then 
returned to camp. The news of the President's murder 
came to him with shocking force after so recently wit- 
nessing his entry upon a second term of beneficent 
power, and Hayes immediately wrote to his wife a let- 
ter too good in itself, and too significant in many ways, 
to be omitted from this record. It is not merely a testi- 
mony to character and feeling on his part, but* it is sug- 
gestive of her enlightened sympathy with him in mat- 
ters of public concern, and hints of qualities of mind 
and heart in her more common to the White House in 
the days of Mrs. Washington and of Mrs. Madison than 
in our own. 

"New Creek, West VmGraiA, 16th Jpri/ (Sunday), 1865. 

"When I heard first, yesterday morning, of the awful 
tragedy at Washington, I was pained and shocked to a 
degree I have never before experienced. I got on to 
the cars, then just starting, and rode down to Cumber- 
land. The probable consequences, or rather the pos- 
sible results, in their worst imaginable form, were pre- 



100 LETTER ON LINCOLN'S DEATH. 

sented to my mind, one after the other, until I really 
began to feel that here was a calamity so extensive 
that in no direction could be found any, the slightest 
glimmer, of consolation. The nation's great joy turned 
suddenly to a still greater sorrow ! A ruler tested and 
proved in every way, and in every way found equal to 
the occasion, to be exchanged for a new man whose 
ill-omened beginning made the nation hang its head ! 
Lincoln for Johnson ! The work of reconstruction, 
requiring so much statesmanship, just begun ! The 
calamity to Mr. Lincoln in a personal point of view 
so uncalled for a fate ! — so undeserved, so unpro- 
voked ! The probable effect upon the future of pub- 
lic men in this country, the necessity for guards ; our 
ways to be assimilated to those of the despotisms of 
the old world — and so I would find my mind filled 
only with images of evil and calamity, until I felt a 
sinking of heart hardly equaled by that which op- 
pressed us all when the defeat of our army at Manassas, 
almost crushed the nation. But slowly, as in all cases 
of great affliction, one comes to feel that it is not all 
darkness ; the catastrophe is so much less, happening 
now, than it would have been at any time before, since 
Mr. Lincoln's election. At the period after his first 
inauguration ; at any of the periods of great public 
confusion; during the pendency of the last presiden- 
tial election ; at any time before the defeat of Lee, 
such a calamity might have sealed the nation's doom. 
Now, the march of events can't be stayed, probably 
can't be much changed. It is possible that a greater 



ESTIMATE OF LINCOLN'S CHARACTER. 101 

degree of severity in dealing with the rebellion may' / 
be ordered, and that may be for the best. As to Mr. 
Lincoln's name and fame and memory, — all is safe. 
His firmness, moderation, goodness of heart ; his quaint 
humor, his perfect honesty and directness of purpose, 
his logic, his modesty, his sound judgment and great 
wisdom ; the contrast between his obscure beginnings 
and the greatness of his subsequent position and 
achievements ; his tragic death, giving him almost the 
crown of martyrdom, elevate him to a place in his- 
tory second to none other in ancient or modern times. 
His success in his great office, his hold upon the confi- 
dence and affections of his countrymen, we. shall all 
say are only second to Washington's ; we shall prob- 
ably ^ee^ and think that they are not second even to 
his." 

In April, Hayes, to his own regret and the grief of 
his old brigade, was transferred to a new command 
under Hancock,^ and he was the leader of that expedi- 

1 Hayes bade his old command farewell in terms expressive of the 
strong affection existing between them : — 

*' It is with very great regret that I have been compelled to part 
with the officers and men of the first brigade. With many of you 
I have been associated in the service almost four years; with three 
of the regiments of the brigade more than two years, and with all the 
regiments during the memorable campaign of 1864. The battle of 
Cloyd Mountain ; the burning of New River bridge, and the night 
march over Salt Pond Mountain under Greneral Crook in May; the 
days and nights of marching, fighting, and starving on the Lynch- 
burg raid in June ; the defeat at Winchester, and the retreat on the 
24th and 25th of July; the skirmishing, marching, and countermarch- 
ing in the Shenandoah Valley in August; the bloody and brilliant 
victories in September; the night battle at Benyviile ; the turn- 



102 PARTING FROM HIS OLD BRIGADE. 

tion against Lynchburg which was given up after Lee's 
surrender and the ruin of the Confederacy. Shortly 
after, the work being done and other work calling him, 
he sent in his resignation, which took effect on the 
1st of June. But before he left the army he had the 
glory of participating in the grand review at Wash- 
ington; and no one in all those hundred thousands 
had a better right to the triumph of that great day 
than this honest man, this faithful soldier, this stain- 
less patriot. 

ingof the enemy's left at Sheridan's battle of Winchester; the arar 
lanche which swept down North Mountain upon the rebel stronghold 
at Fisher's Hjll; the final conflict in October; the surprise and defeat 
of the morning, and the victory of the evening at Cedar Creek, — 
these and a thousand other events and scenes in the campaign of 1864 
form part of our common recollections which we are not likely ever 
to forget. As long as they are remembered, we shall be reminded of 
each other and of the friendly and agreeable relation which so long 
existed between us. 

" It is very gratifying to me that I was allowed to serve with you 
until we received together the tidings of the great victory which ends 
the rebellion. Whatever may be your fortune, I shall not cease to 
feel a lively interest in everything which concerns your welfare and 
reputation.'' 

Hayes himself afterwards came to acquiesce in the change, but his 
old brigade was not so easily consoled. One of his officers wrote : — 

"WiNCHESTEK, VIRGINIA, April 2,0^ 1865. 
"When I learned that you were taken away from us, I was so in- 
dignant I could hardly refrain from language considered highly un- 
military; not that I have aught against our present brigade com- 
mander — for he has my confidence and respect — but because I think 
that by a just and equitable title, sealed with blood, dearly bought, 
and fairly won, this is your brigade. In this war men become attached 
to each other by more than common ties. I have been clear ' through 
the mill,' from Washington to Chattanooga; you are my choice of all 
the brigade commanders I have been under, save and except Crook.'' 



NOT A CONGRESSIONAL ORATOR. 103 

In October, Hayes returned to Cincinnati and re- 
opened his old house, and in December he took his seat 
in Congress, where he at once made himseK quietly 
felt as a thorough and diligent worker. Two or three 
ingrained habits of his life forbade him to make him- 
seU conspicuous on the floor. In the first place, as 
we have already repeatedly shown, it was Hayes's cus- 
tom to study any new business and fit himself for suc- 
ceed in it, and congressmanship was an entirely new 
business to him. Then he is a man whose inherent 
modesty and seK-respect are at one in keeping him 
aloof from any mere noisy exhibition of himself, or from 
attempting anything which he believes the greater ex- 
perience of others will enable them to perform better. 
Above all, his army life had given him an ever-increas- 
ing contempt of unnecessary and intrusive eloquence, 
and he wrote to a friend, — ^ one of many eager that he 
should distinguish himself in the usual congressional 
way, — '^ I am disgusted at the shameful waste of time 
and patience the so-called orators of Washington mako," 
and he refused to " distinguish himself " accordingly. 
He went to work as chairman of the library com- 
mittee, and urged the extension and increase of the 
library. Chiefly by his efforts, the space and material 
were increased threefold ; the Force Historical Library 
was added to that of Congress, and the Smithsonian 
Library transferred to it. He was instrumental in the 
purchase of many valuable works, and on the com- 
mittee, his artistic taste as well as his literary knowl- 
edge were felt No vote of his ever favored the pur- 



104 WORK m CONGRESS. 

chase of trashy pictures or sculptures, and he constantly 
advocated the selection of known and able artists for 
government commissions. 

On other committees he was a conscientious worker, 
knowing that the real business of legislation is done 
across the committee tables, and not by the speechifyers 
on the floor of the House. 

His first vote was given for a resolution requiring the 
maintenance of the public faith " sacred and inviolable " 
from " any attempt to scale or repudiate " the national 
debt ; and he early introduced and carried through a 
resolution to provide for the special punishment of 
agents or attorneys defrauding soldiers and sailors in 
the matter of their pensions and bounties. Renomi- 
nated by acclamation in 1866, and reelected by a ma- 
jority which showed a gain while the rest of the ticket 
showed a loss, he continued especially to interest him- 
self in behalf of the soldiers, and as a commander 
singularly beloved and trusted by his men he was, of 
course, overwhelmed with their claims and applica- 
tions. 

He refused here, as always, to make his office a means 
of office ; he did his duty, and let his future take care 
of itself. He was always in his seat ; he never shirked 
responsibility or dodged a vote; he voted with his 
party on all the measures of reconstruction, and he was 
incessantly active in a personal as well as public way in 
securing the passage and ratification of the thirteenth 
and fourteenth amendments. 

Even before taking his seat in Congress, he was 



ELECTED AND REELECTED GOVERNOR. 105 

meditating retirement from public life, either to his 
uncle's farm in Fremont, or his own law practice in 
Cincinnati, and nothing but the sense of public duty pre- 
vailed with him to accept the nomination for governor 
of Ohio, offered him in 1869. He gave up his place 
in Congress, however, to meet an emergency of national 
significance, and in a campaign conducted with all the 
fire of a nature kindled through and through by his 
experiences in fighting the same ideas on the battle-field, 
he beat his opponent, the present Senator Thurman, by a 
majority that no one else could have commanded. The 
questions at issue were the reconstruction measures, 
which the Democrats assailed, taking their stand upon 
a platform prepared by the late Mr. Vallandigham, 
(whose course, only more open than that of Mr. Tilden, 
in the war it is merciful not to remember,) and -prac- 
tically in favor of State supremacy. The canvass was 
very excited, and Hayes and Thurman spoke daily 
throughout the State, alternately attacking each other's 
positions, and replying and rejoining almost for the 
hundredth time. Hayes's personal popularity gave the 
Republicans their governor, but the legislature and the 
constitutional amenchnent was lost by fifty thousand ma- 
jority. That legislature, therefore, refused to ratify 
the amendments, and it elected Mr. Thurman to the 
United States Senate. 

In 1869 Hayes was renominated in the Republican 
convention by acclamation ; and the Democrats nomi- 
nated General Rosecrans. That gallant soldier refused 
to stand on a platform declaring that the whole bonded 



106 REFUSAL TO TAKE THE SENATORSHIP. 

debt should be paid in greenbacks, and embodying what- 
ever existed of enmity to the cause for which he had 
fought, and the nomination was passed on to Mr. Pen- 
dleton, who hesitatingly accepted, and was duly beaten 
at the October elections. 

It has been well known in Ohio that Hayes could 
have been easily elected United States Senator in the 
place of Mr. Sherman in 1872, if he had been the man 
to profit by prosperous chances at the expense of a 
friend whom he honored and admired. The Republican 
majority in the legislature was small, and enough of 
the Republicans were disaffected to form with the will- 
ing Democrats (always personally fond of Hayes) the 
number requisite to choose him. But he promptly 
and severely discouraged the movement, and the man 
who ought to have been elected, and who was the choice 
of the greater part of the Republicans, succeeded where 
a sordid or selfish rival could have secured his defeat. 

At the end of his second term as governor, Hayes 
wished to retire from political life. " I, too," he wrote 
to a friend, " mean to be out of politics. The ratifica- 
tion of the fifteenth amendment " (this had in the mean 
time taken place) " gives me the boon of equality be- 
fore the law, terminates my enlistment, and discharges 
me cured." His letters and journal entries are to the 
same effect. His interest in public affairs was still in- 
tense, but personally he did not care any longer to take 
part in them. " In spite of his protests," as the dis- 
patch announcing the fact ran, he was nominated in his 
old Cincinnati district in 1872 by the Republicans, who 



RETIREMENT TO FREMONT. 107 

had not ceased to ask for the use of his name, and who 
had used it against his express desire. He went down 
and made the canvass, delivering some of his best 
speeches, but the reaction against Republicanism had 
set in so strongly that he was beaten, though by a ma- 
jority not half so great as that which defeated his fellow 
Eepublican in the other Cincinnati district. He de- 
clined the appointment of Assistant United States Treas- 
urer at Cincinnati, offered him by Grant, and retired to 
Fremont. His uncle Birchard, his life-long benefactor 
and friend, died in 1874, leaving him a handsome for- 
tune, and Hayes made the good old man's house his 
home, planning to live there a life of leisure and of 
books, not unmindful of good citizenship, but no longer 
troubled by the cares and responsibilities of active pol- 
itics. 

His journals of this period form a curious study of 
such a man in the fulfillment of such a purpose. His 
keen delight in nature is oddly mingled with his inex- 
tinguishable interest in public affairs. He sets down 
in the same entry the aspects of the weather and the 
probable effects of such and such measures upon the 
party and the country. He records the fact that he 
has put away his sleigh for the season, but we find that 
he has not put away his im easiness about the currency. 
A robin who steals a whole spool of threrid for his nest, 
and hopelessly entangling himself, hangs dangling by 
the neck in one of the dooryard trees, does not affect 
him more than the spectacle of the Democratic pol- 
iticians who promise themselves prosperity on an excess 



108 THIRD NOMINATION FOB GOVEBNOB. 

of greenbacks. Neyertheless tbe domestic and agri- 
coltural interests do finally prevail, and there are long 
spaces in the diaries where politics are never men- 
tioned — where the thermometer completely displaces 
the President. 

In 1875 Ohio had had for one term a Democratic 
governor for the first time in nearly twenty years — 
a very good governor, as far as economical administra- 
tion went, and a very bad governor, as far as ideas on 
the currency went : William Allen, namely, of un- 
tainted personal character, but politically besotted with 
seventy years of unmitigated Democracy. He was 
strong with his party, he was strong with the people, 
and how to get rid of a man so much worse than any 
worse man was a vital question with the Republicans. 

Hayes had been approached in his philosophical re- 
tirement at Fremont, but though flattered with the 
prospect of being a third time governor, as an honor 
never before conferred on any citizen of Ohio, he had 
thought the matter over, and he decidedly refused to 
let his name go before the convention. It became day 
by day more apparent that the Republicans could suc- 
ceed with no other name, and that without it the cause 
of honest money and of public self-respect must be lost 
Still Hayes refused, and upon the knowledge of his 
determined refusal, his old friend. Judge Taft, of Cin- 
cinnati, afterwards Secretary of War, allowed himself 
to be proposed in the convention. The convention 
nominated Hayes, and then made his nomination unani- 
mous. A dispatch was sent to Hayes, who, considering 



NO DIVISION OF THE SCHOOL FUND. 109 

the circumstances under which his friend had suffered 
himself to appear as a candidate for nomination, felt 
doubly bound to decline. He stood reading over the 
form of his refusal with a friend, when a second dis- 
patch arrived, saying that Judge Taft's name had been 
withdrawn by Mr. Taft, his son, and that it was upon 
Mr. Taft's motion that Hayes's nomination had been 
made unanimous. Hayes tore up his refusal and ac- 
cepted ; and now ensued the famous campaign of 1875, 
which made Ohio the national battle-ground, where 
Hayes, Schurz, Sherman, Woodford, Morton, Dawes, 
Oglesby, Garfield, Taft, and Windom supported the 
cause of good sense and good faith in currency against 
the inflationists, who are now the friends of that emi- 
nent and disinterested hard-money man, Mr. Tilden. 

Another very important element in the canvass, es- 
pecially urged by Hayes, was the question of secular 
against ecclesiastical education. The Democratic party, 
always prompt to make use of whatever is reactionary 
in our civilization, had already in its brief term of power 
in Ohio made haste to truckle to the priest-led foreign- 
ers, who demanded a division of^the school-fund. Hayes 
insisted upon the political recognition of the fact known 
to us all, that our system of free secular schools, with 
all its errors and short-comings, was the very basis of 
our liberties, and that any division of the school-fund 
meant chaos come again. He thoroughly aroused peo- 
ple and politicians to a sense of this ; the liberal Ger- 
mans and the freedom-loving voters of all the churches 
made common cause against the priests, and the tri- 



110 STATE DEBT REDUCED. 

umph that ensued was owing, far more than has been 
realized, to the abhorrence excited by the attempt 
upon the public schools. If any reader here fancies 
himself beguiled with a travesty of Italian story, let 
him turn to the Catholic journals of Ohio, and see how 
bold was the assault, and how real the danger. Of 
Catholics as religionists, Hayes is no enemy, but he is 
the relentless enemy of Catholics as Catholic politicians, 
jiist as he would be the enemy of Methodists as Metho- 
dist politicians. 

Hayes has now been some &ve years governor of 
Ohio, and though often thwarted by Democratic leg- 
islation, has succeeded in reducing the State debt 
$2,773;406, and the State tax from 3.5 mills on the 
dollar to 2.9, with an annual saving of $914,593. By 
continued pressure upon the legislature he reduced 
the local taxation throughout the State more than 
$17,000,000, and through his influence local authorities 
were forbidden by law to make any large expenditure 
without the sanction of a popular vote — wherein the 
people of Ohio are much freer than those of Massa- 
chusetts. He also secured the passage of a law pro- 
hibiting municipalities from incurring debts beyond the 
amounts actually in their treasuries. These measures 
he has urged in the prime of a life whose dearest ac- 
tion was spent in the tented field, and was never for a 
moment sullied by association with ring-thieves. His 
principle of retrenchment is not a mere twelvemonth 
old, nor his patriotism the growth of the years since 
the nation was made. He helped to make it, and his 



A PRACTICAL CIVIL SERVICE REFORMER. Ill 

public economies are the expression of a life-long pri- 
vate honesty. 

So, also, his devotion to civil service reform is not 
merely a profitable novelty. Eight years ago he sup- 
ported Jenckes's bill, and six years ago he recom- 
mended in one of his messages the amendment of the 
Ohio constitution, so as to make civil service reform a 
part of the organic law. He did more ; he showed his 
faith by his works. When he became governor, he was 
importuned by old and dear friends, to turn out the 
Democratic State librarian, and give the office, one of 
the few in the governor's gift, to a most worthy and 
competent Republican. He refused. 

" The present incumbent ?' (he wrote) " of the libra- 
rianship is a faithful, painstaking old gentleman with a 
family of invalid girls dependent on him. His courtesy 
and evident anxiety to accommodate all who visit the 
library have secured him the indorsement of almost all 
who are in the habit of using the books, and under the 
circumstances I cannot remove him. Old associations, 
your fitness, and claims draw me the other way, but 
you see, etc., etc. Very sincerely, R. B. Hates." 

Of course the pressure brought to bear upon a gov 
ernor in such a case is as nothing compared to the 
pressure brought to bear upon the President, but it is 
the same in kind though so different in quantity, and it 
would be very interesting indeed to know whether Mr. 
Tilden can point to a single Republican whom he has 
kept in office because he was " painstaking, faithful, and 
courteous." 



112 A DEMOCRATIC INVESTIGATION. 

Among other reforms, Hayes has repeatedly urged 
upon the legislature the adoption of some form of mi- 
nority representation, and the passage of registration 
laws to secure the purity of elections, and he has never 
ceased to urge the punishment of malfeasance in office. 
The highest testimony to the purity of his administra- 
tion is to be found on the lips of his enemies — his 
political enemies ; he has only friends, personally. At 
the end of his second term, the Democrats appointed a 
committee to investigate the administration of affairs 
under him. This was the chairman's report : — 

" The special committee appointed under House reso- 
lution No. 113 report as follows : The examination has 
taken a wide range. One hundred and nine witnesses, 
residing in various parts of the State, have been sub- 
poenaed and examined touching public contracts and 
expenditures, construction of public buildings, conduct 
of public institutions, etc. All matters, without refer- 
ence to the date of their occurrence, coming to the knowl- 
edge of the committee, that seemed to promise any prob- 
ability of throwing any light upon the subjects of inquiry, 
or any of them, have been diligently inquired into. 

" Your committee take pleasure in reporting that, so 
far as elective officers and their subordinates are con- 
cerned, very commendable honesty and fidelity have 
been observed, and that in the official conduct of no 
public officer, whether elective or appointive, has cor- 
ruption been disclosed." 

