Horace Greeley was
the longtime editor of the New York Tribune and the
1872 presidential nominee of the Liberal Republicans and
Democrats. He was an abolitionist who became dissatisfied with
the alleged slowness of President Abraham Lincoln to act on
emancipation. On August 19, 1862, he publicly chastised Lincoln
for it in the editor’s “The Prayer of Twenty Millions.”
Unknown to Greeley and the public, the president had already
decided to issue the Emancipation Proclamation.
Greeley was born in Amherst, New Hampshire,
on February 3, 1811, to Mary Woodburn Greeley and Zaccheus
Greeley. His parents struggled to make a living at farming, and
therefore moved several times in his youth. His sporadic
schooling ended when he was 14, but he had an inquisitive mind
and would be a voracious reader throughout his life.
In 1826, Greeley began his publishing-journalistic career as
a printer’s apprentice with the Northern Spectator (East
Poultney, Vermont), and then moved with his family in 1831 to
Erie, Pennsylvania, where he was hired by the Erie Gazette.
Within a few months, he struck out on his own for New York City,
where he worked for several newspapers, including the Evening
Post, Spirit of the Times, Morning Post, and
Commercial Advertiser. In 1834, he and Jonas Winchester
founded The New Yorker, a literary weekly (not the
current magazine of the same name). Backed by New York politicos
Thurlow Weed and William Henry Seward, Greeley published in
1838-1839 a Whig Party organ, the Albany Jeffersonian,
and in 1840, the Log Cabin, to promote the election of
Whig presidential nominee William Henry Harrison.
In 1841, Greeley founded the New York Tribune, the
city’s first Whig daily, which soon became a financial and
editorial success. By 1860, the combined daily, weekly, and
semiweekly circulation of the Tribune reached almost
300,000. As editor of one of the most popular and influential
newspapers in the country, Greeley became one of the most well
known figures in the United States. His controversial crusades
against slavery, capital punishment, smoking, drinking, and
adultery, and for women’s rights, labor rights, vegetarianism,
quasi-socialist schemes, and trade protectionism brought him
both admiration and scorn. Unlike many white abolitionists, his
concern for the plight of African-Americans extended to free
blacks, who faced discrimination in the Antebellum North.
Although the editorials represented Greeley’s (sometimes
contradictory) views, he opened the rest of the journal to
various competing perspectives. The Tribune hired
talented editors and writers, such as Charles Dana (managing
editor), George Ripley, Margaret Fuller, and as the paper’s
European correspondent during the 1850s, Karl Marx.
Greeley gave wide exposure to Indiana editor John Soule’s
advice, “Go west, young man, go west,” and thereby became
associated in popular discourse with the catchphrase. Greeley
urged settlement of the West as well as sparsely populated areas
of the East and, particularly after the Civil War, the South. He
followed his own advice and embarked on a western trek to
California, partly to promote the need for a transcontinental
railroad. His experiences were published as An Overland
Journey, from New York to San Francisco in the Summer of 1859,
in which he discussed the need for a transcontinental railroad,
the deplorable conditions of the Native Americans, and the
peculiar practices of the Mormons in Utah. He also bought a farm
near the village of Chappaqua, 35 miles outside of New York
City, where he applied experimental scientific methods to
agriculture. Years later he would report his findings in the
book What I Know About Farming (1871).
Over the years, Greeley made several attempts to gain public
office but only succeeded when he won a brief three-month term
(December 1848–March 1849) in the U.S. House of Representatives,
following the death of an incumbent. In Congress, he quickly
made enemies on both sides of the aisle by vehemently attacking
the franking privilege, which allowed congressmen to send mail
for free. Greeley’s antislavery stance led him in 1854 to help
found the Republican Party in New York. Two year later, he
supported Republican John C. Frémont’s losing effort at the
presidency. In 1860, Greeley was instrumental in Abraham
Lincoln’s presidential nomination by the Republican Party
through the editor’s opposition to front-runner William Henry
Seward, Greeley’s former Whig benefactor.
As the possibility of secession and war loomed large, Greeley
expressed ambivalence about future path of the nation. After
Lincoln’s election, Greeley editorialized (November 9, 1860)
that the best hope for avoiding war might be to allow peaceful
secession. Yet when the slave states from the Deep South left
the Union, he criticized their action as undemocratic. After
Fort Sumter in April 1861, he backed the Union military war
effort, pushing hard for a quick victory. As the war wore on,
the editor proffered his good offices to bring about a peace
settlement, meeting with Confederate representatives in Niagara
Falls, Canada, in July 1864. Lincoln acquiesced in Greeley’s
participation, even though the president rightly accessed the
negotiations chances as futile.
From the early days of the war, Greeley kept constant
pressure on Lincoln to emancipate the slaves. His most famous
editorial on the subject was “The Prayer of Twenty Millions” (August 20, 1862), which urged the president to use
the Second Confiscation Act to allow Union commanders to free
the slaves of rebel masters. Although Lincoln had already
decided privately to issue the
Emancipation Proclamation, he responded publicly to Greeley that as president
his first task was to preserve the Union, whether that meant
keeping or abolishing slavery. (The Emancipation Proclamation
was announced on September 22, following the Union victory at
Antietam, and took effect on January 1, 1863.) Although Greeley
was at first reluctant, he eventually endorsed Lincoln’s
reelection in 1864. Despite a hectic schedule, the editor found
time to write a two-volume analysis of the Civil War, The
American Conflict (1864, 1865).
During Reconstruction, Greeley promoted political equality
for blacks and universal amnesty for Confederates as
complementary policies necessary for national reconciliation. On
the one hand, he condemned President Andrew Johnson for failing
to enforce Radical Reconstruction, while on the other hand he
helped bail former Confederate President Jefferson Davis out of
prison. In 1868, Greeley published his memoirs, Recollections
of a Busy Life.
Greeley had supported Republican Ulysses S. Grant for the
presidency in 1868, but within a few years he became frustrated
with the Grant administration’s policies and corruption. In May
1872, a dissident group of Liberal Republicans surprisingly
nominated Greeley for president. The Liberal Republicans, led by
Senators Carl Schurz, Lyman Trumbull, and Charles Sumner,
opposed the Grant administration’s military-backed
Reconstruction, expansionist foreign policy, high tariffs, and
seemingly widespread corruption. Greeley stood together with the
Liberals on all issues except for trade, on which he was a
protectionist. The party platform and the candidate downplayed
the issue. In July, the weak and desperate Democratic Party
also nominated Greeley as their standard-bearer.
Greeley resigned as editor of the Tribune and then took
the usual step (at the time) of personally campaigning for the
office. He delivered speeches across the country, including in
the South, which stressed national reconciliation. He faced an
uphill battle against much skepticism and ridicule, especially
in the Harper’s Weekly cartoons of caricaturist Thomas
Nast. In October, Greeley’s wife became ill and died later in
the month. A few days later, he was decisively crushed by
Grant’s reelection juggernaut, winning just six states and 44%
of the popular vote. Greeley returned to his Tribune
office. However, managing editor Whitelaw Reid, concerned about
his former boss’s deteriorating health and possible negative
effect on circulation, forced Greeley to relinquish the post.
Exhausted, disheartened, and ill, Horace Greeley died a few
weeks later on November 29, 1872, in Pleasantville, New York.
His funeral on December 4 was attended by a large gathering of
local, state, and national leaders, including President Ulysses
S. Grant and Chief Justice Salmon Chase. |