When I left Harvard, I took up the
study of law. If I had been sufficiently fortunate
to come under Professor Thayer, of the Harvard Law
School, it may well be that I would have realized that
the lawyer can do a great work for justice and against
legalism.
But, doubtless chiefly through my
own fault, some of the teaching of the law books and
of the classroom seemed to me to be against justice.
The caveat emptor side of the law, like the
caveat emptor side of business, seemed to me
repellent; it did not make for social fair dealing.
The “let the buyer beware” maxim, when
translated into actual practice, whether in law or
business, tends to translate itself further into the
seller making his profit at the expense of the buyer,
instead of by a bargain which shall be to the profit
of both. It did not seem to me that the law was
framed to discourage as it should sharp practice,
and all other kinds of bargains except those which
are fair and of benefit to both sides. I was
young; there was much in the judgment which I then
formed on this matter which I should now revise; but,
then as now, many of the big corporation lawyers,
to whom the ordinary members of the bar then as now
looked up, held certain standards which were difficult
to recognize as compatible with the idealism I suppose
every high-minded young man is apt to feel. If
I had been obliged to earn every cent I spent, I should
have gone whole-heartedly into the business of making
both ends meet, and should have taken up the law or
any other respectable occupation for I
then held, and now hold, the belief that a man’s
first duty is to pull his own weight and to take care
of those dependent upon him; and I then believed,
and now believe, that the greatest privilege and greatest
duty for any man is to be happily married, and that
no other form of success or service, for either man
or woman, can be wisely accepted as a substitute or
alternative. But it happened that I had been
left enough money by my father not to make it necessary
for me to think solely of earning bread for myself
and my family. I had enough to get bread.
What I had to do, if I wanted butter and jam, was
to provide the butter and jam, but to count their cost
as compared with other things. In other words,
I made up my mind that, while I must earn money, I
could afford to make earning money the secondary instead
of the primary object of my career. If I had had
no money at all, then my first duty would have been
to earn it in any honest fashion. As I had some
money I felt that my need for more money was to be
treated as a secondary need, and that while it was
my business to make more money where I legitimately
and properly could, yet that it was also my business
to treat other kinds of work as more important than
money-making.
Almost immediately after leaving Harvard
in 1880 I began to take an interest in politics.
I did not then believe, and I do not now believe,
that any man should ever attempt to make politics his
only career. It is a dreadful misfortune for
a man to grow to feel that his whole livelihood and
whole happiness depend upon his staying in office.
Such a feeling prevents him from being of real service
to the people while in office, and always puts him
under the heaviest strain of pressure to barter his
convictions for the sake of holding office. A
man should have some other occupation I
had several other occupations to which he
can resort if at any time he is thrown out of office,
or if at any time he finds it necessary to choose
a course which will probably result in his being thrown
out, unless he is willing to stay in at cost to his
conscience.
At that day, in 1880, a young man
of my bringing up and convictions could join only
the Republican party, and join it I accordingly did.
It was no simple thing to join it then. That was
long before the era of ballot reform and the control
of primaries; long before the era when we realized
that the Government must take official notice of the
deeds and acts of party organizations. The party
was still treated as a private corporation, and in
each district the organization formed a kind of social
and political club. A man had to be regularly
proposed for and elected into this club, just as into
any other club. As a friend of mine picturesquely
phrased it, I “had to break into the organization
with a jimmy.”
Under these circumstances there was
some difficulty in joining the local organization,
and considerable amusement and excitement to be obtained
out of it after I had joined.
It was over thirty-three years ago
that I thus became a member of the Twenty-first District
Republican Association in the city of New York.
The men I knew best were the men in the clubs of social
pretension and the men of cultivated taste and easy
life. When I began to make inquiries as to the
whereabouts of the local Republican Association and
the means of joining it, these men and the
big business men and lawyers also laughed
at me, and told me that politics were “low”;
that the organizations were not controlled by “gentlemen”;
that I would find them run by saloon-keepers, horse-car
conductors, and the like, and not by men with any
of whom I would come in contact outside; and, moreover,
they assured me that the men I met would be rough and
brutal and unpleasant to deal with. I answered
that if this were so it merely meant that the people
I knew did not belong to the governing class, and that
the other people did and that I intended
to be one of the governing class; that if they proved
too hard-bit for me I supposed I would have to quit,
but that I certainly would not quit until I had made
the effort and found out whether I really was too
weak to hold my own in the rough and tumble.
The Republican Association of which
I became a member held its meetings in Morton Hall,
a large, barn-like room over a saloon. Its furniture
was of the canonical kind: dingy benches, spittoons,
a dais at one end with a table and chair and a stout
pitcher for iced water, and on the walls pictures
of General Grant, and of Levi P. Morton, to whose generosity
we owed the room. We had regular meetings once
or twice a month, and between times the place was
treated, at least on certain nights, as a kind of
club-room. I went around there often enough to
have the men get accustomed to me and to have me get
accustomed to them, so that we began to speak the
same language, and so that each could begin to live
down in the other’s mind what Bret Harte has
called “the defective moral quality of being
a stranger.” It is not often that a man
can make opportunities for himself. But he can
put himself in such shape that when or if the opportunities
come he is ready to take advantage of them. This
was what happened to me in connection with my experiences
in Morton Hall. I soon became on good terms with
a number of the ordinary “heelers” and
even some of the minor leaders. The big leader
was Jake Hess, who treated me with rather distant
affability. There were prominent lawyers and
business men who belonged, but they took little part
in the actual meetings. What they did was done
elsewhere. The running of the machine was left
to Jake Hess and his captains of tens and of hundreds.
Among these lesser captains I soon
struck up a friendship with Joe Murray, a friendship
which is as strong now as it was thirty-three years
ago. He had been born in Ireland, but brought
to New York by his parents when he was three or four
years old, and, as he expressed it, “raised as
a barefooted boy on First Avenue.” When
not eighteen he had enlisted in the Army of the Potomac
and taken part in the campaign that closed the Civil
War. Then he came back to First Avenue, and, being
a fearless, powerful, energetic young fellow, careless
and reckless, speedily grew to some prominence as
leader of a gang. In that district, and at that
time, politics was a rough business, and Tammany Hall
held unquestioned sway. The district was overwhelmingly
Democratic, and Joe and his friends were Democrats
who on election day performed the usual gang work
for the local Democratic leader, whose business it
was to favor and reward them in return. This
same local leader, like many other greater leaders,
became puffed up by prosperity, and forgot the instruments
through which he had achieved prosperity. After
one election he showed a callous indifference to the
hard work of the gang and complete disregard of his
before-election promises. He counted upon the
resentment wearing itself out, as usual, in threats
and bluster.
But Joe Murray was not a man who forgot.
He explained to his gang his purposes and the necessity
of being quiet. Accordingly they waited for their
revenge until the next election day. They then,
as Joe expressed it, decided “to vote furdest
away from the leader” I am using the
language of Joe’s youth and the best
way to do this was to vote the Republican ticket.
In those days each party had a booth near the polling-place
in each election district, where the party representative
dispensed the party ballots. This had been a district
in which, as a rule, very early in the day the Republican
election leader had his hat knocked over his eyes
and his booth kicked over and his ballots scattered;
and then the size of the Democratic majority depended
on an elastic appreciation of exactly how much was
demanded from headquarters. But on this day things
went differently. The gang, with a Roman sense
of duty, took an active interest in seeing that the
Republican was given his full rights. Moreover,
they made the most energetic reprisals on their opponents,
and as they were distinctly the tough and fighting
element, justice came to her own with a whoop.
Would-be repeaters were thrown out on their heads.
Every person who could be cajoled or, I fear, intimidated,
was given the Republican ticket, and the upshot was
that at the end of the day a district which had never
hitherto polled more than two or three per cent of
its vote Republican broke about even between the two
parties.
To Joe it had been merely an act of
retribution in so far as it was not simply a spree.