As governor, Hayes has been tireless in the promo- 
tion of schemes of public beneficence and advantage, such 



PHILANTHROPIC PROJECTS. 113 

as the removal of the incurably msane from the jails 
and poorhouses to fitting quarters in the State asylums, 
the establishment of a reform school for girls and a 
reform farm for boys, greater humanity as well as 
greater economy in the management of the State prison, 
and above all the founding of a soldiers' and sailors' 
orphsms' home. His heart, never insensible to the 
claim of friendless sorrow, quick to the misery alike 
of the incurable insade and of the curable depraved, 
was most deeply touched by the condition of the chil- 
dren of those who died for freedom and nationality. 
" During the war for the Union," he wrote in his sec- 
ond annual message, '^ the people of this State ac- 
knowledged their obligation to support the families of 
their absent soldiers, and undertook to meet it, not as a 
charity, but as a partial compensation justly due for 
services rendered. The nation is saved, and the obli- 
gations to care for the orphans of the men who died to 
save it still remain to be fulfilled. It is officially esti- 
mated that three hundred soldiers' orphans, during the 
past year, have been inmates of the county infirmaries of 
the State. It is the uniform testimony of the directors 
of county infirmaries that those institutions are wholly 
unfit for children ; that in a majority of cases they are 
sadly neglected, and that even in the best infirmaries 
the children are subject to the worst moral influences. 
Left by the death of their patriotic fathers in this de- 
plorable condition, it is the duty of the State to assume 
their guardianship, and to provide support, education, 
and homes to all who need them." 
8 



114 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF OHIO. 

Again, in his second inaugural he said : " Under the 
providence of God the people of this State have greatly 
prospered. But in their prosperity they cannot forget 
' him who hath borne the battle, nor his widow nor his 
orphan,' or the thousands of other sufferers in our midst 
who are entitled to sympathy and relief. They are to 
be found in our hospitals, our infirmaries, our asylums, 
our prisons, and in the abodes of the unfortunate and 
the erring. The Founder of our religion, whose spu'it 
should pervade our laws, and animate those who enact 
and those who enforce them, by his teaching and his 
example has admonished us to deal with all the victims 
of adversity as the children of our common Father." 

It is not alone in the gentle and sober feeling of 
passages like this that Hayes reminds us of Lincoln ; 
much also in the essential modesty, the quiet firmness, 
the unaggressive self-respect of our leader recalls the 
man who had a genius for being simply great. 

A very important public work recommended and 
urged to completion by Hayes is the geological sur- 
vey of Ohio, which has not only been of great use to 
science, but of incalculable material advantage to Ohio, 
in the development of her mineral resources. In fine, 
every project for the enlightened advancement of the 
public interest, morals, or taste, during the years since 
Hayes has been governor, has had him for its author 
or its powerful and effective friend.^ 

1 For a full account of Hayes's gubernatorial services and adminis- 
trations, we refer the reader to the conscientious and painstaking chap- 
ters in Mr. J. Q. Howard's Life of Hayes. (Robert Clarke & Co., 
Cincinnati.) 



FIRST NAMED FOR PRESIDENT. 115 

But we can no longer dwell upon this period of his 
history, for we now approach the moment when from 
being a man of national importance he became also a 
man of national note. He had not been elected gov- 
ernor in 1875 before he began to be President in Ohio. 
As soon as his election was known, a newspaper of 
the old Giddings and Garfield district, representing the 
perennial political right-mindedness of the "Western 
Reserve," printed his name as candidate, and through- 
out the whole vast State the prophetic instinct of his 
supreme fitness began to possess the people, though at 
first the Eepublican and the conditionally Republican 
press were by no means united upon him. 

As for himself, he seems to have given himself no 
concern about the presidency, but to have gone qui- 
etly about his business of governor. No man could 
hear himself much talked of for the chief place in a 
nation like this without feeling some share of the pop- 
ular excitement, but no man was less capable of pushing 
himself for such a place than Hayes. We have seen 
many letters of his, written during the period when 
the movement in his favor was gathering strength and 
form (a fact which every Ohioan felt in his bones, 
however insensible the osseous structure of Eastern 
Republicans remained), and they all point to the fact 
that, while he was not indifferent to it, he was firmly 
resolved to have nothing to do with it. 

In one of these letters, shown us by his correspond- 
ent, he wrote : "I am not pushing, directly or indi- 
rectly. It is not likely that I shall. If the sky falls 



116 A MANLY EXPRESSION. 

we shall all catch larks. On the topics yoa name, a 
busy seeker after truth would find my views in speeches 
and messages, but I shall not help him to find them. I 
appreciate your motives and your friendship. But it 
is not the thing for you or me to enroll ourselves in 
the great army of office-seekers. Let the currents 
alone." 

This was the tenor of all his expressions. From his 
diary we permit ourselves a single paragraph, which 
not only shows his mind in March last, but also shows 
the man as he has been all his life: tranquilly self- 
reliant, high-purposed, and resolute never to act from 
personal ambition. " With so general an impression in 
my favor in Ohio, and a fair degree of assent elsewhere, 
especially in States largely settled- by Ohio people, I 
have supposed that it was possible I might be nomi- 
nated. But with no opportunity and no desire to make 
combinations or to lay wires, I have not thought my 
chances worth much consideration. I feel less diffidence 
in thinking of this subject than perhaps T ought It 
seems to me that good purposes, and the judgment, ex- 
perience and firmness I possess would enable me to 
execute the duties of the office well. I do not feel the 
least fear that I should fail ! " 

After the Ohio State convention met and instructed 
its delegates to vote for Hayes in the national conven- 
tion, his attitude changed only so far as was involved in 
a feeling of allegiance to his friends, and a sense of his 
obligation not to embarrass their efforts in his behalf. 
This is not the time, and this is not the place to say 



THE CINCINNATI CONVENTION. 117 

whom Hayes . expected to be nominated at Cincinnati, 
but we know upon the authority of those constantly 
about him at the time that he did not at all expect the 
nomination for himself until the sixth ballot, and then 
when the result came on the seventh ballot he could 
scarcely accept the fact a's true. 

We need not weary the reader with the twice-told tale 
of the convention's proceedings, but we cannot deny 
ourselves the pleasure of reproducing entire in this 
place the exquisitely fitting speech in which ex-Gov- 
ernor Noyes of Ohio presented Hayes's name. 

Gentlemen : On behalf of the forty-four delegates 
from Ohio, representing the entire Republican party of 
Ohio, I have the honor to present to this convention 
the name of a gentleman well known and favorably 
known throughout the cduntry ; one held in high re- 
spect, and much beloved by the people of Ohio ; a man 
who, during the dark aiid stormy days of the rebellion, 
when those who are invincible in peace and invisible in 
battle were uttering brave words to cheer their neigh- 
bors on, himself, in the fore-front of battle, followed 
his leaders and his flag until the authority of our gov- 
ernment was established from the Lakes to the Gulf, 
and from the river round to the sea ; a man who has 
the rare good fortune since the war was over to be 
twice elected to Congress from the district where he 
resided, and subsequently the rarer fortune of beating 
successively for the highest office in the gift of the peo- 
ple of Ohio, Allen G. Thurman, George H. Pendleton, 



118 EX-GOVEBNOB NOYES'S SPEECH. 

and William Allen. He is a gentleman who has some- 
how fallen into the habit of defeating Democratic aspi- 
rants for the presidency, and we in Ohio all have a 
notion that from long experience he will be able to do 
it again. In presenting the name of Governor Hayes, 
permit me to say we wage no war upon the distin- 
guished gentlemen whose names have been mentioned 
here to-day. They have rendered great service to 
their country, which entitles them to our respect and 
to our gratitude. I have no word to utter against 
them. I only wish to say that General Hayes is the 
peer of these gentlemen in integrity, in character, in 
ability. They appear as equals in aU the great quali- 
ties which fit men for the highest positions which the 
American people can give them. Governor Hayes is 
honest ; he is brave ; he is unpretending ; he is wise, 
sagacious, a scholar, and a gentleman. Enjoying an 
independent fortune, the simplicity of his private life, 
his modesty of bearing, is a standing rebuke to the ex- 
travagance — the reckless extravagance — which leads 
to corruption in public and in private places. 

Remember now, delegates to the convention, that 
a responsible duty rests upon you. You can be gov- 
erned by no wild impulse. You can run no fearful 
risks in this campaign. You must, if you would suc- 
ceed, nominate a candidate here who will not only carry 
the old, strong Republican States, but who will carry 
Indiana, Ohio, and New York, as well as other doubt- 
ful States. We care not who the man shall be, othef 
than our own candidate. Whoever you nominate, men 



ADVANTAGES AS A CANDIDATE. 119 

of the convention, shall receive our heartiest and most 
earnest efforts for their success. But we beg to sub- 
mit that in Grovemor Hayes you have those qualities 
which are calculated best to compromise all difficulties, 
and to soften all antagonisms. He has no personal ene- 
mies. His private life is so pure that no man has ever 
dared assail it. His public acts throughout all these 
years have been above suspicion, even. I ask you then 
if, in the lack of these antagonisms and with all of these 
good qualities, living in a State which holds its election 
in October, the result of which will be decisive, it may 
be, of the presidential campaign, it is not worth while 
to see to it that a candidate is nominated against whom 
nothing can be said, and who is sure to succeed in the 
campaign ? 

In conclusion, permit me to say that, if the wisdom 
of this convention shall decide at last that Governor 
Hayes's nomination is safest and is best, that decision 
will meet with such responsive enthusiasm here in Ohio 
as will insure Republican success at home, and which 
will be so far-reaching and wide-spreading as to make 
success almost certain from the Atlantic to the Pa- 
cific. * 

With his name thus presented, and with the forty- 
four Ohio delegates faithfully, ballot after ballot, throw- 
ing in his favor the weight of what was best in the 
sentiment of a State so eminent in war, so wise in the 
uses of peace, his final success was, in the opinion of those 
skilled in judging such matters, only a question of time. 



120 NOMINATED FOB THE PRESIDENCY. 

This history is by no means too dignified to tell how 
the news came to the lady who, we hope, is soon to 
renew the best traditions of the* White House. She 
was absent from home on a visit of mercy at one of the 
State asylmns, and a carriage was sent to recall her. 
The driver was charged with no message except that 
she was to return home at once, and she drove back 
in alarmed expectation of some domestic calamity, 
merely to find that her husband had been nominated 
for the presidency. 



CHAPTER XI. 

Hayes's political positions and opinions. 

The sum of all these positions and opinions is the 
now famous letter of acceptance, which the whole party 
joyfully ratified and made its political creed. It shall be 
given in full, and then we shall show how it is merely 
the final expression of principles and ideas long since 
expressed by its author. 

THE LETTER OP ACCEPTANCE. 

Columbus, Ohio, Juhf 8, 1876. 
Hon. Edward McPherson, Hon. Wm. A. Howard, Hon. 

Joseph H. Rainey, and others. Committee of the 

Republican National Convention. 

Gentlemen, — In reply to your official communica- 
tion of June 17th, by which I am informed of my nomi- 
nation for the office of President of the United States 
by the Republican National Convention at Cincinnati, I 
accept the nomination with gratitude, hoping that under 
Providence I shall be able, if elected, to execute the 
duties of the high office as a trust for the benefit of all 
the people. 

I do not deem it necessary to enter upon any 
extended examination of the declaration of principles 



122 LETTER OF ACCEPTANCE. 

made by the convention. The resolutions are in accord 
with my views, and I heartily concur in the principles 
they announce. In several of the resolutions, however, 
questions are considered which are of such importance 
that I deem it proper to briefly express my convictions 
in regard to them. 

The fifth resolution adopted by the convention is of 
paramount interest. More than forty years ago, a sys- 
tem of making appointments to office grew up, based 
upon the maxim, " To the victors belong the spoils." 
The old rule — the true rule — that honesty, capacity, 
and fidelity constitute the, only real qualifications for 
office, and that there is no other claim, gave place to 
the idea that party services were to be chiefly considered. 
All parties, in practice, have adopted this system. It 
has been essentially modified since its first introduction. 
It has not, however, been improved. 

At first, the President, either directly or through the 
heads of departments, made all the appointments. But 
gradually the appointing power, in many cases, passed 
into the control of members of Congress. The offices, 
in these cases, have become not merely rewards for 
party services, but rewards for services to party leaders. 
This system destroys the independence of the separate 
departments of the government ; it tends directly to ex- 
travagance and official incapacity ; it is a temptation to 
dishonesty ; it hinders and impairs that careful super- 
vision and strict accountability by which alone faithful 
and efficient public service can be secured ; it obstructs 
the prompt removal and sure punishment of the un- 



CIVIL SERVICE REFORM. 123 

worthy. In every way it degrades the civil service and 
the character of the government It is felt, I am confi- 
dent, by a large majority of the members of Congress, 
to be an intolerable burden, and an unwarrantable 
hindrance to the proper discharge of their legitimate 
duties. It ought to be abolished. The reform should 
be thorough, radical, and complete. 

We should return to the principles and practice of 
the founders of the government, supplying by legisla- 
tion, when needed, that which was formerly established 
custom. They neither expected nor desired from the 
public officer any partisan service. They meant that 
public officers should owe their whole service to the 
government and to the people. They meant that the 
officer should be secure in his tenure as long as his per- 
sonal character remained untarnished and the perform- 
ance of his duties satisfactory. If elected, I shall con- 
duct the administration of the government upon these 
principles ; and all constitutional powers vested in the 
executive' will be employed to establish this reform. 

The declaration of principles by the Cincinnati con- 
vention makes no announcement in favor of a single 
presidential term. I do not assume to add to that 
declaration ; but, believing that the restoration of the 
civil service to the system established by Washington 
and followed by the early presidents can be best accom- 
plished by an executive who is under no temptation to 
use the patronage of his office to promote his own re- 
election, I desire to perform what I regard as a duty, in 
stating now my inflexible purpose, if elected, not to be 
a candidate for election to a second term. 



124 THE CUBBENCY QUESTION. 

On the currency question I have frequently ex- 
pressed my views in public, and I stand by my record 
on this subject I regard all the laws of the United 
States relating to the payment of the public indebted- 
ness, the legal tender notes included, as constituting a 
pledge and moral obligation of the government, which 
must in good faith be kept. It is* my conviction that 
the feeling of unce* ainty inseparable from an irre- 
deemable paper currency, with its fluctuations of values, 
is one of the great obstacles to a revival of confidence 
and business, and to a return of prosperity. That un- 
certainty can be ended in but one way — the resump- 
tion of specie payments ; but the longer the instability 
connected with our present money system is permitted 
to continue, the greater will be the injury inflicted 
upon our economical interests and all classes of so- 
ciety. 

If elected, I shall approve every appropriate measure 
to accomplish the desired end, and shall oppose any 
step backward. 

The resolution with respect to the public school 
system is one which should receive the hearty support 
of the American people. Agitation upon this subject 
is to be apprehended, until, by constitutional amend- 
ment, the schools are placed beyond all danger of sec- 
tarian control or interference. The Republican party 
is pledged to secure such an amendment. 

The resolution of the convention on the subject of 
the permanent pacification of the country, and the com- 
plete protection of all its citizens in the free enjoyment 



THE CONDITION OF THE SOUTH. 125 

of all their constitutional rights, is timely and of great 
importance. The condition of the Southern States 
attracts the attention and conmiands the sympathy of 
the people of the whole Union. In their progressive 
recovery from the effects of the war, their first neces- 
sity is an intelligent and honest administration of gov- 
ernment, which will protect all classes of citizens in all 
their political and private rights. What the South most 
needs is peace, and peace depends upon the suprem- 
acy of law. There can be no enduring peace if the 
constitutional rights of any portion of the people are 
habitually disregarded. A division of political parties 
resting merely upon distinctions of race, or upon sec- 
tional lines, is always nnfo'rtunate, and may be disas- 
trous. The welfare of the South, alike with that of 
every other "part of the country, depends upon the at- 
tractions it can offer to labor, to immigration, and to 
capital. But laborers will not go, and capital will not 
be ventured, where the constitution and the laws are 
set at defiance, and distraction, apprehension, and alarm 
take the place of peace-loving and law-abiding social 
life. All parts of the constitution are sacred, and must 
be sacredly observed, the parts that are new no less 
than the parts that are old. The moral and material 
prosperity of the Southern States can be most effect- 
ively advanced by a hearty and generous recognition of 
the rights of all by all, a recognition without reserve 
or exception. 

With such a recognition fuUy accorded, it will be 
practicable to promote, by the influence of all legiti- 



126 THE ISSUES OF THE HOUR. 

mate agencies of the general government, the efforts of 
the people of those States to obtain for themselves the 
blessings of honest and capable local government. 

If elected, I shall consider it not only my duty, but 
it will be my ardent desire, to labor for • the attain- 
ment of this end. 

Let me assure my countrymen of the Southern States 
that if I shall be charged with the duty of organizing 
an administration, it will be one which will regard and 
cherish their truest interests — the interests of the 
white and of the colored people both, and equally ; and 
which will put forth its best efforts in behalf of a civil 
policy which will wipe out forever the distinction be- 
tween North and South in our common country. 

With a civil service organized upon a system which 
will secure purity, experience, efficiency, and economy ; 
with a strict regard for the public welfare, solely, in 
appointments ; with the speedy, thorough, and unspar- 
ing prosecution and punishment of all public officers 
who betray official trusts ; with a sound currency ; with 
education unsectarian and free to all ; with simplicity 
and frugality in public and private affairs, and with a 
fraternal spirit of harmony pervading the people of all 
sections and classes, we may reasonably hope that the 
second century of our existence as a nation will, by the 
blessing of God, be preeminent as an era of good feel- 
ing, and a period of progress, prosperity, and happiness. 

Very respectfully, Your fellow -citizen, 

R. B. Hayes. 



OPPOSED TO THE SPOILS DOCTRINE. 127 

CIVIL SERVICE REFORM. 

In this letter the £u*st and most important matter 
touched is that of the civil service, in which, as we 
have already seen, Hayes had long before been a prac- 
tical reformer. He had also constantly urged the re- 
form in private and in public, officially and personally. 
Jenckes*s and Trumbull's bills had received his vote and 
hearty approval, and to a friend he had written early 
in March, 1870, " I agree with you perfectly in the 
spoils doctrine. This you would know if you had read 
my last inaugural. I am glad you do not bore your- 
self with such reading generally, but you are in for it 
now, and I shall send you a copy." " For many 
years," he said, addressing a legislature of that Demo- 
cratic party which invented the present infamous sys- 
tem, " political influence and political services have 
been essential qualifications for employment in the civil 
service, whether State or national. As a general rule, 
such employments are regarded as terminating with the 
defeat of the political party under which they began. 
All political parties have adopted this rule. In many 
offices the highest qualifications are only obtained by 
experience. Such are the positions of the warden of 
the penitentiary and his subordinates, and the superin- 
tendents of asylums and reformatories and their assist- 
ants. But the rule is applied to these as well as to 
other offices and employments. A change in the polit- 
ical character of the executive and legislative branches 
of the government is followed by a change of the offi- 



128 CIVIL SERVICE REFORM PRACTICABLE. 

cers and employees in all of the departments and institu- 
tions of the State. Efficiency and fidelity to duty do 
not prolong the employment ; unfitness and neglect of 
duty do not always shorten it. The evils of this sys- 
tem in State affairs are, perhaps, of small moment com- 
pared with those which prevail under the same system 
in the transaction of the business of the national gov- 
ernment. But at no distant day they are likely to 
become serious, even in the administration of State 
affairs. The number of persons employed in the va- 
rious offices and institutions of the State must increase, 
under the most economical management, in equal ratio 
with the growth of our population and business. 

" A radical reform in the civil service of the general 
government has been proposed. The plan is to make 
qualifications, and not political services and influence, 
the chief test in determining appointments, and to give 
subordinates in the civil service the same permanency 
of place which is enjoyed by officers of the army and 
navy. The introduction of this reform will be at- 
tended with some difficulties. But in revising our 
State constitution, if this object is kept constantly in 
view, there is little reason to doubt that it can be suc- 
cessfully accomplished." 

In his annual message of January, 1871, he recurred 
to the subject of civil service, and urged its reforma- 
tion through the prompt punishment of frauds. " What 
the public welfare demands," he said, " is a practical 
measure which will provide for a thorough and impar- 
tial investigation in every case of suspected neglect. 



A PLAN SUGGESTED. 129 

abase, or fraud. Such an investigation, to be effective, 
must be made by an authority independent, if possible, 
of all local influences. When abuses are discovered, 
the prosecution and punishment of offenders ought to 
follow. But even if prosecutions fail in cases of full 
exposure, public opinion almost always accomplishes the 
object desired. A thorough investigation of official cor- 
ruption and criminality leads with great certainty to 
the needed reform. ^ Publicity is a great corrector of 
official abuses. Let it therefore be made the duty of 
the governor, on satisfactory information that the pub- 
lic good requires an investigation of the affairs of any 
public office or the conduct of any public officer, 
whether State or local, to appoint one or more citizens 
who shall have ample powers to make such investi- 
gation. If by the investigation violations of law are 
discovered, the governor should be authorized, in his 
discretion, to notify the attorney-general, whose duty it 
should be, on such notice, to prosecute the offenders. 
The constitution makes it the duty of the governor to 
* see that the laws are faithfully executed.' Some such 
measure as the one here recommended is necessary to 
give force and effect to this constitutional provision." 

