Showing posts with label Lorenzo Stephen Coffin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lorenzo Stephen Coffin. Show all posts

Thursday, September 26, 2019

John Orville Hopkins




John Orville Hopkins, July 19, 1876 (Cummingsville, Minn.) - May 31, 1973 (San Mateo, Calif.)

VP candidate for Universal Party (1964)

Running mate with nominee: Kirby James Hensley (1911-1999)

Popular vote: 19 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

The Universal Party, which was a descendant of the 1960 Outer Space Party, held their convention in Berkeley, Calif. on Aug. 8, 1964. Universal Life Church founder Kirby J. Hensley of Modesto, Calif. was nominated for President. Hensely was rather proud of the fact he could not read but had memorized portions of the Bible. Known as "The mail-order minister" almost anyone could be ordained in his church regardless of their real religious beliefs.

The VP nominee was John O. Hopkins, described as a Des Moines, Iowa farmer by the press. He was also the father of Party chair John Woehler Hopkins (1908-1975). John O. Hopkins was 88 years old, making him-- at least up to 1964-- the oldest candidate ever on a Presidential ticket. John Maxwell (Presidential nominee, American Vegetarian Party, 1948) and Lorenzo Stephen Coffin (VP nominee, United Christian Party, 1908) were both 85 when they ran. So was Greenback Party Presidential candidate Peter Cooper in 1876, the same year Hopkins was born.

In 1964 the Universal Party apparently did not publicize their extraterrestrial policies as much as in other elections. Their platform included an abolition of the following: income tax, Electoral College, the Federal Reserve Board, political lobbying, and political conventions. Although the platform had a strong libertarian theme, they also proposed that a "Congress of Nations" should be established as an international police force to end war.

They failed to obtain ballot status in any state, but were registered write-ins in California, where they tallied a whopping 19 votes.

Election history: none

Other occupations: bicycle dealer, hardware salesman, manager of a sporting goods company, farmer

Buried: Masonic Cemetery (Des Moines, Iowa)

Notes:
Moved to Des Moines, Iowa from Minnesota between 1897-1900 to join his brothers in their sporting
 goods business.
Some sources incorrectly list Roscoe B. MacKenna as the 1964 running mate. MacKenna was the
 1968 VP nominee.

Monday, July 29, 2019

Symon Gould



Holdridge and Gould



Symon Gould, May 19, 1894 (New York, NY) - November 24, 1963 (New York, NY)

VP candidate for American Vegetarian Party (aka Vegetarian Party) (1948, 1952, 1956)

Running mate with nominee (1948): John Maxwell (1863-1960)
Running mate with nominee (1952): Daniel J. Murphy (1887-1965)
Running mate with nominee (1956): Herbert M. Shelton (1895-1985)

Popular vote (1948): 68 (0.00%)
Popular vote (1952): 0 (0.00%)
Popular vote (1956): 0 (0.00%)

Electoral vote (1948, 1952, 1956): 0/531

The campaign (1948):

Attempting to build on the perceived momentum of America seeing the advantages of a meatless diet as a result of WWII food rationing, vegetarian activist Symon Gould was one of the main forces behind the creation of the American Vegetarian Party in 1947 during the sessions of a American Naturopathic Association meeting. The aims of the Party appeared to be simply for promotional purposes rather than political, since they apparently never attained ballot status in any state during the five presidential elections they existed.

85-year old John Maxwell, who ran a vegetarian restaurant in Chicago, was selected as the Presidential nominee. Along with Peter Cooper, standard-bearer of the Greenback Party in 1876, this age is something of a record for Presidential candidates (Lorenzo Stephen Coffin was also 85 when he was the running mate for the United Christian Party in 1908). One legal problem regarding Maxwell-- he was born in England evidently as a British subject-- making him ineligible to hold the Presidential office. Gould selected himself, or so the story goes, as the running mate.

Wikipedia cites Daniel J. Murphy as the 1948 running mate but all other evidence points to Gould.

Maxwell said he had "tasted no meat for 45 years" and also ran against alcohol, tobacco, and pharmaceutical medicine. Other issues included supporting government ownership of all natural resources, advocating a law prohibiting farmers from spending more than 20% of their labor on raising meat, and a pension of $100 for everyone over the age of 65.

According to Gould, Maxwell "wanted to accomplish something during the campaign" and that was his thinking behind marrying a woman 40 years younger than himself as the election season unfolded.

Gould predicted 5 million votes for the Party: "Three million of these would be the American vegetarians and the remainder of the votes would come from prohibitionist, anti-vivisectionists and anti-cigarette smoking groups. We will also attract other groups of people of similar high moral principle."

During the campaign Gould became embroiled in a public feud with the writer George Bernard Shaw regarding some esoteric differences in vegetarianism.

The campaign (1952):

The original 1952 ticket was headed by frequent party-jumper Herbert C. Holdridge with Gould once again being in the VP slot.