But the leaders at the Republican headquarters did
not know this, and when they got over their paralyzed
astonishment at the returns, they investigated to
find out what it meant. Somebody told them that
it represented the work of a young man named Joseph
Murray. Accordingly they sent for him. The
room in which they received him was doubtless some
place like Morton Hall, and the men who received him
were akin to those who had leadership in Morton Hall;
but in Joe’s eyes they stood for a higher civilization,
for opportunity, for generous recognition of successful
effort in short, for all the things that
an eager young man desires. He was received and
patted on the back by a man who was a great man to
the world in which he lived. He was introduced
to the audience as a young man whose achievement was
such as to promise much for the future, and moreover
he was given a place in the post-office as
I have said, this was long before the day of Civil
Service Reform.
Now, to the wrong kind of man all
this might have meant nothing at all. But in
Joe Murray’s case it meant everything. He
was by nature as straight a man, as fearless and as
stanchly loyal, as any one whom I have ever met, a
man to be trusted in any position demanding courage,
integrity, and good faith. He did his duty in
the public service, and became devotedly attached
to the organization which he felt had given him his
chance in life. When I knew him he was already
making his way up; one of the proofs and evidences
of which was that he owned a first-class racing trotter “Alice
Lane” behind which he gave me more
than one spin. During this first winter I grew
to like Joe and his particular cronies. But I
had no idea that they especially returned the liking,
and in the first row we had in the organization (which
arose over a movement, that I backed, to stand by
a non-partisan method of street-cleaning) Joe and
all his friends stood stiffly with the machine, and
my side, the reform side, was left with only some half-dozen
votes out of three or four hundred. I had expected
no other outcome and took it good-humoredly, but without
changing my attitude.
Next fall, as the elections drew near,
Joe thought he would like to make a drive at Jake
Hess, and after considerable planning decided that
his best chance lay in the fight for the nomination
to the Assembly, the lower house of the Legislature.
He picked me as the candidate with whom he would be
most likely to win; and win he did. It was not
my fight, it was Joe’s; and it was to him that
I owe my entry into politics. I had at that time
neither the reputation nor the ability to have won
the nomination for myself, and indeed never would
have thought of trying for it.
Jake Hess was entirely good-humored
about it. In spite of my being anti-machine,
my relations with him had been friendly and human,
and when he was beaten he turned in to help Joe elect
me. At first they thought they would take me
on a personal canvass through the saloons along Sixth
Avenue. The canvass, however, did not last beyond
the first saloon. I was introduced with proper
solemnity to the saloon-keeper a very important
personage, for this was before the days when saloon-keepers
became merely the mortgaged chattels of the brewers and
he began to cross-examine me, a little too much in
the tone of one who was dealing with a suppliant for
his favor. He said he expected that I would of
course treat the liquor business fairly; to which I
answered, none too cordially, that I hoped I should
treat all interests fairly. He then said that
he regarded the licenses as too high; to which I responded
that I believed they were really not high enough, and
that I should try to have them made higher. The
conversation threatened to become stormy. Messrs.
Murray and Hess, on some hastily improvised plea,
took me out into the street, and then Joe explained
to me that it was not worth my while staying in Sixth
Avenue any longer, that I had better go right back
to Fifth Avenue and attend to my friends there, and
that he would look after my interests on Sixth Avenue.
I was triumphantly elected.
Once before Joe had interfered in
similar fashion and secured the nomination of an Assemblyman;
and shortly after election he had grown to feel toward
this Assemblyman that he must have fed on the meat
which rendered Cæsar proud, as he became inaccessible
to the ordinary mortals whose place of resort was
Morton Hall. He eyed me warily for a short time
to see if I was likely in this respect to follow in
my predecessor’s footsteps. Finding that
I did not, he and all my other friends and supporters
assumed toward me the very pleasantest attitude that
it was possible to assume. They did not ask me
for a thing. They accepted as a matter of course
the view that I was absolutely straight and was trying
to do the best I could in the Legislature. They
desired nothing except that I should make a success,
and they supported me with hearty enthusiasm.
I am a little at a loss to know quite how to express
the quality in my relationship with Joe Murray and
my other friends of this period which rendered that
relationship so beneficial to me. When I went
into politics at this time I was not conscious of going
in with the set purpose to benefit other people, but
of getting for myself a privilege to which I was entitled
in common with other people. So it was in my
relationship with these men. If there had lurked
in the innermost recesses of my mind anywhere the
thought that I was in some way a patron or a benefactor,
or was doing something noble by taking part in politics,
or that I expected the smallest consideration save
what I could earn on my own merits, I am certain that
somehow or other the existence of that feeling would
have been known and resented. As a matter of
fact, there was not the slightest temptation on my
part to have any such feeling or any one of such feelings.
I no more expected special consideration in politics
than I would have expected it in the boxing ring.
I wished to act squarely to others, and I wished to
be able to show that I could hold my own as against
others. The attitude of my new friends toward
me was first one of polite reserve, and then that of
friendly alliance. Afterwards I became admitted
to comradeship, and then to leadership. I need
hardly say how earnestly I believe that men should
have a keen and lively sense of their obligations in
politics, of their duty to help forward great causes,
and to struggle for the betterment of conditions that
are unjust to their fellows, the men and women who
are less fortunate in life. But in addition to
this feeling there must be a feeling of real fellowship
with the other men and women engaged in the same task,
fellowship of work, with fun to vary the work; for
unless there is this feeling of fellowship, of common
effort on an equal plane for a common end, it will
be difficult to keep the relations wholesome and natural.
To be patronized is as offensive as to be insulted.
No one of us cares permanently to have some one else
conscientiously striving to do him good; what we want
is to work with that some one else for the good of
both of us any man will speedily find that
other people can benefit him just as much as he can
benefit them.
Neither Joe Murray nor I nor any of
our associates at that time were alive to social and
industrial needs which we now all of us recognize.
But we then had very clearly before our minds the need
of practically applying certain elemental virtues,
the virtues of honesty and efficiency in politics,
the virtue of efficiency side by side with honesty
in private and public life alike, the virtues of consideration
and fair dealing in business as between man and man,
and especially as between the man who is an employer
and the man who is an employee. On all fundamental
questions Joe Murray and I thought alike. We never
parted company excepting on the question of Civil Service
Reform, where he sincerely felt that I showed doctrinaire
affinities, that I sided with the pharisees.
We got back again into close relations as soon as
I became Police Commissioner under Mayor Strong, for
Joe was then made Excise Commissioner, and was, I
believe, the best Excise Commissioner the city of
New York ever had. He is now a farmer, his boys
have been through Columbia College, and he and I look
at the questions, political, social, and industrial,
which confront us in 1913 from practically the same
standpoint, just as we once looked at the questions
that confronted us in 1881.
There are many debts that I owe Joe
Murray, and some for which he was only unconsciously
responsible. I do not think that a man is fit
to do good work in our American democracy unless he
is able to have a genuine fellow-feeling for, understanding
of, and sympathy with his fellow-Americans, whatever
their creed or their birthplace, the section in which
they live, or the work which they do, provided they
possess the only kind of Americanism that really counts,
the Americanism of the spirit. It was no small
help to me, in the effort to make myself a good citizen
and good American, that the political associate with
whom I was on closest and most intimate terms during
my early years was a man born in Ireland, by creed
a Catholic, with Joe Murray’s upbringing; just
as it helped me greatly at a later period to work for
certain vitally necessary public needs with Arthur
von Briesen, in whom the spirit of the “Acht-und-Vierziger”
idealists was embodied; just as my whole life was
influenced by my long association with Jacob Riis,
whom I am tempted to call the best American I ever
knew, although he was already a young man when he
came hither from Denmark.
I was elected to the Legislature in
the fall of 1881, and found myself the youngest man
in that body. I was reelected the two following
years. Like all young men and inexperienced members,
I had considerable difficulty in teaching myself to
speak. I profited much by the advice of a hard-headed
old countryman who was unconsciously paraphrasing
the Duke of Wellington, who was himself doubtless paraphrasing
somebody else. The advice ran: “Don’t
speak until you are sure you have something to say,
and know just what it is; then say it, and sit down.”