Again, in a speech which he made in 1872, he advo- 
cated a complete reform in almost the .exact terms of 
the letter of acceptance. 

"There are," he declared, "several questions relating 
to the present and the future which merit the attention 
of the people. Among the most interesting of these 
is the question of oivil service reform. 
9 



180 GROWTH OF THE SPOILS SYSTEM. 

<< About forty years ago a system of making appoint- 
ments to office grew up, based on the maxim, ' To the 
victors belong the spoils.' The old rule — the true 
rule — that honesty, capacity, and fidelity constitute the 
highest claim to office, gave place to the idea that par- 
tisan services were to be chiefly considered. All par- 
ties in practice have adopted this system. Since its 
first introduction it has been materially modified. At 
first the . President, either directly or through the heads 
of departments, made all appointments. Gradually, by 
usage, the appointing power in many cases was trans- 
ferred to members of Congress — to senators and rep- 
resentatives. The offices in these cases have become 
not so much rewards for party services as rewards for 
personal services in nominating and electing senators 
and representatives. What patronage the President 
and his cabinet retain, and what offices congressmen are 
by usage entitled to fill is not definitely settled. A 
congressman who maintains good relations with the ex- 
ecutive usually receives a larger share of patronage 
than one whq is independent The system is a bad 
one. It destroys the independence of the separate de- 
partments of the government, and it degrades the civil 
service. It ought to be abolished. Greneral Grant has 
again and again explicitly recommended reform. A 
majority of Congress has been unable to agree upon 
any important measure. Doubtless the bills which 
have been introduced contain objectionable features. 
But the work should be begun. Let the best obtain- 
able bill be passed, and experience will show what 



AN EABLY FRIEND OF REFORM. 181 

amendments are required. I would support either 
Senator Trumbull's bill or Mr. Jenckes's bill, if nothing 
better were proposed. The admirable speeches on this 
subject by the representative of the first district, the 
Hon. Aaron F. Perry, contain the best exposition I 
have seen of sound doctrine on this question, and I 
trust the day is not distant when the principles which 
he advocates will be embodied in practical measures of 
legislation. We ought to have a reform of the system 
of appoinUnents to the civil service, thorough, radical, 
and complete." 

It is not necessary to expatiate on these positions, so 
distinct and so explicit that there is no mistaking them. 
Taken in connection with the expressions of the letter 
of acceptance, and the facts of Hayes's gubernatorial 
administrations, they show that civil service reform has 
been his settled conviction and his practice for the last 
eight years. He was one of the very first friends of 
the reform, and it is simply absurd to compare with him 
on this ground a man who was the political ally of 
public plunderers when Hayes was urging administra- 
tional purity and efficiency by precept and example. 

CURRENCY. 

In regard to honest money, — the duty of the gov- 
ernment to keep its promises to pay to the last mill, — 
Hayes now stands where he has stood ever since his 
political thinking began, ever since his boyhood. For 
the last year, his success has been the expression of the 
people's will in this direction ; he is, in fact, the most 



132 THE CURBENCY QUESTION. 

eminent exemplification of the public sense of honor 
on this point. No other man represents as he does at 
this moment the popular idea that just debts should be 
fully paid, and in nowise shirked or evaded. His 
speeches and letters and private diaries so abound with 
opinions to this effect, that it is hard to choose from 
them. 

In a speech delivered at Glendale in 1872, from 
which we have already given some passages on civil * 
service reform, he liandled the no less vital question 
with as frank a touch. " We want a financial policy so 
honest that there can be no stain on the national honor 
and no taint on the national credit; so stable that 
labor and capital and legitimate business of every sort 
can confidently count upon what it will be the next 
week, the next month, and the next year. We want 
the burdens of taxation so justly distributed that they 
will bear equally upon all classes of citizens in propor- 
tion to their ability to sustain them. We want our 
currency gradually to appreciate until, without financial 
shock or any sudden shrinkage of values, but in the 
natural course of trade, it shall reach the uniform and 
permanent value of gold. With lasting peace assured, 
and a sound financial condition established, the United 
States and all of her citizens may reasonably expect to 
enjoy a measure of prosperity without a parallel in the 
world's history." 

He was not only always right in this matter, but he 
always felt sure of the people's good sense and honesty, 
and he entered upon the famous campaign of 1875 in 



SPEECH AT MABION. 133 

the full confidence that " if the party in power were op- 
posed to a sound, safe, stable currency .... the peo- 
ple would make a change." He conducted the canvass 
upon the principle that there was a sense of justice and 
of self-respect in the popular heart which would finally 
respond to his own, and while his opponents appealed 
to the people's self-interest and all the sordid motives 
that prompt human nature, he steadily addressed their 
reason and their consciences. 

A few passages from one of the many speeches he 
made on the currency question will serve to show the 
simple, direct, quiet fashion in which he dealt with 
hearers whom he assumed to be equally willing with 
himself to think and to do right. The speech in ques- 
tion was made at Marion, Ohio, on the 31st of last 
July. "The most important part," he said, "in fact 
the only important part of the Democratic platform in 
Ohio this year, which receives or deserves much atten- 
tion, is that in which is proclaimed a radical departure 
on the subject of money from the teachings of all of 
the Democratic fathers. This Ohio Democratic doc- 
trine inculcates the abandonment of gold and silver as 
a standard of value. Hereafter gold and silver are to 
be used as money only * where respect for the obliga- 
tion of contracts requires payment in coin.' The only 
currency for the people is to be paper money, issued 
directly by the general government, * its volume to be 
made and kept equal to the wants of trade,' and with 
no provision whatever for its redemption in coin. The 
Democratic candidate tor lieutenant-governor, who 



134 EVILS OF AH INFLATED OUBBENCY. 

Opened the canvass for his party, states the moiaey issue 
substantially as I have. General Cary, in his Bames- 
ville speech, says : — 

" * Gold and silver, when used as money, are redeem- 
abfe in any property there is for sale in the nation, 
will pay taxes for any debt, public or private. This 
alone gives them their money value. If you had a 
hundred gold eagles, and you could not exchange them 
for the necessaries of life, they would be trash, and you 
would be glad to exchange them for greenbacks or any- 
thing else that you could use to purchase what yon 
require. With an absolute paper money, stamped by 
the government and made a legal tender for all pur- 
poses, its functions as money are as perfect as gold or 
silver can be ! ' 

'^ This is the financial scheme which the Democratic 
party asks the people of Ohio to approve at the elec- 
tion in October. The Republicans accept the issue. 
Whether considered as a permanent policy or as an ex- 
pedient to mitigate present evils, we are opposed to it. 
It is without warrant in the constitution, and it violates 
all sound financial principles. 

'^ The objections to an inflated and irredeemable 
paper currency are so many that I do not attempt to 
state them all. They are so obvious and so familiar 
that I need not elaborately present or argue them. All 
of the mischief which commonly follows inflated and 
inconvertible paper money may be expected from this 
plan, and in addition it has very dangerous tendencies, 
which are peculiarly its own. An irredeemable and in- 



NO LIMIT TO ITS VOLUME. 186 

flated paper currency promotes speculation and extrava- 
gance, and at the same time discourages legitimate busi- 
ness, honest labor, and economy. It dries up the true 
sources of individual and public prosperity. Over-trad- 
ing and fast living always go with it It stimulates the 
desire to incur debt ; it causes high rates of interest ; 
it increases importations from abroad ; it has no fixed 
value; it is liable to frequent and great fiuctuations, 
thereby rendering every pecuniary engagement pre- 
carious, and disturbing all existing contracts and expec- 
tations. It is the parent of panics. Every period of 
inflation is followed by a loss of confidence, a shrink- 
age of values, depression of business, panics, lack of 
employment, and widespread disaster and distress. The 
heaviest part of the calamity falls on those least able to 
bear it The wholesale dealer, the middle-man, and 
the retailer always endeavor to cover the risks of the 
fickle standard of value by raising their prices. But 
the men of small means and the laborer are thrown out 
of employment, and want and suffering are liable soon 
to follow. 

" When government enters upon the experiment of 
issuing irredeemable paper money, there can be no 
fixed limit to its volume. The amount will depend on 
the interest of leading politicians, on their whims, and 
on the excitement of the hour. It affords such facility 
for contracting debt that extravagant and corrupt gov- 
ernment expenditure are the sure result Under the 
name of public improvements the wildest enterprises, 
contrived for private gain, are undertaken. Indefinite 



136 THE GOVEBNMENT*S PLEDGE. 

expansion becomes the rule, and in the end bankruptcy, 
ruin, and repudiation. 

"During the last few years a great deal has been 
said about the centralizing tendency of recent events 
in our history. The increasing power of the govern- 
ment at Washington has been a favorite theme for 
Democratic declamation. But where, since the foun- 
dation of the government, has a proposition been seri- 
ously entertained which would confer such monstrous 
and dangerous powers on the general government as 
this inflation scheme of the Ohio Democracy ? During 
the war for the Union, solely on the ground of neces- 
sity, the government issued the legal-tender or green- 
back currency. But they accompanied it with a solemn 
pledge, in the following words of the act of June 30, 
1864: — 

" ^ Nor shall the total amount of United States notes 
issued or to be issued ever exceed four hundred millions, 
and such additional sum, not exceeding fifty millions, 
as may be temporarily required for redemption of tem- 
porary loans.' 

" But the Ohio inflationists, in a tune of peace, on 
grounds of mere expediency, propose an inconvertible 
paper currency, with its volume limited only by the 
discretion or caprice of its issuers, or their judgment 
as to the wants of trade. The most distinguished gen- 
tleman whose name is associated with the subject once 
said, ^The process must be conducted with skill and 
caution, .... by men whose position will enable them 
to guard against any evil,' and usiing a favorite illustra- 



DANGEBS OF INFLATION. 137 

tion he said, * The secretary of the treasury ought to 
be able to judge. His hand is upon the pulse of the 
country. He can feel all the throbbings of the blood 
in the arteries. He can tell when the blood flows too 
fast and strong, and when the expansion should cease.' 
This brings us face to face with the fundamental error 
of this dangerous policy. The trouble is, the pulse of 
the patient will not' so often decide the question as the 
interest of the doctorl No man, no government, no 
Congress is wise enough and pure enough to be trusted 
with this tremendous power over the business and 
property and labor of the country. That which con- 
cerns so intimately all business should be decided, if 
possible, on business principles, and not be left to de- 
pend on the exigencies of politics, the interests of 
party, or the ambition of public men. It will not do 
for property, for business, or for labor to be at the 
mercy of a few political leaders at Washington, either 
in or out of Congress. The best way to prevent it is 
to apply to paper money the old test sanctioned by the 
experience of all nations — let it be convertible into 
coin. If it can respond to this test, it will, as nearly 

as possible, be sound, safe, and stable 

^^ The credit of the nation depends on its ability and 
disposition to keep its promises. If it fails to keep 
them, and suffers them to depreciate, its credit is 
tainted, and it must pay high rates of interest on all of 
its loans. For many years we must be a borrower in 
the markets of the world. The interest-bearing debt 
is over seventeen hundred millions of dollars. If we 



138 COST OF IMPAIRED CBEDIT. 

could borrow money at the same rate with some of the 
great nations of Europe, we could save perhaps two 
per cent, per annum on this sum. Thirty or forty 
millions a year we are paying on account of tainted 
credit. The more promises to pay an individual issues, 
without redeeming them, the worse becomes his credit. 
It is the same with nations. The legal-tender note for 
five dollars is the promise of the United States to pay 
that sum in the money of the world, in coin. No time 
is fixed for its payment It is therefore payable on 
presentation — on demand. It is not paid ; it is past 
due ; and it is depreciated to the extent of twelve per 
cent. The country recognizes the necessities of the 
situation, and waits, and is willing to wait, until the 
productive business of the country enables the govern- 
ment to redeem. But the Columbus financiers are not 
satisfied. ' They demand the issue of more promises. 
This is inflation. No man can doubt the result. The 
credit of the nation will inevitably suffer. There will 
be further depreciation. A depreciation of ten per 
cent diminishes the value of the present paper currency 
from fifty to one hundred millions of dollars. Its ef- 
fect on business would be disastrous in the extreme. 
The present legal tenders have a certain steadiness, 
because there is a limit fixed to their amount Public 
opinion confides in that limit. But let that limit be 
broken down, and all is uncertainty. The authors of 
this scheme believe inflation is a good thing. When 
this subject was under discussion, a few years ago, the 
* Cincinnati Enquirer ' said, * The issue of two millions 



INFLATION MEANS REPUDUTION. 189 

dollars of currency would only put it in the power of 
each voter to secure $400 for himself and family to 
spend in the course of a life-time. Is there any voter 
thinks that is too mUch — more than he will want ? ' 
This shows what the platform means. It means infla- 
tion without limit ; and inflation is the downward path 
to repudiation. It means ruin to the nation's credit, and 
to all individual credit All the rest of the world have 
the same standard of value. Our promises are worth- 
less as currency the moment you pass our boundary line. 
Even in this country, very extensive sections still use 
the money of the world. Texas, the most promising 
and flourishing State of the South, uses coin. Cali- 
fornia and the other Pacific States and Territories do 
the same. Look at their condition. Texas and Cali- 
fornia are not the least prosperous part of the United 
States. This scheme cannot be adopted. The opin- 
ion of the civilized world is against it. The vast ma- 
jority of the ablest newspapers of the country is against 
it The best minds of the Democratic party are against 
it The last three Democratic candidates for the pres- 
idency were against it The Grerman citizens of the 
United States, so distinguished for industry, for thrift, 
and for soundness of judgment in all practical money 
affairs, are a unit against it. The Republican party is 
against it. The people of Ohio will, I am confident, 
decide in October to have nothing to do with it." 

After all, however, in this matter of honest money, 
as in all others, the nearer you can come to Hayes, the 
more of a man you find him, and a letter of his, not 



140 LETTEB TO GEKEBAL GABFIELD. 

written for the public eye, shows better than any med- 
itated utterance how sturdily steadfast he continues in 
the principles of common sense and of common justice. 

Executive Department, State of Ohio, (Columbus, | 
March 4, 1876. ) 

My dear General Garfield, — I have your 
note of 2d. I am kept busy with callers, correspond- 
ence, and the routine details of the office, and have 
not therefore tried to keep abreast of the currents of 
opinion on any of the issues. My notion is that the 
true contest is to be between inflation and a sound cur- 
rency. The Democrats are again drifting all to the 
wroDg side. We need not divide on details, on meth- 
ods, or time when. 

The previous question will again be irredeemable 
paper as a permanent policy, or a policy which seeks a 
return to coin. My opinion is decidedly against yield- 
ing a hair's breadth. 

We carCt be on the inflation side of the question. 
We must keep our face^ our fronts firrrdy in the other 
direction. " No steps backward," must be something more 
than unmeaning platform words, " The drift of senti- 
ment among our friends in Ohio," which yon inquire 
about, will depend on the conduct of our leading men. It 
is for them to see that the right sentiment is steadily 
upheld. We are in a condition such that firmness and 
adherence to principle are of peculiar value just now. 
I would " consent " to no backward steps. To yield or 
compromise is weakness, and will destroy us. If a 
better resumption can be substituted for the present 



THE BECONSTBUGTION MEASUBES. 141 

one, that may do. But keep cool. We can better af" 
ford to be beaten in Congress than to back out, 

Sincerelyy R. B. Hate«. 

BECONSTBUOTION AND PACIFICATION. 

On all the measures of reconstruction, Hayes, while 
in Congress, constantly voted with the Republican 
party, and his judgment and heart were alike in their 
favor. Outside of Congress he was active in securing 
the adoption of the constitutional amendments; as gov- 
ernor, ^^ believing that the measure was right, and that 
the people approved of it," he recommended the ratifi- 
cation of the fifteenth amendment ; and he duly had the 
pleasure of certifying to the general government the 
fact of its adoption. He held that ^Hhe United 
States were not a confederacy bound together by a 
mere treaty or compact, but a nation," in which equality 
was ^an equality of rights." It was his firm belief 
that ^ the first and highest duty of the people of the 
North to themselves, to the South, to their country, 
and to God, was to crush the rebellion," and that *^ after 
the suppression of the rebellion, the next plain duty of 
the national government was to see that the lives, lib- 
erty, and property of all classes of citizens were secure, 
and especially to see that the loyal white and colored 
citizens who resided, or might sojourn in those States, 
did not suffer injustice, oppression, or outrage because 
of their loyalty." 

In a speech made during his campaign against Thur- 
man in 1867, he dealt with fallacies which are as impu- 
dently proposed to-day as they were then : — 



142 THE LOST CAUSE NOT ABANDONED. 

" Our adversaries are accustomed to talk of the re- 
bellion as an affair which began when the rebels at- 
tached Fort Sumter in 1861, and which ended when 
Lee surrendered to Grant in 1865. It is true that the 
attempt by force of arms to destroy the United States 
began and ended during the administration of Mr. Lin- 
coln, But the causes, the principles, and the motives 
which produced the rebellion are of an older date than 
the generation which suffered from the fruit they bore, 
and their influence and power are likely to last long after 
that generation passes away. Ever since armed rebel- 
lion failed, a large party in the South have struggled 
to make participation in the rebellion honorable, and 
loyalty to the Union dishonorable. The lost cause 
with them is the honored cause. In society, in busi- 
ness, and in politics, devotion to. treason * is the test of 
merit, the passport to preferment. They wish to return 
to the old state of things, an oligarchy of race and the 
sovereignty of States. 

^ To defeat this purpose, to secure the rights of man, 
and to perpetuate the national Union, are the objects 
of the congressional plan of reconstruction. That plan 
has the hearty support of the great generals (so far as 
their opinions are known) — of Grant, of Thomas, of 
Sheridan, of Howard — who led the armies of the 
Union which conquered the rebellion. The sts^tesmen 
most trusted by Mr. Lincoln and by the loyal people of 
the country during the war also support it. The 
supreme court of the United States, upon formal ap- 
plication and after solemn argument, refuse to interfere 



ENFRANCHISEMENT OF THE BLACKS. 143 

with its execution. The loyal press of the country, 
which did so much in the time of need to uphold the 
patriot cause, without exception are in favor of the plan." 

In the same effort — so nobly free from the arts of 
the rhetorician and the dap-trap of the politician — 
he said of the proposal to enfranchise the blacks : — 

^< There are now within the limits of the United 
States about five millions of colored people. They are 
not aliens or strangers. They are here not by the 
choice of themselves or of their ancestors. They are 
here by the misfortune of their fathers and the crime 
of ours. Their labor, privations, and sufferings, unpaid 
and unrequited, have cleared and redeemed one third 
of the inhabited territory of the Union. Their toil has 
added to the resources and wealth of the nation untold 
millions. Whether we prefer it or not, they are our 
countrymen, and will remain so forever. 

" They are more than countrymen — they are citi- 
zens. Free colored people were citizens of the colonies. 
The constitution of the United States, formed by our 
fathers, created no disabilities on account of color. By 
the acts of our fathers and of ourselves, they bear 
equally the burdens, and are required to discharge the 
highest duties of citizens. They are compelled to pay 
taxes and to bear arms. They fought side by side with 
their white countrymen in the great struggle for inde- 
pendence, and in the recent war for the Union. In the 
revolutionary contest colored men bore an honorable 
part, from the Boston Massacre, in 1770, to the sur- 
render of Cornwallis, in 1781. Bancroft says : * Their 



146 A SOUTHERN DEMOCRAT'S TESTIMONY. 

may have been ; no ex-Confederate steeped in North- 
em blood, will be molested by President HayjBs in the 
rights of his restored citizenship ; no Southerner who 
does not fear justice need fear him. And this fact 
Southerners understand as well as we. It is the banded 
murderers who slay in secret and openly, who violate 
the rights of other men to life, liberty, and the pursuit 
of happiness — it is these alone who have cause to 
dread his election, not such true men as the writer of 
the following letter, who differs from tens of thousands 
of others in the South only in publicly avowing what 
they privately feel to be true. 

Galveston, April 18, 1876. 
Hon. a. B. Norton : 

Dear Sir, — I am indebted to your kindly feeling 
for the intelligence of the 18th inst., containing your 
article on Grovemor R. B. liayes and " old Kenyon," 
the alma mater of each of us. 

I have seen with much pleasure and satisfaction that 
Governor Hayes has been frequently mentioned by the 
press, and unanimously nominated by the Riepublican 
convention of Ohio, for the presidency of the United 
States. 

