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Roscoe Conkling
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{{short description|American politician (1829β1888)}} {{for multi|the Missouri judge|Roscoe P. Conkling|the New York lawyer|Roscoe Seely Conkling}} {{Infobox officeholder |name = Roscoe Conkling |image = Roscoe Conkling c. 1868 (cropped).jpg |caption = Senator Conkling, {{circa|1866-68}} |jr/sr = United States Senator |state = [[New York (state)|New York]] |term_start = March 4, 1867 |term_end = May 16, 1881 |predecessor = [[Ira Harris]] |successor = [[Elbridge G. Lapham|Elbridge Lapham]] |office1 = Member of the<br />[[U.S. House of Representatives]]<br />from [[New York (state)|New York]] |constituency1= {{ushr|NY|20|20th district}} |term_start1 = March 4, 1859 |term_end1 = March 3, 1863 |predecessor1 = [[Orsamus B. Matteson|Orsamus Matteson]] |successor1 = [[Francis Kernan]] (redistricting) |constituency2= {{ushr|NY|21|21st district}} |term_start2 = March 4, 1865 |term_end2 = March 3, 1867 |predecessor2 = [[Francis Kernan]] |successor2 = [[Alexander H. Bailey|Alexander Bailey]] |office3 = [[List of mayors of Utica, New York|Mayor of Utica]] |term_start3 = March 9, 1858 |term_end3 = November 19, 1859 |predecessor3 = [[Alrick Hubbell]] |successor3 = Charles Wilson |office4 = [[Oneida County, New York|Oneida County]] District Attorney |term_start4 = April 22, 1850 |term_end4 = December 31, 1850 |predecessor4 = Calvert Comstock |successor4 = [[Samuel B. Garvin]] |birth_date = {{birth date|1829|10|30}} |birth_place = [[Albany, New York]], U.S. |death_date = {{death date and age|1888|4|18|1829|10|30}} |death_place = [[New York, New York]], U.S. |resting_place = [[Forest Hill Cemetery (Utica, New York)|Forest Hill Cemetery]]<br />[[Utica, New York]], U.S. |party = [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] (before 1854)<br />[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] (1854β1888) |parents = [[Alfred Conkling]]<br />Eliza Cockburn |spouse = Julia Seymour |children = |relatives = [[Frederick A. Conkling]] (brother)<br />[[Alfred Conkling Coxe Sr.]] (nephew) |signature = Roscoe Conkling signature.svg }} '''Roscoe Conkling''' (October 30, 1829{{spaced ndash}}April 18, 1888) was an American lawyer and [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] politician who represented [[New York (state)|New York]] in the [[United States House of Representatives]] and the [[United States Senate]]. He was a leader of the Republican [[Stalwart (politics)|Stalwart]] faction and a dominant figure in the United States Senate during the 1870s. As senator, his control of [[patronage]] at the [[United States Custom House (New York City)|New York Customs House]], one of the busiest commercial ports in the world, made him very powerful. His comity with President [[Ulysses S. Grant]] and conflict with Presidents [[Rutherford B. Hayes]] and [[James A. Garfield]] were defining features of American politics of the 1870s and 1880s.{{sfn|Paxson|p=346}} He also participated, as a member of the Joint Committee on Reconstruction, in the drafting of the landmark [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution]]. Conkling publicly led opposition to proposals for civil service reform, which he called "[[snivel service reform]],"<ref>Truesdale, Dorothy S. (October 1940). [https://www.libraryweb.org/~rochhist/v2_1940/v2i4.pdf Rochester Views The Third Term 1880], p. 3. ''Rochester History''. Retrieved March 12, 2022.</ref> and defended the prerogatives of senators in appointments. His conflict with President Garfield over appointments eventually led to [[1881 United States Senate special elections in New York|Conkling's resignation in 1881]]. He ran for reelection in an attempt to display his support from the New York political machine and his power, but lost the special election, during which [[Assassination of James A. Garfield|Garfield was assassinated]]. Though Conkling never returned to elected office, the assassination elevated [[Chester A. Arthur]], a former New York Collector and Conkling ally, to the presidency. Their relationship was destroyed when Arthur pursued civil service reform, out of his sense of duty to the late President Garfield. Conkling remained active in politics and practiced law in New York City until his death in 1888.{{sfn|Paxson|p=347}} Conkling turned down two presidential appointments to the [[United States Supreme Court]]: first to the position of Chief Justice in 1873{{sfn|Paxson|p=346}} and then as an associate justice in 1882. In 1882, Conkling was confirmed by the Senate but declined to serve, the last person (as of {{CURRENTYEAR}}) to have done so.{{sfn|Paxson|p=347}} Conkling, who was [[Temperance movement|temperate]] and detested [[tobacco]], was known for his physical condition, maintained through regular exercise and [[boxing]],{{sfn|Paxson|p=346}} an unusual hobby for his time. ==Early life== ===Family=== [[File:Alfred Conkling crop.jpg|thumb|left|Conkling's father [[Alfred Conkling|Alfred]] was a United States Representative and Ambassador to Mexico.]] Roscoe Conkling was born on October 30, 1829, in [[Albany, New York]] to [[Alfred Conkling]], a U.S. Representative and federal judge, and his wife Eliza Cockburn, cousin of the late Lord Chief-Justice [[Sir Alexander Cockburn]] of England.<ref>{{Cite news| url =http://www.nndb.com/people/241/000050091/ |title=Roscoe Conkling |publisher=[[NNDB]] |access-date = October 13, 2014}}</ref> His father's ancestors emigrated to the North America around 1635 and settled in [[Salem, Massachusetts]] before moving to [[Suffolk County, New York]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=2β8}} Conkling's maternal grandfather James Cockburn was Scottish by birth, but emigrated to the Bahamas and later to the [[Mohawk Valley]], where he married Margaret Frey, the daughter of a feudal lord. Conkling was the youngest of seven children, four sons and three daughters.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|p=4}} He had two older brothers, Frederick and Aurelian. A third brother also named Roscoe died before this article's subject was born. Both Roscoes were named for the British author [[William Roscoe]], whom Eliza Conkling read during her pregnancy.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=2β8}} Conkling's mother was said to have a "talent for repartee and brilliant talk" which her son inherited.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=360}} ===Childhood=== At the suggestion of [[William H. Seward]], the Conkling family moved to [[Auburn, New York]], via the [[Erie Canal]] in 1839. At his new home, Conkling enjoyed horseback riding, which became a lifelong pursuit. He did not take to academic study, but had a retentive memory.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=11β14}} In 1842, Roscoe was enrolled in the Mount Washington Collegiate Institute in [[New York City]]. While in New York, he also studied oratory with his elder brother Frederick. They often practiced their speaking together.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=11β14}} After a year at the Mount Washington Institute, Conkling entered the Auburn Academy and remained there for three years.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=11β14}} Even as a schoolboy, Conkling's intimidating appearance and intellect demanded attention. A childhood friend said young Roscoe "was as large and massive in his mind as he was in his frame, and accomplished in his studies precisely what he did in his social life β a mastery and command which his companions yielded to him as due."{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=11β14}} Conkling first became interested in politics during his time at Auburn. Since his father was a leading member of the upstate [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig Party]], Conkling became acquainted with some of the most prominent men of the era, such as Presidents [[Martin Van Buren]] and [[John Quincy Adams]], Governor [[Enos Throop]], Supreme Court Justice [[Smith Thompson]], [[James Kent (jurist)|James Kent]], and [[Thurlow Weed]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=11β14}} Fellow Auburn resident [[William Henry Seward]] was a friend of Conkling's father and soon of Conkling as well.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|p=5}} ===Law and local politics=== In 1846, seventeen year-old Conkling moved to [[Utica, New York|Utica]] to study law in the offices of [[Joshua A. Spencer]] and [[Francis Kernan]], two of the leading lawyers in the state.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|p=6}} He integrated himself into Utica society and spoke publicly on a variety of issues, especially in support of human rights and the abolition of slavery. At eighteen, he spoke at various venues in Central New York in sympathy for the sufferers of the [[Great Famine (Ireland)|Great Famine]] in Ireland. He displayed deep abhorrence for slavery, which he described as "[[man's inhumanity to man]]," and referred to himself as a "Seward Whig," stumping the county for Taylor and Fillmore in 1848.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=17β21}}{{sfn|Jordan|1971|p=8}} On one occasion, he is said to have transcribed a [[Henry Clay]] speech from memory with such accuracy that Clay himself remarked on its quality. He also practiced his oratory by reciting passages from the Bible, Shakespeare, and British Whigs including [[Thomas Babington Macaulay]], [[Edmund Burke]], and [[Charles James Fox]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=363}} In 1849, Conkling gained his first exposure to political campaigning when he was elected as a delegate to his [[New York State Assembly]] district's Whig nominating convention, then to the state judicial nominating convention as a supporter of Joshua Spencer for the [[New York Court of Appeals]].{{sfn|Jordan|1971|p=8}} Conkling was [[Admission to the bar in the United States|admitted to the bar]] in 1850. Almost immediately, [[Governor of New York|Governor]] [[Hamilton Fish]] appointed him as interim district attorney of [[Oneida County, New York|Oneida County]]. He was still only twenty-one, and set about prosecuting cases without the aid of more senior co-counsel. He was nominated for re-election that fall but was defeated along with the rest of the Whig ticket.