Showing posts with label election of 1936. Show all posts
Showing posts with label election of 1936. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Claude Alonzo Watson






Claude Alonzo Watson,  June 26, 1885 (Wexford, Mich.) – January 3, 1978 (Los Angeles, Calif.)

VP candidate for Prohibition Party (aka National Prohibition Party aka Commonwealth Party) (1936)

Running mate with nominee: David Leigh Colvin (1880-1959)

Popular vote: 37,646 (0.08%)

Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

The 1936 Prohibition Party convention selected WWI hero Alvin York as the running mate for D. Leigh Colvin (who was himself the 1920 VP selection for the Party) but the decorated soldier declined so the delegates turned to Los Angeles attorney Claude A. Watson.

It must have been a very difficult campaign year for the Colvin/Watson ticket. It was the first presidential election since the experiment with Prohibition had ended and for the veteran Party activists it must have felt like starting all over again.

The 1936 Party platform, seething with anger, roasted the two major parties over repeal of Prohibition. It also outlined policy statements on other issues and stated: "We present a sane, liberal and comprehensive program on the great problems of our time." This would probably be the last time the word "liberal" was used in a positive way by this group. 

Other selected passages foreshadowed the future for this party:

"It is plain that the crass materialism of our dominant parties; their abandonment of moral precepts; their flouting of the majesty of the law; their double dealing; their supreme self interest must be replaced by a return to the early American principles of dependence upon Almighty God as the source of all just government and to a following of the principles of the Prince of Peace."

"Movie Censorship

  We stand for federal supervision of the creation of motion picture films at the source of production so that the public effect may be beneficial and uplifting."

"Gambling

  We are opposed to the legalization of lotteries, gambling and all other forms of exploitation of the people."


With recorded votes in 25 states, their strongest finish was in California with 0.49%.

Election history:
1938 - Attorney General of California (Prohibition Party) - defeated
1942 - Attorney General of California (Prohibition Party) - defeated
1944 - US President (Prohibition Party) - defeated
1946 - Attorney General of California (Prohibition Party) - defeated
1948 - US President (Prohibition Party) - defeated
1950 - Attorney General of California (Prohibition Party) - defeated
1952 - Los Angeles County (Calif.) District Attorney (Nonpartisan) - defeated
1954 - Republican nomination for Attorney General of California - defeated

Other occupations: minor league baseball player, attorney, Methodist minister, author

Buried: Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale, Calif.)

Notes:
Buried in the same cemetery as Forrest Ackerman, James Arness, Theda Bara, Joe Barbera, George Barris, Billy Barty, L. Frank Baum, Warner Baxter, Iceberg Slim, Wallace Beery, Joe Besser, Joan Blondell, Monte Blue, Humphrey Bogart, Gutzon Borglum, Clara Bow, William Boyd, Joe E. Brown, Vincent Bugliosi, George Burns and Gracie Allen, Francis X. Bushman, Jack Carson, William Castle, Lon Chaney, Charlie Chase, Nat King Cole, Natalie Cole, Donald Crisp, George Cukor, Bob Cummings, Michael Curtiz, Dan Dailey, Delmer Daves, Sammy Davis Jr., William Demarest, Noah Dietrich, Walt Disney, Theodore Dreiser, Marie Dressler, Don Drysdale, W.C. Fields, Larry Fine, Errol Flynn, Dwight Frye, Clark Gable, Jerry Giesler, Samuel Goldwyn, Sydney Greenstreet, Jean Harlow, Edith Head, Edward Everett Horton, Michael Jackson, Jennifer Jones, Tom Keene, Ted Knight, Kathryn Kuhlman, Louis L'Amour, Alan Ladd, Carole Landis, Mervyn Leroy, Harold Lloyd, Carole Lombard, Ernst Lubitsch, Jeanette MacDonald, Chico Marx, Gummo Marx, Mike Mazurki, Chuck McCann, Victor McLaglen, Vincente Minnelli, Tom Mix, Clayton Moore, Hugh O'Brian, Merle Oberon, Clifford Odets, Edna May Oliver, R.F. Outcault, Lilli Palmer, Franklin Pangborn, Mary Pickford, Dick Powell, Blossom Rock, S.Z. Sakall, David O. Selznick, Aimee Semple McPherson, Norma Shearer, Red Skelton, William French Smith, Carrie Snodgress, Max Steiner, Casey Stengel, Jimmy Stewart, Elizabeth Taylor, Robert Taylor, Irving Thalberg, Spencer Tracy, Ben Turpin, Hal B. Wallis, Mary Wells, James Whale, Bobby Womack, Sam Wood, Robert Woolsey, Hank Worden, William Wyler, Ed Wynn, Keenan Wynn, and Robert Young
The winner in the 1938 race for Attorney General of California was Earl Warren.
The winner in the 1950 race for Attorney General of California was Edmund G. "Pat" Brown.
Graduate of Alma College (Mich.)
His widow, Maude (1889-1996) lived to be 106.
Licensed pilot.
Sometimes called Dr. Claude Watson although the origin of the prefix is murky.