Although I am, and have long been from principle, 
a Democrat, and expect to support and vote the Dem- 
ocratic ticket at the next presidential election, yet I 
hope Governor Hayes will receive the nomination of 
the Republican party ; for, if your party should be 
successful, there is no distinguished member of it I 
would rather see President than Rutherford B. Hayes, 



WHAT THE SOUTH NEEDS. 147 

for I know him well, and I believe that he is hooest, 
that he is capable, and that he will be faithful to the 
constitution. Having been in Congress four years, 
and governor of Ohio the third time, he has experi- 
ence, and is a statesman of incorruptible integrity, 
besides being a genial and dignified gentleman, a 
scholar, a sound lawyer and patriot — one who, if 
elected, would be President for the whole country, and 
not for a section. What the South most needs is good 
local government^ and one in the presidential chair who 
will do all he can under the constitutions. Federal :H^p4 
State, to promote it. I believe, if elected, Hayen^ 
do this. 

In addition to what I have said, I will add that ke 
has, of my own knowledge, a personal interest in our 
State. He spent the winter and part of the spring of 
1848 and 1849 in Texas. Since then he has kept up 
his interest in our State, and to-day has a better Texan 
library than many of our own educated citizens. In 
the first speech of his late political campaign (which he 
sent me), he spoke of Texas in the most compliment- 
ary manner. I can most truthfully say that my old 
classmate, and almost life-long friend, Rutherford B. 
Hayes, deserves all and more than all that you have 
said of him ; and I believe, if he should be chosen 
President, that he will make such a President as to se- 
cure the confidence 'of the South as well as the North ; 
and if any one of^ your party can bring back the Mon- 
roe era of good feeling in politics, it is R. B. Hayes. 
Very truly, etc.. Gut M. Bbtan. 



148 SEOULAB FREE EDUCATION. 

The reader will remember the writer of this letter, 
and will honor his frankness and loyalty to his old 
friend in a section where the terror of social ostracism, 
quite as much as political conviction, will reduce the 
white vote for EEayes to a minimum. Southerners like 
him have the sympathy and compassion of all right- 
thinking Northern men, and they may rest secure in 
Mr, Bryan's confidence. But neither they nor any one 
could make a greater mistake than to suppose that 
Hayes is one of the vulgar sentimentalists who would 
barter the sacred and terrible memories of the past for 
a moment of unmeaning effusion ; one of the witless 
and heartless milksops who befoul, in their brutal 
phrase of the " bloody shirt," the fame of those who 
died on battle-field and in prison-pen during the war, 
and have since perished in the same cause by assassina- 
tion all over the South. 

SECULAB FREE EDUCATION. 

On ibis point, as on all others, Hayes has had per- 
fect confidence in the people. At a serenade given him 
in Columbus after his last nomination for governor, he 
said : << If it shall turn out that the party in power is 
dangerously allied to any body of men who are opposed 
to our free schools, and have proclaimed undying hos- 
tility to our educational system, then I doubt not the 
people will make a change in the administration." 
And in his speech at Marion in the same canvass he 
treated the question at length. <^ Altogether the most 
interesting questions in our State affairs," he said, ^are 



THE WAR AGAINST FUBLIG SCHOOLS. 149 

those which relate to the passage, by the last legisla- 
ture, of the Geghan bill [to provide Catholic books for 
prisoners in the pententiarj], and the war which the 
sectarian wing of the Democratic party is now waging 
against the public schools. In the admirable speech 
made by Judge Taft at the Republican State conven- 
tion, he sounded the key-uote to the canvass on this 
subject He said, ^ Our motto must be universal liberty 
and V universal suffrage, secured by universal education.' 
Before we discuss these questions, it may be well, in 
order that there may be no excuse for further misrep- 
resentation, to show by whom this subject was intro- 
duced into politics, and to state explicitly that we at- 
tack no sect and no man, either Protestant or Jew, 
Catholic or unbeliever, on account of his conscientious 
convictions in regard to religion. Who began the agi- 
tation of this subject ? Why is it agitated ? AH parties 
have taken hold of it. The Democratic party in their 
State convention make it the topic of their longest res- 
olution. In their platform they gave it more space 
than any other subject except the currency. Many 
of the Democratic county conventions also took action 
upon it. 

'<The Republican State convention passed resolu- 
tions on the question. It is stated that it was con- 
sidered in about forty Republican county conventions. 
The State Teachers' Association, at their last meeting, 
passed unanimously the following resolution. Mr. Tap- 
pan, from the committee on resolutions, reported' the 
following : — 



150 DIVISION OF THE SCHOOL FUND. 

" ^Eesolvedy That we are in favor of a free, impartial, 
and nnsectarian education for every child in the State, 
and that any division of the school fund or appropria- 
tion of any part thereof to any religious or private 
school would be injurious to education and the best in- 
terests of the church.' 

^* The assemblies of the different religious denomina-^ 
tions in the State which have recently been held have 
generally, and I think without exception, passed similar 
resolutions. If blame is to attach to all who consider 
and discuss this question before the public, we have 
had a very large body of offenders. But I have not 
named all who are engaged in it. I have not named 
those who began it ; those who for years have kept it 
up ; those who in the press, on the platform, in the 
pulpit, in legislative bodies, in city councils, and in 
school boards, now unceasingly agitate the, question. 
Everybody knows who they are ; everybody knows that 
the sectarian wing of the Democratic party began this 
agitation, and that it is bent on the destruction of our 
free schools. • • • . 

<<The sectarian agitation against the public schools 
was begun many years ago. During the last few years 
it has steadily and rapidly increased, and has been en- 
couraged by various indications of possible success. It 
extends to all of the States where schools at the com- 
mon expense have been long established. Its triumphs 
are mainly in the large towns and cities. It has already 
divided the schools, and in a considerable degree im- 
paired ajad limited their usefulness. The glory of the 



THE AMERICAN IDEA OF EDUCATION. 151 

American system of education has been that it was so 
cheap that the humblest citizen could afford to give his 
children its advantages, and so good that the man of 
wealth could nowhere provide for his children anything 
better. This gave the system its most conspicuous 
merit. It made it a republican system. The young 
of all conditions of life are brought together and edu- 
cated on terms of perfect equality. The tendency of 
this is to assimilate and to fuse together the various 
elements of our population, to promote unity, harmony, 
and general good-will in our American society. But 
the enemies of the American system have begun the 
work of destroying it. They have forced away from 
the public schools, in many towns and cities, one third 
or one fourth of their pupils, and sent them to schools 
which it is safe to say are no whit superior to those 
they have left These youth are thus deprived of the 
associations and the education in practical republican- 
ism and American sentiments which they peculiarly 
need. Nobody questions their constitutional and legal 
right to do this, and to do it by denouncing the public 
schools. Sectarians have a lawful right to say that 
these schools are * a relict of paganism — that they are 
godless,' and that ^the secular school system is a so- 
cial cancer.' But when, having thus succeeded in di- 
viding the schools, they make that a ground for abol- 
ishing school taxation, dividing the school fund, or 
otherwise destroying the system, it is time that its 
friends should rise up in its defense. 

"We all agree that neither the government nor 



162 DEMOCRATIC ATTACK ON THE SCHOOLS. 

political parties ought to interfere with religious sects. 
It is equally true that religious sects ought not to in- 
terfere with the government or with political parties. 
We believe that the cause of good government and the 
cause of religion both sufEer by all such interference. 
But if sectarians make demands for legislation of po- 
litical parties, and threaten that party with opposition 
at the elections in case the required enactments are 
not passed, an3 if the political party yields to such 
threats, then those threats, those demands, and that 
action of the political party become a legitimate sub- 
ject of political discussion, and the sectarians who thus 
interfere with the legislation of the State are alone 
responsible for the agitation which follows. 

" And now a few words as to the action of the last 
legislature on this subject. After an examination of 
the G^ghan bill, we shall perhaps come to the conclu- 
sion that in itself it is not of great importance. I 
would not undervalue the conscientious scruples on the 
subject of religion of a convict in the penitentiary, 
or of any unfortunate person in any State institution. 
But the provision of the constitution of the State 
covers the whole ground. It needs no Awkwardly 
framed statute of doubtful meaning, like the Greghau 
bill, to accomplish the object of the organic law. 

" The author of the bill wrote, * the members daim 
that such a bill is not needed.' The same opinion 
prevails in New Jersey, where a similar bill is said to 
have been defeated by a vote of three to one. But 
the sectarians of Ohio were resolved on the passage of 



PBIESTLY THREATS. 163 

this bill. Mr. Gegban, its author, wrote to Mr. Mur- 
phy, of Cinciunati : — 

" ' We have a prior daim upon the Democratic party. 
The elements composing the Democratic party in Ohio 
to-day are made up of Irish and German Catholics, and 
they have always been loyal and faithful to the inter- 
ests of the party. Hence the party is under obligations 
to us, and we have a perfect right to demand of them, 
as a party, inasmuch as they are in control of the State 
legislature and State government, and were by both 
our means and votes placed where they are to-day, that 
they should, as a party, redress our grievances.' 

" The organ of the friends of the bill published this 
letter, and among other things said : -— 

" * The political party with which nine tenths of the 
Catholic voters affiliate, on account of past services that 
they will never forget, now controls the State. With- 
draw the support which Catholics have given to it, and 
it will fall in this city, county, and State as speedily 
as it has risen to its long lost position and power. 
That party is now on trial. Mr. G^ghan's bill will 
test the sincerity of its professions.' 

^^That threat was effectual. The bill was passed, 
and the sectarian organ therefore said : — 

" * The unbroken solid vote of the Catholic citizens 
of the State will be given to the Democracy at the fall 
election.' 

<^ In regard to those who voted against the bill, it 
said : * They have dug their political grave ; it will not 
be our fault if they do not fill it. When any of them ap- 



154 PASSAGE OF THE 6EGHAN BILL. 

pear again in the political arena, we will put upon them 
a brand that every Catholic citizen will understand.' 
No defense of this conduct of the last legislature has 
yet been attempted. The facts are beyond dispute. 
This is the first example of open and successful sec- 
tarian interference with legislation in Ohio. If the 
people are wise, they will give it such a rebuke in Octo- 
ber that for many years, at least, it will be the last. 

^^ But it is claimed that the schools are in no danger. 
Now that public attention is aroused to the importance 
of the subject, it is probable that in Ohio they are safe. 
But their safety depends on the rebuke which the peo- 
ple shall give to the party which yielded last spring at 
Columbus to the threats of their enemies. It is said 
that no political party * desires the destruction of the 
schools.' I reply, no political party * desired ' the pas- 
sage of the Geghan bill ; but the power which hates 
the schools passed the bill. The sectarian wing of the 
Democratic party rules that party to-day in the great 
commercial metropolis of the nation. It holds the bal- 
ance of power in many of the large cities of the coun- 
try. Without its votes, the Democratic party would 
lose every large city and county in Ohio, and every 
Northern State. In the presidential canvass of 1864, 
it was claimed that General McClellan was as good a 
Union man as Abraham Lincoln, and that he was as 
much opposed to the rebelKon. An eminent citizen of 
this State replied : * I learn from my adversaries. 
Whom do the enemies of the Union want electe<l? 
The man they are for, I am against.' So I would say 



ONE TEBM; ELECTIVE JUDICUBY. 165 

to the friends of the public schools: <How do the 
enemies of universal education vote ? ' If the enemies 
of the free schools give their < unbroken, solid vote ' to 
the Democratic ticket, the friends of the schools will 
make no mistake if they vote the Republican ticket." 

ONE TERM FOB PRESIDENT. 

We find nothing in Hayes's published writings or 
speeches, before the letter of acceptance, bearing upon 
this point. But there are other evidences that he was 
deliberately arriving at it, and we take leave to think 
that a man who has dwelt so long, so closely, and so 
penetratingly upon all questions bearing upon admin- 
istration has probably considered it more thoroughly 
and wisely than any of his critics. 

In regard to reforms not spoken of in the letter of 
acceptance, the reader will be glad to see that Hayes's 
progress had been constant and in the right direction. 
His views upon the chief of these must suffice. 

ELECTIVE JUDICIARY A FAILURE. 

^ Our judicial system is plainly inadequate to the 
wants of the people of the State. Extensive alterations 
of existing provisions must be made. The suggestions 
I desire to present in this connection are as to the 
manner of selecting judges, their terms of office, and 
their salaries. It is fortunately true that the judges of 
our courts have heretofore been, for the most part, law- 
yers of learning, ability, and integrity. But it must be 
remembered that the tremendous events and the won- 



156 ECONOMY IN ADMINISTRATION. 

derftil progress of the last few years are working great 
changes in the condition of our society. Hitherto, pop- 
ulation has been sparse, property not unequally dis- 
tributed, and the bad elements which so frequently 
control large cities have been almost unknown in our 
State. But with a dense population crowding into 
towns and cities, with vast wealth accumulating in the 
hands of a few persons or corporations, it is to be ap- 
prehended that the time is coming when judges elected 
by popular vote, for short official terms, and poorly 
paid, will not possess the independence required to pro- 
tect individual rights. Under the national constitution, 
judges are nominated by the executive and confirmed 
by the Senate, and hold office during good behavior. 
It is worthy of consideration whether a return to the 
system established by the fathers is not the dictate of 
the highest prudence. I believe that a system under 
which judges are so appointed, for long terms and with 
adequate salaries, will afEord to the citizen the amplest 
possible security that impartial justice will be admin- 
istered by an independent judiciary." (Inaugural of 
1870.) 

ECONOMICAL STATE AND LOCAL ADMINISTRATIONS. 

^^One of the most valuable articles of the present 
State constitution is that which prohibits the State, 
save in a few exceptional cases, from creating any debt, 
and which provides for the payment at an early day ol 
the debt already contracted. I am convinced that it 
would be wise to extend the same policy to the creation 



TAXES BY THE TAXED. 157 

of public debts by county, city, and other local author- 
ities. The rule, * Pay as you go,' leads to economy in 
public as well as in private affairs ; while the power to 
contract debts opens the door to wastefulness, extrava- 
gance, and corruption." (Annual Message, 1871.) 

TAXES TO BE VOTED BY TAX-PAYEB8. 

^ The constitution makes it the duty of the legis- 
lature to restrict the powers of taxation, borrowing 
money, and the like, so as to prevent their abuse. I 
respectfully suggest that the present laws conferring 
these powers on local authorities require extensive 
modification, in order to comply with this constitutional 
provision. Two modes of limiting these powers have 
the sanction of experience. All large expenditures 
should meet the approval of those who are to bear 
their burden. Let all extraordinary expenditures 
therefore be submitted to a vote of the people, and 
no tax be levied unlSss approved by a majority of all 
the voters of the locality to be affected by the tax, at a 
special election, the number of voters to be ascertained 
by reference to the votes cast at the State election 
next preceding %uch special election. Another mode is 
to limit the rate of taxation which may be levied and 
the amount of debt which may be incurred. It has 
been said that with such restrictions upon the powers 
of local authorities, the legislature will be importuned 
and its time wasted in bearing applications for special 
legislation. The ready answer to all such applications 
by local authorities will be to refer them to their own 



158 MUNICIPAL OUTLAYS TO BE CONTROLLED. 

citizens for a decision of the question. The facility 
with which affirmative votes can be obtained under the 
pressure of temporary excitement upon propositions 
authorizing indebtedness may require further restric- 
tions upon the power to borrow money. It is therefore 
suggested, for your consideration, to limit the amount 
of debt for a single purpose, and the total amount for 
all purposes which any local authority may contract to 
a certain percentage of the taxable property of such 
locality." (Annual Message, 1869.) 

" The attention of the legislature has often been 
earnestly invoked to the rapid increase of municipal 
and other local expenditures, and the consequent aug- 
mentation of local taxation and local indebtedness. 
This increase is found mainly in the cities and large 
towns. It is certainly a great evil. How to govern 
cities well, consistently with the principles and methods 
of popular government, is one of the most important 
and difficult problems of our timeC Profligate expendi- 
ture is the fruitful cause of municipal misgovernpient. 
If a means can be found which will keep municipal ex- 
penses from largely exceeding the public necessities, 
its adoption will go far towards securing honesty and 
efficiency in city affairs. In cities, large debts and bad 
government go together. Cities which have the lightest 
taxes and smallest debts are apt, also, to have the 
purest and most satisfactory governments. 

" It is not enough to require in every grant of special 
authority to incur debt, as a condition precedent, that 
the people interested shall approve it by their votes. 



PURITY OF THE FRANCHISE. 169 

It is well known how easily such elections are carried 
under the influence of local excitement and local rival- 
ries. If the rule of the State constitution which forbids 
all debts except in* certain specified emergencies is 
deemed too stringent to be applied to local affairs, the 
legislature should at least accompany every authority 
to contract debt with an imperative requirement that a 
tax sufficient to pay oft the indebtedness within a brief 
period shall be immediately levied, and thus compel 
every citizen who votes to increase debts to vote at the 
same time for an immediate increase of taxes sufficient 
to discharge them." (Inaugural, January, 1876.) 

PURITY OP THE FRANCHISE. 

" The most important subject of legislation which, in 
my judgment, requires the attention of the General As- 
sembly at its present session, relates to the prevention 
of frauds upon the elective franchise. Intelligent men 
of all parties are persuaded that at the recent impor- 
tant State and national elections great abuses of the 
right of suffrage were practiced. I am not prepared to 
admit that the reports commonly circulated and believed 
in regard to such abuses would, so fat as the elections 
in Ohio are concerned, be fully sustained by a thorough 
investigation of the facts. But it is not doubted that, 
even at the elections in our own State, frauds were per- 
petrated to such an extent that all good citizens ear- 
nestly desire that effective measures may be adopted 
by you to prevent their repetition. No elaborate at- 
tempt to portray the consequences of this evil is re- 



160 MINORITY REPRESENTATION. 

quired. If it is allowed to increase, the confidence of 
the people in the purity of elections will be lost, and 
the exercise of the right of suffrage will be neglected. 
To corrupt the ballot-box is to destroy our free institu- 
tions. Let all good citizens, ^erefore, unite in enact- 
ing and enforcing laws which will secure honest elec- 
tions." (Annual Messiage, November, 1868.) 

MINORITY REPRESENTATION. 

" All agree that a republican government will fail, un- 
less the purity of elections is preserved. Convinced 
that great abuses of the elective franchise cannot be 
p;*evented under existing legislation, I have heretofore 
recommended the enactment of a registry law, and also 
of some appropriate measure to secure to the minority, 
as far as practicable, a representation upon all boards 
of elections. There is much opposition to the enact- 
ment of a registry law. Without yielding my own 
settled convictions in favor of such a law, I content 
myself, in this communication, with urging upon your 
attention a measure of reform in the manner of con- 
ducting elections, the importance and justice of which 
no one ventures to deny. The conduct of the officers 
whose duty at elections it is to receive and count the 
ballots, and to make returns of the result, ought to be 
above suspicion. This can rarely be the case where 
they all belong to the same political party. A fair rep- 
resentation of the minority will go far, not only to pre- 
vent fraud, but, what is almost of equal importance, to 
remove the suspicion of fraud. I do not express any 



FAVOBEt BY HAYES. 161 

preference for any particular plan of securing minority 
representation in the boards of judges and clerks of 
elections. Various modes have been suggested, and it 
will not be difficult to adopt a. means of attaining the 
desired result which will harmonize with our system of 
election law," (Annual Message, 1869.) 
11 



CHAPTER XIL 

OHABACTEB : POLITICIAN, ORATOR, PUBLIC SERVANT, 
SOLDIER, CITIZEN, MAN. 

We should have written to little purpose if we had 
not already given the reader some distinct idea of the 
sort of man of whom we have been treating : a man 
who, if you look at him from the side of motive, is as 
grandly simple a figure as any of " the simple great 
ones gone forever and ever by," but who on his intel- 
lectual side has the due modem complexity. One of 
the anomalies which most strikes the observer of his 
character is the iron^^A^ which instantly replaces what 
seems the normal repose, almost indifference, of his 
nature, when once he is called into action of any sort 
Before battle, when not actually charging the enemy, 
he was perfectly tranquil ; but when the moment came, 
his tranquillity was found heated through, and till the 
end arrived his ardor knew no abatement. In his after 
political life the same traits appeared, and the man who 
never sought an office, who rigidly refused to advance 
himself before a convention, had no sooner accepted a 
nomination and become responsible for the success of 
a principle, than he threw himself into the work with 
a fury that at first astonished, and always dismayed his 
enemies. 