<ref>Henry Scott Wilson, "Distinguished American Lawyers: With Their Struggles and Triumphs in the Forum," (New York: Charles L. Webster & Company, 1891), p. 190.</ref>{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=17β21}} Opposition mainly centered on Conkling's youth.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=11β13}} [[File:Young Roscoe Conkling.jpg|thumb|right|[[Daguerreotype]] of a young Roscoe Conkling, {{circa|1855}}]] In 1852, Conkling opened a legal partnership with former Mayor of Utica Thomas R. Walker; the partnership continued until 1855.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=23β24}} He became famous throughout central New York after his defense of Sylvester Hadcock for forgery; Joshua Spencer was the prosecutor, but Conkling won acquittal by proving Hadcock's illiteracy.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=11β13}} In 1854, he won a case for slander against a priest who had accused a young woman of "want of chastity."{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=11β13}} In 1855, he partnered with his former classmate Montgomery Throop; their partnership continued until 1862.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=54}} He became one of the highest-paid attorneys in the region, often charging over $100 per trial.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=58β59}} Through 1853, Conkling remained an orthodox [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]]. In [[1852 United States presidential election|1852]], he stumped New York state for General [[Winfield Scott]], denouncing [[Franklin Pierce]] as a British tool committed to upholding slavery and free trade to fuel the cotton mills of England.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=28β30}} In 1853, Conkling was a leading candidate for Attorney General of New York; he lost the Whig nomination to [[Ogden Hoffman]] on the third ballot.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=11β13}} As the Whig Party [[Whig Party (United States)#Collapse, 1853β1856|rapidly disintegrated]], Conkling took an active part in the formation of the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] and came to consider himself an "original Republican."{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=47}}{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=11β13}} In 1856, he spoke throughout Oneida and Herkimer counties for [[John C. FrΓ©mont]] and [[William L. Dayton]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=57}} ===Mayor of Utica (1858β59)=== In 1858, Republicans sought a candidate for Mayor of Utica, considered a slightly Democratic city.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=61}} The party convention nominated Conkling on the first ballot. After a five-day campaign, Conkling defeated Democrat Charles S. Wilson on March 2, 1858, and took office on March 9.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=16β19}} Although he did not run for re-election, Conkling remained mayor until his resignation on November 18, 1859 because the March 1859 election to choose his successor resulted in a tie.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=16β19}}{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=71}} ==U.S. House of Representatives (1859β67)== ===First term=== {{See also|1858 United States House of Representatives elections in New York|36th United States Congress}} Almost immediately after his nomination for mayor, Conkling prepared to mount a run for Congress; incumbent Representative [[Orsamus B. Matteson]] had chosen to retire after his censure for corruption. Conkling's chief opponent was another Utica attorney, Charles H. Doolittle.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=17β19}} Conkling said he hoped to be elected "because some men object to my nomination. So long as one man in the city opposes, I shall run on the Republican ticket." Conkling campaigned as a personal ally of Senator Seward, and Seward delivered a speech on Conkling's behalf.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=80β83}} Conkling won easily on the first ballot of the district convention; Doolittle was nominated by future Conkling ally [[Ward Hunt]].{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=16β19}} Conkling's opponent in the general election, Judge [[P. Sheldon Root]], had the endorsement of the incumbent Matteson, his former law partner. Root refused to debate Conkling; Conkling stumped the county on his own behalf.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=16β19}} Conkling won the election by 2,793 votes out of slightly under 20,000 cast. He ran 200 votes ahead of Governor [[Edwin D. Morgan]].{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=16β19}} Conkling's first term as Representative was uneventful. He quietly opposed slavery and his speeches largely consisted of legal expositions.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=26β28}} Throughout the protracted battle for Speaker that dominated the first session, Conkling supported [[John Sherman]] of Ohio.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=21β23}} On the second day of the session, December 6, Conkling allegedly rose and stood to guard [[Thaddeus Stevens]] as he castigated Southern Representatives, amid fears that they would assault Stevens.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=21β23}} (Representative Preston Brooks had [[Caning of Charles Sumner|beaten Charles Sumner unconscious]] only three years prior.) On April 17, 1860, Conkling delivered a long address attacking the [[Taney Court]] for its decisions in the [[Dred Scott case]] and ''[[Ableman v. Booth]]''. Conkling went so far as to reject [[judicial review]] as final, arguing "the judgments of the Supreme Court are binding only upon inferior courts and parties litigant."{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=21β23}} In the second session of the 36th Congress, Conkling voted in favor of a committee to address the growing secession crisis and gave a speech denouncing secession and slavery. He voted in favor of the [[Morrill Tariff]] and against the proposed [[Corwin Amendment]], which would have shielded slavery from federal interference as a step toward reconciliation.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=118β20}} ===Second term and Civil War=== {{See also|37th United States Congress}} In the summer of 1860, Conkling campaigned on behalf of [[Abraham Lincoln]] and [[Hannibal Hamlin]] in New York. Though Conkling was disappointed that Seward had not been nominated, he spoke in favor of Lincoln at a June 4 unity rally.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=25β27}} Conkling himself was unanimously re-nominated on September 4 and was re-elected by an increased majority over Utica mayor DeWitt Clinton Grove. As a high-profile House freshman, he spent much more of the 1860 campaign outside his district.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=25β27}} Given his first opportunity to advise President-elect Lincoln on federal appointments in Oneida, Conkling rejected a list provided by district Republicans, replying, "Gentlemen, when I need your assistance in making the appointments in our district, I shall let you know."{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=118β20}}{{sfn|Jordan|1971|p=34}} [[File:Chester A Arthur 1859.png|thumb|[[Chester A. Arthur]], as a young lawyer. Conkling nurtured Arthur's career and relentlessly promoted him.]] In 1861, Conkling teamed up with [[Chester A. Arthur]] and another man, George W. Chadwick, to make a profit on wartime cotton. The business worked well and was expunged from public record.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Broxmeyer |first=Jeffrey D. |date=2015 |title=Roscoe Conkling's Wartime Cotton Speculation |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/newyorkhist.96.2.167 |journal=New York History |volume=96 |issue=2 |pages=167β181 |jstor=newyorkhist.96.2.167 |issn=0146-437X}}</ref> Conkling later secured Arthur's appointment as a tax commissioner; Arthur was appointed [[Collector of the Port of New York]] in 1871.{{citation needed|date = September 2024}} The 37th Congress met amidst the [[American Civil War]], which began in April 1861. President Lincoln called Congress into a special session on Independence Day in order to equip an army. Conkling took a leading role in the session and was joined in the House by his elder brother [[Frederick Augustus Conkling|Frederick]], who had been elected from New York City. Conkling was promoted to chairman of the Committee on the District of Columbia. He introduced a bill to "establish an auxiliary watch for the protection of public and private property in the city of Washington" and another instituting a committee to report on the subject of a general bankruptcy law.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=135}} When Congress reconvened on December 3, 1861, Conkling introduced a resolution calling for the War Department to investigate the humiliating Union defeat at the [[Battle of Ball's Bluff]].{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=39β43}} When [[George McClellan]] responded that an investigation would be incompatible with the public service, Conkling delivered a speech calling the battle "the most atrocious military murder ever committed in our history as a people," gaining national attention. His persistent criticism led to the creation of the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War to provide civilian oversight of the war effort.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=39β43}} Conkling was a consistent opponent of issuing paper currency to pay for the war effort, unsuccessfully voting against the Legal Tender Act of 1862 and proposing bond issuances redeemable in gold as substitutes. He remained a consistent opponent of monetary expansion throughout his career.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=39β43}}{{sfn|Jordan|1971|p=50}} ===Out of office=== {{See also|1862 United States House of Representatives elections}} Conkling was renominated by party faithful at [[Rome, New York|Rome]] on September 26, 1862.