Our country probably never produced
a character more perfectly rounded, physically, intellectually
and morally than that which is presented to us in
the person of James A. Garfield, who was born in a
log cabin in Cuyahoga county, Ohio, November 19th,
1831.
His childhood was passed in almost
complete isolation from social influences, save those
which proceeded from his mother. His father had
died when James was only eighteen months old, and when
old enough to be of any use he was put to work on
the farm. The family was very poor, and his services
were needed to help ‘make both ends meet.’
At school, as a little boy, he allowed no one to impose
upon him. He is said to have never picked a quarrel,
but was sure to resent any indignity with effect,
no matter how large a boy the offender happened to
be. He attended school during the cold months
when it was impossible to be of value on the farm;
summers he generally ‘worked out,’ at one
time being a driver-boy on the canal.
He attended school at the Geauga Seminary,
where he got through his first term on the absurdly
small sum of seventeen dollars. When he returned
to school the next term he had but a six pence in his
pocket, and this he dropped into the contribution
box the next day at church. He made an arrangement
with a carpenter in the village to board with him,
and have his washing, fuel and light furnished for
one dollar and six cents per week. The carpenter
was building a house, and Garfield engaged to help
him nights and Saturdays. The first Saturday he
planed fifty-one boards, and thereby made one dollar
and two cents. So the term went, and he returned
home, having earned his expenses and AND THREE DOLLARS
OVER.
The following winter he taught school
at $12 a month and ’boarded around.’
In the spring he had $48, and when he returned to school
he boarded himself at an expense of thirty-one cents
a week. Heretofore, he had supposed a college
course beyond him, but meeting a college graduate
who explained that it was barely possible for a poor
boy to graduate, if he worked and attended alternate
years, he determined to try it. After careful
calculation Garfield concluded he could get through
school within TWELVE YEARS. He accordingly began
to lay his plans to graduate. Think of such determination,
dear reader, and then see if you can reasonably envy
the position attained by Garfield. He appeared
as a scholar at Hiram, a new school of his own denomination,
in 1851. Here he studied all the harder, as he
now had an object in life. Returning home he
taught a school, then returned to college, and attended
the spring term. During the summer he helped
build a house in the village, he himself planning
all the lumber for the siding, and shingling the roof.
Garfield was now quite a scholar, especially in the
languages, and upon his return to Hiram he was made
a tutor, and thenceforward he worked both as a pupil
and teacher, doing a tremendous amount of work to fit
himself for college. When he came to Hiram he
started on the preparatory course, to enter college,
expecting it would take four years. Deciding
now to enter some eastern institution, he wrote a letter
to the president of each of the leading colleges in
the east, telling them how far he had progressed.
They all replied that he could enter the junior year,
and thus graduate in two years from his entrance.
He had accomplished the preparatory course, generally
requiring four solid years, and had advanced two years
on his college course. He had crowded six years
into three, beside supporting himself. If ever
a man was worthy of success Garfield was. He
decided to enter Williams College, where he graduated
in 1856, thus came that institution to grasp the honor
of giving to the United States of America one of our
most popular presidents. The grasp of the mind
of Garfield, even at this early period, can be seen
by glancing at the title of his essay, “The Seen
and the Unseen.” He next became a professor;
later, principal of the college at Hiram.
In the old parties Garfield had little
interest, but when the Republican party was formed
he became deeply interested, and became somewhat noted
as a stump orator for Fremont and Dayton. In 1860
he was sent to the State senate, and while there began
preparation for the legal profession, and in 1861
was admitted to the bar. The war broke out about
this time, which prevented his opening an office, and
he was commissioned a colonel, finally a major-general.
His career in the army was brief, but very brilliant,
and he returned home to go to Congress. In Washington
his legislative career was very successful. He
proved to be an orator of no mean degree of ability,
his splendid education made him an acknowledged scholar,
and he soon became known as one of the ablest debaters
in Congress, serving on some of the leading committees.
When Ohio sent her delegation to the
Republican National Convention, of 1880, pledged for
Sherman, Garfield was selected as spokesman. His
speech, when he presented the name of John Sherman,
coming, as it did, when all was feverish excitement,
must be acknowledged as a master-piece of the scholarly
oratory of which he was master. Conkling had just
delivered one in favor of Grant, the effect of which
was wonderful. The Grant delegates ‘pooled’
the flags, which marked their seats, marched around
the aisles and cheered and yelled as if they were dwellers
in Bedlam, just home after a long absence. Fully
twenty minutes this went on, and Mr. Hoar, the president
of the convention after vainly trying to restore order
gave up in despair, sat down, and calmly allowed disorder
to tire itself out.