Monday, July 15, 2019

George A. Nelson





George A. Nelson, November 15, 1873 (Polk County, Wis.) – May 4, 1962 (St. Croix Falls, Wis.)

VP candidate for Socialist Party of America (1936)

Running mate with nominee: Norman M. Thomas (1884-1968)

Popular vote: 187,910 (0.41%)

Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

As the Socialist Party of America continued their slow downward spiral to oblivion, the once mighty third party nominated Norman Thomas for President on his third run for the office, and in a bid to appeal to agrarian and Midwest voters, George A. Nelson of Wisconsin was tapped as the running mate.

At the SPA convention, the delegates voted to seek cooperation with labor groups in creating a broader based party, but they drew the line at working with the Communist Party USA in forming a united front against fascism and rejected the appeal of the CPUSA to unite in a joint effort.

The SPA itself was still going through major generational, philosophical, political, and personality conflicts. A significant number of old guard right wing Socialists split away and in 1936 were forming their own group, the Social Democratic Federation of the United States of America. They endorsed Roosevelt in 1936, a nod to just how far one of the major parties had integrated the SPA's past platforms into mainstream politics.

On the other end of the spectrum, the SPA absorbed a wave of new members when the Workers Party of the United States dissolved in 1936. These were mainly Trotskyists and rather than transitioning into one happy Big Tent the SPA was becoming increasingly factionalized and dysfunctional.

Thomas and Nelson ran a very energetic campaign, and sometimes it seemed that they were running against Lemke's Union Party more than were against FDR. Although Thomas warned the country against the fascist and antisemitic leanings of the Union Party, the more militant wings of the SPA itself included paramilitary uniformed followers (blue shirts, red ties) with their own special salute (raised arm, clenched fist). It was the political fashion of the era.

With votes recorded in 38 states, the SPA only cracked 1% in New York with 1.55%. Nelson's home state of Wisconsin was next with 0.84% and it went downhill from there. As meager as their national result of 0.41% was, in the five presidential elections remaining for the SPA they would never again finish with a percentage as high.

Election history:
1921-1922 - Wisconsin State Assembly (Republican)
1925-1928 - Wisconsin State Assembly (Republican)
1926 - Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly during Special Session (Republican)
1934 - Governor of Wisconsin (Socialist Party of America) - defeated
1938 - Lt. Governor of Wisconsin (Farmer-Labor Progressive Federation) - defeated
1942 - Treasurer of Wisconsin (Socialist Party of America) - defeated
1944 - Governor of Wisconsin (Socialist Party of America) - defeated

Other occupations: miner, machinist, dairy farmer, author, school clerk, University of Wisconsin Regent, Delegate to the Republican National Convention 1928

Buried: Milltown Cemetery (Milltown, Wis.)

Notes:
Son of Danish immigrants.
Found enough gold during the Yukon Gold Rush of 1898 to purchase a farm in Wisconsin.
Joined the Social Democratic Party in 1899.
Was born under the name George A. Nielsen, but it was changed when he was in school "to enable
 his Irish teacher to keep it straight."
Was considered a "Progressive Republican" in the 1920s.

Sunday, July 14, 2019

Thomas Charles O'Brien








Thomas Charles O'Brien, June 19, 1887 (Boston, Mass.) – November 22, 1951 (Boston, Mass.)

VP candidate for Union Party (aka Royal Oak Party aka The Third Party) (1936)

Running mate with nominee: William F. Lemke (1878-1950)

Popular vote: 892,378 (1.95%)    

Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

One historical theory behind the creation of the Union Party was that Louisiana Governor Huey "Kingfish" Long or one his  surrogates would be the nominee of the new third party, splitting the Democratic vote and robbing FDR of his re-election victory. Then in 1940 Long would ride in to the country's rescue as the new President. But Long's 1935 assassination ended that alleged strategy.

