Showing posts with label Single Tax Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Single Tax Party. Show all posts

Thursday, June 27, 2019

John Cromwell Lincoln






John Cromwell Lincoln, July 17, 1866 (Painesville, Ohio) - May 24, 1959 (Phoenix, Ariz.)

VP candidate for Commonwealth Land Party (aka Single Tax Party) (1924)

Running mate with nominee: William J. Wallace (1861-1927)
Popular vote: 2,919 (0.01%)
Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

Changing their party name from that of Single Tax Party to Commonwealth Land Party, the Georgist single-issue group made another attempt for the White House. Running mate John C. Lincoln noted years later that the campaign personally cost him $2000 and, "It was a crazy thing to do."

The Wallace/Lincoln ticket was on the ballot in nine states. Their best showing was in Ohio with a tally of 1,246 (0.06%).

Election history: none.

Other occupations: Inventor, entrepreneur, philanthropist, author, founder of the Lincoln Electric Co., President of the Bagdad Mine and Copper Co., established the Lincoln Foundation, Trustee of Henry George School of Social Science, co-founder of the Camelback Inn.

Buried: Greenwood Memory Lawn Cemetery (Phoenix, Ariz.)

Notes:
If elected, Lincoln would have become President in 1927 upon the death of Wallace, meaning he
 would have been our 2nd President Lincoln.
Buried in the same cemetery as Don Bolles, Robert Cox, Loyal and Edith Davis (parents of Nancy
 Reagan), Paul Fannin, Beverly Michaels, Helen McRuer Mitchell, Walter Winchell
Drove his own handmade automobile
Heard Henry George speak in Cleveland in 1889, sparking his journey into the single-tax movement.
Posthumously inducted into the American Mining Hall of Fame in 1998.
Holder of numerous electricity-related patents.
Mother was a physician.
Father was an immigrant from England.

Saturday, June 22, 2019

Richard Clarence Barnum

 Macauley and Barnum
Richard Clarence Barnum, July, 1879 (Ellis County, Tex.) - Aug. 27, 1961 (Cuyahoga County, Ohio)

VP candidate for Single Tax Party (aka National Single Tax Party) (1920)

Running mate with nominee: Robert Colvin Macauley (1865-1933)
Popular vote: 8110 (0.03%)
Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

The single-issue single-tax disciples of Henry George had morphed from the tiny Land Value Tax Party to the Single Tax Party with a cat as their party symbol.

Except for the final month, most of the STP campaign consisted of Macauley running a front porch campaign from his home in Philadelphia.

Running mate R.C. Barnum didn't need any professional political handlers: "Mrs. Barnum is my business partner. I intend to conduct my political campaign in the same way I handle my private business. Then whom shall I select as my campaign manager but my wife?"

The Macauley/Barnum ticket was on the ballot in 9 states and didn't exactly turn the world upside down, winning 8110 popular votes for a national total of 0.03%.

Election history: none

Other occupations: publisher

Buried: Highland Park Cemetery (Highland Hills, Ohio)

Notes:
Arrived in Cleveland, Ohio around 1910.
Was 6 ft. 8 in. tall.
His parents, Franklin and Harriet Barnum natives of Ohio, appeared to be Texas residents for just a short time, and returned to the Buckeye State, living in Rock Creek.
Some sources claim Carrie Chapman Catt was actually the nominee or running mate in 1920.
Buried in the same cemetery as Donald “Cinque” DeFreeze.