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=176}} He was opposed by his former law teacher, Democrat [[Francis Kernan]], running on a ticket led by Conkling's brother-in-law, [[Horatio Seymour]], for Governor. Local Democrats quoted criticism of Conkling by radical Representative [[Elihu Washburne]] and cited Frederick Conkling's vote against an expansion of the [[Erie Canal]] which would have benefitted Conkling's district. He may also have suffered from the disproportionate enlistment of Republican voters in the Union Army and a growing sentiment opposed to the war in general. Conkling was ultimately narrowly defeated by Kernan by 98 votes, and Seymour was once again elected Governor.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=185}} Conkling ran behind the Republican gubernatorial candidate, radical [[James S. Wadsworth]], in Oneida.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=46β49}} After leaving office, Conkling returned to Utica and resumed a solo law practice. He continued to give public speeches on occasion, criticizing Governor Seymour.{{sfn|Jordan|pp=52β53|1971}} From 1863 to 1865, he acted informally as a judge advocate of the War Department, investigating alleged frauds in the recruiting service in western New York. In the summer of 1863, he and Kernan were opposing counsel in a case regarding an Army deserter.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=196}} In 1864, Conkling remained an active supporter of President Lincoln and endorsed his re-nomination and re-election. He rebuffed efforts, including a direct appeal from [[Horace Greeley]], to replace Lincoln on the ticket with a more radical candidate.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|p=54}} Conkling was re-nominated on the Union ticket, despite some opposition, on September 22. At the district convention, [[Ward Hunt]] produced a letter from Lincoln claiming no other candidate "could be more satisfactory to me" than Conkling. He was nominated by a large vote, but declined. A second vote was taken reaffirming his nomination by acclamation, whereupon he accepted.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=54β55}} In the fall election, with a much-improved war effort and political environment for the Lincoln administration, Conkling defeated Kernan to reclaim his seat. In the time before Conkling returned to the House, President Lincoln was inaugurated, the Civil War came to a close, and Lincoln was assassinated on April 14. Conkling was among the first Union men to arrive in Richmond after its fall, on a fact-finding mission with [[Charles Anderson Dana|Charles Dana]]. He and Seymour also accompanied Lincoln's funeral procession from Albany to Utica.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|p=58}} ===Third term=== {{See also|39th United States Congress|40th United States Congress}} Returning to Congress in December 1865, Conkling was appointed to the powerful [[United States House Committee on Ways and Means|Committee on Ways and Means]], serving alongside future Presidents [[Rutherford B. Hayes]] and [[James A. Garfield]]. He also served on the [[United States Congress Joint Committee on Reconstruction|Joint Committee on Reconstruction]], which drafted the [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution]]. He was among the committee's most active supporters of enfranchising freed slaves. ==== Reconstruction and the Fourteenth Amendment ==== Within the Joint Committee on Reconstruction, Conkling was a relatively conservative member of the Republican majority, in sympathy with chairman William Pitt Fessenden and in contrast to radicals George S. Boutwell and Jacob Howard.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=63β65}} He subscribed neither to the constitutional theory of secession advanced by the radical [[Thaddeus Stevens]] or [[Charles Sumner]], who held that secession (or dissolution of the Southern states) had been achieved, leaving Congress plenary power to govern their territory, or of President Andrew Johnson, which held that secession was impossible and that the Southern states remained in the Union. Instead, Conkling endorsed the theory advanced by [[Samuel Shellabarger]] and Chief Justice [[Salmon P. Chase]], which held that secession was impossible and void, but that states had lapsed from the [[Guarantee Clause|guaranteed republican form of government]], thus entitling Congress to prescribe the steps for reinstating a proper government.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=63β65}} In order to establish these steps, the Joint Committee began work on the [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]]. Conkling took an active part in drafting the amendment, particularly its provision on representation, Section 2. His draft excluded, for the purpose of apportioning representation, all persons of a race or color whose political or civil rights and privilege were denied, thus punishing the jurisdiction which so denied them.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=63β65}} Conkling was also responsible for substituting the word "persons" for "citizens" in Section 2.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=63β65}} ==== Blaine-Fry affair ==== [[File:Blaine, James G.jpg|thumb|Conkling began a long feud with [[James G. Blaine]], future secretary of state and Republican presidential candidate, during the 39th Congress.|295x295px]] Conkling's long rivalry with [[James G. Blaine]] had its roots in his final term as Representative. In April 1865, in connection with his work for the War Department, Conkling had been selected as a [[Special counsel|special prosecutor]] in the case of Major John A. Haddock, who as [[provost marshal]] was responsible for administering the draft in western New York and accused of flagrant corruption.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=59β65}} Conkling zealously secured a conviction but retained a grudge against Haddock's commanding officer, General [[James Barnet Fry]], whom Conkling believed was truly responsible for the corrupt conduct of Haddock's office.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=59β65}} At the opening of the 39th Congress, Conkling introduced a resolution, which passed, to study the potential of eliminating Fry's position of Provost-Marshal General.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=59β65}} In April 1866, a bill to reorganize the army was introduced which would have made Provost-Marshal General a permanent office. On April 24, Conkling rose to strike this section, on the grounds that it "create[d] an unnecessary office for an undeserving public servant. It fastens, as an [[incubus]] upon the country, a hateful instrument of war, which deserves no place in a free government in a time of peace."{{sfn|Jordan|pp=|1971|p=73}} Blaine, who had by then already clashed with Conkling on a number of matters in the House, replied in vehement defense of Fry, though they were not acquainted. In the ensuing debate, both Blaine and Conkling exchanged sharp personal attacks, before Conkling offered to settle the matter "not here but elsewhere." The argument was renewed several times during the week, until April 30, when Blaine read a letter into the record which he had written with General Fry, taking issue with Conkling's statement and making specific charges of [[Embezzlement|graft]] in connection with Conkling's work for the War Department. After Conkling's rebuttal, the debate culminated in an oft-quoted speech in which Blaine derided Conkling's "haughty disdain, his grandiloquent swell, his majestic, supereminent, overpowering, turkey-gobbler strut," prompting Conkling later to demand an apology that Blaine refused to give.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|p=80}} <nowiki>Though the charges by Fry were investigated and unanimously dismissed by an investigatory committee as having "no foundation in truth" and Conkling's conduct as "above reproach... eminently patriotic and valuable," Conkling never forgave Blaine. Their personal animosities shaped Republican presidential politics for the next two decades and possibly </nowiki>[[1884 United States presidential election in New York|cost Blaine the presidency in 1884]] when Conkling, still a power in the closely fought state of New York, not only refused to help Blaine, but worked for his defeat.<ref name="Muzzey"> [https://archive.org/details/jamesgblainepoli0000muzz/page/307/mode/1up?view=theater Muzzey, David Saville ''James G. Blaine, a Political Idol of Other Days'', pp.307-308 (1934)].</ref> ==U.S. Senator (1868β81)== ===1867 election=== {{Main|1867 United States Senate election in New York}} Conkling was re-elected to the House over Palmer Kellogg in November 1866.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=281}} Confident of his victory in advance, Conkling spent the fall campaign working on behalf of other Republicans in an effort to actively, privately seek the United States Senate seat of [[Ira Harris]], whose term expired in the coming March. By campaigning throughout the state, he studied the political situation in every county and secured the allegiances of local party leaders. The political organization he formed in his canvas for Senate later formed the basis for the [[Stalwarts (politics)|Stalwart faction of the Republican Party]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=285β86}} With Republicans firmly in control of the state legislature, the election would be determined by the Republican caucus, where the field gradually dwindled to Harris, Conkling, and Judge [[Noah Davis (judge)|Noah Davis]], who was backed by Governor [[Reuben Fenton]] and most of western New York.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=85β89}} Conkling was endorsed in the caucus by [[Andrew Dickson White]], a signal that his candidacy was backed by [[George William Curtis]], and was nominated on the fifth ballot after the small minority of Harris men chose him over Davis.