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President James A. Garfield

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Title: President James A. Garfield


1
President James A. Garfield
  • 20th President
  • Republican
  • 1881
  • Born Nov 19, 1831, Ohio
  • VP Chester Arthur
  • Died Sept 19, 1881, NJ

2
I. Politics under Garfield
3
A. Political Parties of the Gilded Age
DemocraticBloc
RepublicanBloc
  • Northern whites(pro-business)
  • African Americans
  • Northern Protestants
  • Old WASPs (supportfor anti-immigrant laws)
  • Most of the middleclass
  • White southerners(preservation ofwhite
    supremacy)
  • Catholics
  • Recent immigrants(esp. Jews)
  • Urban working poor (pro-labor)
  • Most farmers

4
B. Problems within the Republican Party
  • Quick review from last class
  • Civil Service public service jobs that are
    appointed instead of elected
  • Remember Because of the Spoils System, some
    people involved in public service/politics were
    not qualified for their jobs During the late
    1800s, many sought to reform this process.

5
  • (1) Election of 1880 Facts
  • 1. Because of differences over civil service
    reform, the Republican party split into two
    factions
  • a. Stalwarts(Arthur) conservative Republicans
    who opposed Civil Service Reform
  • b. Half-breeds(Garfield) moderate faction of
    Republicans who supported Civil Service Reform
    (which began under Rutherford B. Hayes)
  • 2. This split caused confusion over who to
    choose as the presidential candidate in 1880!

6
D. Republicans and the 1880 Election
Half Breeds
Stalwarts
Conflict!
Sen. James G. Blaine Sen. Roscoe
Conkling (Maine)
(New York)
Compromise!
James A. Garfield Chester A. Arthur (VP)
7
C. Presidential Election of 1880
  • 1. Incumbent (current holder of office)
    president Rutherford B. Hayes planned to retire
    at the end of one term, which opened wide the
    door of opportunity!
  • Candidates for the Election of 1880
  • (1 cont)
  • a. Democrat Winfield S. Hanfield (P)
  • William English (VP)
  • VS.
  • b. Republican James Garfield (P)
  • Chester A. Aurthur (VP)

8
E. Issues of the Election of 1880
  • 1. Only the tariff question divided the parties
  • Tariff tax on imported goods, used
    primarily to protect young American industries
  • a. Democrats
  • Supported tariff for revenue only
  • (what would pay for the cost of govt)
  • b. Republicans
  • Supported a high tariff to help protect
  • industry in the North (make Americans
  • buy American products!!!)

9
Election Results
Solid South term which describes the voting bloc
of the South from 1876 to 1960
10
Excerpt from Inaugural Address of 1881
  • The elevation of the negro race from slavery to
    the full rights of citizenship is the most
    important political change we have known since
    the adoption of the Constitution of 1787 It has
    freed us from the perpetual danger of war and
    dissolution. It has added immensely to the moral
    and industrial forces of our people. It has
    liberated the master as well as the slave from a
    relation which wronged and enfeebled both It has
    given new inspiration to the power of self-help
    in both races by making labor more honorable to
    the one and more necessary to the other. The
    influence of this force will grow greater and
    bear richer fruit with the coming years.

11
  • What does that excerpt from Garfields first
    speech as President tell us about him???

12
II. Economics under Garfield
13
  • A. (2) Several different economic theories began
    circulating the nation
  • 1. Capitalism an economic system based on
    private ownership of the means of production and
    distribution.
  • encourages private investment and business in
    contrast to a government-controlled economy.
  • 2. Communism No private ownership! Property
    and the production of goods are owned
    collectively by the community.

14
  • 3. Social Darwinism
  • a. Applying Darwins theory of evolution,
    Social Darwinists claimed that business
    competition was natural and would weed out the
    unfit businesses/businessmen.
  • (The strong businesses would survive and the
    weak would fail.)
  • b. In their viewpoint, the poor should not be
    helped nature should take its course.

15
Compare Literature
  • Wealth
  • v.
  • Social Darwinsim

16
  • B. (3) Big business started getting out of
    control!!!
  • 1. Corporation a type of business
    organization that raises money by selling shares
    of stock in the company. (Stockholders receive
    part of the profit of the company in return for
    their investment.)
  • 2. Trust the combination of several
    corporations under the management of a common
    board of trustees.
  • 3. Monopoly the exclusive possession or
    control of an industry by one business/trust/owner
    .

17
(No Transcript)
18
III. Social aspects of Garfields presidency
19
A. Social Gospel (4)
  1. During the late 1800s and on into the 20th
    century, people began protesting the way of life
    forced upon the financially misfortunate
    Americans.
  2. One result of this was a new movement known as
    (4) Social Gospel, which urged people to apply
    Christian principles (remember, America was
    predominantly Christian at this point) to the
    countrys social problems.
  3. Many churches began providing social services
    such as job training and education.