The concept became reality to a degree. The Union Party was a confederation of three groups who had one thing in common-- they hated FDR. Here is how I described the leaders of the factions in an essay I wrote in 2008:

Dr. Francis Everitt Townsend (1867-1960) had proposed in 1933 an old age pension plan for retired citizens over the age of 60– grants of $200 a month funded by a 2% national sales tax. A plan like this would’ve been considered socialist in the 1920s, but the reality of the Great Depression made labels less important. The idea took off like wildfire and Townsend Clubs spread by the thousands all over country. In Washington State, over 400 such clubs were in existence by 1950, including places such as Montesano and Satsop ... The Townsendites have been credited by historians with helping to prod the government into creating the Social Security system.

Father Charles E. Coughlin (1891-1979) was a religious/political activist who used radio as his main medium. At first a strong supporter of FDR, he quickly became a bitter and vocal opponent. Coughlin saw Wall Street and Communism as two sides of the same monster, and became increasingly antisemitic and pro-fascist as the decade regressed internationally. I’m not using the term "fascist" as rhetoric, by saying so I mean he really expressed sympathy for Hitler and Mussolini and their treatment of the Jews in Europe. In 1936 the Socialist Party candidate for President denounced the Union Party as fascist, based mostly on Father Coughlin’s presence.

Gerald L.K. Smith (1898-1976) had inherited the Share Our Wealth movement from the freshly assassinated Louisiana demagogue Huey Long. Originally a Disciples of Christ radio evangelist, Smith eventually aimed the SOW program into a white supremacy movement. He later became a prominent American Holocaust denier and all-around hate-spewing nutcase.


The historian William Manchester gives his take on the Union Party: "… Father Coughlin and his colleagues preempted the lunatic fringe, presenting for the voters’ consideration their new Union Party. The Union candidate for President was Congressman William Lemke of North Dakota, a strange individual with a pocked face, a glass eye, and a shrill voice; to the radio priest’s dismay he insisted upon wearing a gray cloth cap and an outsize suit. Coughlin baptized him ‘Liberty Bill,’ and Gerald L.K. Smith drew up plans to guard the November polls with a hundred thousand Townsendite youths. The radio priest promised to quit the air forever if he didn’t deliver nine million votes for the Union ticket. That seemed extravagant, but in June both major parties were taking Lemke seriously … The sobriquet ‘Liberty Bill’ was catching on. Father Coughlin rather liked the alliterative resemblance to ‘Liberty Bell.’ Then, too late, he remembered something: the Liberty Bell was cracked."

The Union Party belonged to Coughlin more than anyone else. After attempting to lure Northern Tier Senators William Borah of Idaho, Burton Wheeler of Montana (the Progressive Party VP nominee in 1924), or Floyd B. Olson of Minnesota, the Party settled on Republican Rep. Lemke. For VP they chose Boston Democrat Thomas Charles O'Brien.

O'Brien was simultaneously running for the US Senate in Massachusetts as a member of the Union Party in race that would be won by Republican Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.

Lemke and Coughlin predicted an Electoral College deadlock to the press, but in the end it was an enormous Roosevelt landslide. With votes recorded in 37 states the Lemke/O'Brien ticket finished strongest in Lemke's home state of North Dakota (13.41%), followed by Minnesota (6.58%), Massachusetts (6.45%), Rhode Island (6.29%), Oregon (5.27%), Wisconsin (4.79%), Ohio (4.39%) and Michigan (4.20%).

The Union Party fell apart after the election. FDR's administration had managed to co-opt several of their economic issues.

Election history:
1912 - Massachusetts House of Representatives (Democratic) - defeated
1913 - Massachusetts House of Representatives (Democratic) - defeated
1914 - Massachusetts State Senate (Democratic) - defeated
1925 - Mayor of Boston, Mass. (Nonpartisan) - defeated
1930 - Democratic primary for US Senate (Mass.) - defeated
1936 - Democratic primary for US Senate (Mass.) - defeated
1936 - Republican primary for US Senate (Mass.) - defeated
1936 - Governor of Massachusetts (Union Party) - defeated

Other occupations: baggageman, brakeman, soda clerk, bicycle repairman, labor attorney, Massachusetts Board of Parole 1913-1916, appointed District Attorney for Suffolk Dist. 1922-1927, Massachusetts Deputy Director of Prisons 1916-1919, Boston's Commissioner of Penal Institutions 1919

Buried: ?

Notes:
Catholic.
Died from a heart attack.
Graduate of Harvard and Harvard Law School.