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=85β89}} Conkling joined the Senate as a member of the Committees on [[United States Senate Committee on Appropriations|Appropriations]], [[United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary|the Judiciary]], and [[United States Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources|Mines and Mining]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=290β91}} He became a popular subject of press attention and was even mentioned as a potential candidate for president in 1868.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=292β95}} ===Impeachment of Andrew Johnson=== {{Main|Impeachment of Andrew Johnson}} Conkling was a frequent critic of President [[Andrew Johnson]] and supporter of aggressive Reconstruction policies.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=296β99}} In Johnson's impeachment trial for the removal of Secretary of War [[Edwin Stanton]], Conkling did not serve as a manager or make any public speech but was active in the prosecution of the case. He voted guilty on several articles before the Senate adjourned. Conkling fell ill while the Senate remained in recess, but declared that if he were unable to walk or speak, he would still be carried to the chamber with the word "Guilty" pinned to his coat.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=299β301}} The Senate fell one vote short of convicting Johnson and removing him from office. Conkling remained Johnson's antagonist for the remainder of the latter's term.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=299β301}} ===Grant administration=== Conkling actively supported the [[Ulysses S. Grant]] administration and its policy in Santo Domingo, including the [[Proposed annexation of Santo Domingo|Annexation of Santo Domingo]]. He became known as the "[[Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick|Warwick]] of the [Grant] Administration."{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=332}} During the [[Franco-Prussian War]], Conkling expressed his sympathies with the German side, arguing that [[Napoleon III]]'s support of the Confederates in the Civil War had made him the enemy of the United States.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=327}} Nevertheless, Conkling defended the administration from [[Charles Sumner]]'s charges of violating neutrality by selling arms to France.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=426}} In 1870, New York elected its first Democratic legislature since the War. When the new legislature repealed and rescinded its prior resolution ratifying the [[Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution]], Conkling spoke out against it.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=323}} He actively worked for the passage of the [[Civil Rights Act of 1875]], opposing attempts by Senator [[Allen Thurman]] to water down its provisions.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=432β33}} In the [[43rd United States Congress]], Conkling opposed federal relief for the [[Boston Fire of 1872]], efforts to establish a uniform national system of [[bankruptcy law]], and an increase in congressional salaries. He spoke against seating Republican senator [[Alexander Caldwell]] of Kansas, who stood accused of bribery and ultimately resigned.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=454β55}} He served on the committees on Foreign Relations, Commerce, and the Judiciary, and chaired the committee on the Revision of Laws.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=453β54}} In 1873, after the death of Chief Justice [[Salmon P. Chase]], President Grant urged him to accept an appointment to the seat, but Conkling declined.<ref>Peskin, Allan. "Conkling, Roscoe (1829-1888), politician." American National Biography. February 1, 2000; Accessed September 9, 2020.</ref><ref>[http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Conkling,+Roscoe Roscoe Conkling] Legal Dictionary Online</ref> He stated, "I could not take the place, for I would be forever gnawing my chains."{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=461}} Instead, Grant nominated [[George Henry Williams]], who was rejected by the Senate. Conkling declined once more, and Grant appointed [[Morrison Waite]], who was confirmed.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=463}} ==== Credit Mobilier scandal ==== In September 1872, the New York newspaper [[The Sun (New York City)|''The Sun'']] reported that many republican politicians were bribed by [[Union Pacific Railroad]] and [[CrΓ©dit Mobilier scandal|Credit Mobilier]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Humanities |first=National Endowment for the |date=1872-09-04 |title=The sun. [volume] (New York [N.Y.]) 1833-1916, September 04, 1872, Image 1 |url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1872-09-04/ed-1/seq-1/ |access-date=2024-03-08 |issn=1940-7831}}</ref> Later on The house created the [[Luke P. Poland|Poland]] Committee to investigate these accusations. In December 1872, the committee received allegations on many high-tier Republican officials, including Conkling.<ref>{{Cite web |title=U.S. Senate: Expulsion Case of James W. Patterson of New Hampshire (1873) |url=https://www.senate.gov/about/powers-procedures/expulsion/064JamesPatterson_expulsion.htm#:~:text=The%20Senate%20committee,%20however,%20concluded,it,%20and%20later%20bought%20and |access-date=2024-03-08 |website=www.senate.gov}}</ref> By February 1873, the committee was convinced that they should share this information with the senate. The senate created the Morrill committee named after [[Lot M. Morrill]] to help with the investigation. Conkling's testimony convinced The Morrill Committee to clear his name from the charges.<ref>U.S. Senate Historical Office, ''United States Senate Election, Expulsion and Censure Cases: 1793-1990'' (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1995), pp. 189-1995.</ref> ====1873 election==== {{Main|1873 United States Senate election in New York}} After the Democratic victories in the 1870 state elections, Conkling's political future was uncertain. Conkling privately told friends he did not expect re-election. He was offered a $50,000 yearly salary as a law partner in New York City but turned it down.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=333}} However, after victories in 1871 and 1872, Conkling was re-elected without much competition or fanfare.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=449β50}} ====Power struggle with Reuben Fenton==== [[File:Reuben Fenton (portrait by Asa Twitchell).png|thumb|left|From 1869 to 1871, Conkling was locked in a power struggle with his Senate colleague [[Reuben Fenton]], the former Governor of New York. Conkling defeated Fenton by winning an alliance with President Grant that effectively solidified his control of the New York party for the next decade.]] In 1869, upon the retirement of [[William H. Seward]] as secretary of state and the defeat of senior senator [[Edwin D. Morgan]], Senator Conkling suddenly became the most senior figure in the New York Republican Party. His new junior colleague, former governor [[Reuben Fenton]], quickly gained President Grant's ear and claimed to have control over presidential appointments in New York.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=317}} Conkling and Fenton also disagreed over proposed amendments to the [[Tenure of Office Act (1867)|Tenure of Office Act of 1867]], which had given rise to the controversy over Johnson's removal of Secretary Stanton. Fenton supported repeal of the bill entirely, in line with the position of the New York Legislature.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=318}} Fenton's influence with Grant evidently came to an end in 1870, when Grant appointed Conkling's choice for Collector of the Port of New York, [[Thomas Murphy (Collector)|Thomas Murphy]]. Only Fenton, [[Charles Sumner]], and [[Joseph S. Fowler]] voted against the appointment as Republicans. After this, Conkling was more influential with the Grant administration than any senator except [[Oliver Morton]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=326}} At the 1870 state convention, Conkling and his allies accused Fenton of a corrupt bargain with [[Boss Tweed]] of [[Tammany Hall]] for control of the New York City party organization; many of Fenton's supporters held sinecures in city government.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=329β30}} The Republicans [[1870 New York state election|lost the 1870 election by a wide margin]]; Conkling blamed the loss on betrayal by the Fenton faction.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=331}} In 1871, Conkling gained Grant's support to reform the New York City organization. State chairman [[Alonzo Cornell]] removed the "Tammany Republicans" over Fenton's objection and founded a successor organization led by [[Horace Greeley]] and Jackson S. Schultz; Greeley declined and joined Fenton's organization instead, precipitating a struggle for power within the city party.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=334β35}} The struggle was ended at the 1871 state convention in [[Syracuse, New York|Syracuse]]. [[Hamilton Ward Sr.]] suggested that each organization be given half the vote of [[New York County]], but Conkling successfully prevented this move, delivering an extemporaneous speech:{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=340β43}} <blockquote>A horde of ballot-box pirates and robbers have clutched by the throat the greatest city of the Western world. A horde of pirates, whose firm-name is Tammany Hallβ¦ is presenting in its own organization the most hideous spectacle in modern history, has disbanded, tampered with, and to a large part controlled that glorious organization which is the brightest in the annals of political partiesβ¦{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=340β43}}</blockquote> The delegates voted to seat the Conkling delegation, and the party platform included an endorsement of President Grant and condemnation of "astounding revelations of fraud and corruption in the city of New York."{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=344}} For the next decade, Conkling was the undisputed leader of the [[New York Republican Party]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=347}} Fenton eventually left the party entirely in 1872, supporting the new [[Liberal Republican Party (United States)|Liberal Republican Party]], which nominated Greeley for president in opposition to Grant.