[50 years ago this week, Vice President Spiro Agnew resigned. That striking political moment was not only part of the deepening Watergate scandal, but one of the few times when an American Vice President has made major news. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy Agnew and other noteworthy Veeps, leading up a weekend post on our current VP!]
How a vice
presidential publication helps us rethink an administration.
In a 2019
New Year’s series on historical anniversaries, I
dedicated a post to the thorny question of how we remember
Ulysses S. Grant’s presidency, and more exactly how we acknowledge his
administration’s significant failures while still highlighting some of its
genuinely impressive and inspiring elements. Rather than repeat myself here,
I’ll ask you to check out that post and then come on back here.
Welcome
back! Grant’s first Vice President, former Indiana Congressman and Speaker of
the House Schuyler Colfax, declined to seek the office for a second time (at
least in part due to significant
conflicts between him and Grant related to those ongoing scandals),
and so Grant selected a new running mate for his 1872
reelection campaign (and thus a new Vice President once Grant defeated
Democratic nominee Horace Greeley and earned that second term): Henry
Wilson, a longtime Massachusetts Senator and leading member of the abolitionist
Radical Republicans since before the Civil War. Wilson had
actively sought the Vice Presidential nomination in 1868, and so was poised to
make a real contribution to Grant’s second term and the period’s ongoing
battles over Reconstruction, among other issues. Unfortunately he
suffered a serious stroke in May 1873, just a few months after Grant’s second
inauguration, and although he stayed in office his health declined thereafter
until he passed away after a second stroke in 1875.
While
those health issues likely led Wilson to be a less active contributor to
Grant’s second term than he would have liked, another 1872 moment both
exemplifies his impressive voice and illustrates the stakes for that
administration’s ongoing efforts. In the same year he won the Vice Presidency,
Wilson published (with the prominent Boston publisher J.R. Osgood and Company) volumes
1 and 2 of his magisterial The History of the Rise and Fall of the Slave
Power in America, an important early scholarly effort to trace
the lead up to and events of the Civil War (volume 3 would be published after
his death, in 1877). In an era when the
propagandistic efforts to reframe the Civil War (and related histories
of slavery and race) around white
supremacist narratives were well underway, Wilson’s book offered
instead an abolitionist account of slavery’s centrality to the war, the
Confederacy, and (at least implicitly) Reconstruction’s ongoing debates and
conflicts. That the soon-to-be Vice President of the U.S. wrote and published
such a book reminds us that whatever its faults, Grant’s administration was fighting
for that abolitionist vision on a number of levels that we can and must
remember (and be inspired by) today.
Next
VeepStudying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Vice Presidents you’d highlight?
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