METHODS OF POLITIOAL WARFARE. 168 

Some life-long habits of his peculiarly fit him for 
success in a political campaign. He has been, as we 
have already shown, a constant student of men from 
his boyhood, and he has been as thorough a political 
observer for as long a time. Every political event of 
the smallest significance, every politician of whatever 
calibre, has a place iu his relentless memory ; he knows 
the whole country politically, with only less fullness 
than he knows Ohio. In addition to this, he has had 
the habit of compiling history from the newspapers as 
it was made, and from these collections he has been 
able at any time to confront an opponent with the rec- 
ord of that opponent's political life from the outset In 
certain formidable little books^ Mr. Thiirman, and Mr« 
Pendleton, and Mr. Allen successively found that he 
had full and accurate trace of their political turns and 
windings ; that a man who had nothing to regret ib 
his own past had forgotten nothing in theirs. When 
these little books were opened on the stump, and their 
contents supplemented from his unfailing memory, it 
was like the opening of the books of doom for any 
hapless politician anxious about his record. 

Whoever met Hayes in political conflict knew that 
his warfare would be unsparing; yet such has always 
been the personal charm of the man, the quality of 
his high and blameless character, that the bitterest of 
his political enemies has been glad to have him for his 
friend in social lifer At the end of a campaign of 
unwonted fierceness, when, last autumn^ his success 
threw into retirement a man too old to hope for any 



164 CHARACTERISTICS ON THE STUMP. 

fatore triumph, the election of Hayes was confessedly 
more acceptable to Mr. Allen than that of any other 
Republican could have been. "If we must have a 
Republican, I am glad it is Hayes," said the ex-gov- 
ernor to the enterprising interviewer at once set upon 
him. Let us hope that Mr. Tilden will be able to con- 
sole himself with equal magnanimity, when his turn 
comes. 

On the stump, Hayes is grave, simple, and earnest. 
He is no great teller of stories, no maker of laughter ; 
the fine, rather delicate humor of his intimate life rarely 
appears in arguments pressed solidly home to his listen- 
ers' sense of right. We shall give some idea of his 
method of dealing with an opponent by quoting passages 
from a speech delivered in the campaign against Thur- 
man, but these can convey but a fragmentary impression 
after all. If the reader will substitute another name 
for Thurman's, he can hardly fail to believe that Hayes 
was prophetically arraigning Mr. Tilden eight years ago. 
These are the passages from his speech. 

^1 will quote also from Judge Thurman himself. 
In a speech lecturing one of his colleagues, who thought 
the Mexican war was unnecessary, he says : — 

" * It is a strange way to support one's country right 
or wrong, to declare after war has begun, when it exists 
both in law and in &ct, that the war is aggressive, un- 
holy, unrighteous, and damnable on the part of the 
government of that country, and on that government 
rests its responsibility and its wrongfulness. It is a 
strange way to support one's country right or wrong in 



ABRAIGNMENT OF THUBMAN. 165 

a war, to tax one's imagination to the utmost to depict 
the disastrous consequences of the contest ; to dwell on 
what it has already cost and what it will cost in future ; 
to depict her troops prostrated by disease and dying 
with pestilence ; in a word, to destroy, as far as possi- 
ble, the moral force of the goviBrnment in the struggle, 
and hold it up to its own people and the world as the 
aggressor that merits their condemnation. It was for 
this that I arraigned my colleague, and that I intend to 
arraign him. It was because his remarks, as far as 
they could have any influence, were evidently calculated 
to depress the spirits of his own countrymen, to lessen 
the moral force of his own government, and to inspire 
with confidence and hope the enemies of his country.* 

" He goes on further to say : — 

" * What a singular mode it was of supporting her in 
a war to bring against the war nearly all the charges 
that were brought by the peace party Federalists against 
the last war, to denounce it as an unrighteous, unholy, 
and danmable war ; to hold up our government to the 
eyes of the world as the aggressors in the conflict ; to 
charge it with motives of conquest and aggrandizement ; 
to parade and portray in the darkest colors all the hor- 
rors of war ; to dwell upon its cost and depict its ca- 
lamities.' 

^^ Now, that was the doctrine of Judge Thurman as 
to the duties of citizens in time of war — in time of 
such a war as the Mexican war even, in which no vital 
interest of the country could by possibility suffer* 
Judge Thurman says that General Hayes, in his speecdi^ 



166 A TELLING ATTACK. 

has a great many slips cut from the newspapers, and 
that he must have had some sewing society of old ladies 
to cut out the slips for him. I don't know how he 
found that out. I never told it, and you know the 
ladies neyer tell secrets that are confided to them. I 
hold in my hand a speech of Judge Thurman, from 
which I have read extracts, and I find that he has in it 
slips cut from more than twenty different prints, ser- 
mons, newspapers, old speeches, and pamphlets, to show 
how, in the war of 1812, certain Federalists uttered 
unpatriotic sentiments. I presume he must have ac- 
quired his slips on that day in the way he says I ac- 
quired mine now. 

^ Now, my friends, I propose to hold Judge Thur- 
man to no severe rule of accountability for his conduct 
during the war. I merely ask that it shall be judged 
by his own rule : < Your country is engaged in war, 
and it is the duty of every citizen to say nothing and 
do nothing which shall depress the spirits of his own 
countrymen, nothing that shall encourage the enemies 
of his country, or give them moral aid or comfort.' 
That is the rule. Now, Judge Thurman, how does 
your conduct square with it? I do not propose to 
begin at the beginning of the war, or even just before 
the war, to cite the record of Judge Thurman. I am 
willing to say that perhaps men might have been mis- 
taken at that time. They might have supposed in the 
beginning a conciliatory policy, a non-coercive policy, 
would in some way avert the threatened struggle. 
But I ask you to approach the period when the war 



THE NATURE OF THE GREAT STRUGGLE. 167 

was going on, when armies to the number of hundreds 
of thousands of men were ready on one side and the 
other, and when the whole world knew what was the 
nature of the great struggle going on in America. 
Taking the beginning of 1863, how stands the conflict ? 
We have pressed the rebellion out of Kentucky and 
through Tennessee. Grant stands before Vicksburg, 
held at bay by the army of Femberton ; Rosecrans, 
after the capture of Nashville, has pressed forward to 
Murfreesboro', but is still held out of East Tennessee by 
the army of Bragg. The army of the Potomac and 
the army of Lee, in Virginia, are balanced, the one 
against the other. The whole world knows that that 
exhausting struggle cannot last long without deciding 
in favor of one side or the other. That the year 1863 
is big with the fate of Union and of liberty, every in- 
telligent man in the world knows — that on one side it 
is a struggle for nationality and human rights. There 
is not in all Europe a petty despot who lives by grind- 
ing the masses of the people, who does not know that 
Lincoln and the Union are his enemies. There is not 
a friend of freedom in all Europe who does not know 
that Lincoln and the loyal army are fighting in the 
cause of free government for all the world. Now, in 
that contest, where are you. Judge Thurman ? It is a 
time when we need men and money, when we need to 
have our people inspired with hope and confidence. 
Your sons and brothers are in the field. Their success 
depends upon your conduct at home. 

^ The men who are to advise you what to do have 



168 ATTITUDE OF A PEACE DEMOCRAT. 

upon them a dreadful responsibility to give you wise 
and patriotic advice. Judge Thurman, in the speech I 
am quoting from, says : — 

" * But now, my friends, I shall not deal with obscure 
newspapers or obscure men. What a private citizen 
like Allen G. Thurman m£iy have said in 1861 is a 
matter of indifference.' 

^ Ah, no. Judge Thurman, the Union party does not 
propose to allow your record to go without investiga- 
tion because you are a private citizen. I know you 
held no official position under the government at the 
time I speak of ; but, sir, you had for years been a 
leading, able, and influential man in the great party 
which had often carried your State. You were acting 
under grave responsibilities. More than that, during 
that year, 1863, you were more than a private citizen. 
You were one of the delegates to the State convention 
of that year ; you were one of the committee that 
forms your party platform in that convention ; you 
were one of the central committee that carries on the 
canvass in the absence of your staudard-bearers ; and 
you were one of the orators of the party. No, sir, 
you were not a private citizen in 1863. You were 
one of the leading and one of the ablest men in your 
party in that year, speaking through the months of 
July, August, September, and October, in behalf of the 
candidate of the peace party. You cannot escape as a 
private citizen. 

" Well, sir, in the beginning of that eventful year, 
there rises in Congress the ablest member of the peace 



AID AND COMFORT TO THE ENEMY. 169 

party, to advise CoDgress and to advise the people, and 
what does. he say ? 

" * You have not conquered the South. You never 
will. It is not in the nature of things possible, espe- 
cially under your auspices. Money you have expended 
without limit ; blood you have poured out like water.' 

"Now, mark the taunt — the words of discourage- 
ment that were sent to the people and to the army of 
the Union : — 

" * Defeat, debt, taxation, sepulchres, these are your 
trophies. Can you get men to enlist now at any 
price ? ' 

" Listen again to the words that were sent to the 
army and to the loyal people : — 

" ' Ah, sir, it is easier to die at home.' 

" We knew that. Judge Thurman, better than Mr. 
Vallandigham knew -it. We had seen our comrades 
falling and dying alone on the mountain side and in the 
swamps — dying in the prison-pens of the Confederacy 
and in the crowded hospitals. North and South. Yet 
he had the face to stand up in Congress, and say to the 
people and the world, < Ah, sir, it is easier to die at 
home.' Judge Thurman, where are you at this time ? 
He goes to Columbus to the State convention, on the 
11th of June of that year, in all the capacities in which 
I have named him — as a delegate, as committee-man, 
and as an orator — and he spends that whole summer 
in advocating the election of the man who taunted us 
with the words, < Defeat, debt, taxation, sepulchres, 
these are your trophies.' " 



170 MUTATO NOMINE, DE TE, MB. TJLDEN I 

Was it Mr. Thorman, or was it really Mr. Tilden 
whom Greneral Hayes meant ? And is it really of Mr. 
Thurman that he goes on to speak ? 

** This, my friends, is a part of that record which we 
are invited to examine by my friend. Judge Thurman. 
I ask you to apply to it the principle that whoever^ 
during the great struggle^ was unfaithful to the cause 
of the country is not to he trusted to he one of the 
men to harvest and secure the legitimate fruits of the 
victory which the Union people and the Union army 
won during the reheUion, .... 

** It is not worth while now to consider, or undertake 
to predict, when we shall cease to talk of the records of 
those men. It does seem to me that it will for many 
years to come be the voice of the Union people of the 
State that for a man who as a leader — as a man having 
control in political affairs — that for such a man, who 
has opposed the interests of his country during the war, 
< the post of honor is the private station.' When shall 
we stop talking about it ? When ought we to stop 
talking about that record, when leading men come be- 
fore the people ? Certainly not until every question 
arising out of the rebellion, and every question which is 
akin to the questions which made the rebellion, is set- 
tled. Perhaps these men will be remembered long after 
these questions are settled ; perhaps their conduct will 
long be remembered. What was the result of this ad- 
vice to the people ? It prolonged the war ; it made it 
impossible to get recruits ; it made it necessary that we 
should have drafts. They opposed the drafts, and that 



A POLITICUN " WISE WITHOUT A PLAN." 171 

made rioting, which required that troops should be called 
from all the armies in the field to preserve the peace 
at home. From forty to a hundred thousand men in 
the different States of this Union were kept within the 
loyal States to perserve the peace at home. And now, 
when they talk to you about the debt and about the 
burden of taxation, remember how it happened that the 
war was so prolonged, that it was so expensive, Mid 
that the debt grew to such large proportions." 

As a politician, in the sense of a successful candidate 
for office, Hayes has been, as Mr. Lowell says of Lin-» 
coin, " wise without a plan." His oaly schemes, prac- 
ticed after he came to power, have been for the public 
advantage. How to come to power never gave him an 
hour's unrest. It would be idle to pretend that such a 
man has not felt honored by the honors done him ; he is 
neither so ungrateful, so obtuse, nor so arrogant as not 
to have deeply felt them ; but he has always felt that 
honesty was better than honor, and he has never sought 
the one at the cost of the other ; he has asked no favors 
and has used no arts. 

As a public orator, a speaker for occasions, Hayes 
has little of the ready eloquence that goes to the mak- 
ing of a brilliant speech. His political and legal argu- 
ments strike us as far better, with their weighty and 
solid movement, their stalwart grace, their deep con- 
viction just touched and not more than touched with 
poetry. Yet even in those slighter efforts in which he 
does not shine, he satisfies with his sense and serious 
fitness. Here, for example, is a little speech made at 



172 HAYES AS AN ORATOR. 

the dedication of the beautiful Davidson fountain in 
Cincinnati : — 

"Fellow Citizens, — It is altogether fitting that 
the citizens of Cincinnati should feel a deep interest in 
the occasion which has called together this large assem- 
blage. It is well to do honor to this noble gift, and to 
do honor to the generous giver. This work lends a 
new charm to the whole city. 

" Longfellow's lines in praise of the Catawba that 
grows on the banks of the Beautiful River give to the 
Catawba a finer flavor, and render the Beautiful River 
still more beautiful. When art and genius give to us 
in marble or on canvas the features of those we admire 
or love, ever afterward we discover in their faces and 
in their characters more to admire and more to love. 

"This work makes Cincinnati a pleasanter city, her 
homes more happy, her aims worthier, and her future 
brighter. 

" But this fountain does not pour out its blessings 
for Cincinnati, or for her vbitors and guests alone. 
Cincinnati is one of the central cities of the nation — 
of the great continent. It is becoming the convention 
city. Witness the national assemblies in the interest of 
commerce, of industry, of education, of benevolence, of 
progress, of religion, which annually gather here from 
the most distant parts of America. This monument is 
an instructor of all who come. Whoever beholds it 
will carry away some part of the lesson it teaches. 
The duty which the citizen owes to the community in 
which and by which he has prospered, that duty this 



DUTY OF RICH MEN TO THE PUBUC. 173 

work will forever teach. No rich man who is wjse 
will, in the presence of this example, willingly go to 
his grave with his debt to the public unpaid and unpro- 
vided for. Many a last will and testament will have 
a beneficent codicil, suggested by the work we inaugu- 
rate to-day. Parks, fountains, schools, galleries of art, 
libraries, hospitals, churches, whatever benefits and ele- 
vates mankind, will here receive much needed encour- 
agement and support. 

" This work says to him who, with anxious toil and 
care, has successfully gathered and hoarded, Do not 
neglect your great opportunity. Divide wisely and 
equitably between the few who are most nearly of your 
own blood, and the many who in kinship are only a 
little farther removed. If you regard only those 
reared under your own roof, your cherished estate will 
soon be scattered, perhaps wasted by profligate heirs in 
riotous living, to their own ruin, and you and your for- 
tune will quickly be forgotten. Give a share, pay a 
tithe, to your more distant and more numerous kindred 
— to the general public, and you will be gratefully re- 
membered, and mankind will be blessed by your having 
lived! 

'< Many, reflecting on the uncertainty of the future, 
will prefer to see their benefactions distributed and ap- 
plied while they are still living. Regarding their ob- 
ligations to the public as sacred debts, they will wish to 
pay as they go. This is commendable. Perhaps it is 
safest. 

^' But at some time and somehow the example here 



174 A TOUCHING SPEECH. 

presented will and must be followed. All such deeds 
are the parents of other similar good deeds. And so 
the circle within which the blessings flowing from this 
fountain are enjoyed will forever grow wider and 
wider, and the people of distant times and places will 
rejoice to drink, as we now do, healthful and.oopious 
draughts in honor of its founder." 

A far nobler effort, one that has deeply impressed 
us with the strange qualities of its power, is the address 
which Hayes deliyered at the dedication of a soldiers' 
monument in Findlay, Ohio, last year. Here, perhaps 
more strongly than anywhere else, his manner has re- 
minded us of that of Lincoln ; yet Lincoln's eloquence 
had much more of the oratorical movement. Li this 
singularly touching speech of Hayes's, there is no art. 
It is almost as helpless in this respect as the utterance 
of some able, slow-languaged Englishman. The dic- 
tion in the most pathetic passages is plain and blunt al- 
most to uncouthness ; yet word by word the speaker 
draws nearer to you till, as if in the silence of the 
pathos-stricken crowd, you seem to hear the very 
throbbing of his heart. It is the supreme triumph of 
pure and deep feeling that will have none but the 
simplest expression. 

" I know not," he said, speaking of the fallen sol- 
diers, '^ how many of them have been gathered into the 
cemeteries near their home ; I know not how many 
others have been gathered into the beautiful national 
cemeteries near the great battle-fields ; I know not how 
many are lying in swamps, along the mountain-sides. 



HOW SOLDIERS WERE BURIED. 175 

in nameless graves, the unknown heroes of the Union : 
but wherever they are, and however many there may 
be, you people of Hancock County have erected your 
monument to all who fell, who left your county. All 
soldiers, I am sure, feel like thanking you for this. I 
remember well that one of the saddest days of my life 
was after one of our great battles in the early period 
of the war. Recovering from wounds, with other com- 
rades who had been wounded there, we passed near the 
battle-field, as soon as we felt able to do so ; and, when 
we came there, what did we learn ? Passing up the 
mountain, charging the line of the enemy, they fell ; 
and everywhere were the shallow graves in which were 
deposited the remains of our seven hundred companions 
who had fallen. And how were they buried ? and how 
was their last resting-place marked ? Hastily, tenderly, 
no doubt, the parties detailed to bury them had gath- 
ered up their remains. You soldiers know how it was 
done. They placed upon the face of each man who 
died, whenever they could ascertain his name, a piece of 
an envelope, or a scrap of a letter, or something of the 
kind, containing his name, his company, bis regiment, 
fastening it there, hoping that some day his friends 
might come and find him, and learn who was there 
buried. And then, you remember, there were no coffins, 
nothing of the sort ; but they took the blue overcoat, 
and placed it around the man, and took the cape, and, 
bringing it over the face, fastened it down. This was 
his shroud ; this was his coffin ; and he was placed away 
to rest until the resurrection mom. That was the man- 



176 THE FIRST soldiers' MONUMENT. 

ner of his burial. And strange, I may say, was the re- 
sult of that woollen material over the face : saturated 
with water, and covered with the earth, it did so protect 
them from decay, that months afterwards many were 
recognized by their friends, preserved as they were by 
the overcoat cape. And how was the grave marked ? 
With a pencil they scratched upon a piece of pine 
board — a thin piece of cracker-box — the name and 
company, which was placed at the grave. This was all 
then ; and we did not know what the result would be. 
We did not know what friends would do, what monu- 
ments would be reared. 

<* As we left that field, talking to each other, we said 
there must be a soldiers' monument for the soldiers of 
our regiment. I would not claim that this was the first 
regiment that built a monument ; that the twenty-third 
Ohio, to which I had the honor to belong, built the 
first monument : but I will say it was the first I heard 
of. After the famous An tie tarn campaign was fought, 
we called the men together, — four hundred and fifty 
or ^Ye hundred men, — and from the scanty pay which 
was to support the men, and to some extent their fami- 
lies, the majority of the remainder subscribed at least 
one dollar, and others more, according to their ability, 
and raised in the regiment two thousand dollars to 
build a monument, on which, it was agreed, should be 
inscribed the name of every man in the regiment who 
had fallen, and every man who should fall during the 
continuance of the war. We had it placed in the 
cemetery at Cleveland, where more of our number 



WHAT THE SOLDIERS DIED FOB. 177 

came from than from any other place. Many a monu- 
ment has been built since, far grander than that, taller, 
and finer, and more expensive ; but that, so far as I 
know, was the first soldiers' monument. 

" We are glad to know that you of Hancock County 
have not neglected your duty in that regard. You 
mean that those men shall have their monument, and 
be remembered forever. It will be a monument that 
will have its value to you and your children. It will be 
an instructor, a teacher of lessons to all who look on it. 
What is it ? Why did these men perish ? Why was 
this monument built? Here is a great nation : here is 
a country stretching from ocean to ocean, over the fin- 
est part of the best continent on the globe. On the 
day that they volunteered, the only enemy that the 
American nation could know, could fear, could dread, 
was in war against us. We cared nothing for foreign 
nations ; they were too far, too distant ; and anyway, 
with the North and South united, as I believe they now 
are, in feeling, we can meet the world in arms against 
us. A house divided against itself — there was the 
danger ; and that was the danger that these men went 
out to meet. And now, how is it to-day ? How stands 
the matter now ? We know every acre of that beauti- 
ful land belongs only to the stars and stripes, and be- 
longs to the flag forever. 