My first days in the Legislature were
much like those of a boy in a strange school.
My fellow-legislators and I eyed one another with mutual
distrust. Each of us chose his seat, each began
by following the lead of some veteran in the first
routine matters, and then, in a week or two, we began
to drift into groups according to our several affinities.
The Legislature was Democratic. I was a Republican
from the “silk stocking” district, the
wealthiest district in New York, and I was put, as
one of the minority members, on the Committee of Cities.
It was a coveted position. I did not make any
effort to get on, and, as far as I know, was put there
merely because it was felt to be in accordance with
the fitness of things.
A very short experience showed me
that, as the Legislature was then constituted, the
so-called party contests had no interest whatever for
me. There was no real party division on most of
the things that were of concern in State politics,
both Republicans and Democrats being for and against
them. My friendships were made, not with regard
to party lines, but because I found, and my friends
found, that we had the same convictions on questions
of principle and questions of policy. The only
difference was that there was a larger proportion of
these men among the Republicans than among the Democrats,
and that it was easier for me at the outset to scrape
acquaintance, among the men who felt as I did, with
the Republicans. They were for the most part from
the country districts.
My closest friend for the three years
I was there was Billy O’Neill, from the Adirondacks.
He kept a small crossroads store. He was a young
man, although a few years older than I was, and, like
myself, had won his position without regard to the
machine. He had thought he would like to be Assemblyman,
so he had taken his buggy and had driven around Franklin
County visiting everybody, had upset the local ring,
and came to the Legislature as his own master.
There is surely something in American traditions that
does tend toward real democracy in spite of our faults
and shortcomings. In most other countries two
men of as different antecedents, ancestry, and surroundings
as Billy O’Neill and I would have had far more
difficulty in coming together. I came from the
biggest city in America and from the wealthiest ward
of that city, and he from a backwoods county where
he kept a store at a crossroads. In all the unimportant
things we seemed far apart. But in all the important
things we were close together. We looked at all
questions from substantially the same view-point,
and we stood shoulder to shoulder in every legislative
fight during those three years. He abhorred demagogy
just as he abhorred corruption. He had thought
much on political problems; he admired Alexander Hamilton
as much as I did, being a strong believer in a powerful
National government; and we both of us differed from
Alexander Hamilton in being stout adherents of Abraham
Lincoln’s views wherever the rights of the people
were concerned. Any man who has met with success,
if he will be frank with himself, must admit that there
has been a big element of fortune in the success.
Fortune favored me, whereas her hand was heavy against
Billy O’Neill. All his life he had to strive
hard to wring his bread from harsh surroundings and
a reluctant fate; if fate had been but a little kinder,
I believe he would have had a great political career;
and he would have done good service for the country
in any position in which he might have been put.
There were other Republicans, like
Isaac Hunt and Jonas van Duzer and Walter Howe and
Henry Sprague, who were among my close friends and
allies; and a gigantic one-eyed veteran of the Civil
War, a gallant General, Curtis from St. Lawrence County;
and a capital fellow, whom afterwards, when Governor,
I put on the bench, Kruse, from Cattaraugus County.
Kruse was a German by birth; as far as I know, the
only German from Cattaraugus County at that time;
and, besides being a German, he was also a Prohibitionist.
Among the Democrats were Hamden Robb and Thomas Newbold,
and Tom Welch of Niagara, who did a great service in
getting the State to set aside Niagara Falls Park after
a discouraging experience with the first Governor
before whom we brought the bill, who listened with
austere patience to our arguments in favor of the State
establishing a park, and then conclusively answered
us by the question, “But, gentlemen, why should
we spend the people’s money when just as much
water will run over the Falls without a park as with
it?” Then there were a couple of members from
New York and Brooklyn, Mike Costello and Pete Kelly.
Mike Costello had been elected as
a Tammany man. He was as fearless as he was honest.
He came from Ireland, and had accepted the Tammany
Fourth of July orations as indicating the real attitude
of that organization towards the rights of the people.
A month or two in Albany converted him to a profound
distrust of applied Tammany methods. He and I
worked hand in hand with equal indifference to our
local machines. His machine leaders warned him
fairly that they would throw him out at the next election,
which they did; but he possessed a seasoned-hickory
toughness of ability to contend with adverse circumstances,
and kept his head well above water. A better
citizen does not exist; and our friendship has never
faltered.
Peter Kelly’s fate was a tragedy.
He was a bright, well-educated young fellow, an ardent
believer in Henry George. At the beginning he
and I failed to understand each other or to get on
together, for our theories of government were radically
opposed. After a couple of months spent in active
contests with men whose theories had nothing whatever
to do with their practices, Kelly and I found in our
turn that it really did not make much difference what
our abstract theories were on questions that were
not before the Legislature, in view of the fact that
on the actual matters before the Legislature, the
most important of which involved questions of elementary
morality, we were heartily at one. We began to
vote together and act together, and by the end of the
session found that in all practical matters that were
up for action we thought together. Indeed, each
of us was beginning to change his theories, so that
even in theory we were coming closer together.
He was ardent and generous; he was a young lawyer,
with a wife and children, whose ambition had tempted
him into politics, and who had been befriended by the
local bosses under the belief that they could count
upon him for anything they really wished. Unfortunately,
what they really wished was often corrupt. Kelly
defied them, fought the battles of the people with
ardor and good faith, and when the bosses refused
him a renomination, he appealed from them to the people.
When we both came up for reelection, I won easily in
my district, where circumstances conspired to favor
me; and Kelly, with exactly the same record that I
had, except that it was more creditable because he
took his stand against greater odds, was beaten in
his district. Defeat to me would have meant merely
chagrin; to Kelly it meant terrible material disaster.
He had no money. Like every rigidly honest man,
he had found that going into politics was expensive
and that his salary as Assemblyman did not cover the
financial outgo. He had lost his practice and
he had incurred the ill will of the powerful, so that
it was impossible at the moment to pick up his practice
again; and the worry and disappointment affected him
so much that shortly after election he was struck
down by sickness. Just before Christmas some of
us were informed that Kelly was in such financial straits
that he and his family would be put out into the street
before New Year. This was prevented by the action
of some of his friends who had served with him in
the Legislature, and he recovered, at least to a degree,
and took up the practice of his profession. But
he was a broken man. In the Legislature in which
he served one of his fellow-Democrats from Brooklyn
was the Speaker Alfred C. Chapin, the leader
and the foremost representative of the reform Democracy,
whom Kelly zealously supported. A few years later
Chapin, a very able man, was elected Mayor of Brooklyn
on a reform Democratic ticket. Shortly after his
election I was asked to speak at a meeting in a Brooklyn
club at which various prominent citizens, including
the Mayor, were present. I spoke on civic decency,
and toward the close of my speech I sketched Kelly’s
career for my audience, told them how he had stood
up for the rights of the people of Brooklyn, and how
the people had failed to stand up for him, and the
way he had been punished, precisely because he had
been a good citizen who acted as a good citizen should
act. I ended by saying that the reform Democracy
had now come into power, that Mr. Chapin was Mayor,
and that I very earnestly hoped recognition would
at last be given to Kelly for the fight he had waged
at such bitter cost to himself. My words created
some impression, and Mayor Chapin at once said that
he would take care of Kelly and see that justice was
done him. I went home that evening much pleased.
In the morning, at breakfast, I received a brief note
from Chapin in these words: “It was nine
last evening when you finished speaking of what Kelly
had done, and when I said that I would take care of
him. At ten last night Kelly died.”
He had been dying while I was making my speech, and
he never knew that at last there was to be a tardy
recognition of what he had done, a tardy justification
for the sacrifices he had made. The man had fought,
at heavy cost to himself and with entire disinterestedness,
for popular rights; but no recognition for what he
had done had come to him from the people, whose interest
he had so manfully upheld.