Saturday, July 13, 2019

Emil F. Teichert






Emil F. Teichert, December 17, 1897 (West Newton, Penn.) - January 9, 1972 (Lake Hill, NY)

VP candidate for Socialist Labor Party (aka Industrial Government Party) (1936)

Running mate with nominee: John W. Aiken (1896-1968)

Popular vote: 12,799 (0.03%)

Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

In 1936 the Socialist Labor Party elevated their 1932 VP nominee John W. Aiken to be the standard bearer. Emil F. Teichert, a resident of New York, was chosen as the running mate.

The 1936 SLP platform didn't think much of FDR's New Deal policies:
  
"Where a social revolution is pending and, for whatever reason, is not accomplished, reaction is the alternative. Every reform granted by capitalism is a concealed measure of reaction, exemplified by the NRA, AAA, TVA, CCC, WPA, etc. He who says reform says preservation, and he who says that reforms under capitalism are possible and worthwhile thereby declares that a continuation of capitalism is possible and worthwhile. But capitalism has grown into an all-destroying and all-devouring monster that must itself be destroyed if humanity is to live. Fascism, Nazism, Absolutism in government-- in short, Industrial Feudalism-- are but means in the  attempts to preserve capitalism.

American capitalism, along with capitalism in the rest of the world  today, is trembling in the balance between decay or progress, reaction or revolution. THIS IS THE HISTORIC HOUR OF THE AMERICAN WORKING CLASS"


It was a pretty bad year for the SLP at the ballot box, even for them. They finished in a dismal 7th place. Presented as an option in the voting booth in 15 states, their best result was in Rhode Island with 0.30%.

Election history:
1932 - Lt. Governor of New York (Socialist Labor Party) - defeated
1933 - New York City Board of Aldermen President (Socialist Labor Party) - defeated
1934 - Lt. Governor of New York (Socialist Labor Party) - defeated
1937 - Mayor of New York City (Industrial Government Party) - defeated

Other occupations: office worker for the Pennsylvania Railroad, book translator, lecturer, newspaper writer

Buried: ?

Notes:
The winner in the 1937 mayoral race was Fiorello LaGuardia.
Older brother of 1944-1948 SLP Presidental nominee Edward A. Teichert.
Presidential electors in Pennsylvania (where the SLP was called the Industrial Labor Party) included
 E.A. Teichert, Minnie J. Teichert, and Ernest M. Teichert.
Moved to Lake Hill, NY ca. 1947.

Friday, July 12, 2019

Willard W. Kemp

Willard W. Kemp

VP candidate for Christian Party (aka Christian Party of America) (1936)

Running mate with nominee: William Dudley Pelley (1890-1965)

Popular vote: 1,598 (0.00%)

Electoral vote: 0/531

The campaign:

The campaign has been described in the Addendum (*) below. The Christian Party appeared on the ballot only in Washington State, where they ran a crop of candidates for several offices. Meanwhile, I'll share a few small details about the elusive Vice-Presidential nominee:

Willard W. Kemp, Pelley's running mate and resident of Alpine, Calif., had already gained attention from law enforcement before he was nominated. Based in the San Diego area, Kemp ran a paramilitary unit known as the "Silver Rangers" who would practice on property out in the hills east of El Cajon under the name of "San Diego Silver Shirt Rifle Club." The idea was to be prepared for May Day, 1934, when they would be waiting for an expect Communist uprising in San Diego and in the ensuing confusion the 200 or so Silver Shirts would emerge victorious and start their own revolution in the process with the help, Kemp believed, of local military units the San Diego Sheriff.

It didn't turn out that way. No Communists showed up, no uprising took place.

A government spy was within the midst of the Silver Shirts. Once he was discovered the fascists beat him and fractured his skull but it was too late to stop the government inquiries. By the time of the 1936 elections Kemp was already in the Federal radar.

What became of Kemp is a matter of conjecture. Did he quit the whole fascist organization in March, 1937 and vanish himself? Was he banned from living on the West Coast as a result of WWII security measures? One source claims Kemp killed himself after the 1936 defeat. Someone matching his name and description was in the news in Salt Lake City in 1938 as an alcoholic oil salesman accused of intoxicating some fireman on duty. His name came up frequently in 1940 during the Dies Committee investigations. Did Kemp die in Southern California in 1966? Lots of blanks to fill in on this case.
   
Election history: none

Other occupations: oil speculator and sales

Buried: ?