Holdridge, who claimed he had been a vegetarian since 1947, was the only American general who retired during the Second World War. In 1944 he appeared to be in support of the Socialist Party of America but by 1948 the retired general was attempting to gain the Democratic Party nomination for President. By 1952 he was covering all bets-- He was the Presidential nominee of the American Rally for Peace, Abundance and the Constitution (aka the American Rally Party), and he was making moves to be the Democratic Party nominee again, plus he was the nominee of the American Vegetarian Party.

For reasons that are unclear, Holdridge either withdrew or was forced off the ticket in late September/early October, 1952. Holdridge's campaign manager Burr McCloskey claimed the retired general quit because the vegetarians were "making Holdridge out to look as crackpot as they are." In another news source McCloskey said Holdridge was "asked" to resign from the ticket as the AVP had sharp differences of opinion over issues with the parallel American Rally Party campaign and could not endorse those activities or issues. As an aside, McCloskey would later be the VP nominee for the Pioneer Party in 1956.

The retired general continued to campaign, without a running mate, on the American Rally Party and quit that party shortly after Election Day.

At this point with only a month left in the campaign, Daniel J. Murphy was selected as the new substitute Presidential nominee for the American Vegetarian Party. Murphy had lost his left arm and leg decades earlier in an accident as a railroad employee and was now running an artificial limb shop in San Francisco. 

The campaign (1956):

The AVP nominated Herbert M. Shelton for President with Gould being the Party's VP choice for the third election in a row.

Shelton was a naturopath and pacifist. He was arrested, convicted, and jailed many times in his life, once for anti-draft activity during WWI, but most of his legal woes were due to charges of quackery, practicing medicine without a license, and twice for negligent homicide in the course of his "treatments" (1942 and 1978). Apparently Shelton himself didn't take his nomination very seriously.

The AVP platform promoted ideas that were obscure in 1956 but are more widely discussed today such as: "Vegetarianism is synonymous with universal brotherhood and universal peace. Its fundamental principle of 'anti-killing' if generally adopted would banish wars. In furtherance of this ideal, the American Vegetarian Party is unconditionally opposed to the slaughter of animals for sustenance, sport, or style. We contend that these barbaric and uncivilized practices brutalize men and generate in them a blood-lust that ultitmately seems to find an outlet in annihilating wars."

Election history:
1960 - US President (American Vegetarian Party) - defeated
1962 - US Senate (NY) (American Vegetarian Party) - defeated
1964 - US President (American Vegetarian Party) - died before election

Other occupations: editor, Secretary of the Vegetarian Society of New York, founder of the International Film Arts Guild in 1930, founder of American Library Service in 1922,

Buried: ?

Notes:
The winner of the 1962 Senate election was Republican Jacob Javits, a former classmate of Gould's--
 Also in that Senate race was Stephen Emery who also the Socialist Labor VP nominee in 1948 and  1952.
Alleged editor of the American print of the silent film Nosferatu.
Went on a three-week fast on an annual basis.
Jewish by birth, became pro-Israel during a 1949 visit, urging the UK to support US efforts there.
Died of cancer at age 70 two days after President Kennedy was assassinated.                                          In the Liz Taylor/Richard Burton film The Comedians (1967), the actor Paul Ford portrays "Mr. Smith," who was the fictional 1948 Vegetarian Party nominee for President.

 

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

Lorenzo Stephen Coffin



Lorenzo Stephen Coffin, April 29, 1823 (Alton, NH) - January 17, 1915 (Fort Dodge, Iowa)

VP candidate for United Christian Party (1908)

Running mate with nominee: Daniel Braxton Turney (1848-1926)
Popular vote: 463 (0.0%)
Electoral vote: 0/483

The campaign:

The United Christian Party resurfaced in 1908 after we last saw them in 1900. They apparently skipped the 1904 election, either that or they ran stealth candidates.

1908 platform was short and to the point: "The platform of the united Christian party is based on the ten commandments and the golden rule and favors direct primary elections, the initiative, referendum, recall, uniform marriage and divorce laws, equal rights for men and women, government ownership of coal mines, oil wells and public utilities: the regulation of trusts and the election of the president and vice-president and senators of the United States by the direct vote of the people."

At age 85, Lorenzo S. Coffin is one of the oldest third party running mates. He was probably one of the last Civil War veterans to be on a third party ticket as well.

The UCP seems to have been on the ballot in at least two states with 400 votes in Illinois and 63 in Michigan.

Election history:
1906 - Governor of Iowa (Prohibition Party) - defeated

Other occupations: farmer, Union soldier (Iowa Infantry) during the Civil War, newspaper editor, grange activist, member of the Iowa Railroad Commission (1883-1888), instructor in Geauga Seminary

Buried: Willowledge Cemetery (Fort Dodge, Iowa)

Notes:
Attended Oberlin College
Moved to Iowa in 1854
Organized the Iowa Benevolent Association for ex-convicts and unwed mothers.
Started out as a Republican before joining the Prohibition Party.
During his time as an instructor in Geauga Seminary, James A. Garfield was one of his students.
His burial site is on the National Register of Historic Places.