Where there is no chance of statistical
or mathematical measurement, it is very hard to tell
just the degree to which conditions change from one
period to another. This is peculiarly hard to
do when we deal with such a matter as corruption.
Personally I am inclined to think that in public life
we are on the whole a little better and not a little
worse than we were thirty years ago, when I was serving
in the New York Legislature. I think the conditions
are a little better in National, in State, and in
municipal politics. Doubtless there are points
in which they are worse, and there is an enormous
amount that needs reformation. But it does seem
to me as if, on the whole, things had slightly improved.
When I went into politics, New York
City was under the control of Tammany, which was from
time to time opposed by some other and
evanescent city Democratic organization.
The up-country Democrats had not yet fallen under
Tammany sway, and were on the point of developing a
big country political boss in the shape of David B.
Hill. The Republican party was split into the
Stalwart and Half-Breed factions. Accordingly
neither party had one dominant boss, or one dominant
machine, each being controlled by jarring and warring
bosses and machines. The corruption was not what
it had been in the days of Tweed, when outside individuals
controlled the legislators like puppets. Nor was
there any such centralization of the boss system as
occurred later. Many of the members were under
the control of local bosses or local machines.
But the corrupt work was usually done through the
members directly.
Of course I never had anything in
the nature of legal proof of corruption, and the figures
I am about to give are merely approximate. But
three years’ experience convinced me, in the
first place, that there were a great many thoroughly
corrupt men in the Legislature, perhaps a third of
the whole number; and, in the next place, that the
honest men outnumbered the corrupt men, and that,
if it were ever possible to get an issue of right
and wrong put vividly and unmistakably before them
in a way that would arrest their attention and that
would arrest the attention of their constituents,
we could count on the triumph of the right. The
trouble was that in most cases the issue was confused.
To read some kinds of literature one would come to
the conclusion that the only corruption in legislative
circles was in the form of bribery by corporations,
and that the line was sharp between the honest man
who was always voting against corporations and the
dishonest man who was always bribed to vote for them.
My experience was the direct contrary of this.
For every one bill introduced (not passed) corruptly
to favor a corporation, there were at least ten introduced
(not passed, and in this case not intended to be passed)
to blackmail corporations. The majority of the
corrupt members would be found voting for the blackmailing
bills if they were not paid, and would also be found
voting in the interests of the corporation if they
were paid. The blackmailing, or, as they were
always called, the “strike” bills, could
themselves be roughly divided into two categories:
bills which it would have been proper to pass, and
those that it would not have been proper to pass.
Some of the bills aimed at corporations were utterly
wild and improper; and of these a proportion might
be introduced by honest and foolish zealots, whereas
most of them were introduced by men who had not the
slightest intention of passing them, but who wished
to be paid not to pass them. The most profitable
type of bill to the accomplished blackmailer, however,
was a bill aimed at a real corporate abuse which the
corporation, either from wickedness or folly, was
unwilling to remedy. Of the measures introduced
in the interest of corporations there were also some
that were proper and some that were improper.
The corrupt legislators, the “black horse cavalry,”
as they were termed, would demand payment to vote as
the corporations wished, no matter whether the bill
was proper or improper. Sometimes, if the bill
was a proper one, the corporation would have the virtue
or the strength of mind to refuse to pay for its passage,
and sometimes it would not.
A very slight consideration of the
above state of affairs will show how difficult it
was at times to keep the issue clear, for honest and
dishonest men were continually found side by side voting
now against and now for a corporation measure, the
one set from proper and the other set from grossly
improper motives. Of course part of the fault
lay in the attitudes of outsiders. It was very
early borne in upon me that almost equal harm was
done by indiscriminate defense of, and indiscriminate
attack on, corporations. It was hard to say whether
the man who prided himself upon always antagonizing
the corporations, or the man who, on the plea that
he was a good conservative, always stood up for them,
was the more mischievous agent of corruption and demoralization.
In one fight in the House over a bill
as to which there was a bitter contest between two
New York City street railway organizations, I saw
lobbyists come down on the floor itself and draw venal
men out into the lobbies with almost no pretense of
concealing what they were doing. In another case
in which the elevated railway corporations of New York
City, against the protest of the Mayor and the other
local authorities, rushed through a bill remitting
over half their taxes, some of the members who voted
for the measure probably thought it was right; but
every corrupt man in the House voted with them; and
the man must indeed have been stupid who thought that
these votes were given disinterestedly.
The effective fight against this bill
for the revision of the elevated railway taxes perhaps
the most openly crooked measure which during my time
was pushed at Albany was waged by Mike Costello
and myself. We used to spend a good deal of time
in industrious research into the various bills introduced,
so as to find out what their authors really had in
mind; this research, by the way, being highly unappreciated
and much resented by the authors. In the course
of his researches Mike had been puzzled by an unimportant
bill, seemingly related to a Constitutional amendment,
introduced by a local saloon-keeper, whose interests,
as far as we knew, were wholly remote from the Constitution,
or from any form of abstract legal betterment.
However, the measure seemed harmless; we did not interfere;
and it passed the House. Mike, however, followed
its career in the Senate, and at the last moment,
almost by accident, discovered that it had been “amended”
by the simple process of striking out everything after
the enacting clause and unobtrusively substituting
the proposal to remit the elevated railway taxes!
The authors of the change wished to avoid unseemly
publicity; their hope was to slip the measure through
the Legislature and have it instantly signed by the
Governor, before any public attention was excited.
In the Senate their plan worked to perfection.
There was in the Senate no fighting leadership of
the forces of decency; and for such leadership of
the non-fighting type the representatives of corruption
cared absolutely nothing. By bold and adroit management
the substitution in the Senate was effected without
opposition or comment. The bill (in reality,
of course, an absolutely new and undebated bill) then
came back to the House nominally as a merely amended
measure, which, under the rules, was not open to debate
unless the amendment was first by vote rejected.
This was the great bill of the session for the lobby;
and the lobby was keenly alive to the need of quick,
wise action. No public attention whatever had
so far been excited. Every measure was taken
to secure immediate and silent action. A powerful
leader, whom the beneficiaries of the bill trusted,
a fearless and unscrupulous man, of much force and
great knowledge of parliamentary law, was put in the
chair. Costello and I were watched; and when for
a moment we were out of the House, the bill was brought
over from the Senate, and the clerk began to read
it, all the black horse cavalry, in expectant mood,
being in their seats. But Mike Costello, who
was in the clerk’s room, happened to catch a
few words of what was being read. In he rushed,
despatched a messenger for me, and began a single-handed
filibuster. The Speaker pro tem called him to
order. Mike continued to speak and protest; the
Speaker hammered him down; Mike continued his protests;
the sergeant-at-arms was sent to arrest and remove
him; and then I bounced in, and continued the protest,
and refused to sit down or be silent. Amid wild
confusion the amendment was declared adopted, and the
bill was ordered engrossed and sent to the Governor.
But we had carried our point. The next morning
the whole press rang with what had happened; every
detail of the bill, and every detail of the way it
had been slipped through the Legislature, were made
public. All the slow and cautious men in the
House, who had been afraid of taking sides, now came
forward in support of us. Another debate was held
on the proposal to rescind the vote; the city authorities
waked up to protest; the Governor refused to sign
the bill. Two or three years later, after much
litigation, the taxes were paid; in the newspapers
it was stated that the amount was over $1,500,000.
It was Mike Costello to whom primarily was due the
fact that this sum was saved the public, and that the
forces of corruption received a stinging rebuff.
He did not expect recognition or reward for his services;
and he got none. The public, if it knew of what
he had done, promptly forgot it. The machine did
not forget it, and turned him down at the next election.
One of the stand-by “strikes”
was a bill for reducing the elevated railway fare,
which at that time was ten cents, to five cents.