At last it ceases, Ohio is called,
a form arises near the center of the middle aisle,
and moves toward the stage amid the clapping of thousands
of hands, which increases as General Garfield mounts
the same platform upon which Senator Conkling has
so lately stood. In speaking he is not so restless
as was Conkling, but speaking deliberately he appeals
to the judgment of the masses, as follows:
“Mr. President: I have
witnessed the extraordinary scenes of this convention
with deep solicitude. No emotion touches my heart
more quickly than a sentiment in honor of a great
and noble character. But, as I sat on these seats
and witnessed these demonstrations, it seemed to me
you were a human ocean in a tempest. I have seen
the sea lashed into a fury and tossed into a spray,
and its grandeur moves the soul of the dullest man.
But I remember that it is not the billows, but the
calm level of the sea from which all heights and depths
are measured. When the storm had passed and the
hour of calm settles on the ocean, when sunlight bathes
its smooth surface, then the astronomer and surveyor
takes the level from which he measures all terrestrial
heights and depths. Gentlemen of the convention,
your present temper may not mark the healthful pulse
of our people. When our enthusiasm has passed,
when the emotions of this hour have subsided, we shall
find the calm level of public opinion below the storm
from which the thoughts of a mighty people are to
be measured, and by which their final action will be
determined. Not here, in this brilliant circle
where fifteen thousand men and women are assembled,
is the destiny of the Republic to be decreed; not
here, where I see the enthusiastic faces of seven hundred
and fifty-six delegates waiting to cast their votes
into the urn and determine the choice of their party;
but by four million Republican firesides, where the
thoughtful fathers, with wives and children about
them, with the calm thoughts inspired by love of home
and love of country, with the history of the past,
the hopes of the future, and the knowledge of the
great men who have adorned and blessed our nation in
days gone by there God prepares the verdict
that shall determine the wisdom of our work to-night.
Not in Chicago in the heat of June, but in the sober
quiet that comes between now and November, in the silence
of deliberate judgment will this great question be
settled. Let us aid them to-night.
“But now, gentlemen of the convention,
what do we want? Bear with me a moment.
Hear me for this cause, and, for a moment, be silent
that you may hear. Twenty-five years ago this
Republic was wearing a triple chain of bondage.
Long familiarity with traffic in the bodies and souls
of men had paralyzed the consciences of a majority
of our people. The baleful doctrine of State
sovereignty had shocked and weakened the noblest and
most beneficent powers of the national government,
and the grasping power of slavery was seizing the
virgin territories of the West and dragging them into
the den of eternal bondage. At that crisis the
Republican party was born. It drew its first inspiration
from that fire of liberty which God has lighted in
every man’s heart, and which all the powers
of ignorance and tyranny can never wholly extinguish.
The Republican party came to deliver and save the
Republic. It entered the arena when the beleaguered
and assailed territories were struggling for freedom,
and drew around them the sacred circle of liberty which
the demon of slavery has never dared to cross.
It made them free forever. Strengthened by its
victory on the frontier, the young party, under the
leadership of that great man who, on this spot, twenty
years ago, was made its leader, entered the national
capitol and assumed the high duties of the government.
The light which shone from its banner dispelled the
darkness in which slavery had enshrouded the capitol,
and melted the shackles of every slave, and consumed,
in the fire of liberty, every slave-pen within the
shadow of the capitol. Our national industries,
by an impoverishing policy, were themselves prostrated,
and the streams of revenue flowed in such feeble currents
that the treasury itself was well-nigh empty.
The money of the people was the wretched notes of
two thousand uncontrolled and irresponsible State banking
corporations, which were filling the country with a
circulation that poisoned rather than sustained the
life of business. The Republican party changed
all this. It abolished the babel of confusion,
and gave the country a currency as national as its
flag, based upon the sacred faith of the people.
It threw its protecting arm around our great industries,
and they stood erect as with new life. It filled
with the spirit of true nationality all the great
functions of the government. It confronted a
rebellion of unexampled magnitude, with slavery behind
it, and, under God, fought the final battle of liberty
until victory was won. Then, after the storms
of battle, were heard the sweet, calm words of peace
uttered by the conquering nation, and saying to the
conquered foe that lay prostrate at its feet:
’This is our only refuge, that you join us in
lifting to the serene firmament of the Constitution,
to shine like stars for ever and ever, the immortal
principles of truth and justice, that all men, white
or black, shall be free and stand equal before the
law.’
“Then came the question of reconstruction,
the public debt, and the public faith. In the
settlement of the questions the Republican party has
completed its twenty-five years of glorious existence,
and it has sent us here to prepare it for another
lustrum of duty and victory. How shall we do
this great work? We cannot do it, my friends,
by assailing our Republican brethren. God forbid
that I should say one word to cast a shadow upon any
name on the roll of our heroes. This coming fight
is our Thermopylae. We are standing upon a narrow
isthmus. If our Spartan hosts are united, we
can withstand all the Persians that the Xerxes of
Democracy can bring against us. Let us hold our
ground this one year, for the stars in their courses
fight for us in the future. The census taken
this year will bring re-enforcements and continued
power. But in order to win this victory now,
we want the vote of every Republican, of every Grant
Republican, and every anti-Grant Republican in America,
of every Blaine man and every anti-Blaine man.