Notes:

*Addendum:

I originally compiled the following section for OlyBlog, Nov. 16, 2008, as a profile of 1936 Christian Party candidate for Washington State Governor Malcolm Mark Moore. Although Kemp is not named, he is described in a news report:

https://www.olyblog.net/newWP/2008/11/16/ungovernor-1936-malcolm-mark-moore/

Ungovernor, 1936 – Malcolm Mark Moore

The eight men running for Washington State Governor in 1936 represented the political spectrum from communist to theocratic fascist. And when I say "theocratic fascist," I’m not using inflammatory language to generalize a political group. No. The members of the Christian Party, or the Silver Shirts as they were known, promoted fascism, white supremacy, hatred of Jews, openly admired Hitler and Mussolini, and thought their presidential candidate communicated directly with otherworldly powers and was doing God’s work. What makes their gubernatorial candidate in 1936 so fascinating is that M.M. Moore was a respected political office-holder and pillar of the Ilwaco and Pacific County community. P.U.D. founder and Commissioner, Ilwaco City Treasurer and City Councilman, active in civic groups, store owner– his involvement with the Silver Shirts seemed out of place.

The historian Karen Hoppes provides some background on the Silver Shirts: "The Silvershirt Legion of America was born on January 30, 1933. Its founder and spiritual leader, William Dudley Pelley, fashioned the Silvershirts after the Storm Troopers of the NSDAP. Even though the ideology and structure mimicked the German Nazi Party, the Silvershirt Legion was the sole reflection of the spiritualistic ideas of its founder."

Pelley (1890-1965) had set up his headquarters in Asheville, N.C. Stating that he had "died" on May 29, 1928, the near-death experience had transformed him. According to Hoppes, "Pelley believed he had acquired amazing new powers of stamina and reflection. Furthermore, he claimed to possess a built-in ‘mental radio’ through which he could ‘tune in on the minds and voices of those in another dimension of being.’ Through his studies in astrology, occult, numerology and other metaphysical fields, Pelley concluded that he knew the answers to the questions plaguing mankind. These answers could be found in the messages of the Great Pyramid at Gizeh …" Hoppes says Pelley also predicted "the total collapse of the United States, which was to be September 16, 1936." He also predicted his own death would happen in 1962 (he guessed three years too soon) and Christ would return on Sept. 17, 2001.

It is estimated there were 15,000 party members by 1934. Pelley had visions of a "Christian Commonwealth." Hoppes: "In this system, the United States would be transformed into a giant corporation, which would be operated by native-born white American Christian stockholders who, without having to work, would each receive monthly dividends of $83.33."

The uniform, which was required to be worn at all party functions, consisted of a silver-gray shirt and a red "L" on the left breast. A blue tie included the special individual membership number sewn on. Party initiation and regulations were strict and complete obedience was expected.

Pelley announced his run for the U.S. Presidency in 1935, but managed to get his name on the ballot of only one state. Yup. You got it. The Evergreen State. The historian Eckard V. Toy Jr., disputing the oft-quoted "Soviet of Washington" label, makes this case for Pelley’s ability to run in our state: "Washington’s exceptionalism during the 1930s was probably due less to the radicalism of its parties than to the ‘eccentricity and opportunism’ of some of its politicians. The novelist Mary McCarthy made this point in 1936 when she described her home state’s political atmosphere as ‘wild, comic, theatrical, dishonest, disorganized, hopeful; but … not revolutionary.’"

Washington State was foreign territory to Pelley, but in spite of that he had no trouble attracting candidates to run for statewide office. Some of them had been active in Townsend Clubs and/or the Liberty Party campaign of 1932. They came from the middle class, some of them were professional men. Dr. Dwight D. Clarke of Olympia was the Christian Party candidate for Secretary of State. Chehalis insurance salesman Orville Roundtree, who had run for U.S. Congress as a Democrat in 1932 and Liberty Party in 1934, was trying a third time for the same office under the Christian Party. Roundtree would become Pelley’s chief organizer in Washington.

And then there was Christian Party gubernatorial candidate, M.M. Moore.

Malcolm Mark Moore was born in Washington State, probably in Clark County, Aug. 1883. He was the son of Ohio native Frank M. Moore, employed as a civilian clerk at Vancouver Barracks. In 1900 Frank appears to be a single father with two children, Malcolm and Alice. Malcolm married Juanita, a native of Oregon, around 1906 and settled in Portland. While there he worked as a clerk (1910) and by 1920 was a salesman for Goodyear Rubber Co. The couple had two daughters and a son. The Moores moved to Ilwaco around 1924.

Moore became active in Ilwaco civic affairs. A May 13, 1966 article in the Chinook Observer outlines Moore’s resume: "Mr. Moore has lived in Ilwaco for 42 years past and served in that city as a volunteer fireman for 30 years, on the town council for six years, town treasurer for nine years, town clerk for seven years, Ilwaco port auditor for five years, was organizer of Pacific county’s Public Utility District No. 2, and served as its commissioner for 20 years, and was secretary and a director of the Washington PUD Commissioners’ Association for six years."