In one Legislature the men responsible for the introduction
of the bill suffered such an extraordinary change
of heart that when the bill came up being
pushed by zealous radicals who really were honest the
introducers actually voted against it! A number
of us who had been very doubtful about the principle
of the bill voted for it simply because we were convinced
that money was being used to stop it, and we hated
to seem to side with the corruptionists. Then
there came a wave of popular feeling in its favor,
the bill was reintroduced at the next session, the
railways very wisely decided that they would simply
fight it on its merits, and the entire black horse
cavalry contingent, together with all the former friends
of the measure, voted against it. Some of us,
who in our anger at the methods formerly resorted
to for killing the bill had voted for it the previous
year, with much heart-searching again voted for it,
as I now think unwisely; and the bill was vetoed by
the then Governor, Grover Cleveland. I believe
the veto was proper, and those who felt as I did supported
the veto; for although it was entirely right that
the fare should be reduced to five cents, which was
soon afterwards done, the method was unwise, and would
have set a mischievous precedent.
An instance of an opposite kind occurred
in connection with a great railway corporation which
wished to increase its terminal facilities in one
of our great cities. The representatives of the
railway brought the bill to me and asked me to look
into it, saying that they were well aware that it
was the kind of bill that lent itself to blackmail,
and that they wished to get it through on its merits,
and invited the most careful examination. I looked
carefully into it, found that the municipal authorities
and the property-owners whose property was to be taken
favored it, and also found that it was an absolute
necessity from the standpoint of the city no less
than from the standpoint of the railway. So I
said I would take charge of it if I had guarantees
that no money should be used and nothing improper
done in order to push it. This was agreed to.
I was then acting as chairman of the committee before
which the bill went.
A very brief experience proved what
I had already been practically sure of, that there
was a secret combination of the majority of the committee
on a crooked basis. On one pretext or another
the crooked members of the committee held the bill
up, refusing to report it either favorably or unfavorably.
There were one or two members of the committee who
were pretty rough characters, and when I decided to
force matters I was not sure that we would not have
trouble. There was a broken chair in the room,
and I got a leg of it loose and put it down beside
me where it was not visible, but where I might get
at it in a hurry if necessary. I moved that the
bill be reported favorably. This was voted down
without debate by the “combine,” some
of whom kept a wooden stolidity of look, while others
leered at me with sneering insolence. I then moved
that it be reported unfavorably, and again the motion
was voted down by the same majority and in the same
fashion. I then put the bill in my pocket and
announced that I would report it anyhow. This
almost precipitated a riot, especially when I explained,
in answer to statements that my conduct would be exposed
on the floor of the Legislature, that in that case
I should give the Legislature the reasons why I suspected
that the men holding up all report of the bill were
holding it up for purposes of blackmail. The
riot did not come off; partly, I think, because the
opportune production of the chair-leg had a sedative
effect, and partly owing to wise counsels from one
or two of my opponents.
Accordingly I got the bill reported
to the Legislature and put on the calendar. But
here it came to a dead halt. I think this was
chiefly because most of the newspapers which noticed
the matter at all treated it in such a cynical spirit
as to encourage the men who wished to blackmail.
These papers reported the introduction of the bill,
and said that “all the hungry legislators were
clamoring for their share of the pie”; and they
accepted as certain the fact that there was going to
be a division of “pie.” This succeeded
in frightening honest men, and also in relieving the
rogues; the former were afraid they would be suspected
of receiving money if they voted for the bill, and
the latter were given a shield behind which to stand
until they were paid. I was wholly unable to
move the bill forward in the Legislature, and finally
a representative of the railway told me that he thought
he would like to take the bill out of my hands, that
I did not seem able to get it through, and that perhaps
some “older and more experienced” leader
could be more successful. I was pretty certain
what this meant, but of course I had no kind of proof,
and moreover I was not in a position to say that I
could promise success. Accordingly, the bill was
given into the charge of a veteran, whom I believe
to have been a personally honest man, but who was
not inquisitive about the motives influencing his colleagues.
This gentleman, who went by a nickname which I shall
incorrectly call “the bald eagle of Weehawken,”
was efficient and knew his job. After a couple
of weeks a motion to put the bill through was made
by “the bald eagle”; the “black
horse cavalry,” whose feelings had undergone
a complete change in the intervening time, voted unanimously
for it, in company with all the decent members; and
that was the end. Now here was a bit of work
in the interest of a corporation and in the interest
of a community, which the corporation at first tried
honestly to have put through on its merits. The
blame for the failure lay primarily in the supine
indifference of the community to legislative wrong-doing,
so long as only the corporations were blackmailed.
Except as above mentioned, I was not
brought in contact with big business, save in the
effort to impeach a certain judge. This judge
had been used as an instrument in their business by
certain of the men connected with the elevated railways
and other great corporations at that time. We
got hold of his correspondence with one of these men,
and it showed a shocking willingness to use the judicial
office in any way that one of the kings of finance
of that day desired. He had actually held court
in one of that financier’s rooms. One expression
in one of the judge’s letters to this financier
I shall always remember: “I am willing
to go to the very verge of judicial discretion to serve
your vast interests.” The curious thing
was that I was by no means certain that the judge
himself was corrupt. He may have been; but I am
inclined to think that, aside from his being a man
of coarse moral fiber, the trouble lay chiefly in
the fact that he had a genuine if I had
not so often seen it, I would say a wholly inexplicable reverence
for the possessor of a great fortune as such.
He sincerely believed that business was the end of
existence, and that judge and legislator alike should
do whatever was necessary to favor it; and the bigger
the business the more he desired to favor it.
Big business of the kind that is allied with politics
thoroughly appreciated the usefulness of such a judge,
and every effort was strained to protect him.
We fought hard by “we” I mean
some thirty or forty legislators, both Republicans
and Democrats but the “black horse
cavalry,” and the timid good men, and the dull
conservative men, were all against us; and the vote
in the Legislature was heavily against impeachment.
The minority of the committee that investigated him,
with Chapin at its head, recommended impeachment;
the argument for impeachment before the committee was
made by Francis Lynde Stetson.
It was my first experience of the
kind. Various men whom I had known well socially
and had been taught to look up to, prominent business
men and lawyers, acted in a way which not only astounded
me, but which I was quite unable to reconcile with
the theories I had formed as to their high standing I
was little more than a year out of college at the time.
Generally, as has been always the case since, they
were careful to avoid any direct conversation with
me on a concrete case of what we now call “privilege”
in business and in politics, that is, of the alliance
between business and politics which represents improper
favors rendered to some men in return for improper
conduct on the part of others being ignored or permitted.
One member of a prominent law firm,
an old family friend, did, however, take me out to
lunch one day, evidently for the purpose of seeing
just what it was that I wished and intended to do.
I believe he had a genuine personal liking for me.
He explained that I had done well in the Legislature;
that it was a good thing to have made the “reform
play,” that I had shown that I possessed ability
such as would make me useful in the right kind of
law office or business concern; but that I must not
overplay my hand; that I had gone far enough, and that
now was the time to leave politics and identify myself
with the right kind of people, the people who would
always in the long run control others and obtain the
real rewards which were worth having. I asked
him if that meant that I was to yield to the ring
in politics. He answered somewhat impatiently
that I was entirely mistaken (as in fact I was) about
there being merely a political ring, of the kind of
which the papers were fond of talking; that the “ring,”
if it could be called such that is, the
inner circle included certain big business
men, and the politicians, lawyers, and judges who
were in alliance with and to a certain extent dependent
upon them, and that the successful man had to win his
success by the backing of the same forces, whether
in law, business, or politics.
This conversation not only interested
me, but made such an impression that I always remembered
it, for it was the first glimpse I had of that combination
between business and politics which I was in after
years so often to oppose. In the America of that
day, and especially among the people whom I knew,
the successful business man was regarded by everybody
as preeminently the good citizen. The orthodox
books on political economy, not only in America but
in England, were written for his especial glorification.