" And not only that lesson does it teach ; but it 
teaches, also, that this Union is dedicated to the princi- 
ples of the Declaration of Independence. I hardly 
know what others may think ai)out that ; but I believe 

12 



178 QUALITY OF OUB SOLDIEBS. 

that in fifty years past there never was a time when 
there was that prospect of complete and enduring har« 
mony among all classes of peoplis, in all sections of this 
country, that there is to-day. Why, think of it I On 
the 17th of Jun0, the hundredth anniversary of the 
battle of Bunker Hill, we had Maryland Confederate 
regiments and soldiers saluting — in the streets of Bos- 
ton, and on Boston Common and Bunker Hill — the 
men of Massachusetts: we had South Carolina and 
Massachusetts shoulder to shoulder, as in the days 
when their fathers beat the British a hundred years 
ago. All this, I think, is due, in a great measure, 
to the success of our men to whom this monument is 
erected, and their comrades in other States and other 
organizations, living and dead. Think of the men 
themselves who were there, — citizen soldiers, not one, 
perhaps, of whom, was ever acquainted with war, or 
ever bred to war. Here and there one had been in the 
Mexican war; here and there one had been in some 
Indian war; but, as a rule, they all came from civil 
life : they all came from where they were sovereigns, 
to be, for three years, obedient to men who were not 
better than themselves. 

" Why, they tell us our bayonets could think. Yes, 
and often and often it was the glory, in my judgment, 
of the private soldier that the bayonet thought more 
truly, more wisely, more accurately, than the sword. 
A celebrated English statesman said, < I can understand 
why these Americans, to the number of millions, rushed 
to arms to defend the government they had made. 



LESSONS OF THE MONUMENT. 179 

There is no mystery in that. Now, I do not under- 
stand how it was, that, at the end of that war, a million 
of men quietly disbanded, and returned to the walks of 
peaceful life, and went back about their old occupa- 
tions, and became again good citizens.' There was one 
great advantage we had, — a people so educated, and 
so intelligent in all classes, that we could raise an army 
of that sort. 

^ Our monument, then, stands and teaches us of the 
importance of the Union, the importance of the princi- 
ples of the Declaration of Independence, and the im- 
portance of universal education. My friends, what is 
a monument, however costly and beautiful, if it does 
not teach us some of the duties of practical life, how 
the living shall deal with the living ? When you shall 
see the widows of the soldiers, the parents and orphans 
of the soldiers, every man whose heart is in the right 
place feels his sympathies warmed towards them. There 
is no doubt as to that, I am sure, in any Christian com- 
munity. But there is another lesson. The men who 
fell, the men who lost an arm or leg, the widows and 
orphans who are left, are not the only victims of the 
war. There must always be another class. We rejoice 
to know that the great body of young men who went 
out to the war returned to their homes, more manly, 
braver, and better than when they left them, but they 
were gone, many of them, at the critical period of life, 
from sixteen to twenty years of age, just the period 
when they must learn habits of thrift, and the knowledge 
of occupations and trades that shall enable them to get 



180 HAYES AS A SOLDI£B. 

that independence which every man in America ought 
to have or try to have. They were during that period 
in the army ; and some came hack with hahits to which 
we regret to allude. But, my friends, when we look at 
that monument, we should he reminded that that man 
who may have thus formed any pernicious hahits in the 
army is always one of the victims of the war. He has 
lost that which is better than life in trying to save the 
republic Avert not your gaze, patriotic men, from 
that man. Lift him up, help him, never give him up. 
Give him occupation, give him good words ; save him, if 
you can. At any rate, treat him as one of the victims 
of the war." 

What Hayes was as a soldier, the reader can best 
learn from his history in the war — a history only too 
slightly and inadequately sketched in these pages. To 
his regiment he was one of the good colonels, and to his 
brigade one of the good generals, looking to the com- 
fort, the health, the honor, and the morality of his men 
with literally the same studied care, the same enlight- 
ened vigilance, that a father bestows upon his children ; 
and in return he enjoyed from them a devotion that 
knew no limit ; wherever he led they followed ; what- 
ever he said they did. A private of the twenty-third, 
writing of his colonel^ says : " A braver or better man 
was not in the army. He had an abundance of grit. 
If he had a fault, it was that in battle he was too eager. 
On a long, dusty march I could always tell Colonel 
Hayes's horse, as it was always loaded with the guns 
and knapsacks of < the boys ' who were giving out, the 



A fellow-officer's opinion. 181 

colonel himself walking by its side, no matter how great 
the heat. Yes, sir, he was a kind man, bat we had to 
do our whole duty as soldiers." 

When he was removed from the command of the first 
brigade, " The boys looked upon you,** wrote one of his 
officers, " more in the light of a father than a military 
commander, and while we all regret that old associa- 
tions must be broken off, yet we feel assured that what- 
ever station you may be called upon to fill in the future, 
you will acquit yourself with like honors to those now 
attending you as the commander of the old first brig- 
ade." 

The testimony of officers and those competent to 
judge. of his professional qualities as a soldier, is of but 
one effect. "In military life," writes General Comly, 
who served under him throughout the war, and was 
himself a soldier of heroic temper and achievement, 
" he was noted among army men for his coolness, firm- 
ness, and daring. No emergency ever came upon him 
that he was not equal to. The West Point men re- 
garded him as one of the very best officers in the vol- 
unteer service, and attributed to him a very high order 
of military genius. His courage, though of the most 
undemonstrative sort, was absolutely sublime, and was 
attested by three or four wounds received in the very 
front of battle. His charge at Winchester, where he 
led his brigade through a deep slough in the face of 
the enemy, plunging his horse into the mire up to the 
saddle-bow, and being the first man over, though a per- 
fect storm of bullets swept about him, was scarcely ex- 



182 AN EASTERN WEST POINTER'S OPINION. 

celled during the whole war as a feat of personal 
daring. Yet this was but one incident of a dozen sim- 
ilar ones in his army career that might be named. Had 
he been as clamorous for promotion, and as impatient 
for popular appreciation as some officers were, he would 
have been placed at the head of a corps, or one of the 
grand armies, instead of a division." 

Not only do Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, and all the 
other great Ohio soldiers of West Point education, or 
of native military genius developed in the volunteer 
service, esteem and praise his soldiership, but wherever 
scientific soldiers of Eastern origin came in contact with 
him they acknowledged his capacity and power. We 
have just been shown a private letter from a New En- 
gland officer, a general of volunteers in West Virginia, 
a graduate of West Point, and now holding very high 
rank in the regular army, who speaks of Hayes in terms 
no less cordial and unstinted than these : — 

" September 4, 1876. 
" I am glad to assure you, not only of my full and 
undoubted conviction of the success of General Hayes, 
but still more the further conviction that from week to 
week comes over me, that he as fully merits that suc- 
cess. And though I was not so much brought in con- 
tact with him as if he had been in my own brigade, I 
recollect very distinctly his quiet, unobtrusive, gentle- 
manly manner, and his faithful attention to duty in the 
West Virginia campaign, from Carnifex Ferry to its 
close. It was of the same type exactly with the modest 



THE SAME TYPE OF SOLDIER AS THOMAS. 188 

worth and quietj reserved power of Grant and of 

ThomaSy since so well known to the country I 

firmly believe his administration is to be oar political 
and national salvation. 

'< I have always felt that the daily letters, the record 
of events written at the time by those engaged in them, 
were the most valuable papers ever to be had, either as 
to the truth of the events or to show the characters of 
the writers ; and I doubt not the most interesting and 
important articles for the national (I do not call it polit- 
ical) contest now coming on will be those which give 
most fully the very words and thoughts of the moment 
(as the great events of the war were passing), of this 
brave, honest man, whom the people will delight to 
honor, as his fellow soldiers now do; this modest 
Bayard, in war or in peace — as the whole country 
finds, and will ever find — sans peur et sans reproche^ 

It is superfluous to multiply these testimonies, as we 
might to any extent, from rank and file alike. They 
are as unanimous — a hater of Aris tides might say as 
monotonous — as the witnesses to the purity, efficiency, 
and economy of Hayes's civil administrations. What his 
character as a congressman was, we have already seen ; 
and as governor of a great State we have allowed him 
to speak for himself in extracts from his messages. On 
some points he was necessarily silent He could not 
say what we know from examination of his letters 
and diaries, that his smallest official act followed only 
upon the most careful and conscientious deliberation. 
His appointments have been made after the closest 



184 HIS IDEAS OF A GOVERNOR'S DUTIES: 

possible inquiry into the character and qualifications of 
the persons appointed ; and no fault has been found 
with them except by Republicans who have blamed him 
for the impartiality with which he has n^uned Democrats 
for places in which he judged that purely partban ap- 
pointments might be to the public disadvantage. We 
have yet to know of a single instance in which that 
eminent civil service reformer, Mr. Tilden, has laid 
himself open to reproach by giving office to a political 
opponent. 

As governor, Hayes ha^s conceived it his business to 
attend to State affairs, and only to notice national ques- 
tions as they concern citizens of Ohio. He has not 
been putting out feelers for the presidency, nor manu- 
facturing a reputation on which he could lift himself 
into partisan prominence ; and he has not, like Grov- 
ernor Tilden, lugged into his messages the discussion of 
every sort of irrelevant affair. He has applied himself 
closely to the study of the sources of Ohio's prosperity, 
and probably no man in the State knows them so well 
as he. A gentleman who recently talked with him on 
such matters confessed his astonishment at the extent 
and minuteness of his knowledge relating to the agri- 
culture, manufactures, and mines of the State ; but 
Hayes seemed to think it was part of his duty, as the 
first citizen, to be second to none in this knowledge. 

He has not only bestowed unusual attention upon 
the condition of the asylums and prisons, but he has 
been extremely careful in the exercise of the pardon- 
bg power, which he has used according to principles 



HIS TEMPER AS A BULEB. 185 

arrived at through diligent study of the results in cases 
coming within his own experience or observation. In- 
clining always towards mercy, he has suffered no per- 
sonal feeling to doud his judgment in such matters, 
and in more public affairs, involving disturbances of 
order or violations of law, he has acted with instant 
vigor. His promptness in quelling the riots of the 
striking coal-miners in Ohio, during the present year, 
is an earnest of what his action would be on a larger 
theatre in any greater emergency, and the following 
letter to his adjutant-general, who was sent with troops 
to crush out the riots, shows the temper of a ruler not 
disposed to dally with his duty, or to address a murder- 
ous mob as his " friends." 

Deab General, — I still feel that there is doubt 
as to the sufficiency of your force. Be sure to have it 
ample. If you call out too many men, I will be re- 
sponsible, but if you fail for want of enough, it will 
be your fault It now looks as if this trouble would 
last a 'long time. I wish you to make preparations to 
hold your men in camp near Massillon, until all danger 
from lawless violence is at an end ; therefore let your 
arrangements be of a more permanent character; let 
it be understood that you mean to stay until lawless- 
ness ceases, or is plainly controllable by the civil au- 
thorities. Sincerely yours, R. B. Hayes. 

" Hayes's capacity for civil affairs," says a journal- 
ist of the State which knows him best, <^ has been 



186 HAYES'S BECOBD WITHOUT A FLAW. 

severely tested, and the tests have developed executive 
abilities of the very highest order. With a rare knowl- 
edge of men and afEairs, he has shown a genius for 
doing the right thing in the right way and at the right 
time. In prudence, moderation, and sturdy good sense, 
he bears a striking resemblance to Abraham Lincoln, 
as he does also in his simplicity, and keen, almost un- 
erring sagacity. Few men have, with such caution, 
such strength of will and power of decision." 

Not more, but not less valuable than the praise of an 
impartial friend, is that of an impartial enemy, and Mr. 
Dana, of the "New York Sun," may now speak for 
the man whose defeat he desires : — 

" Hayes is a man of talent ; he is a gentleman ; he 
is rich and independent ; he served with credit as a 
soldier in the war, and his record as governor of Ohio 
is withotUjlaw or spot.'' 

Of Hayes as a citizen and a man, what remains to be 
said ? Nothing truly that will not make him even nK)re 
hateful to those already weary of hearing Aristides 
called just. Some of his moral and intellectual quali- 
ties have been admirably given by an old acquaintance 
of his in a letter printed by " The Nation." " He is 
not a < magnetic ' man ; he is not audacious, he is not a 
< leader,' he does not impress one as a great force, and 
all that. But when he has a duty to perform he first 
proceeds to throw aside all nonsense, and, with a pecul- 
iar singleness and simplicity, sees just what the matter 
is. Afte^r that, the devil can't scare him. I never 
knew a man who listened with a franker willingness to 



HAYES'S INTELLECTUAL " COLOR," 187 

learn, and I have known very few men who were so 
sure to end with an opinion of their own, which nothing 
could shake. I observe that the little people of the 
^ Herald ' and < World ' speak of him as a ' colorless ' 
candidate. Well, his color is not loud, but what they 
actually mean is nonsense. They had better encounter 
him some time when he has a duty to perform, and try 
to turn him aside, and then tell us whether he has color. 
I have seen him tried, and noticed that his color was a 

good deal like steel I need say nothing about 

his honesty; you've seen that mentioned by every 
paper that names him, though perhaps I ~ had as well 
add that he is just absolute integrity. My main pur- 
pose was to speak of his capabilities, since that must be 
the chief point of curiosity just now. For whatever it 
is worth, my clear convictioi^ is that he is a very able 
man, very well informed, of a good deal of culture, of 
rare soundness of judgment, and of a courageous and 
high character." 

Mr. Henry B. Blackwell, a friend of equally long 
standing with the writer of the foregoing, has published 
his impressions of Hayes's character in a letter to the 
" Boston Advertiser," from which we transcribe a few 



"Mr. Hayes has a calm, cool, intellectual temper- 
ament, which is not easily roused, but which when 
roused, moves promptly and with singular precision. 
He has a clear, judicial intellect. He is not want- 
ing in enthusiasm, but he never gushes. There is a 
certain magnanimity, a stately and dignified repose of 



188 MORAL AND INTELLECTUAL QUALITIES. 

character, which underlies his frank and genial tem- 
per, and which keeps his generous impulses from run- 
ning away with him. He is always and everywhere 
a gentleman. During our six or seven years of weekly 
• meetings,^ I never knew him to use a harsh or coarse 
expression, nor ever knew him to indulge in a per- 
sonality. He never made an enemy, nor lost a friend. 
Nothing sordid or selfish was ever associated with his 
character. Always cheerful, kind, frank, and sym- 
pathetic, he took a keen interest in every question, 
and occasionally spoke, when roused, effectively and to 
the purpose. But he seldom was roused to speak ex- 
cept in <5onversation. There he was always ready, 
bright, and animated. It was a common remark in 
those days, at the club, * Hayes is capable of rising to 
any distinction, if he coi^|Only be impelled to seek it.' 
But he seemed totally devoid of personal ambition, and 
unwilling to take any of the ordinary steps to attain no- 
toriety ; yet this very coolness and indifference to per 
sonal aggrandizement has proved the secret of his sub- 
sequent political success. He has never sought position. 
He has never lifted his hand to become a candidate for 
any place. The office has always sought the man, not 
the man the office." 

Some reminiscences, sketchily jotted down by an old 
friend of Hayes's college days, and kindly transferred 
to the present writer by Mr. J. Q. Howard, for whose 
careful work^ they came too late, present traits of 

^ In the Cincinnati Literary Club. 

2 Life of Rutherford B. Hayes. (Robert Clarke & Co., Cincinnati.) 



HAYES AT COLLEGE. 189 

the man too essential to a good portrait to be lost. We 
think the reader will enjoy these all the better, if given 
without our manipulation. << Hayes was the champion 
in college, in debate class section, and in the foot-path ; 
cheerful, sanguine, and confident of the future, never 
seeing cause for desponding ; was a young man of sub- 
stantial physique ; in my whole acquaintance, I never 
knew of his being sick one day, and so free from any 
weakness as to seem indefatigable. His greatest amuse- 
ments were fishing and chess. In company he was 
humorous to hilarity, told quick, pungent stories, many 
of which I remember with laughter to this day ; took 
things as they came ; used to laugh at the shape of our 
boarding-house roast beef, but still ate. 

" I grew from boyhood, knowing him as a good friend, 
to whom I went whenever to^. lazy to study, or found- 
ered by my problems, and I always found help and 
good cheer. Do not think he had many intimate 
friends ; those with whom he was intimate were, and 
are now^ the best men of my acquaintance. I don't 
remember a single man with whom he was intimate 
but that has been successful in his vocation, showing 
that Hayes either had an intuitive disgust for mean 
spirits and rejected them, or else changed them. He 
had all the appearance of a fighting man, and I think 
in all college scrimmages was let alone. Have often 
heard it said that he Mid nothing for his friends;' 
perhaps not, but his real friends generally needed no 
help, or were not of that class who attached themselves 
for selfish interests. Even in his political labors, I am 



190 THOROUGHLY INDEPENDENT. 

•sure he never entangled himself by promises or by such 
intimacies as to bind him, but never shrank from tack- 
ling any subject or measure of policy when brought to 
him. He never walked around anything, but took it 
by the horns and shook it, or was shaken. I think him 
a square specimen of an Anglo-Saxon, honest man; 
stubbornly square in his views ; of simple ideas of life ; 
that is, he had such ideas as would make him prefer 
heaping, round measure of good to pretension and false 
appearances. 

" The independence of his character was shown on 
commencement day at Kenyon. He was valedictorian, 
and I remember how grand he looked in my boy eyes 
because he was n't able to have splendid new clothes, 
and was independent enough to do without. That was 
the first impression made on my mind, evidencing a 
pure, thorough self-sacrifice. I was but sixteen years 
old, and think I see him now, with what we knew then 
as a box-coat with side pockets, when all the rest were 
dressed in new black cloth frock-coats. 

^I spent the summer of 1844 with him at Cam- 
bridge, Mass., as a law student ; I as an amateur (i, e. 
a listener who never studies), he as a regular stu- 
dent He then showed himself thoroughly independent 
of everything and everybody. Judge Story always 
noticed him especially, as he came into the lecture 
room. In the practice of law his advice was always 
against litigation. When offered the city solicitorship, 
we talked it over, and I urged him to take it for its in- 
troduction to the public. He always refused to do any^- 



NO ENTANGLING ALUANCES. 191 

thing to advance his own interests ; but, don't try to 
make him a saint ; he was n't ; he was nothing but a 
good honest specimen of a man. 

" Three months ago I wrote to him about his presi- 
dential prospects, and his reply was emphatically, ^I 
cannot do anything to aid myself.' And on June 7, 
1876, he writes, < I am luckily constituted, or the things 
you allude to would be vexations ; the truth is, I am in 
no way complicated, entangled, or committed with the 
parties you name, or anybody else.' And I believe if he 
is elected President of the United States, no man ever 
went into office so free from obligations as he wiU he. 
The head-quarters of the Hayes movement in this sec- 
tion during the campaign were projected by his per- 
sonal friends; not one cent was contributed by an 
office-holder or politician." 

It was a good usage of the old-fashioned biogra- 
phers, with whom we would fain ally ourselves in some 
sort, to delineate the persons of their heroes ; and the 
reader, we hope, would not be content without some 
such picture of Hayes. The material for such a pict- 
ure is vast enough, but the authorities upon his looks 
are not so well agreed as those upon his morals. In 
its way, a sketch by Judge Johnston, in an address to 
a ratification meeting at Avondale, Ohio, is, we are 
told, quite trustworthy : — 

^ Place him on a platform together with one hun- 
dred distinguished men, and call in an able connoisseur, 
who has neither seen nor heard of any one of them, 
and he will point him out as a model man ; neither too 



192 PERSONAL APPEARANCE. 

large nor too small, nor too tall nor too short, nor too 
fat nor too lean, nor too old nor too young. A man 
in the prime and vigor of healthful manhood, with 
blood in his veins and marrow in his bones ; able to en- 
dure any labor, either of body or of mind, which may 
devolve upon him. His face seems made to match his 
form. No painful, care-worn wrinkles, indicative of 
infirmities or misfortunes, to provoke a grudge against 
nature, or engender sourness toward mankind. Nor 
does he wear a smirking face, as if he were a candi- 
date for admiration; but a fine, sunny countenance, 
such as men and women respect, and children love. 
His manners, like his countenance, are simple and sin- 
cere. HS don't run to meet you, and call you * My 
VERY DEAR BiT^ He takes you by the hand, with a 
cordial kindness which recognizes the universal broth- 
erhood of man, and impresses you that he is a man 
who gets above nobody, and nobody gets above him." 