"The Father of Public Power in Pacific County" as the South Bend Journal liked to call him, earned that name by being a tireless proponent of the then radical notion of establishing public utility districts in place of private power monopolies. It is hard to imagine the distinguished gentleman I see in newspaper photos allowing himself to wear a silly uniform and sign up with a specimen like Pelley. But he did.

Pelley campaigned throughout the state, giving many speeches. He was basically ignored by the press. One of the few descriptions of a Christian Party rally I found by a non-Pelley source comes from the left-wing Washington Commonwealth (Seattle), July 4, 1936:

Christian Party Strut Heroics
 

Staff Correspondent Attends Meeting of the Lowly Followers of the Self Styled Gods’ Own Representative
 

Ever seen William Dudley Pelley and his crew in action at a meeting of the Christian Commonwealth Party?
 

No? Then you’ve missed seeing some slickers work at the old game of skinning the people.
 

Boy, what a show! And how folks go for it!

"Into the crowded hall (Moose Temple, last Tuesday) walks Pelley, followed by his lieutenant, a tall false-alarm from California who aspires to be vice-president of the U.S., followed by their big noise, the official ballyhooer, followed by six color-bearers, three carrying the Stars and Stripes, and three the flag of the Christian Party– a big red "L" sewed on a field of white."

"Meanwhile we in the audience arise and sing the ‘Star Spangled Banner.’"

"Song concluded, and the air thus properly thickened with patriotism, the ballyhooer, now on the platform, starts out: ‘Folks, this is STILL America!’ (Applause)."

"’This is STILL the land of the free and the home of the brave!’ (Loud applause)."

"’And by God, citizens like us are going to see that it stays so!’ (Louder applause)."

"The big noise now proceeds to his real business, the build-up of Pelley, who is to follow him on the program, winding up, ‘And now I wish to introduce the man who has been chosen by God to lead America out of the depression!’"

"When Pelley takes the platform everyone gets up, including us, though we’re a little sickened by this tribute."

"Pelley gives us the works. From position 1, straight front to the audience, hands in pockets, he tells us that in all his travels through 30 states he has not seen a group of people more intelligent-looking than this one; that the logical place to start the Christian Commonwealth is in Washington, the spot in the U.S. fartherest from the cancer-infested East, where Jews reign. ‘We should make this a movement,’ he says, ‘from Washington (state) to Washington (D.C.).’"

"From position 2, walking about, taking a stance here and there, he goes into personal history. It seems that several years ago, while secluded in a New York apartment, he heard a call from God to go out and fight America’s enemies, so he went out and organized the Silver Legion to persecute the Jews."

"Time marched on, and not long ago Pelley got word through his direct connection with the Above that it was time for his Silvershirts to get into the political ring. ‘Today,’ says he, ‘We’re going straight ahead to get Christian Party candidates registered for every possible electoral office.’"

"And now, from position 3, leaning over confidentially, gesturing freely with his arms, he begins feeding out the propaganda– such stuff that it revolted us to see the people eating it out of his hand. Sample slices:"

"’That fine, brainy type of statesman, Adolf Hitler– .’"


"’There is no Fascism in Germany; Hitler has set up a protectorate over German institutions– .’"


"’Suppose a house is being robbed, and there are 12 of us in the room next to the one where the burglar is. We wouldn’t care whether or not we had badges; we’d go in and take the shirt off the burglar–‘ (Mind, it’s 12 against 1)."

"’Mussolini not only thumbed his nose at the League of Nations; he kicked it in the teeth–‘ (Exaltingly)."

"‘The Silvershirts are the guardians of the Christian Commonwealth, taking care of our poor, hungry, bedeviled people–‘."


"Just as we began thinking we could stomach no more, Pelley quit. During the intermission which followed, the ballyhooer signalled for the squeeze play and the collection plates were passed by some of the aides de camp, pompous because of the red ‘L’s’ sewed on their shirt fronts over their hearts. Those ‘L’s’, by the way, stand for ‘Life, Liberty, Love, Liberation.’"

"Collection results: $109.22. Not bad from an assemblage of 500 people, considering most of it came in dimes and nickels from the poor."

"Well, now we sing again, this time the ‘Battle Hymn of the Republic,’ to sound the pitch for the man from California, Pelley’s right hand man, who soon rises to speak."

"And this guy plays no mean second fiddle to ‘the Chief’ in handing out the hokum:"

"’Roosevelt, the Big Grin, as the Chief likes to call him–‘."