The tangible rewards came to him, the admiration of
his fellow-citizens of the respectable type was apt
to be his, and the severe newspaper moralists who
were never tired of denouncing politicians and political
methods were wont to hold up “business methods”
as the ideal which we were to strive to introduce
into political life. Herbert Croly, in “The
Promise of American Life,” has set forth the
reasons why our individualistic democracy which
taught that each man was to rely exclusively on himself,
was in no way to be interfered with by others, and
was to devote himself to his own personal welfare necessarily
produced the type of business man who sincerely believed,
as did the rest of the community, that the individual
who amassed a big fortune was the man who was the best
and most typical American.
In the Legislature the problems with
which I dealt were mainly problems of honesty and
decency and of legislative and administrative efficiency.
They represented the effort, the wise, the vitally
necessary effort, to get efficient and honest government.
But as yet I understood little of the effort which
was already beginning, for the most part under very
bad leadership, to secure a more genuine social and
industrial justice. Nor was I especially to blame
for this. The good citizens I then knew best,
even when themselves men of limited means men
like my colleague Billy O’Neill, and my backwoods
friends Sewall and Dow were no more awake
than I was to the changing needs the changing times
were bringing. Their outlook was as narrow as
my own, and, within its limits, as fundamentally sound.
I wish to dwell on the soundness of
our outlook on life, even though as yet it was not
broad enough. We were no respecters of persons.
Where our vision was developed to a degree that enabled
us to see crookedness, we opposed it whether in great
or small. As a matter of fact, we found that
it needed much more courage to stand up openly against
labor men when they were wrong than against capitalists
when they were wrong. The sins against labor
are usually committed, and the improper services to
capitalists are usually rendered, behind closed doors.
Very often the man with the moral courage to speak
in the open against labor when it is wrong is the
only man anxious to do effective work for labor when
labor is right.
The only kinds of courage and honesty
which are permanently useful to good institutions
anywhere are those shown by men who decide all cases
with impartial justice on grounds of conduct and not
on grounds of class. We found that in the long
run the men who in public blatantly insisted that
labor was never wrong were the very men who in private
could not be trusted to stand for labor when it was
right. We grew heartily to distrust the reformer
who never denounced wickedness unless it was embodied
in a rich man. Human nature does not change; and
that type of “reformer” is as noxious
now as he ever was. The loud-mouthed upholder
of popular rights who attacks wickedness only when
it is allied with wealth, and who never publicly assails
any misdeed, no matter how flagrant, if committed
nominally in the interest of labor, has either a warped
mind or a tainted soul, and should be trusted by no
honest man. It was largely the indignant and
contemptuous dislike aroused in our minds by the demagogues
of this class which then prevented those of us whose
instincts at bottom were sound from going as far as
we ought to have gone along the lines of governmental
control of corporations and governmental interference
on behalf of labor.
I did, however, have one exceedingly
useful experience. A bill was introduced by the
Cigar-Makers’ Union to prohibit the manufacture
of cigars in tenement-houses. I was appointed
one of a committee of three to investigate conditions
in the tenement-houses and see if legislation should
be had. Of my two colleagues on the committee,
one took no interest in the measure and privately
said he did not think it was right, but that he had
to vote for it because the labor unions were strong
in his district and he was pledged to support the bill.
The other, a sporting Tammany man who afterwards abandoned
politics for the race-track, was a very good fellow.
He told me frankly that he had to be against the bill
because certain interests which were all-powerful and
with which he had dealings required him to be against
it, but that I was a free agent, and that if I would
look into the matter he believed I would favor the
legislation. As a matter of fact, I had supposed
I would be against the legislation, and I rather think
that I was put on the committee with that idea, for
the respectable people I knew were against it; it
was contrary to the principles of political economy
of the laissez-faire kind; and the business
men who spoke to me about it shook their heads and
said that it was designed to prevent a man doing as
he wished and as he had a right to do with what was
his own.
However, my first visits to the tenement-house
districts in question made me feel that, whatever
the theories might be, as a matter of practical common
sense I could not conscientiously vote for the continuance
of the conditions which I saw. These conditions
rendered it impossible for the families of the tenement-house
workers to live so that the children might grow up
fitted for the exacting duties of American citizenship.
I visited the tenement-houses once with my colleagues
of the committee, once with some of the labor union
representatives, and once or twice by myself.
In a few of the tenement-houses there were suites
of rooms ample in number where the work on the tobacco
was done in rooms not occupied for cooking or sleeping
or living. In the overwhelming majority of cases,
however, there were one, two, or three room apartments,
and the work of manufacturing the tobacco by men,
women, and children went on day and night in the eating,
living, and sleeping rooms sometimes in
one room. I have always remembered one room in
which two families were living. On my inquiry
as to who the third adult male was I was told that
he was a boarder with one of the families. There
were several children, three men, and two women in
this room. The tobacco was stowed about everywhere,
alongside the foul bedding, and in a corner where there
were scraps of food. The men, women, and children
in this room worked by day and far on into the evening,
and they slept and ate there. They were Bohemians,
unable to speak English, except that one of the children
knew enough to act as interpreter.
Instead of opposing the bill I ardently
championed it. It was a poorly drawn measure,
and the Governor, Grover Cleveland, was at first doubtful
about signing it. The Cigar-makers’ Union
then asked me to appear before the Governor and argue
for it. I accordingly did so, acting as spokesman
for the battered, undersized foreigners who represented
the Union and the workers. The Governor signed
the bill. Afterwards this tenement-house cigar
legislation was declared invalid by the Court of Appeals
in the Jacobs decision. Jacobs was one of the
rare tenement-house manufacturers of cigars who occupied
quite a suite of rooms, so that in his case the living
conditions were altogether exceptional. What
the reason was which influenced those bringing the
suit to select the exceptional instead of the average
worker I do not know; of course such action was precisely
the action which those most interested in having the
law broken down were anxious to see taken. The
Court of Appeals declared the law unconstitutional,
and in their decision the judges reprobated the law
as an assault upon the “hallowed” influences
of “home.” It was this case which
first waked me to a dim and partial understanding
of the fact that the courts were not necessarily the
best judges of what should be done to better social
and industrial conditions. The judges who rendered
this decision were well-meaning men. They knew
nothing whatever of tenement-house conditions; they
knew nothing whatever of the needs, or of the life
and labor, of three-fourths of their fellow-citizens
in great cities. They knew legalism, but not
life. Their choice of the words “hallowed”
and “home,” as applicable to the revolting
conditions attending the manufacture of cigars in
tenement-houses, showed that they had no idea what
it was that they were deciding. Imagine the “hallowed”
associations of a “home” consisting of
one room where two families, one of them with a boarder,
live, eat, and work! This decision completely
blocked tenement-house reform legislation in New York
for a score of years, and hampers it to this day.
It was one of the most serious setbacks which the cause
of industrial and social progress and reform ever
received.
I had been brought up to hold the
courts in especial reverence. The people with
whom I was most intimate were apt to praise the courts
for just such decisions as this, and to speak of them
as bulwarks against disorder and barriers against
demagogic legislation. These were the same people
with whom the judges who rendered these decisions were
apt to foregather at social clubs, or dinners, or
in private life. Very naturally they all tended
to look at things from the same standpoint. Of
course it took more than one experience such as this
Tenement Cigar Case to shake me out of the attitude
in which I was brought up. But various decisions,
not only of the New York court but of certain other
State courts and even of the United States Supreme
Court, during the quarter of a century following the
passage of this tenement-house legislation, did at
last thoroughly wake me to the actual fact. I
grew to realize that all that Abraham Lincoln had
said about the Dred Scott decision could be said with
equal truth and justice about the numerous decisions
which in our own day were erected as bars across the
path of social reform, and which brought to naught
so much of the effort to secure justice and fair dealing
for workingmen and workingwomen, and for plain citizens
generally.
Some of the wickedness and inefficiency
in public life was then displayed in simpler fashion
than would probably now be the case. Once or
twice I was a member of committees which looked into
gross and widely ramifying governmental abuses.
On the whole, the most important part I played was
in the third Legislature in which I served, when I
acted as chairman of a committee which investigated
various phases of New York City official life.