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Dunkelman |first1=Mark H. |title=Patrick Henry Jones: Irish American, Civil War General, and Gilded Age Politician |date=2015 |publisher=[[LSU Press]] |isbn=978-0-8071-5967-5 |page=94 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WxYuCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA94 |access-date=5 December 2019 |language=en}}</ref> ===Hayes administration=== Conkling and President [[Rutherford B. Hayes]] got off to a rocky start after Hayes named [[William M. Evarts]], a New York opponent of Conkling's machine, as secretary of state. In addition to elevating a Conkling critic, the appointment precluded Conkling's ally [[Thomas C. Platt]] from joining the cabinet as postmaster general on grounds of regional diversity; traditionally, only one cabinet member could come from a state.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=529}} In April 1877, Secretary of the Treasury [[John Sherman]] appointed a commission, chaired by [[John Jay (lawyer)]], to investigate the [[United States Custom House (New York City)|New York Custom House]]. The investigation brought to light extensive irregularities in the service, showing that the federal office holders in New York were rather a large army of political workers and that their positions were secured by and dependent upon their faithful service on behalf of New York City politicians.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}} After Conkling returned from a European vacation, he took an active part in the 1877 New York state campaign. He and Platt were openly critical of the Hayes administration at the state convention, passing a number of resolutions endorsing Grant over the objection of reformer [[George William Curtis]]. Conkling gave a lengthy speech denouncing Curtis, Hayes, and reformers and praising Grant.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=538}} The Conkling-Hayes conflict peaked in December 1877, when Hayes nominated [[Theodore Roosevelt Sr.]] and [[L. Bradford Prince]] to replace Chester Arthur and [[Alonzo Cornell]] as the Collector and Naval Officer, respectively, of the Port.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=555}} The appointments were made on the basis of findings of corruption at the Port of New York by a commission of independent, anti-Conkling Republicans. The nominations were rejected by a vote of 25 to 32, with six Republicans voting for and two Democrats voting against.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=556}} After the vote, a disagreement between Conkling and Senator [[John Brown Gordon]] of Georgia nearly resulted in a duel between the two men, but their friends defused the situation.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=561}} Nevertheless, Hayes suspended Arthur and Cornell's service on July 11, 1878, and appointed [[Edwin Atkins Merritt]] and [[Silas W. Burt]] during the congressional recess. Both were confirmed when Congress reconvened in February.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=557}} ====1879 election==== {{Main|1879 United States Senate election in New York}} In January 1879, Conkling was re-nominated by acclamation and re-elected to a third term easily.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=574}} ===Garfield administration and resignation=== {{See also|1881 United States Senate special elections in New York}} Shortly after [[James Garfield]]'s victory in the 1880 election, Conkling consulted with friends on his future. Though he sought to resign over his differences with Garfield, they urged him to remain in office.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=632}} Garfield solicited his advice on "several subjects relating to the next administrationβand especially in reference to New York interests" and invited Conkling to visit him in [[Mentor, Ohio]]. Their conversation there, in private with no witnesses, remained the subject of debate long after both men's deaths.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=634β35}} Garfield assembled a cabinet including James Blaine as secretary of state and [[Thomas Lemuel James]], a New York enemy of Conkling's, as postmaster general. He refused to appoint Conkling's proposed candidate, [[Levi P. Morton]], for Secretary of the Treasury. Garfield further angered Conkling when he removed [[Edwin Atkins Merritt]] as Collector of the Port of New York during his term and appointed Judge [[William H. Robertson]]. Historians disagree over whether Garfield did so at Blaine's insistence<ref>[[David Saville Muzzey]], [https://archive.org/details/jamesgblainepoli0000muzz/page/189/mode/1up?view=theater ''James G. Blaine: A Political Idol of Other Days'', pp.189-193], Dodd, Mead & Co., 1934.</ref> rather than on his own initiative.<ref>[[Theodore Clarke Smith]], [https://archive.org/details/lifelettersofjam0002smit/page/1106/mode/1up?view=theater ''Life and Letters of James Abram Garfield'', Vol.II, pp.1106-1142], Archon Books, 1968.</ref> Merritt's removal halfway through his term and Robertson's appointment pressed Conkling to action. He resigned from the Senate May 16, expecting vindication of his own political strength and of the principle of senatorial courtesy by winning the special election to his seat. [[Thomas C. Platt]] resigned alongside him.{{citation needed|date = September 2023}} Conkling's gambit failed: although he attended the legislature's sessions in Albany, [[Elbridge Lapham]] was chosen as his successor. Any chance of Conkling's re-election was likely ended, and his political career with it, when [[Assassination of James A. Garfield|President Garfield was shot]] on July 2 by [[Charles Guiteau]], a fellow Stalwart who had cited the Blaine appointment in threats to the President. Though Garfield was still alive when the election finally concluded on July 22, he died on September 19. Conkling's long-time protΓ©gΓ©, Chester Arthur, succeeded to the presidency. ==Presidential politics== [[File:Great presidential puzzle2.jpg|thumb|An 1880 political cartoon depicts Conkling working at a "presidential puzzle." Conkling's control of the New York delegation at the [[1876 Republican National Convention|1876]] and [[1880 Republican National Convention]]s made him a presidential kingmaker.]] As a senator and the boss of the New York Republicans, Conkling was a kingmaker at multiple Republican Conventions. After supporting President [[Ulysses S. Grant]] in 1868 and 1872, Conkling ran an unsuccessful campaign of his own in 1876. In 1880, he supported the nomination of Grant for a third term. Though his preferred candidate was not nominated for president in either case, he was successful in preventing the nomination of an outright reformer. [[Chester A. Arthur]]'s nomination as vice president in 1880 was designed to appease Conkling (though Arthur accepted over Conkling's objection) and led to Arthur's succession as president after the [[assassination of James Garfield]]. ===1868 and 1872=== Conkling was an active supporter of [[Ulysses S. Grant]]'s three presidential campaigns. In 1868, he actively campaigned for Grant against his own brother-in-law, [[Horatio Seymour]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=308β12}} As the 1872 campaign shaped up, Conkling established himself as one of the foremost defenders of the Grant administration. When [[Charles Sumner]] introduced a constitutional amendment to limit the presidency to one term in 1871, Conkling spoke against its passage.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=348}} Conkling led a barnstorming tour across New York state, beginning in [[Manhattan]] on July 23. His speech there was issued, in abridged form, by the state party as a central piece of the Republican campaign in the state.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=436}} Conkling spoke against [[Horace Greeley]] in personal terms, drawing criticism from the Democratic and Liberal Republican press.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=443}} His next speech was on August 8, after which he hosted a meet-and-greet with President Grant at his mansion in Utica.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=444}} Grant won the election over Greeley easily, and the Republican ticket swept New York. ===1876 campaign=== {{Main|1876 Republican National Convention}} Soon after his re-election to the Senate, Conkling became a leading choice to succeed President Grant. He had the support of Grant and the unanimous backing of the New York Republicans.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=451}} A public meeting was held in Utica on March 2 to endorse his candidacy,{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=495}} and the Republican state convention on March 22 endorsed Conkling for president.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=498}} Conkling named as his own second choice Governor [[Rutherford B. Hayes]] of Ohio,{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=499}} likely to block his rival [[James G. Blaine]] from winning the nomination. At the Republican Convention in Cincinnati on June 14, the New York delegation actively worked to secure Conkling's nomination,{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=499}}{{efn|[[George William Curtis]] was the lone New York delegate to oppose Conkling's nomination; he supported Benjamin Bristow.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=503β04}}}} and his name was placed forward by [[Stewart L. Woodford]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=501}} The other candidates named were [[Marshall Jewell]], [[Oliver P. Morton]], [[Benjamin Bristow]], [[John Hartranft]], Hayes, and Conkling's personal rival [[James G. Blaine]]. After Conkling's vote slipped lower on the first five ballots, a member of the Indiana delegation began a stampede to Hayes, who was nominated. New Yorker [[William A. Wheeler]] was nominated for vice president.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=506β07}} Conkling pledged to make four speeches on behalf of Hayes, but made only one, claiming ill health.