If this is not enough, there is a yet closer portraiture 
— also said to be faithful — by Mr. Keenan, writing 
for one of the Chicago newspapers. It is well to pre- 
mise that Hayes's complexion is of the true Scotch 
sandiness, and that his once tawny beard and hair are 
both now touched with gray. " His complexion,** says 
Mr. Keenan, "has the ripe tinge of health. He is 
much in the open air, and has cheeks like a reaper's — 
fresh, brown, and thickly bearded. He has no gift of 
music evidently, for his bright, frank, blue eyes are set 
closely together, under a fair, clear, shapely forehead. 
The nose is a column of strength, if physiognomy's laws 



1 Si:'BI2 CITTIE. 198 

are to m lin^xeL I: is not the hooked heak of the 
Cxsars. bat the complex formation which marks the 
BtroDger type of the Anglo-Saxons. Tlie lower face, 
where the lines can be seen, is symmetrical, strong, ami 
reassnring. In repose or anunation the face is a fine 
one." 

And now that we stand, as it were, in ih«i \«rj 
presence of the man, let him speak once more io; ^ix- 
self , and let his final utterances be those iBagLr.':=»uai 
words winch are tmest to his broad asd ^s^t-j'Ta ift- 
tare. Here is a letter writien lK»me in uie Ttrj suQk 
of the Shenandoah Yallej camptdgL. -viuii v^ *xmr 
mend to the perosal of the wlK>le cjicltt. NutJl uic 
South; — 

'•CiLkm3Tr.j[. Caw Iul. Jh^ i iiy^ 
"You wrote one thougbikw BOiUaiOfe. wmij.lkixiai^ 
of Lincoln for failing to provbct our unf '^r.una;* jrii.. 
oners by retaliation. All a mi^iakt ! hil m-L iL^Xij. 
should be avoided as mnch u poBiulfc. Wt uvt ooU 
too much rather than too liuk. Ycm u«: tU josik 
'brutal rebels.' Don't be cheated in iha: way. Tun 
are enough 'brutal rebels,' no doubu b-r. '-mth l^, 
plenty of humane rebels. I have seen a g^xid d^^ .^ :. 
on our late trip. War is cruel bosinehs. at^i d*-. il 
brutality in it on all sides, but it is T.rv wj. v> ^ up 
anxiety on account of any supposed pe^Iiar cn^lu on 
the part of rebels." 

from ir f ' '*"'' '*'' " i"*^? ^•rf* «>*"»« 



194 THE PROPORTIONS OF OUR LEADER, 

yet one other letter which we must give to show ho^ 
tolerantly he could feel toward one consenting to repre- 
sent a cause which he abhorred : — ■ 

"Camp Summit PoiKt, Yiroinia, September 9, 1864. 
" Speaking of politics, it is quite common for young- 
sters, adopting their parents' notions, to get very bitter 
talk into their innocent little mouths. I was quite 

willing W. [his son] should * hurrah for ,' last 

summer with the addition, ' and a rope to hang him, ' 
but I feel quite different about McClellan. He is on 
a mean platform, aild is in bad company ; but I do not 
doubt his personal loyalty ; and he has been a soldier; 
and what is more, a soldier's friend. No man ever 
treated the private soldier better. No commander was 
ever more loved by his men. I therefore want my 
boys taught to think and talk well of Greneral Mc- 
Qellan." 

This, then, is our leade)r. The proportions are he- 
roic, but the figure is not larger than life ; and the 
nearer we draw to it, the more august and benign are 
the lineaments. A scholar, and a lover of letters and 
the arts ; fine by nature and refined by culture, careful 
self-study, and wide knowledge of both men and books ; 
a soldier of dauntless bravery and approved genius $ 
a statesman and public servant of the best principles 
and of irreproachable performance, his highest com- 
mendation to our honor and our trust is still that he 
id a true and good man. 



THE LEGEND OF A SHIELD. 195 

Among the escutcheons of the old Scottish borderers 
which hang on the walls of Sir Walter Scott's library, 
at Abbotsford, are those of the Rutherfords and the 
Hayeses. The arms of the Hayeses are a shield with 
a Greek cross and four stars, surmounted by a dove, 
and having for legend one word — a word which has 
always been the instinct and the principle of the man 
whose life we have so imperfectly portrayed — 

" Recte ! " 



SKETCH OF THE LIFE 



WILLIAM A. WHEELER. 




_•_ 



'>'^^: v'. *^.^v 



SKETCH OF THE LIFE 



WILLIAM A. WHEELEB. 



The writer of this sketch, though counting himself 
among the friends of Mr. Wheeler, does not feel at 
liberty to indulge in mere eulogy of him, regarding him 
only from the standpoint of personal friendship. The 
attitude of Mr. Wheeler as a candidate for one of the 
highest offices in the gift of the people, gives them a 
right to exact and impartial information respecting both 
his public career and his personal character as bearing 
on the question of his fitness for the high position to 
which he has been named. For in this canvass, more 
perhaps than in any previous one, personal integrity as 
the surest guaranty of official rectitude, is emphasized 
beyond all other qualifications. And most happily both 
for Mr. Wheeler and the nation, the more both his 
public career and his personal character are known, 
the more deserving of the confidence of the people at 
this critical time, will he be proved. ^ Let them turn 
their calcium light on me," he said to one who rallied 
him on his calmness under public scrutiny just before 



• ,...,,■)■■' 



4 PARENTAGE. 

the Convention, " they will find nothing which will 
make my friends ashamed of me." To this proud as- 
sertion of the consciousness of right, limiting itself to 
modest self-acquittal, may he added by those who know 
the man and have watched his career, that " the fiercest 
light which beats upon " a candidate can reveal in him 
only new traits to admire and new virtues to honor. 
And more : Mr. Wheeler's character is such that it not 
only endures this strong light, but needs it in order to 
be brought out into observation. Some men show to 
advantage in the shade of common-place events, but 
wilt under the glare of great responsibilities. Mr. 
Wheeler belongs to the class of men who are greatest 
on great occasions and under the stress of great de- 
mands. This sketch — the writer must stipulate with 
his readers that this be understood — will not do him 
justice ; no written life can, because the best part of his 
life is as yet unrevealed. He has spoken many brave 
and wise words which have had their influence in shap- 
ing memorable events ; but what he has done is greater 
than what he has said ; and he is greater than aU he 
has said and done. If the people confirm him in the 
position of leadership to which one of the great na- 
tional parties has designated hi», it will be found that 
he has still in reserve resources of greatness and good- 
ness upon which neither his party nor the nation has 
yet drawn. 

PABENTAGE. 

Mr. Wheeler comes of good stock. Three great 
New England principles are traceable in the family for 



EDUCATION. 5 

several generations : love of freedom, love of knowledge, 
and the fear of God. The grandfather Wheeler was 
in the first Concord fight. The maternal grandfather, 
William Woodward, was a soldier all through the 
Eevolution. The Wheeler branch of the family, from 
Massachusetts, and the Woodward branch, from Con- 
necticut, came together in Vermont, where Almon 
Wheeler, father of William, was born, and where he 
lived till two months before his son's birth. It thus 
appears that both the Republicati candidates are of 
Vermont parentage. We may be permitted to hope 
that this fact is no bad omen either for the character 
of the men or the success of the candidates. Mr. 
Wheeler at least seems not to augur ill of his origin. 
" I have Vermont blood in my veins," he said at Mont- 
pelier, " and Vermont ideas in my head. My fkther 
was a Highgate man and my mother a Castleton 
woman, and in my early days I lived in the town of 
Fairfax, where under the shadow of old Fletcher 
Mountain, I learned from a valued uncle, in the inter- 
vals of the toil which was the common lot of almost all 
men in those days, those lessons which only the true 
New Englander could inculcate." 

EDUCATION. 

There runs through the Wheeler family the story, so 
common in New England families of those times, of 
struggles with poverty and hardship in the pursuit of 
education. In this case it was the old story in its most 
pathetic form, ambition saddened by ill health ^nd ar- 



6 EDUCATION. 

rested short of the hoped-for success. Almon Wheeler, 
obliged by sickness to suspend his studies in the Uni- 
versity of Vermont, at Burlington, entered upon the 
practice of law, in which he gave promise of eminence, 
but died at the early age of thirty-seven. His son, 
William Almon, bom at Malone, New York, June 30, 
1819, was but eight years old at his father's death. 
For the support of the family, consisting of William 
and two sisters, the widowed mother found herself in 
possession of an estate valued at about $300, and 
encumbered by a mortgage. But this mother, Eliza 
Woodward Wheeler, — her name deserves to be writ 
large, — was a woman of great force of character, con- 
cealed under the gentlest exterior. By taking boarders 
for the academy at the rate of $1.25 a week, she con- 
trived to keep her little family from want, and to give 
William the chance to attend the district schools until 
he was old enough to earn something for himself while 
pursuing his studies preparatory to college. During 
this time he taught schools and ^ boarded round," in 
winters, and worked at farming in the laboring season, 
sometimes for months' wages, sometimes for the tenth 
bushel of com husked, the tenth basket of potatoes 
dug, according to the custom of the region. If ever 
his ambition flagged or his hope grew dim, in view of 
all that lay between him and the great prize of a liberal 
education, the mother^s heroic spirit came to the rescue 
and helped him through the momentary lull of his own 
aspirations. And as Providence would have it, in all 
this brave, patient, strenuous battle with the hardships 



LEGAL PBACTICE. 7 

of bis life, the lad was not only knitting his physical 
and moral jErame into condition for manly work, but was 
drawing the attention of many to himself as one whom 
they might well put in the way of promotion when the 
opportunity should come. At the age of nineteen, with 
a capital of $30 lent him by a former friend who 
had more faith in William than in himself, he entered 
the University of Vermont and pursued the course of 
study for two years, absent from the classes much of the 
time to work and teach. His college contemporaries 
speak of him as a good scholar, studious, thoughtful, 
and haying a great many ideas of his own. At the 
end of two years, the family necessities and an affection 
of the eyes compelled him, though with great reluc- 
tance, to leave college. Mr. Wheeler did not, however, 
cease to be a student. He has always been a thought- 
ful reader of the best books, especially in English litera- 
ture. His style and utterance are those of an educated 
man. The writer does not remember to have ever 
heard him misconstruct a sentence or mispronounce a 
word, and this is much to say of the most finished 
scholar. 

LEGAL PRACTICE. 

Immediately on leaving college, Mr. Wheeler entered 
upon the study of law with Asa Hascall, a leading law- 
yer of Malone, and after four years' study, three of the 
seven years then required being remitted on account of 
his classical discipline, was admitted to the bar and 
" soon acquired," says a former legal brother, " an en- 
viable position as a keen advocate and wise counsellor. 



8 LOCAL AND STATE OFFICES. 

which brought him clients, friends, and competence." 
A throat trouble which seriously interfered with his 
practice as an advocate, finally compelled him to aban- 
don the profession of the law, which he did in 1851. 

LOCAL AND STATE OFFICES. 

From his early manhood, Mr. Wheeler has held a 
succession of offices, the variety and importance of which 
attest the confidence of those who know him best. 
During his early struggles to maintain himself and his 
family, his neighbors seemed to have bestowed all 
their offices on him, one after another, as fast as he grew 
up to them. While studying law, he was made town 
clerk, school commissioner, and school inspector. At 
the first election under the Constitution of 1846, by 
which the county judges and district attorneys were 
made eligible by popular vote, Mr. Wheeler, who was a 
pronounced Whig, was elected district attorney, and 
his partner, a Democrat, was elected judge, on a Union 
ticket, it being then the desire of both parties to keep 
judicial elections free from party strifes. In 1849, and 
again in 1850, Mr. Wheeler was elected by the Whigs 
a member of the New York Assembly, and in 1859 and 
1860, was State senator for his district. Although he 
was always an active^and was at times an ardent party 
man, and was outspoken in the advocacy of the meas- 
ures he approved, it is the testimony alike of his 
political friends and opponents, that he had a delicate 
sense of official responsibility ; that he was broad and 
catholic in his sympathies and acts as a legislator ; and 



LOCAL AND STATE OFFICES. 9 

severely just in giving or refusing his great influence 
to the many interests that appealed to him. This may 
explain the high respect which he has always enjoyed 
from men of all parties, and his singular exemption 
from that partisan calumny which is the disgrace of 
American politics. 

How Mr. Wheeler felt toward those who had ad- 
vanced him to so many honors is touchingly mani- 
fested by an impromptu address made to them shortly 
after his nomination to the Vice-Presidency, which we 
give at length, because it fills in with warmer touches 
our meagre outline of his early life, and shows in 
what estimate he holds the mere honors and rewards 
of office as compared with the esteem of good men and 
the approbation of his own heart: — 

TovTNSMEN AND Fbiends : Of the many congrat- 
ulations proffered me since my nomination by the Re- 
publican Convention for the second place in the gov- 
ernment of the United States, none have so stirred me 
and come so near my heart ns yours. If this nomi- 
nation be an honor — and who shall gainsay it? — it is 
your honor and not mine ; I am the simple instrument 
through which it is reflected. For what am I, and 
what have I, that I have not received from you ? It 
was in the early confidence of the people of Malone, 
in their cheering words of encouragement, and in their 
unwavering support, that the foundations of whatever 
success I have achieved in life were laid. In boy- 
hood, in manhood, and now that the sun of life rs well 



10 LOCAL AND STATE OFHCES. 

past the meridian, these have been, and are now, my 
refuge and strength. 

No honor, however exalted, shall ever dim my grat- 
itude to those who extended to me the helping hand 
in my early struggles, and who have honored me with 
life-long trust and substantial acts of kindness. Nor 
can the glare and glitter of life at the national capital, 
or the blandishments and hollow arts of its society, 
ever efface the simple tastes and early habits learned 
by me from the New England pioneers of this goodly 
town, to which I always return with renewed pleasure 
and gratitude. How many of those pioneers whose 
memory is hallowed by me, would, if they could speak, 
this morning join in your congratulations I 

From the people of Malone I received my first po- 
litical recognition. Even before I had attained my 
majority they made me clerk of the town, an office in 
which I magnified myself more than in all the offices I 
have since possessed, and whose pecuniary emoluments 
— $30 for the year — for recording the estrays of the 
town and the laying out of new roads, were of more 
value to me than the thousands I have since attained. 

And right here I want to say a word especially to 
the young men, so many of whom I see before me — 
a class in whom I always take the deepest interest, 
and with whose efforts in life to achieve honorable suc- 
cess I am always in deep sympathy. It is said that 
a fellow feeling makes us wondrous kind. There are 
few phases in the struggles of the boy or young man 
to make his way in life in which I have not had severe 



LOCAL AND STATE OFFICES. 11 

experience. When, forty years ago, on a cold Decem- 
ber morning, before the dawn of day, I emerged from 
the humble home which then stood npon the site from 
which I now address you, to make my way on* foot 
through the i^lling snow to an adjoining town to teach 
my first district school at ten dollars a month, << half 
store pay ; " and when, during that winter, in the 
progress of boarding around, in the chambers of the 
log houses, through the shrunken roof boards, I was 
literally a ** star gazer," had any one predicted to me 
that at some future period of my life I should be nom- 
inated by a great party to the second office in the gift 
of forty millions of people, it would hare been deemed 
stranger to me than any of the tales of the <' Arabian 
Nights " which so stirred my boyish wonder. With an 
imagination naturally vivid, I built many air castles in 
those days, but this nomination was not among the 
structures. My nomination has this lesson for you, 
young men. In this beneficent people's government of 
ours, every man, without regard to the accidents of 
birth or fortune, is, with character, industry, and per- 
severance, the equal of every other man, and honest 
efforts to make an honorable name in life are sure of 
recognition and reward. And despite the hard things 
we say of the world, my own experience is that it 
never withholds a helping hand from a young man who 
shows an upright, stem determination to help himself. 
Doing this, though he fail of political distinction, he 
will obtain the respect and confidence of his fellow 
men, which is far better. 



12 LOCAL AND STATE OFFICES. 

** Honor and shame from no condition rise ; 
Act well your part, there all the honor lies." 

To be selected from this great, imperial commoD- 
wealth as its exponent of that party whose achievementR 
for liberty and unity, and for the advancement of the 
great cause of human brotherhood, have no parallel in 
the annals of the world, is an honor which ought to 
gratify any man's ambition. But it is an honor which 
comes to me unexpectedly, which I did not seek, and 
which I say in all frankness I did not desire. So long 
as I might remain in the public service my preference 
was to remain in the House of Bepresentatives. But 
how utterly empty and meaningless is the honor to me, 
standing in the shadow of this desolate home, you all 
well know. 

To the great tribunal of the American people, in 
which issue is again joined by the two great leading 
parties which divide the country, we can safely leave 
the argument and the verdict. In the meantime, how- 
ever our party relations may be ruflOied, I trust our per- 
sonal relations may remain undisturbed. And when 
the verdict shall be rendered in November, we shall 
all, as good citizens, desiring only the prosperity of our 
common country, cheerfully acquiesce in it, whatever 
it may be. And whatever the result shall be as to my- 
self, I shall hope to remain secure in your personal 
confidence. That is my highest purpose and ambition. 
And when, in obedience to universal and inevitable 
law, after the fitful fever of life, its weary wheels shall 
at last stand still, and I shall go to the rest which. 



THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION. 18 

thank God, beyond the conflicts and bereavements of 
this life " remaineth^^ I know I shall be followed by that 
charity with which our better nature covers the short- 
comings and imperfections of those who lay aside life's 
armor, and cross the flood to join the great, silent ma- 
jority. 

THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION. 

In 1867 Mr. Wheeler was chosen one of the dele- 
gates at large to the Constitutional Convention of the 
State of New York. This body was one of the ablest 
ever assembled in the State, embracing a large number 
of such men as Wm. M. Evarts, George W. Curtis, 
Horace Greeley, Sanford E. Church, Ira Harris, Sam- 
uel J. Tilden, Edwards Pierrepont, representatives of 
the best legal, financial, and administrative talent of the 
Empire State. Over this imposing body Mr. Wheeler 
was called to preside by the highly complimentary vote 
of 100 over 49, no competitor receiving over 9 votes. 
He took no part in the debates, " having to undergo " 
as Mr. Erastus Brooks, his colleague, expressed it, ^^ a 
severe ordeal for a man of ability, literally putting a 
padlock upon his mind, being unable in consequence of 
his position to mingle in the debates." In making up 
the committees of this body, with characteristic magna- 
nimity he put leading Democrats into several important 
positions. " I came to the chair," said he in his closing 
speech, " with the single purpose of administering its 
duties fairly and impartially ; remembering that the 
trust confided to us was neither for majorities nor mi- 



14 AS A PRESIDING OFFICER. 

norities, but for all alike as citizens of a oommon State.'^ 
Some of his ultra Bepublican friends were at first of- 
fended by this course of action, but afterward acknowl- 
edged both its justice and policy. 

AS A PBESIDING OFFIOEB, 

there can be no question that Mr. Wheeler would 
bring preeminent ability to the position of President of 
the Senate. His mental characteristics, his quick per- 
ception of the real issue through all perplexities, his 
promptness of utterance and action, his habit of im- 
partial judgment, mark him out for a presiding officer. 
The Senate of New York discovered his parliamentary 
ability and chose him its speaker pro tempore. Speak- 
ing to a resolution of thanks tendered to the president 
at the close of the Constitutional Convention, Mr. San- 
ford E. Church said : ^' I have had some experience in 
deliberative bodies, and I can say without qualification 
that for impartiality, fairness, and ability, I have never 
seen a presiding officer excel the presiding officer of this 
body." And to this high testimony Mr. George W. 
Curtis added : " I shall carry from this Convention the 
profoundest impression of the dignified deliberation 
which is possible for gentlemen in a period of great 
political excitement, but who are called together to ad- 
minister a great public trust As for the gentleman 
who has presided over our deliberations, we shall all, I 
am sure, to the latest hour of our lives, bear his image 
in our memories, as that of a most able, a most urbane, 
and most skillful officer." 



IN CONGRESS. 16 

IN CONGBESS. 