The most important of the reform measures
our committee recommended was the bill taking away
from the Aldermen their power of confirmation over
the Mayor’s appointments. We found that
it was possible to get citizens interested in the
character and capacity of the head of the city, so
that they would exercise some intelligent interest
in his conduct and qualifications. But we found
that as a matter of fact it was impossible to get
them interested in the Aldermen and other subordinate
officers. In actual practice the Aldermen were
merely the creatures of the local ward bosses or of
the big municipal bosses, and where they controlled
the appointments the citizens at large had no chance
whatever to make their will felt. Accordingly
we fought for the principle, which I believe to be
of universal application, that what is needed in our
popular government is to give plenty of power to a
few officials, and to make these few officials genuinely
and readily responsible to the people for the exercise
of that power. Taking away the confirming power
of the Board of Aldermen did not give the citizens
of New York good government. We knew that if
they chose to elect the wrong kind of Mayor they would
have bad government, no matter what the form of the
law was. But we did secure to them the chance
to get good government if they desired, and this was
impossible as long as the old system remained.
The change was fought in the way in which all similar
changes always are fought. The corrupt and interested
politicians were against it, and the battle-cries
they used, which rallied to them most of the unthinking
conservatives, were that we were changing the old
constitutional system, that we were defacing the monuments
of the wisdom of the founders of the government, that
we were destroying that distinction between legislative
and executive power which was the bulwark of our liberties,
and that we were violent and unscrupulous radicals
with no reverence for the past.
Of course the investigations, disclosures,
and proceedings of the investigating committee of
which I was chairman brought me into bitter personal
conflict with very powerful financiers, very powerful
politicians, and with certain newspapers which these
financiers and politicians controlled. A number
of able and unscrupulous men were fighting, some for
their financial lives, and others to keep out of unpleasantly
close neighborhood to State’s prison. This
meant that there were blows to be taken as well as
given. In such political struggles, those who
went in for the kind of thing that I did speedily excited
animosities among strong and cunning men who would
stop at little to gratify their animosity. Any
man engaged in this particular type of militant and
practical reform movement was soon made to feel that
he had better not undertake to push matters home unless
his own character was unassailable. On one of
the investigating committees on which I served there
was a countryman, a very able man, who, when he reached
New York City, felt as certain Americans do when they
go to Paris that the moral restraints of
his native place no longer applied. With all his
ability, he was not shrewd enough to realize that
the Police Department was having him as well as the
rest of us carefully shadowed. He was caught
red-handed by a plain-clothes man doing what he had
no business to do; and from that time on he dared
not act save as those who held his secret permitted
him to act. Thenceforth those officials who stood
behind the Police Department had one man on the committee
on whom they could count. I never saw terror
more ghastly on a strong man’s face than on the
face of this man on one or two occasions when he feared
that events in the committee might take such a course
as to force him into a position where his colleagues
would expose him even if the city officials did not.
However, he escaped, for we were never able to get
the kind of proof which would warrant our asking for
the action in which this man could not have joined.
Traps were set for more than one of
us, and if we had walked into these traps our public
careers would have ended, at least so far as following
them under the conditions which alone make it worth
while to be in public life at all. A man can
of course hold public office, and many a man does
hold public office, and lead a public career of a sort,
even if there are other men who possess secrets about
him which he cannot afford to have divulged.
But no man can lead a public career really worth leading,
no man can act with rugged independence in serious
crises, nor strike at great abuses, nor afford to
make powerful and unscrupulous foes, if he is himself
vulnerable in his private character. Nor will
clean conduct by itself enable a man to render good
service. I have always been fond of Josh Billings’s
remark that “it is much easier to be a harmless
dove than a wise serpent.” There are plenty
of decent legislators, and plenty of able legislators;
but the blamelessness and the fighting edge are not
always combined. Both qualities are necessary
for the man who is to wage active battle against the
powers that prey. He must be clean of life, so
that he can laugh when his public or his private record
is searched; and yet being clean of life will not
avail him if he is either foolish or timid. He
must walk warily and fearlessly, and while he should
never brawl if he can avoid it, he must be ready to
hit hard if the need arises. Let him remember,
by the way, that the unforgivable crime is soft hitting.
Do not hit at all if it can be avoided; but never
hit softly.
Like most young men in politics, I
went through various oscillations of feeling before
I “found myself.” At one period I
became so impressed with the virtue of complete independence
that I proceeded to act on each case purely as I personally
viewed it, without paying any heed to the principles
and prejudices of others. The result was that
I speedily and deservedly lost all power of accomplishing
anything at all; and I thereby learned the invaluable
lesson that in the practical activities of life no
man can render the highest service unless he can act
in combination with his fellows, which means a certain
amount of give-and-take between him and them.
Again, I at one period began to believe that I had
a future before me, and that it behooved me to be
very far-sighted and scan each action carefully with
a view to its possible effect on that future.
This speedily made me useless to the public and an
object of aversion to myself; and I then made up my
mind that I would try not to think of the future at
all, but would proceed on the assumption that each
office I held would be the last I ever should hold,
and that I would confine myself to trying to do my
work as well as possible while I held that office.
I found that for me personally this was the only way
in which I could either enjoy myself or render good
service to the country, and I never afterwards deviated
from this plan.
As regards political advancement the
bosses could of course do a good deal. At that
time the warring Stalwart and Half-Breed factions of
the Republican party were supporting respectively President
Arthur and Senator Miller. Neither side cared
for me. The first year in the Legislature I rose
to a position of leadership, so that in the second
year, when the Republicans were in a minority, I received
the minority nomination for Speaker, although I was
still the youngest man in the House, being twenty-four
years old. The third year the Republicans carried
the Legislature, and the bosses at once took a hand
in the Speakership contest. I made a stout fight
for the nomination, but the bosses of the two factions,
the Stalwarts and the Half-Breeds, combined and I
was beaten. I was much chagrined for the moment.
But the fact that I had fought hard and efficiently,
even though defeated, and that I had made the fight
single-handed, with no machine back of me, assured
my standing as floor leader. My defeat in the
end materially strengthened my position, and enabled
me to accomplish far more than I could have accomplished
as Speaker. As so often, I found that the titular
position was of no consequence; what counted was the
combination of the opportunity with the ability to
accomplish results. The achievement was the all-important
thing; the position, whether titularly high or low,
was of consequence only in so far as it widened the
chance for achievement. After the session closed
four of us who looked at politics from the same standpoint
and were known as Independent or Anti-Machine Republicans
were sent by the State Convention as delegates-at-large
to the Republican National Convention of 1884, where
I advocated, as vigorously as I knew how, the nomination
of Senator George F. Edmunds. Mr. Edmunds was
defeated and Mr. Blaine nominated. Mr. Blaine
was clearly the choice of the rank and file of the
party; his nomination was won in fair and aboveboard
fashion, because the rank and file of the party stood
back of him; and I supported him to the best of my
ability in the ensuing campaign.
The Speakership contest enlightened
me as regards more things than the attitude of the
bosses. I had already had some exasperating experiences
with the “silk stocking” reformer type,
as Abraham Lincoln called it, the gentlemen who were
very nice, very refined, who shook their heads over
political corruption and discussed it in drawing-rooms
and parlors, but who were wholly unable to grapple
with real men in real life. They were apt vociferously
to demand “reform” as if it were some concrete
substance, like cake, which could be handed out at
will, in tangible masses, if only the demand were
urgent enough. These parlor reformers made up
for inefficiency in action by zeal in criticising;
and they delighted in criticising the men who really
were doing the things which they said ought to be
done, but which they lacked the sinewy power to do.
They often upheld ideals which were not merely impossible
but highly undesirable, and thereby played into the
hands of the very politicians to whom they professed
to be most hostile. Moreover, if they believed
that their own interests, individually or as a class,
were jeoparded, they were apt to show no higher standards
than did the men they usually denounced.