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=511}} Conkling played an active part in resolving the disputed election. Acting on the advice of President Grant, he helped write and pass the bill establishing the Electoral Commission of 1877, tasked with resolving the dispute between Hayes and [[Samuel Tilden]]. He gave a powerful speech urging its constitutionality and its passage as a means of avoiding violence, but declined to serve on the Committee himself.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=518β21}} Conkling's own position on the controversy was that neither Tilden nor Hayes should be inaugurated, frequently reported as an implicit endorsement of Tilden.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=528}} ===1880 convention=== {{Main|1880 Republican National Convention}} As the 1880 election approached, a growing movement favored the nomination of President Grant for a third term. Conkling, along with Senators [[J. Donald Cameron]] of Pennsylvania and [[John A. Logan]] of Illinois, were at its head. At the 1880 state convention, Conkling secured a binding resolution pledging New York's delegates to Grant.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=586β87}} At the national convention, Conkling moved to have all delegates pledge their support to the eventual nominee. After [[James A. Garfield]], a supporter of Senator [[John Sherman]] of Ohio for president, delivered a well-received speech against the resolution, Conkling sent him a note which read, "New York requests that Ohio's real candidate and dark horse come forward." Conkling then withdrew his motion.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=592β93}} On the fourth day, Conkling placed Grant's name in nomination, and the nomination was seconded by [[William O'Connell Bradley]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=596}} Grant's strongest opponents were Conkling's rivals [[James G. Blaine]] and Sherman, who was nominated by Garfield. Conkling marshaled the Grant delegates through dozens of successive ballots, never wavering in his support. On the fifth night, some delegates suggested that Conkling could be nominated if he would withdraw Grant's name; he declined.<ref name="Geeks">{{cite web |url=https://potus-geeks.livejournal.com/1379069.html |title=Four More Years: The Republican Convention of 1880 |author=kensmind |date=November 3, 2021 |website=Potus_Geeks |publisher=Presidential History Geeks |access-date=March 10, 2023}}</ref> The non-Grant delegates struggled to find an alternative candidate, but it became clear they would not support Grant under any circumstances.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=605}} On the sixth day, Garfield emerged as the consensus anti-Grant choice.<ref name="Geeks"/> He received the necessary majority on the thirty-sixth ballot of the convention, and Conkling moved to make his nomination unanimous.<ref name="Geeks"/><ref>{{cite book |last1=Doyle |first1=Burton T. |last2=Swaney |first2=Homer H. |date=1881 |title=Lives of James A. Garfield and Chester A. Arthur |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PRgpAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA36 |location=Washington, DC |publisher=Rufus H. Darby |page=36 |via=[[Google Books]]}}</ref> The Garfield campaign sought to reconcile with Conkling's [[Stalwart (politics)|Stalwarts]] by offering one of them the vice presidential nomination.<ref name="Reeves">{{cite book |last=Reeves |first=Thomas C. |author-link=Thomas C. Reeves |title=Gentleman Boss: The Life of Chester A. Arthur |url=https://archive.org/details/gentlemanbosslif00reev |url-access=registration |year=1975 |pages=119β121 |publisher=Alfred A. Knopf |location=New York, New York |isbn=978-0-394-46095-6}}</ref> They first approached [[Levi P. Morton]]; Conkling was still angry over Grant's loss and advised Morton to decline, which he did.<ref name="Reeves"/> Garfield's supporters then offered the nomination to [[Chester A. Arthur]], who they knew had close ties to Conkling, but who had impressed delegates with his work to broker a compromise on the selection of a permanent chairman at the start of the convention.<ref name="Geeks"/> Conkling tried to talk Arthur out of accepting, urging him to "drop it as you would a red hot shoe from the forge," but Arthur insisted that he would, calling the vice presidency "a greater honor than I ever dreamed of attaining."<ref name="Reeves"/><ref name=JAG-C&E>{{cite web| url=https://millercenter.org/president/garfield/campaigns-and-elections| title=James A. Garfield: Campaigns and Elections| last=Doenecke| first=Justus| date=4 October 2016| publisher=Miller Center of Public Affairs, University of Virginia| access-date=March 28, 2018}}</ref> Arthur won the nomination with 468 votes to 193 for [[Elihu Washburne]] and 44 for [[Marshall Jewell]].<ref name="Geeks"/> ===1880 campaign=== During the general election campaign, Conkling conspicuously avoided Garfield, declining the nominee's invitations to meet. When a conference of Republican leaders convened at the [[Fifth Avenue Hotel]] to meet with Garfield, Conkling left his seat conspicuously vacant.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=612}} In response to entreaties from friends, he simply replied, "There are some matters which must be attended to before I can enter the canvass." This remark was widely reprinted in press throughout the North as evidence of Garfield's weak position. Conkling only began to campaign actively after Grant and Arthur personally prevailed upon him to do so.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=613β14}} Conkling gave a well-received speech at New York's Academy of Music, then travelled west to deliver a series of speeches in Ohio alongside President Grant.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=615β17}} At the insistence of Grant and Senator Cameron, they stopped at Garfield's home in [[Mentor, Ohio|Mentor]]. During his entire visit, Conkling refused to be left alone with Garfield.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=623β24}} He made four more speeches in Indiana, then returned to New York for the remainder of the campaign.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=626}} ==Positions and views== Conkling was a [[Radical Republicans|Radical Republican]], favoring equal rights for ex-slaves and reduced rights for ex-[[Confederate States of America|Confederates]]. He was active in framing and pushing the legislation framing [[Reconstruction era of the United States|Reconstruction]], including the [[Civil Rights Act of 1875]]. Conkling defended a proposal ordering the construction of a [[First Transcontinental Telegraph|transcontinental telegraph]] to the Pacific Ocean.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}} He also championed the broad interpretation of the [[ex post facto]] clause in the Constitution. (See ''[[Stogner v. California]]''){{citation needed|date=November 2021}} ===Temperance=== Conkling was a moderate on the issue of alcohol. In 1873, Conkling submitted a resolution on behalf of the [[temperance movement]] within his district{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=451β52}} and spoke in support of the movement's aims at the 1873 state convention, but denounced any "irrational effort" to ban alcohol as indefensible.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=483β84}} ===Monetary policy=== While in the House, Conkling notably broke with the Republican Party over the passage of the [[Legal Tender Act]], which established Treasury notes as legal currency in order to better fund the war effort. In this opposition he was joined by his brother, [[Frederick Augustus Conkling]]. Both were "hard money" men, arguing that the only legal tender could be precious metals (gold and silver) and that the war could be won without extending the Union's line of credit.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=152}} Instead, he argued for reducing the costs of government by cutting salaries and limiting congressional travel expenses.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=176}} Conkling also vigorously opposed the so-called "inflation bill", which would have authorized an additional $46 million in bank notes. The bill passed, but President Grant vetoed it and a compromise was reached. He was an active opponent of the [[Bland-Allison Act]] and any legislation attempting to increase the supply of silver.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=496}}{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=567}} ===Civil rights and Reconstruction=== Conkling was a lifelong advocate for civil rights for freed black Americans. He remained an advocate for Southern Reconstruction long past its political popularity in the North and even beyond President Hayes's decision to withdraw federal troops from Southern states.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=583}} ===Women's rights=== In 1877, Conkling presented a petition on behalf of citizens of New York, mostly women, calling for an amendment granting all women the right to vote.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=528}} ==Retirement== After resigning from the Senate in 1881, Conkling returned to the practice of law. As one of the original drafters of the [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]], he claimed in a case which reached the Supreme Court, ''[[Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad]]'', 118 U.S. 394 (1886),<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://supreme.justia.com/us/116/138/case.html|title=San Mateo County v. Southern Pacific R. Co. 116 U.S. 138 (1885)|access-date=2016-08-06}}</ref> that the phrase "nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws" meant the drafters wanted corporations to be included, because they used the word "[[Personhood|person]]" and cited his personal diary from the period. Howard Jay Graham, a [[Stanford University]] historian considered the pre-eminent scholar on the Fourteenth Amendment, named this case the "[[conspiracy theory]]" and concluded that Conkling probably [[perjury|perjured]] himself for the benefit of his railroad friends.<ref>Graham, Howard J., The "Conspiracy Theory" of the Fourteenth Amendment, 47 Yale L. J. 371 (1938).