The vote of every follower of every candidate is needed
to make our success certain; therefore, I say, gentlemen
and brethren, we are here to take calm counsel together,
and inquire what we shall do. We want a man whose
life and opinions embody all the achievements of which
I have spoken. We want a man who, standing on
a mountain height, sees all the achievements of our
past history, and carries in his heart the memory
of all its glorious deeds, and who, looking forward,
prepares to meet the labor and the dangers to come.
We want one who will act in no spirit of unkindness
toward those we lately met in battle. The Republican
party offers to our brethren of the South the olive
branch of peace, and wishes them to return to brotherhood,
on this supreme condition, that it shall be admitted
forever and forevermore, that, in the war for the Union,
we were right and they were wrong. On that supreme
condition we meet them as brethren, and on no other.
We ask them to share with us the blessings and honors
of this great republic.
“Now, gentlemen, not to weary
you, I am about to present a name for your consideration the
name of a man who was the comrade and associate and
friend of nearly all those noble dead whose faces look
down upon us from these walls to-night, a man who
began his career of public service twenty-five years
ago, whose first duty was courageously done in the
days of peril on the plains of Kansas, when the first
red drops of that bloody shower began to fall, which
finally swelled into the deluge of war. He bravely
stood by young Kansas then, and, returning to his duty
in the National Legislature, through all subsequent
time his pathway has been marked by labors performed
in every department of legislation. You ask for
his monuments. I point you to twenty-five years
of national statutes. Not one great beneficent
statute has been placed in our statute books without
his intelligent and powerful aid. He aided these
men to formulate the laws that raised our great armies
and carried us through the war. His hand was
seen in the workmanship of those statutes that restored
and brought back the unity and married calm of the
States. His hand was in all that great legislation
that created the war currency, and in a still greater
work that redeemed the promises of the Government,
and made the currency equal to gold. And when
at last called from the halls of legislation into
a high executive office, he displayed that experience,
intelligence, firmness and poise of character which
has carried us through a stormy period of three years.
With one-half the public press crying ‘crucify
him,’ and a hostile Congress seeking to prevent
success, in all this he remained unmoved until victory
crowned him. The great fiscal affairs of the
nation, and the great business interests of the country
he has guarded and preserved while executing the law
of resumption and effecting its object without a jar
and against the false prophecies of one-half of the
press and all the Democracy of this continent.
He has shown himself able to meet with calmness the
great emergencies of the Government for twenty-five
years. He has trodden the perilous heights of
public duty, and against all the shafts of malice
has borne his breast unharmed. He has stood in
the blaze of ‘that fierce light that beats against
the throne,’ but its fiercest ray has found
no flaw in his armor, no stain on his shield.
I do not present him as a better Republican or as
better man than thousands of others we honor, but
I present him for your deliberate consideration.
I nominate John Sherman, of Ohio.”
The speech was over, its effect was
like oil upon troubled waters. When the balloting
began a single delegate only voted for Garfield.
The fight was between Grant, Blaine, Sherman and Edmunds;
Windom and others were waiting the possibility of
a compromise. Garfield managed Sherman’s
forces. He meant to keep his favorite in the field,
in vain trying to win over Blaine’s followers.
On the thirty-fourth ballot the Wisconsin delegation
determined to make a break, and hence put forth an
effort in an entirely new direction, casting their
entire seventeen votes for Garfield. The General
arose and declined to receive the vote, but the chairman
ruled otherwise, and on the next ballot the Indiana
delegation swung over. On the thirty-sixth ballot
he was nominated. Then followed his canvass and
election.
Time flew, and he was about to join
his old friends at Willams’ College, when an
assassin stealthily crept up and shot him from behind,
as dastardly assassins and cowardly knaves generally
do. The whole country was thrown into a feverish
heat of excitement between this cowardly act and the
president’s death, which occurred two months
later. Thus, after a struggle for recognition,
which had won the admiration of the world, he was
snatched from the pleasure of enjoying the fruits of
his toil, and from the people who needed his service.
Like Lincoln, he had come from the people, he belonged
to the people, and by his own right hand had won the
first place among fifty millions of people. Like
Lincoln, he was stricken down when his country expected
the most of him, stricken in the very prime of life.
Like Lincoln, when that enjoyment for which he had
labored was about to crown his efforts; and like Lincoln,
it could not be said of him he lived in vain.