"’I’d like to go back to Washington, D.C., and take the shirt off Tugwell– yes, and his britches too, if the ladies here will permit me to say so–‘."


"’We hope to do this job with pigskin gloves over knuckles of iron. But if it shall come to pass as when the Lord said, ‘I shall call for a sword throughout all the mountains against him,’ by the grace of God, we shall answer the call–‘."


"Thunderous applause, while we sat there with what we hoped was a sneer on our face, thinking: ‘Gosh darn! Are the people here really being taken in by that Pelley fellow up there in the black uniform and his right hand man, that guy in the black suit playing Hitler’s ‘Man of Iron’?’"

"’See,’ said an old man behind me to his wife, who had just been given a copy of Pelley’s Weekly by an aide, ‘just call on the Lord and he’ll answer you!’"

"’H’m,’ we thought, ‘that settles it,’ and we fought our way through the crowd to the door."



Malcolm M. Moore’s hometown paper in Ilwaco, The Tribune, barely mentioned their local gubernatorial prospect. The Oct. 9, 1936 issue did carry this small item buried on the bottom of page 1: "William Dudley Pelly, candidate for President of the United States, was in Ilwaco on Wednesday afternoon from 3:30 to 6 o’clock for the purpose of conferring with Malcolm M. Moore, Ilwaco candidate for Governor of the State of Washington. Accompanying Mr. Pelly was Dr. Clarke of Olympia, candidate for secretary of state for Washington and several other men, including a photographer, who took moving pictures of Malcolm Moore for use in the campaign. These gentlemen are candidates on the Christian party ticket for their respective offices."

It is interesting to note the Tribune editor considered the following headlines to be more important than Pelley’s visit, as they appeared on the top of the fold:
"Violinist Plays Delightful Music at PTA Program : Marion Egbert of South Bend Captures Audience With Charm of Music," "Ilwaco Boy Wins Prize in Window Display at Doupe Brothers’ Store," and "Kiwanis Stages Meeting Of Interest To Business."

Pelley did have one mainstream newspaper on his side, The Centralia Tribune. Chief Pelley and Silver Shirts Visit Centralia, screamed a banner headline on July 31, 1936. The paper ran a regular column containing excerpts from Pelley’s book, No More Hunger, and provided fawning and free front page advertising for Christian Party candidates under the guise of news.

If the Christian Party had dreams of sparking a popular uprising, the Washington State voters effectively nipped that idea in the bud. Moore finished sixth out of eight with 1,947 votes (0.29%), beating the Communist candidate by only eight votes. Moore placed third in Island (39 votes), Kitsap (171 votes) and Pacific (61 votes) counties. He also placed 4th, behind Union Party Ungovernor Nelson, in Lewis (233 votes) and Pierce (430 votes) counties.

Moore’s connection with the Christian Party appears to have ceased or dramatically tapered off after the 1936 campaign. As the country edged closer to World War II, the government went after Mr. Pelley and his organization. Malcolm avoided sharing Pelley’s fate of imprisonment.

Indeed, Mr. Moore continued his public life as if he had never been part of Pelley’s crew. According to P.U.D. historian Ken Billington, just a month after the 1936 election, Moore was present at the Dec. 7 formation of the Washington Public Utility Commissioners’ Association in Seattle and elected the first Secretary-Treasurer.

Although Malcolm’s Pelley connection was apparently never mentioned in subsequent newspaper articles or even his obituary, he seems to have been a controversial figure in political news. In Dec. 1940 Moore resigned as Secretary of the Pacific County P.U.D. (but retained his seat) after a shouting match with another Commissioner. He "resigned" his post altogether in Sept. 1949, as he walked out of an emotional public hearing concerning labor and management. He finally resigned for real in July 1955, with three years remaining in his term, "for personal reasons." He was still Treasurer for Ilwaco at the time.

The Moores moved to Bellingham in May 1966 in order to live closer to one of their daughters. Juanita died Apr. 15, 1969. Shortly after her death Malcolm broke a vertebrae and was confined to a rest home. He apparently had failing eyesight during his last years. He died in Bellingham at the age of 96, Aug. 8, 1979.


Tuesday, July 9, 2019

James William Ford
















James William Ford, December 22, 1893 (Pratt City, Ala.) – June 21, 1957 (New York, NY)

VP candidate for Communist Party USA (1932, 1936, 1940)

Running mate with nominee (1932): William Z. Foster (1881-1961)
Running mate with nominee (1936, 1940): Earl R. Browder (1891-1973)

Popular vote (1932): 103,307 (0.26%)
Popular vote (1936): 79,315 (0.17%)
Popular vote (1940): 48,557 (0.10%)

Electoral vote (1932, 1936, 1940): 0/531

The campaign (1932):

In an era when thousands of Americans were moving to the Soviet Union, the newly renamed Communist Party USA had their best opportunity to recruit new members.