</ref> ===Relationship with President Arthur=== Conkling and Arthur were so intimately associated that it was feared, after President Garfield was assassinated, that the killing had been done at Conkling's behest in order to install Arthur as president and bring about restoration of the patronage system of political appointments. After [[Inauguration of Chester A. Arthur|Arthur assumed the presidency]] upon Garfield's death in September 1881, Conkling attempted to sway his protΓ©gΓ© into reversing the earlier appointment by Garfield of William H. Robertson as Collector of the Port of New York. Arthur, who would become an avid champion of civil service reform, refused.<ref name="WAPO 22722">{{cite news| first=Robert| last=Mitchell| title=The senator who said no to a seat on the Supreme Court β twice| date=February 27, 2022| url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2022/02/27/roscoe-conkling-supreme-court/| newspaper=The Washington Post| access-date=April 3, 2022}}</ref> [[File:Conkling Nomination.JPG|thumb|President [[Chester A. Arthur]]'s 1882 nomination of Conkling to serve as an [[associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States]]. Conkling was confirmed, but declined to serve]] On February 24, 1882, Arthur nominated Conkling as an associate justice of the Supreme Court, following the retirement of [[Ward Hunt]].<ref name="RL33225">{{cite report| last=McMillion| first=Barry J.| date=March 8, 2022| title=Supreme Court Nominations, 1789 to 2020: Actions by the Senate, the Judiciary Committee, and the President| url=https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL33225.pdf| publisher=Congressional Research Service| location=Washington, D.C.| access-date=April 3, 2022}}</ref> Arthur submitted the nomination to the Senate not knowing whether Conkling would accept it or not.<ref name="WAPO 22722"/><ref name="Life Letters">{{cite book |last=Conkling|first=Alfred Ronald |date=1889 |title=Life and Letters of Roscoe Conkling |url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924024243945 |quote=roscoe conkling decline supreme court.|location=New York, NY |publisher=Charles L. Webster & Company |page=[https://archive.org/details/cu31924024243945/page/n728 677]}}</ref> He was confirmed by the Senate on March 2, 1882, by a 39β12 vote,<ref name="RL33225"/> but declined to serve in a letter to Arthur citing "reasons you would not fail to appreciate."<ref name="WAPO 22722"/><ref name="Life Letters"/> The breach between Arthur and Conkling was never repaired.<ref name="WAPO 22722"/> Without Conkling's leadership, his Stalwart faction dissolved. However, upon Arthur's death in 1886, he attended the funeral and showed deep sorrow according to onlookers. ==Personal life== During his first term as Senator, Conkling purchased a mansion in Utica (3 Rutger Park) that remained his primary residence until his death. He adorned his walls with photos of [[Lord Byron]], [[Daniel Webster]], [[William W. Eaton]], and [[Antonio LΓ³pez de Santa Anna]] (presented to Conkling's father during his time as Minister to Mexico).{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=306β07}} Conkling was an avid reader of poetry, particularly the works of [[Lord Byron]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=21β22}} He sometimes quoted or recited poetry in his speeches.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=31}} He made careful study of British oratory throughout his life, and was a particular admirer of [[Thomas Babington Macaulay]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=37}} Conkling was a personal friend and political ally of Senator [[Blanche Bruce]], whom he defended against both racist and reformist critics, and who named his son [[Roscoe Conkling Bruce]] in honor of their friendship.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=583}} ===Marriage and romantic affairs=== [[File:S NPG 95 102 Conkling det.tif|thumb|Julia Catherine Seymour Conkling, Senator Conkling's wife]] Conkling married Julia Catherine Seymour, sister of Governor of New York [[Horatio Seymour]], on June 28, 1855; Horatio was strongly opposed to the marriage and remained a forceful political opponent of Conkling's. Their marriage was unhappy; Conkling focused on politics and was frequently unfaithful.{{sfn|Jordan|1971|pp=13β14}} They became estranged as early as 1863.{{Sfn|Jordan|1971|p=52}} Conkling had a reputation as a [[Promiscuity|philanderer]], and was accused of having an affair with the married [[Kate Chase|Kate Chase Sprague]], daughter of [[Salmon P. Chase]] and wife of [[William Sprague IV]]. According to a well-known story, buttressed by contemporaneous press reports, Mr. Sprague confronted the philandering couple at the Spragues' Rhode Island summer home and pursued Conkling with a shotgun.<ref>Peg A. Lamphier, ''Kate Chase and William Sprague: Politics and Gender in a Civil War Marriage'', University of Nebraska Press, 2003.</ref> One posthumous account from ''[[The New York Times]]'' (October 12, 1909) stated: <blockquote>The late Senator Roscoe Conkling was a frequent visitor at Canonchet [Sprague's estate], and was unpleasantly conspicuous in the proceedings which ended in the divorce of the Spragues. Mr. Conkling was once forbidden by Mr. Sprague to come to Canonchet. Despite this, however, the Executive [Sprague] later met the Senator [Conkling] on the estate coming from the rear of the houseβsome reports had it that the Senator jumped from a windowβand after him came the Governor with his old civil war musket in his hands.<ref>CANONCHET, SPRAGUE HOME IS BURNED: War Governor in Danger as Place Is Destroyed with Loss Exceeding $1,000,000. PRICELESS RELICS LOST House, Remnant of William Sprague's Vast Fortune, Was Identified with Stirring Events in Nation's Annals. New York Times, Oct. 12, 1909, p. 18</ref></blockquote> ===Physical fitness=== Throughout his life, Conkling was noted for his advocacy of [[physical culture]], a somewhat unorthodox pastime for a man of his era and social status. Conkling maintained his physique through horseback riding and boxing.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=37}} He took daily walking trips throughout his life.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=66β67}} Stories of his boxing exploits frequently appeared in the press, though their accuracy is questioned.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=37}} Perhaps due to his massive frame (6'3"){{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=310}} and dominant physical presence, Conkling drew frequent press attention.{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=292β95}} Despite his pride in his physique, Conkling was known to have a peculiar aversion to "having his person touched."{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=288}} In the summer of 1868, Conkling, [[Louis Agassiz]], [[Samuel Hooper]], and others traveled to the [[Rocky Mountains]], including a visit to [[Pikeβs Peak|Pike's Peak]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=308β12}} In his retirement, he became a governing member of the [[New York Athletic Club]].{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|pp=66β67}} ==Death and legacy== On March 12, 1888, Conkling attempted to walk home three miles from his law office on [[Wall Street]] through the [[Great Blizzard of 1888]]. Conkling made it as far as [[Union Square, Manhattan|Union Square]] before collapsing. He contracted [[pneumonia]] and developed [[mastoiditis]] several weeks later which, following a surgical procedure to drain the infection, progressed to [[meningitis]]. Conkling died in the early morning hours of April 18, 1888.<ref>{{cite news |last=O'Grady |first=Jim |date=January 27, 2015 |title=Bad Idea: The Most Powerful Man in America Walks Home Through the Blizzard of 1888 |url=https://www.wnyc.org/story/bad-idea-most-powerful-man-america-walks-home-through-blizzard-1888/ |work=WNYC News |location=New York, NY}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|date=April 18, 1888 |title=Roscoe Conkling Dead |url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1888/04/18/103177872.html?action=click&contentCollection=Archives&module=ArticleEndCTA®ion=ArchiveBody&pgtype=article&pageNumber=1 |work=The New York Times |location=New York, NY |page=1}}</ref> After leaving the Senate, Conkling had reconciled with Mrs. Conkling, and both his wife and daughter were with him when he died. Conkling is buried at [[Forest Hill Cemetery, Utica|Forest Hill Cemetery]] in [[Utica, New York|Utica]]. ===Legacy=== [[Chauncey Depew]], the noted railroad executive, political observer and himself a member of the United States Senate from New York from 1899 to 1911, commented thus more than 30 years after Conkling's death: "[Roscoe Conkling] was created by nature for a great career ... he was the handsomest man of his time ... his mental equipment nearly approached genius ... [but] with all his oratorical power and his talent in debate, he made little impression on the country and none upon posterity ... The reason for this was that his wonderful gifts were wholly devoted to partisan discussions and local issues."<ref>Chauncey M. Depew, "My Memories Of Eighty Years", Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1923</ref> [[File:Roscoe Conkling crop.jpg|thumb|upright|A statute of Conkling in [[Madison Square Park]], near Conkling's Manhattan home.]] A [[Statue of Roscoe Conkling|statue of him]] stands in Madison Square Park in [[New York City]]. Conkling is the namesake to the hamlets [[Roscoe, New York]],<ref>[http://www.sullivancountyhistory.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=category&id=56&Itemid=85 Rockland] Sullivan County Historical Society</ref> [[Roscoe, South Dakota]], and [[Roscoe, Georgia]]<ref>{{cite book | url=http://www.kenkrakow.com/gpn/r.pdf| title=Georgia Place-Names: Their History and Origins | publisher=Winship Press | last =Krakow | first = Kenneth K. | date=1975 | location=Macon, GA | page =192 | isbn=0-915430-00-2}}</ref> and [[Roscoe Conkling Park]], a {{convert|625|acre|adj=on}} park in Utica, New York containing a zoo, golf course, and ski area. His [[Roscoe Conkling House|house]] in Utica was made a [[National Historic Landmark]] in 1975. [[Los Angeles]]'s [[Roscoe Boulevard]] may or may not have been named after him.