One of their shibboleths was that
the office should seek the man and not the man the
office. This is entirely true of certain offices
at certain times. It is entirely untrue when
the circumstances are different. It would have
been unnecessary and undesirable for Washington to
have sought the Presidency. But if Abraham Lincoln
had not sought the Presidency he never would have
been nominated. The objection in such a case
as this lies not to seeking the office, but to seeking
it in any but an honorable and proper manner.
The effect of the shibboleth in question is usually
merely to put a premium on hypocrisy, and therefore
to favor the creature who is willing to rise by hypocrisy.
When I ran for Speaker, the whole body of machine
politicians was against me, and my only chance lay
in arousing the people in the different districts.
To do this I had to visit the districts, put the case
fairly before the men whom I saw, and make them understand
that I was really making a fight and would stay in
the fight to the end. Yet there were reformers
who shook their heads and deplored my “activity”
in the canvass. Of course the one thing which
corrupt machine politicians most desire is to have
decent men frown on the activity, that is, on the efficiency,
of the honest man who genuinely wishes to reform politics.
If efficiency is left solely to bad
men, and if virtue is confined solely to inefficient
men, the result cannot be happy. When I entered
politics there were, as there always had been and
as there always will be any number of bad
men in politics who were thoroughly efficient, and
any number of good men who would like to have done
lofty things in politics but who were thoroughly inefficient.
If I wished to accomplish anything for the country,
my business was to combine decency and efficiency;
to be a thoroughly practical man of high ideals who
did his best to reduce those ideals to actual practice.
This was my ideal, and to the best of my ability I
strove to live up to it.
To a young man, life in the New York
Legislature was always interesting and often entertaining.
There was always a struggle of some kind on hand.
Sometimes it was on a naked question of right and wrong.
Sometimes it was on a question of real constructive
statesmanship. Moreover, there were all kinds
of humorous incidents, the humor being usually of the
unconscious kind. In one session of the Legislature
the New York City Democratic representatives were
split into two camps, and there were two rivals for
leadership. One of these was a thoroughly good-hearted,
happy-go-lucky person who was afterwards for several
years in Congress. He had been a local magistrate
and was called Judge. Generally he and I were
friendly, but occasionally I did something that irritated
him. He was always willing to vote for any other
member’s bill himself, and he regarded it as
narrow-minded for any one to oppose one of his bills,
especially if the opposition was upon the ground that
it was unconstitutional for his views of
the Constitution were so excessively liberal as to
make even me feel as if I belonged to the straitest
sect of strict constructionists. On one occasion
he had a bill to appropriate money, with obvious impropriety,
for the relief of some miscreant whom he styled “one
of the honest yeomanry of the State.” When
I explained to him that it was clearly unconstitutional,
he answered, “Me friend, the Constitution don’t
touch little things like that,” and then added,
with an ingratiating smile, “Anyhow, I’d
never allow the Constitution to come between friends.”
At the time I was looking over the proofs of Mr. Bryce’s
“American Commonwealth,” and I told him
the incident. He put it into the first edition
of the “Commonwealth”; whether it is in
the last edition or not, I cannot say.
On another occasion the same gentleman
came to an issue with me in a debate, and wound up
his speech by explaining that I occupied what “lawyers
would call a quasi position on the bill.”
His rival was a man of totally different type, a man
of great natural dignity, also born in Ireland.
He had served with gallantry in the Civil War.
After the close of the war he organized an expedition
to conquer Canada. The expedition, however, got
so drunk before reaching Albany that it was there
incarcerated in jail, whereupon its leader abandoned
it and went into New York politics instead. He
was a man of influence, and later occupied in the
Police Department the same position as Commissioner
which I myself at one time occupied. He felt
that his rival had gained too much glory at my expense,
and, walking over with ceremonious solemnity to where
the said rival was sitting close beside me, he said
to him: “I would like you to know, Mr.
Cameron [Cameron, of course, was not the real name],
that Mr. Roosevelt knows more law in a wake than you
do in a month; and, more than that, Michael Cameron,
what do you mane by quoting Latin on the floor of
this House when you don’t know the alpha and
omayga of the language?”
There was in the Legislature, during
the deadlock above mentioned, a man whom I will call
Brogan. He looked like a serious elderly frog.
I never heard him speak more than once. It was
before the Legislature was organized, or had adopted
any rules; and each day the only business was for
the clerk to call the roll. One day Brogan suddenly
rose, and the following dialogue occurred:
Brogan. Misther
Clu-r-r-k!
The Clerk. The
gentleman from New York.
Brogan. I rise
to a point of ordher under the rules!
The Clerk. There
are no rules.
Brogan. Thin
I object to them!
The Clerk. There
are no rules to object to.
Brogan. Oh!
[nonplussed; but immediately recovering himself].
Thin I move that they
be amended until there ar-r-re!
The deadlock was tedious; and we hailed
with joy such enlivening incidents as the above.
During my three years’ service
in the Legislature I worked on a very simple philosophy
of government. It was that personal character
and initiative are the prime requisites in political
and social life. It was not only a good but an
absolutely indispensable theory as far as it went;
but it was defective in that it did not sufficiently
allow for the need of collective action. I shall
never forget the men with whom I worked hand in hand
in these legislative struggles, not only my fellow-legislators,
but some of the newspaper reporters, such as Spinney
and Cunningham; and then in addition the men in the
various districts who helped us. We had made
up our minds that we must not fight fire with fire,
that on the contrary the way to win out was to equal
our foes in practical efficiency and yet to stand
at the opposite plane from them in applied morality.
It was not always easy to keep the
just middle, especially when it happened that on one
side there were corrupt and unscrupulous demagogues,
and on the other side corrupt and unscrupulous reactionaries.
Our effort was to hold the scales even between both.
We tried to stand with the cause of righteousness
even though its advocates were anything but righteous.
We endeavored to cut out the abuses of property, even
though good men of property were misled into upholding
those abuses. We refused to be frightened into
sanctioning improper assaults upon property, although
we knew that the champions of property themselves
did things that were wicked and corrupt. We were
as yet by no means as thoroughly awake as we ought
to have been to the need of controlling big business
and to the damage done by the combination of politics
with big business. In this matter I was not behind
the rest of my friends; indeed, I was ahead of them,
for no serious leader in political life then appreciated
the prime need of grappling with these questions.
One partial reason not an excuse or a justification,
but a partial reason for my slowness in
grasping the importance of action in these matters
was the corrupt and unattractive nature of so many
of the men who championed popular reforms, their insincerity,
and the folly of so many of the actions which they
advocated. Even at that date I had neither sympathy
with nor admiration for the man who was merely a money
king, and I did not regard the “money touch,”
when divorced from other qualities, as entitling a
man to either respect or consideration. As recited
above, we did on more than one occasion fight battles,
in which we neither took nor gave quarter, against
the most prominent and powerful financiers and financial
interests of the day. But most of the fights
in which we were engaged were for pure honesty and
decency, and they were more apt to be against that
form of corruption which found its expression in demagogy
than against that form of corruption which defended
or advocated privilege. Fundamentally, our fight
was part of the eternal war against the Powers that
Prey; and we cared not a whit in what rank of life
these powers were found.
To play the demagogue for purposes
of self-interest is a cardinal sin against the people
in a democracy, exactly as to play the courtier for
such purposes is a cardinal sin against the people
under other forms of government. A man who stays
long in our American political life, if he has in
his soul the generous desire to do effective service
for great causes, inevitably grows to regard himself
merely as one of many instruments, all of which it
may be necessary to use, one at one time, one at another,
in achieving the triumph of those causes; and whenever
the usefulness of any one has been exhausted, it is
to be thrown aside. If such a man is wise, he
will gladly do the thing that is next, when the time
and the need come together, without asking what the
future holds for him. Let the half-god play his
part well and manfully, and then be content to draw
aside when the god appears. Nor should he feel
vain regrets that to another it is given to render
greater services and reap a greater reward. Let
it be enough for him that he too has served, and that
by doing well he has prepared the way for the other
man who can do better.