A useful member of the legislature
of his state, a general in the army during the Civil
War, governor of his state, Secretary of the Interior
in President Grant’s Cabinet, a member of Congress,
the president of a large railroad, a writer of books,
dean and teacher in a law school, and a reviewer of
books in the Nation, such were the
varied activities of General Cox. All this work
was done with credit. He bore a prominent part
in the battle of Antietam, where Ropes speaks of his
“brilliant success”; he was the second
in command at the battle of Franklin, and bore the
brunt of the battle. “Brigadier-General
J. D. Cox,” wrote Schofield, the commanding
general, in his report, “deserves a very large
share of credit for the brilliant victory at Franklin.”
The governor of the state of Ohio
did not then have a great opportunity of impressing
himself upon the minds of the people of his state,
but Cox made his mark in the canvass for that office.
We must call to mind that in the year 1865, when he
was the Republican candidate for governor, President
Johnson had initiated his policy of reconstruction,
but had not yet made a formal break with his party.
Negro suffrage, which only a few had favored during
the last year of the war, was now advocated by the
radical Republicans, and the popular sentiment of the
party was tending in that direction. Cox had
been a strong antislavery man before the war, a supporter
of President Lincoln in his emancipation measures,
but soon after his nomination for governor he wrote
a letter to his radical friends at Oberlin in opposition
to negro suffrage. “You assume,”
he said, “that the extension of the right of
suffrage to the blacks, leaving them intermixed with
the whites, will cure all the trouble. I believe
it would rather be like the decision in that outer
darkness of which Milton speaks where
“’chaos
umpire sits,
And by decision more embroils the fray.’”
While governor, he said in a private
conversation that he had come to the conclusion “that
so large bodies of black men and white as were in
presence in the Southern States never could share political
power, and that the insistence upon it on the part
of the colored people would lead to their ruin.”
President Grant appointed General
Cox Secretary of the Interior, and he remained for
nearly two years in the Cabinet. James Russell
Lowell, on a visit to Washington in 1870, gave expression
to the feeling among independent Republicans.
“Judge Hoar,” he wrote, “and Mr.
Cox struck me as the only really strong men in the
Cabinet.” This was long before the Civil
Service Reform Act had passed Congress, but Secretary
Cox put the Interior Department on a merit basis,
and he was ever afterwards an advocate of civil service
reform by word of mouth and with his pen. Differences
with the President, in which I feel pretty sure that
the Secretary was in the right, caused him to resign
the office.
Elected to Congress in 1876, he was
a useful member for one term. He has always been
known to men in public life, and when President McKinley
offered him the position of Minister to Spain something
over three years ago, it was felt that a well-known
and capable man had been selected. For various
reasons he did not accept the appointment, but if he
had done so, no one could doubt that he would have
shown tact and judgment in the difficult position.
As president of the Wabash Railroad,
one of the large railroads in the West, he gained
a name among business men, and five or six years ago
was offered the place of Railroad Commissioner in
New York City. This was practically the position
of arbitrator between the trunk lines, but he was
then Dean of the Cincinnati Law School and interested
in a work which he did not care to relinquish.
Besides a controversial monograph,
he wrote three books on military campaigns: “Atlanta”;
“The March to the Sea; Franklin and Nashville”;
“The Battle of Franklin”; and he wrote
four excellent chapters for Force’s “Life
of General Sherman.” In these he showed
qualities of a military historian of a high order.
Before his death he had finished his Reminiscences,
which will be brought out by the Scribners this autumn.
His differences with President Grant
while in his Cabinet left a wound, and in private
conversation he was quite severe in his strictures
of many of the President’s acts, but he never
let this feeling influence him in the slightest degree
in the consideration of Grant the General. He
had a very high idea of Grant’s military talents,
which he has in many ways emphatically stated.
Since 1874 he had been a constant
contributor to the literary department of the Nation.
In his book reviews he showed a fine critical faculty
and large general information, and some of his obituary
notices especially those of Generals Buell,
Grant, Sherman, Joseph E. Johnston, and Jefferson
Davis showed that power of impartial characterization
which is so great a merit in a historian. He was
an omnivorous reader of serious books. It was
difficult to name any noteworthy work of history or
biography or any popular book on natural science with
which he was not acquainted.
As I saw him two years ago, when he
was seventy years old, he was in the best of health
and vigor, which seemed to promise many years of life.
He was tall, erect, with a frame denoting great physical
strength, and he had distinctively a military bearing.
He was an agreeable companion, an excellent talker,
a scrupulously honest and truthful man, and a gentleman.