<ref>{{cite web|title=Roscoe Boulevard |url=https://lastreetnames.com/street/roscoe-boulevard/|website=lastreetnames.com|date=30 September 2020 |access-date=September 11, 2024}}</ref> Conkling's stature as a powerful politicianβand the interests of others in currying favor with himβled to many babies being named for him. These include [[Roscoe C. Patterson]], Roscoe Conkling Oyer, [[Roscoe Simmons|Roscoe Conkling Simmons]], [[Roscoe Conkling Giles]], [[Roscoe Conkling Bruce]],{{sfn|A.R. Conkling|p=583}} [[Roscoe C. McCulloch]], [[Roscoe Conkling Ensign Brown]] and [[Roscoe Arbuckle|Roscoe Conkling ("Fatty") Arbuckle]].<ref>Melissa Block, [https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1121680 Roscoe Conkling], "All Things Considered", [[National Public Radio]], April 18, 2001.</ref> Arbuckle's father, however, despised Conkling and named the boy because he suspected the boy wasn't his own, and as a nod towards Conkling's reputation as a philanderer.<ref name="Ellis">{{cite book |last=Ellis |first=Chris & Julie |title=The Mammoth Book of Celebrity Murder: Murder played out in the spotlight of maximum publicity |publisher=Constable & Robertson |date=April 10, 2005 |isbn=978-0786715688 }}</ref> Roscoe Conkling Brown Sr., the father of [[Roscoe C. Brown Jr.]], changed his own name from George to honor Conkling.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Roberts |first1=Sam |date=July 7, 2016 |title=Roscoe C. Brown, Jr., 94, Tuskegee Airman and Political Confidant |page=A17 |work=New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/06/nyregion/roscoe-c-brown-jr-tuskegee-airman-and-confidant-to-new-york-politicians-dies-at-94.html |access-date=7 July 2016}}</ref> ==In popular culture== Conkling was an important character in Rosemary Simpson's 2017 detective novel ''What the Dead Leave Behind''. To spite his large son, whose delivery he believed hastened his petite wife's death and whose great size implied infidelity, William Goodrich Arbuckle named his child [[Roscoe Arbuckle|Roscoe Conkling Arbuckle]] in reference to the politician's numerous extramarital affairs.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Stevens |first=Dana |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1285369307 |title=Camera man : Buster Keaton, the dawn of cinema, and the invention of the Twentieth Century |date=2022 |isbn=978-1-5011-3419-7 |edition=First Atria Books hardcover |location=New York, NY |pages=90 |oclc=1285369307}}</ref> ==See also== *[[Seymour-Conkling family]] ==References== {{reflist|20em}} ===Notes=== {{notelist}} ==Further reading== ===Biographical=== *Burlingame, Sara Lee. "The Making of a Spoilsman: The Life and Career of Roscoe Conkling from 1829 to 1873." PhD dissertation Johns Hopkins U. 1974. 419 pp. * {{cite book|last=Conkling|first=Alfred R.|author-link=Alfred R. Conkling |title=The Life and Letters of Roscoe Conkling: Orator, Statesman, Advocate |publisher=New York : C.L. Webster & Co. |year=1889 |url=https://archive.org/details/lifelettersofros00inconk/page/n10 |ref={{harvid|A.R. Conkling}}}} * {{cite book|last=Chidsey|first=Donald Barr|author-link=Donald Barr Chidsey|title=The Gentleman from New York: A Life of Roscoe Conkling|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=1935|url=|url-access=|pages=438}} * {{cite book|last=Jordan|first=David M.|url=https://archive.org/details/roscoeconklingof00jord|url-access=registration|title=Roscoe Conkling of New York: Voice in the Senate|year=1971|publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=0801406250}} *{{cite book |ref={{sfnRef|Paxson}} |last=Paxson |first=Frederic Logan |title=Dictionary of American Biography: Conkling, Roscoe |publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons |location=[[New York City|New York]] |editor=Allen Johnson |editor2=Dumas Malone |year=1930}} *{{CongBio|C000681}} ===Scholarly topical studies=== *Eidson, William G. "Who Were the Stalwarts?" ''Mid-America'' 1970 52(4): 235β261. {{ISSN|0026-2927}} * {{cite book |last=Fry |first=James Barnet |title=The Conkling and Blaine-Fry controversy, in 1866 |publisher=New York, Press of A.G. Sherwood & Co. |year=1893 |url=https://archive.org/details/conklingblainefr01fryj/page/n4 |ref=fry}} *Graham, Howard Jay. "The 'Conspiracy Theory' of the Fourteenth Amendment". The Yale Law Journal. Vol. 47, No. 3. (January, 1938), pp. 371β403. *[https://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=94446383 Morgan, H. Wayne. ''From Hayes to McKinley: National Party Politics, 1877-1896'' (1969)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120716182316/http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=94446383 |date=2012-07-16 }} *Peskin, Allan. [http://www.anb.org/articles/04/04-00255.html ''Conkling, Roscoe''] American National Biography Online, (February 2000), (29 January 2007). *Peskin, Allan. "Who Were the Stalwarts? Who Were Their Rivals? Republican Factions in the Gilded Age." ''Political Science Quarterly'' 1984-1985 99(4): 703β716. {{ISSN|0032-3195}} Fulltext: online in Jstor *Reeves, Thomas C. "Chester A. Arthur and the Campaign of 1880". Political Science Quarterly. Vol. 84, No. 4. (December, 1969), pp. 628β637. *Reeves, Thomas C. "Gentleman Boss: The Life of Chester Alan Arthur," (1975) ({{ISBN|0-394-46095-2}}). *Shores, Venila Lovina. ''The Hayes-Conkling Controversy, 1877-1879'' (Smith College Studies in History, Vol. IV, No. 4, July, 1919), Northampton, MA, 1919. in ''The Spoils System in New York''. Edited by James MacGregor Burns and William E. Leuchtenburg. New York: Arno Press, Inc. 1974. *Swindler, William F. "Roscoe Conkling and the Fourteenth Amendment." ''Supreme Court Historical Society Yearbook 1983:'' 46β52. {{ISSN|0362-5249}} ===Encyclopedias=== *{{Cite Appletons'|short=x|wstitle=Conkling, Alfred|year=1900}} *{{Cite NIE|wstitle=Conkling, Roscoe|year=1905}} *{{Cite EB1911|short=x|wstitle=Conkling, Roscoe}} *{{Cite NSRW|short=x|wstitle=Conkling, Roscoe}} ===Primary sources=== *[https://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=4701968 A. R. Conkling (editor), ''The Life and Letters of Roscoe Conkling: Orator, Statesman, Advocate'' (1889)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120716182321/http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=4701968 |date=2012-07-16 }} *''The Nation'', March 2, 1882 *Eaton, Dorman B., The Spoils System and Civil Service Reform in the Custom-House and Post-Office at New York (Publications of the Civil Service Reform Association, No. 3), New York, 1881. In The Spoils System in New York. Edited by James MacGregor Burns and William E. Leuchtenburg. New York: Arno Press, Inc. 1974. ==External links== {{Commons category|Roscoe Conkling}} *[http://www.mrlincolnandnewyork.org/inside.asp?ID=53&subjectID=3 Mr. Lincoln and New York: Roscoe Conkling] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150925063116/http://www.mrlincolnandnewyork.org/inside.asp?ID=53&subjectID=3 |date=2015-09-25 }} {{CongBio|C000681}}. Includes ''[http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/guidedisplay.pl?index=C000681 Guide to Research Collections]'' where his papers are located. *{{Find a Grave|6653495|Roscoe Conkling}} {{s-start}} {{s-par|us-hs}} {{s-bef|before=[[Orsamus B. Matteson|Orsamus Matteson]]}} {{s-ttl|title=Member of the [[List of United States Representatives from New York|U.S. House of Representatives]]<br />from [[New York's 20th congressional district]]|years=1859β1863}} {{s-aft|after=[[Ambrose W. Clark|Ambrose Clark]]}} |- {{s-bef|before=[[Francis Kernan]]}} {{s-ttl|title=Member of the [[List of United States Representatives from New York|U.S. House of Representatives]]<br />from [[New York's 21st congressional district]]|years=1865β1867}} {{s-aft|after=[[Alexander H. Bailey|Alexander Bailey]]}} |- {{s-ppo}} {{s-bef|rows=2|before=[[Ira Harris]]}} {{s-ttl|rows=2|title=[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] nominee for [[List of United States Senators from New York|U.S. Senator from New York]]<br />([[Classes of United States Senators|Class 3]])|years=[[United States Senate election in New York, 1867|1867]], [[United States Senate election in New York, 1873|1873]], [[United States Senate election in New York, 1879|1879]]}} {{s-aft|after=[[Chauncey Depew]]}} |- {{s-aft|after=[[Thomas C. Platt|Thomas Platt]]}} |- {{s-par|us-sen}} {{s-bef|before=[[Ira Harris]]}} {{s-ttl|title=[[List of United States Senators from New York|U.S. Senator (Class 3) from New York]]|years=1867β1881|alongside=[[Edwin D. Morgan|Edwin Morgan]], [[Reuben Fenton]], [[Francis Kernan]], [[Thomas C. Platt|Thomas Platt]]}} {{s-aft|after=[[Elbridge G. Lapham|Elbridge Lapham]]}} {{s-end}} {{USSenNY}} {{SenCommerceCommitteeChairmen}} {{US House District of Columbia chairs}} {{United States presidential election, 1876}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Conkling, Roscoe}} [[Category:1829 births]] [[Category:1888 deaths]] [[Category:Politicians from Albany, New York]] [[Category:Lawyers from Albany, New York]] [[Category:Seymour family (United States)]] [[Category:Gardiner family]] [[Category:American people of English descent]] [[Category:Republican Party members of the United States House of Representatives from New York (state)]] [[Category:Republican Party United States senators from New York (state)]] [[Category:Mayors of Utica, New York]] [[Category:American political bosses from New York (state)]] [[Category:County district attorneys in New York (state)]] [[Category:Unsuccessful nominees to the United States Supreme Court]] [[Category:Politicians from New York City]] [[Category:People of New York (state) in the American Civil War]] [[Category:Union (American Civil War) political leaders]] [[Category:People of the Six Years' War]] [[Category:Stalwarts (Republican Party)]] [[Category:Activists for African-American civil rights]] [[Category:Radical Republicans]] [[Category:Burials at Forest Hill Cemetery (Utica, New York)]] [[Category:19th-century members of the United States House of Representatives]] [[Category:19th-century United States senators]]
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