20
4. In that same spirit, we have the foundation
of the Salvation Army (5)
  • a. Started in Great
  • Britain by William
  • Booth - came to the
  • US in 1881.
  • b. This organization
  • inspired many much-
  • needed services, in this
  • GILDED country
  • including women's social
  • work, the first food
  • depot, the first day nursery, and the
  • first Army missionary hospital.

21
B. Govt vs. Native Americans
  1. The government continued their policy of rounding
    up the Native Americans and sending them to
    reservations.
  2. While most of the nations citizens agreed with
    the governments treatment of the Native
    Americans, there were some who spoke out against
    this practice.

22
  • (6) Helen Hunt Jackson was one of the first
    authors to draw attention to the mistreatment of
    the Indians through her book A Century of
    Dishonor.
  • a. Far-reaching
  • in its influence, the
  • book created quite
  • a stir amongst the
  • American public. Many were outraged
  • by her stance of criticizing the government!

23
  • b. Her book outlined the U.S.
  • government's habit of violating treaties and
    disregarding the rights of various Indian tribes
    across the United States.

24
Helen Hunt Jackson Reading
25
III. The 2nd Presidential Assassination
26
  • (7) At July 2, 1881, 930 a.m., in a Washington
    D.C. train station,
  • -Charles J. Guiteau shot President Garfield
  • 1. Guiteau stalked the president for
  • weeks and had backed down three
  • previous times.
  • 2. Fired a .44 British Bulldog at the
  • back of the president in the waiting
  • room of the railway station.
  • 2 shots one grazed the arm, one
  • entered his back

27
Random info
  • Alexander Graham Bell
  • invented a metal-detecting
  • device he thought would find
  • the bullet in Garfields body.
  • The results of the experiment
  • were inconclusive as there was
  • a humming sound no matter
  • where the wand was placed on
  • the presidents body. Bell was
  • unaware that the White House
  • bed had a coil spring mattress
  • (a new invention). If Bell had
  • moved Garfield off the bed,
  • the apparatus would have
  • detected where the bullet was
  • and, knowing this, the surgeons
  • may have saved Garfields life.

28
B. Garfields Death
  • The bullet didnt kill him- the doctors did!!!
    (Doctors stuck their un-sanitized fingers and
    un-sterilized instruments into the open wound.)
  • 2. In the end, the doctors had taken a
    three-inch wound and turned it into a twenty-inch
    gouge that was massively infected. On September
    15, 1881, symptoms of blood poisoning appeared.
    On September 19, 1881 after a few hours of
    unconsciousness, he died.

29
  • 3. At the autopsy, examiners determined that the
    bullet had lodged itself some four inches from
    the spine in a protective cyst.  Their
    conclusion? 
  • Garfield would have survived if the
  • doctors had left him alone!!! 
  • (At his trial, Guiteau argued that he did not
    kill the President the doctors did.  That
    argument might get you off today but not in the
    1880's.)
  • 4. Guiteau was hanged a year later.

30
Why did Guiteau shoot the President?
  • His death was a political necessity.
  • It will unite the Republican party.
  • Guiteau written on the morning of the
    assassination
  • WHY?? Guiteau wanted civil service reform to end!
    (he like the old fashioned Spoils System- friends
    get you jobs whether you are qualified or not!)
  • He will be classified as a
  • disappointed office seeker
  • yep, he was crazy!

31
D. How does history see Garfield?
  • He was only in office 4 months, but
  • 1. Garfield did have time to appoint his
    cabinet, and in
  • doing so, he refused to cave in to party
    politics.
  • Historians speculate that had Garfield served
    his
  • term, he would have continued toward civil
    service
  • reform, carrying on in the honorable legacy of
    Hayes.
  • 2. He was also determined to fight for the
    civil rights
  • of black Southerners, as he made clear in his
    1881
  • Inaugural address- STILL 16 years after the
    end of
  • the Civil War- 4 years after the end of
  • Reconstruction.

32
SATP Practice
  • Speaker a I want to live in a country where
    property and the means of production are under
    government control and the community provides
    for my needs without regard to social rank. The
    ownership of private property only causes
    problems.
  • Speaker b It is best here in America to run
    under an economic system where private
    businesses run most industries. Competition is
    important and should determine how much goods
    cost and wages.
  • Speaker c Society and business should
    progress through natural competition. Unfit
    businesses should fail as the most efficient
    people, companies and countries should rise to
    positions of wealth and power.
  • Speaker d I am glad the government lets us do
    as we choose and keeps their hands off of our
    business. It is right that the government
    allows business to run without interference. It
    allows monopolies to grow, but, so what?
  • __________________________________________________
    ______________________
  • Which speaker from above is referring to
    communism?
  • a. Speaker A b. Speaker B c. Speaker C d.
    Speaker D
  • Which speaker from above is referring to
    capitalism?
  • a. Speaker A b. Speaker B c. Speaker C d.
    Speaker D
  • Which speaker from above is referring to Social
    Darwinism?
  • a. Speaker A b. Speaker B c. Speaker C d.
    Speaker D
  • Which speaker from above is referring to free
    enterprise laissez-faire?
  • a. Speaker A b. Speaker B c. Speaker C d.
    Speaker D
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