Mr. Wheeler has sat as Representative in the thirty- 
seventh, forty-first, forty-second, forty-third, and forty- 
fourth Congresses. During most of this time, while 
he has been recognized as one of the leading men 
in Congress by those within, he has been one of the 
least conspicuous in the eyes of those without. He 
has been a working rather than a talking member. 
His oratory, which is vigorous and effective, has been 
^devoted to advocating and defending measures which 
came from his committees. During his whole career 
he has never made a volunteer speech. Our constitu- 
encies are coming slowly to understand that the men 
who are the most valuable in Congress, the men who 
influence legislation most effectually, are those who 
work hard in committees, talk but seldom on the floor, 
and then with business-like point and directness. Mr. 
Wheeler belongs to this class. When ordinary men 
have confused and muddled a question beyond any ap- 
parent hope of a settlement, a few words of clear good 
sense from Mr. Wheeler often closes the dispute. He 
has also another method of influencing votes, which is 
quite effective, but does not seem to be emulated by as- 
piring Congressmen as much as might be wished. He 
keeps such a vigilant watch over measures in progress, 
and forms his opinions on them so honestly and care- 
fully, that men who want to rely on a sound judgment, 
and who distrust their own, find out how Mr. Wheeler 
intends to vote, and act accordingly. He is thus a kind 



16 IN CONGRESS. 

of legislative conscience to a considerable number of 
members. His standing with his political opponents is 
shown by his being unanimously selected in the Demo- 
cratic caucus as a member of the Belknap Impeach- 
ment Committee. With regard to the measures in 
Congress by which so many fair names have been 
smirched, let his colleague, Hon. Robert H. Ellis, 
speak for him : — 

" No inquiry has ever connected his name with any 
transaction depending in the most remote degree on 
his legislative action. When it was the fashion for allj 
men to dabble in railroad stocks and bonds, and his 
own training might have induced him to invest in such 
securities, Mr. Wheeler never bought or sold a share of 
stock or a single bond in any of the Pacific roads. His 
experience on his local railroad would have rendered 
his services of rare value to any one of the great en- 
terprises with which he was brought into contact ; and 
the cases are many where legislators have by such re- 
lations been introduced to remunerative employment. 
Mr. Wheeler is free from even such imputation upon 
his disinterestedness. 

" Other men have not accounted it an offense to use 
knowledge obtained by them as legislators as a basis .for 
investments and business transactions. Such knowl- 
edge Mr. Wheeler often had, but his sense of right and 
his instincts of fair play forbade his taking any such 
advantage. He has served his country in Congress for 
ten years, without adding to the moderate competence 
with which he first went to Washington. With simple 



ECONOMY IN EXPENDITURE. 17 

tastes, he has never been greedy of gain either for its 
own sake or the luxury it would buy. As a legislator, 
the thought never occurred to him that his influence 
could bring riches, and not the shadow of a stain rests 
on his name. 

^ In the last Congress he was chairman of the Com- 
mittee on Commerce, and a member of the Committee 
on Appropriations, and in the present Congress he 
serves on the same committees. In these positions, he 
has never been self-asserting. His leadership has not 
been that of push ; he has never sought notoriety. He 
has walked modestly in th« path of duty, without self- 
seeking, and fearing no consequences." 

ECONOMY IN EXPENDITURE. 

A short specimen of Mr. Wheeler's style of speak- 
ing in Congress is here appended. Let the reader 
note the ring of sincerity in this plea for economy, and 
make his own contrasts. 

" In presenting the regular appropriation bill for the 
support of the army for the next fiscal year, the 
committee on appropriations invite for it close atten- 
tion and examination. Economy in public expendi- 
ture is now the profession of every lip ; its practice 13 
the universal, imperative demand of the hour. The 
time has passed, for a while at least, when millions of 
the public funds can, as at some former periods, flow 
safely through */he open sluice-ways of legislation with- 
out careful consideration and critical scrutiny. The 
specter of renewed and incf eased taxation now haunts 



18 ECONOMY IN EXPENDITUBE. 

every hamlet in the land, and upon us, as possessing 
the power, and in the exercise of a wise prudence and 
discretion, the people rely to heat hack from their 
homes the unwelcome reality. 

" Probably there has been no period in our history 
when the people were more sensitive upon the subject 
of taxation, or more keenly inquisitive as to its neces- 
sity. The great and, until quite recently, steady re- 
duction of our national indebtedness, and the removal 
of the greater portion of the burdensome taxation im- 
posed by the war, led our people to believe, with rea- 
son, that their long-fettered energies and industries 
were at length unloosed, and the country once more 
placed upon the sure road to permanent prosperity. 
The sudden dissipation of these hopes surprises and 
disheartens thoni, and all the more, as they are now 
suffering from severe monetary derangements and the 
great reduction of values ever, in time, inseparable 
from an inflated paper currency. 

^ The people are now ill able and ill disposed to bear 
burdens not demanded by palpable, immediate, pressing 
necessity. They demand of us to practice here the 
economy to which they are forced, and to bend to the 
necessity which overpowers them. 

^ We ought now and here to accept and legislate for 
the future upon the fact that certain great questions, 
which have for the past few years overshadowed all 
others, and to which, for the time, all others were 
justly subordinated, have been substantially settled. 
In a certain sense we are called upon to take, in leg- 



ECONOMY IN EXPENDITURE. 19 

islation, what our Democratic friends style a ^ new de- 
parture.' The questions of slavery, of the integrity 
of the Union, of reconstruction, and the like, are 
hereafter to live mostly, if not wholly, in the memory, 
soon, we trust, to be erased even from its tablet, in the 
closer, more cordial fraternity, the better civilization, 
the general prosperity and high advancement in every- 
thing which exalts and refines a nation, for all which, 
with wise and just government to foster and aid, the 
costly experience of the last few years has laid the 
sure foundation. 

<< With the adjustment of old difficulties comes the 
era of peace, leaving the people free for the pursuit of 
avocations which respect their material interests. He 
is a poor statesman who imagines for a moment that 
the record of the past, however brilliant or beneficent, 
can cover present dereliction of duty, or atone for 
want of fidelity, capacity, and adaptation to grapple 
successfully with the questions which now confrpnt us. 
No party can or ought to command the confidence and 
support of the people which is not equal and faithful 
to current duties and responsibilities, and whose rep- 
resentatives do not demonstrate by wise action that they 
exercise their trust broadly, intelligenijy, effectively, 
and honestly in the interest of the whole people. He 
scans the political horizon to little purpose who does 
not discern this sure sign of the times." 



20 THE SALARY GRAB. — WAR RECORD. 

THE SALARY GRAB. 

A few days after the passage of the act known as 
the " Salary Grab Law," Mr. Wheeler wrote to the 
Secretary of the Treasury : " As this measure was op- 
posed by my vote in all its stages, it does not comport 
with my. views of consistency or propriety to take the 
above sum to my personal use. I desire, therefore, 
without giving publicity to the act, to return it to the 
treasury, which I do by enclosing herewith five-twenty 
bonds of the United States, purchased with said funds 
and assigned by me to you for the sole purpose of can- 
cellation." Mr. Wheeler is said to have been the first 
to adopt this mode of returning his extra pay into the 
treasury. 

WAR RECORD. 

When the old Whig party wavered, and finally broke 
in the onset with slavery, Mr. Wheeler was among the 
first to hail the new party of freedom. He threw him- 
self with characteristic vigor into the campaign of 1856, 
with the loss of which by the friends of freedom went 
out the last hope of averting civil war. His sympathy 
with the victims of border ruffianism in Kansas, was due 
in part to the conviction that they were in reality the 
picket line in the great conflict shortly coming on be- 
tween slavery and freedom. But his sympathy and his 
conviction are revealed in this letter : — 



WAR RECORD. 21 

Tremont House, Chicago, June 2, 1856. 
Editors of the Chicago Daily Tribune : — 

Herewith I send draft on Metropolitan Bank, New 
York, for one hundred dollars, which I will thank you 
to hand to the appropriate committee for distributing 
material aid to our hunted and oppressed brethren in 
Kansas. Residing in the State of New York, to which 
I shall not return for several days, I am induced to 
contribute my mite here, that it may be made available 
as soon as possible. I shall always number among the 
cherished events of my life, that I had the opportunity 
of attending the meeting in this city on Saturday even- 
ing last. To see here, in the residence of Douglass, 
such a breaking away from party trammels ; such a 
spontaneous and hearty outburst of sympathetic free- 
dom, and of determined resistance to oppression and 
wrong, makes one more hopeful for the future, and is 
an encouraging indication that the free North is at last 
aroused, and will assert and maintain its just rights in 

the government Now that the banner is 

throvm to the breeze, there will be no faltering in its 
support. Kansas will inevitably become free. Slavery 

has made its last stride 

W. A. Wheeler. 

A few days after the firing on Sumter, a meeting of 
the citizens of Malone was held, at which Mr. Wheeler 
made a stirring appeal to his fellow-citizens to sustain 
the government, and headed a subscription for the re- 



22 THE LOUISIANA ADJUSTMENT. 

lief of soldiers' families with $1000. During the tjsro 
following years he was in Congress, where he was 
among the foremost in devising and urging ways and 
means for the successful prosecution of the war. He 
also gave a large amount of time and attention to car- 
ing for the soldiers from his State, making use of his 
extensive banking connections to forward their earnings 
to their families, and in every possible way, contribu- 
ting to their comfort and looking after their interests. 
If soldiers' gratitude could be quarried, Mr. Wheeler's 
bundles of letters contain enough to make a pyramid. 

THE LOUISIANA ADJUSTMENT. 

Probably the one act of Mr. Wheeler's life which 
comes nearest to furnishing a measure of the real power 
and greatness of the man, is his management of the 
Louisiana difficulties in 1875. This is often referred to 
as the " Wheeler compromise." But it was not in the 
ordinary sense of the term a compromise ; Mr. Wheeler 
himself does not so style it ; but an adjustment, a plan 
which aimed first to determine what was just between 
the two contending parties and then to bring both 
parties to accept it. The situation was one of the an- 
griest and most threatening among all the scenes which 
have attended the progress of reconstructipn at the 
South. Intimidation and proscription of the colored 
voting population on the one side, false returns and 
military interference on the other ; two hostile factions 
with inflammable Southern passions already heated to 
madness ; leaders on both sides eager to head, but un- 



THE LOUISIANA ADJUSTMENT. 28 

able to guide their followers ; the semblance o£ a legis* 
lature in session and therefore no colorable pretext ex- 
isting for calling in Federal aid to meet the progress of 
sedition; here were all the elements of a revolution in 
which violence and atrocity would have run full riot. 
Where was the hand that could stay the disaster, and 
bring these wild elements into harmony ? Was there a 
man in the nation who, answering Virgil's description, 
revered for his piety and services, could ** soothe with 
sober words their angry mood," and lay this storm of 
sectional and political passion ? It would be hazardous 
to say that there was more than one : one, happily, there 
was. Mr. Wheeler, having by means of his position on 
the Committee on Southern Affairs become thoroughly 
informed of the facts in the case, first decided in his 
own mind upon a plan of adjustment, and then went 
to New Orleans and laid it before the most ultra men 
of both parties, urging it upon them with all the force 
of cogent reasoning and strong appeal. Having secured 
the assent of the leaders, his next and harder task was 
to bring over the masses of the two parties to accept 
the plan proposed. While this was in process, Mr. 
Wheeler remained in New Orleans during a long month 
of toil and pei*il, exposed to popular insult, threatened 
with assassination, on one occasion actually fired on, 
but holding firmly to his original scheme against all 
appeals for modifications urged upon him, now by one 
side, now by the other, until the adjustment was finally 
efEected, and Louisiana had peace. And be it under- 
stood that in all this Mr. Wheeler, though a member of 



24 AS BAILBOAD MANAGER. 

the Committee of Congress on Southern Affairs, was 
clothed with no authority to enforce his views. The 
settlement he effected cannot even be called an arbitra- 
tion, for the contending parties had not agreed to sub- 
mit their differences to him. It was the case of a citi- 
zen of the United States going to the rescue of his 
fellow citizens involved in difficulty and persuading 
them to accept deliverance at his hands. And never 
before in our history has one man so changed the con- 
dition and prospects of a whole State as did Mr. Wheeler 
in Louisiana, though acting unofficially, and carrying his 
measures by sheer force of character. It is pleasant to 
be able to add that during a si\bsequent visit to New 
Orleans, made for the purpose of aiding the execution 
of his plan, Mr. Wheeler found himself the applauded 
and fllted hero of that brilliant city, the two parties 
vying with each in doing him homage. 

AS RAILROAD MANAGER. 

In endeavoring to give some continuity to the ac- 
count of Mr. Wheeler's political career, we have passed 
by a large section of his life during which he devoted 
himself to business pursuits. He was cashier of the 
Malone Bank from 1851 to 1865. In 1854, he was 
appointed one of the trustees of the second mortgage 
bonds of the old Northern Railroad, which has since 
been merged in the Ogdensburg and Lake Champlain 
Railroad. As president of the Board of Trustees, he 
was virtually manager of the road for eleven years. 
When it first came into his hands, the bonds were sell- 



RELIGIOUS CHARACTER. — PERSONAL TRAITS. 25 

iug for four and five cents on the dollar ; but obtaining 
a decree of the court allowing the trustees to bid in 
the road, he raised the property for the benefit of the 
bondholders, until every dollar of the bonds was pay- 
ing a fair interest to the holders. Mr. Wheeler him- 
self never owned a dollar of the securities of the road. 
On laying down his trust in 1865, his accounts for the 
total period of his trusteeship were audited and allowed 
by the Supreme Court, and he was fully discharged by 
decree of the court, to which all persons interested 
were made parties. 

RELIGIOUS CHARACTER. 

For many years past, Mr. Wheeler has been a mem- 
ber of the Congregational church in Malone. He 
maintains worship in his family, takes part in the de- 
votional meetings of his church, and is earnest in all 
Christian activities and benevolences. As, however, he 
is broader than his party in politics, so his religious 
sympathies extend beyond his own denomination in the 
Church. A few years ago, when the Methodists of 
Malone built a new church edifice, Mr. Wheeler gave 
$1000 to aid the enterprise. Other denominations 
have also had from him liberal testimonials of his in- 
terest in their prosperity. 

PERSONAL TRAITS. 

Mr. Wheeler has a dignified and commanding pres- 
ence ; his manners are cordial ; his conversation is un- 
usually interesting, as that of a man who has seen and 



26 A REPRESENTATIVE MAN. 

thought much, and who takes pleasure in sharing his 
views with others. His face has an expression of min- 
gled sternness and sweetness, saying to you at the first 
look, <' Here is a man whom no one would dare ask to 
do wrong," and at the second look, << Here is a man of 
whom any one may ask a kindness." 

A REPRESENTATIVE MAN. 

Take him for all in all, Mr. Wheeler is a representa- 
tive American. His political principles are grounded 
in the fundamental ideas of American Bepublicanism. 
He is in cordial sympathy with the people and is an 
exponent of tbeir best spirit and purpose. Endowed 
with faculties whose combination begets that rarest in- 
telligence which in private life we call good sense and 
in a statesman wisdom ; raised by education to the level 
of our ablest men in self-respect and in the power to 
maintain opinions in their presence, and yet not lifted 
out of the associations and sympathies of the common 
people ; a man of such rare purity of character that 
although he has been in public office nearly all his life, 
his reputation, even in these scandalous times, is unsul- 
lied by even the breath of suspicion ; a " plain man," 
a true gentleman, a wise statesman, a sincere Christian, 
Mr. Wheeler is a man singularly fitted, in this time of 
revived national spirit, to represent the American peo- 
ple and the results of a century of American institu- 
tions, in one of the two national offices directly in the 
gift of the people. May they not lose their opportu- 
nity ! 



LETTER OF ACCEPTANCE. 27 

LETTER OF ACCEPTANCE. 

Malone, July 15, 1876. 
Hon. Edward McPherson^ and others of the Com" 

mittee of the Republican Naiional Convention : — 

Gentlemen: — I received, on the 6th inst, youi 
communication advising me that I had been anani- 
mously nominated by the National Convention of the 
Republican party, held at Cincinnati on the 14th ult, 
for the office of Vice-President of the United States ; 
and requesting my acceptance of the same, and asking 
my attention to the summary of Republican doctrines 
contained in the platform adopted by the convention. 

A nomination made with such unanimity implies a 
confidence on the part of the Convention which in- 
spires my profound gratitude. It is accepted with a 
sense of the responsibility which may follow. If elect- 
ed, I shall endeavor to perform the duties of the office 
in the fear of the Supreme Ruler, and in the interest 
of the whole country. 

To the summary of doctrines enunciated by the 
Convention I give my cordial assent. The Republican 
party has intrenched in the organic law of our land 
the doctrine that liberty is the supreme, unchangeable 
law for every foot of American soil. It is the mission 
of that party to give full effect to this principle by 
" securing to every American citizen complete liberty 
and exact equality in the exercise of all civil, political, 
and public rights." This will be accomplished only 
when the American citizen, without regard to color. 



28 LETTER OF ACCEPTANCE. 

shall wear this panoply of citizenship as fully and as 
securely in the cane brakes of Louisiana as on the 
banks of the St. Lawrence. 

Upon the question of our Southern relations, my 
views were recently expressed as a member of the 
Committee of the United States House of Represen- 
tatives upon Southern Affairs. Those views remain 
unchanged, and were thus expressed : — 

"We of the North delude ourselves in expecting, 
that the masses of the South, so far behind in many 
of the attributes of enlightened improvement and civil- 
ization, are, in the brief period of ten or fifteen years, 
to be transformed into our model Northern communi- 
ties. That can only come through a long course of 
patient waiting, to which no one can now set certain 
bounds. There will be a good deal of unavoidable fric- 
tion, which will call for forbearance, and which will 
have to be relieved by the temperate, fostering care of 
the government. One of the most potent, if not in- 
dispensable agencies in this direction, will be the de- 
vising of some system to aid in the education of the 
masses. The fact that there are whole counties in 
Louisiana in which there is not a solitary school- 
house, is full of suggestion. We compelled these peo- 
ple to remain in the Union, and now duty and interest 
demand that we leave no just means untried to make 
them good, loyal citizens. How to diminish the fric- 
tion, how to stimulate the elevation of this portion of 
our country, are problems addressing themselves to our 
best and wisest statesmanship. The foundation for 



LETTER OF ACCEPTANCE. 29 

these efforts must be laid in satisfying the Southern 
people that they are to have equal, exact justice ac- 
corded to them. Give them, to the fullest extent, 
every blessing which the government confers upon the 
most favored — give them no just cause for complaint, 
and then hold them, by every necessary means, to an 
exact, rigid observance of all their duties and obliga- 
tions under the Constitution and its amendments to se- 
cure to all within their borders manhood and citizen- 
ship, with every right thereto belonging." 

The just obligations to public creditors, created when 
the government was in the throes of threatened disso- 
lution, and as an indispensable condition of its salva- 
tion — guarantied by the lives and blood of thousands 
of its brave defenders — are to be kept with religious 
faith, as are all the pledges subsidiary thereto and con- 
firmatory thereof. 

In my judgment the pledge of Congress of January 
14, 1875, for the redemption of the notes of the United 
States in coin, is the plighted faith of the nation, and 
national honor, simple honesty, and justice to the peo- 
ple whose permanent welfare and prosperity are de- 
pendent upon true money, as the basis of their pecuni- 
ary transactions, all demand the scrupulous observance 
of this pledge, and it is the duty of Congress to sup- 
plement it with such legislation as shall be necessary 
for its strict fulfillment. 

In our system of government intelligence must give 
safety and value to the ballot. Hence the common 
schools of the land should be preserved in all their 



80 LETTER OF AOOEPTANCE. 

vigor, while in accordance with the spirit of the con- 
etitation, they and all their endowments should be 
secared by every possible and proper guaranty against 
every form of sectarian influence or control. 

There should be the strictest economy in the ex- 
penditures of the government consistent with its effec- 
tive administration, and all unnecessary offices should 
be abolished. Offices should be conferred only upon 
the basis of high character and particular fitness, and 
should be admistered only as public trusts, and not for 
private advantage. 

The foregoing are chief among the cardinal principles 
of the Republican party, and to carry them into full, 
practical effect is the work it now has in hand. To 
the completion of its great mission we address our- 
selves in hope and confidence, cheered and stimulated 
by the recollection of its past achievements; remem- 
bering that, under God, it is to that party that we are 
indebted in this centennial year of our existence for a 
preserved, unbroken Union ; for the fact that there is 
no master or slave throughout our broad domains, and 
that emancipated millions look upon the ensign of the 
Republic as the symbol of the fulfilled declaration that 
all men are created free and equal, and the guaranty 
of their ovm equality, under the law, with the most 
highly favored citizen of the land. 

To the intelligence and conscience of all who desire 
good government, good will, good money, and universal 
prosperity, the Republican party, not unmindful of the 
imperfection and short-comings of human organizations, 



LETTEB OP ACCEPTANCE. 31 

yet with the honest purpose of its masses promptly to 
retrieve all errors and to smnmarily punish all offenders 
against the laws of the country, confidently submits 
its claims for the continued support of the American 
people. 

^ Respectfully, 

William A. Wheeleb. 



Political and Philosophical Works. 

THE NATION: ' 

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