Pro-Stalinist William Z. Foster was nominated for his third presidential run, with James W. "Jim" Ford as his running mate.

Although Ford is frequently touted as "the first African American to run for a presidential ticket in U.S. history," that is not entirely true although he was the first to be on a ticket where a significant number of votes were recorded from numerous state ballots. But we cannot ignore Frederick Douglass (Equal Rights Party 1872), William Thomas Scott/George Edwin Taylor/William C. Payne (National Negro Liberty Party 1904), and Simon Peter William Drew (Interracial Independent Political Party 1928).

It is true that the CPUSA was one the first political parties to be integrated and denounce segregation, but it was still demographically a very white party.

The 1932 CPUSA platform called for a United States of Soviet America and summarized itself with six points:

1. Unemployment and social insurance at the expense of the state and employers.                                2. Against Hoover's wage-cutting policy.  
3. Emergency relief for the impoverished farmers without restrictions by the government and banks; exemption of impoverished farmers from taxes, and no forced collection of rents or debts.
4. Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination for the Black Belt.
5. Against capitalist terror; against all forms of suppression of the political rights of the workers.
6. Against imperialist war; for the defense of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Union.

On Sept. 8 Foster suffered a major heart attack on the campaign trail in Illinois which was followed by a mental breakdown. After the election he went to the USSR to recover, not returning to the US until 1934.

1932 would be the high point for the CPUSA at the presidential ballot box with a final national result of 0.26%, landing in a very distant 4th place. They were an option for voters in 39 states, with their best showing being Montana (0.82%) where in Sheridan County they polled 17.74%. 

The campaign (1936):

Earl Browder, a less militant leader of CPUSA than his rival Foster, had stepped into a leadership role after the latter had been sidelined by his failing health. Browder was more willing to work the system and made overtures to the Socialists and other groups to form a united front for pro-labor and anti-fascist activities. Supposedly Browder even offered to be the running mate with Socialist Norman Thomas in 1936.

With votes recorded in 35 states their best showing was in New York (0.64%) and California (0.41%). In some states their popular vote was in single or double digits.

The campaign (1940):

The Nazi-Soviet pact of August, 1939 had seriously undermined the CPUSA's anti-fascist rhetoric and the Party began to lose members, especially artists, writers, and intellectuals who had signed up in the early 1930s. On top of that, presidential nominee Browder had been tried and convicted of passport fraud in 1940, and during the campaign was free while the case was being appealed, which didn't turn out so well for him. He began his 14-month prison sentence in March, 1941.

On the ballot in 23 states, their strongest finish was in California (0.42%).

The CPUSA would not appear on the presidential ballot again until 1968.

Election history:
1930 - US House of Representatives (NY) (Communist Party USA) - defeated
1934 - US House of Representatives (NY) (Communist Party USA) - defeated

Other occupations: blacksmith's helper, machinist's helper, blast furnace laborer, US Signal Corps in France during WWI, mattress factory worker, Post Office worker, author

Buried: cremated

Notes:
First person to run as a third party VP three times.
Attended Fisk University
Joined the Workers (Communist) Party of America in 1926.
In Moscow and Hamburg as an open Communist agent in 1928-1930
In Spain supporting the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War, 1937.
Demoted from his executive position in CPUSA in 1944-1945 due to his association with Earl
 Browder, who had been expelled from the Party.
When Ford was young, his grandfather had been burned alive by white mob.
Born James William Foursche "with the accent on the last syllable."

Friday, July 5, 2019

Florence Garvin

Florence Garvin, February 27, 1876 (Middletown, Conn.) - July 10, 1968 (Providence, RI)

VP candidate for National Party (aka Independent Party aka Greenback Party) (1932)
VP candidate for National Greenback Party (1936)

Running mate with nominee (1932, 1936): John Zahnd (1877-1961)
Popular vote (1932): 1645 (0.00%)
Popular vote (1936): 0 (0.00%)
Electoral vote (1932): 0/531
Electoral vote (1936): 0/531

The campaign (1932):

Ex-leader of his own religion John Zahnd chose not to run in 1932 as he had in 1924 and 1928, but sometimes our best plans go awry.

Seymour E. Allen of Springfield, Mass. was nominated for President but he withdrew once he learned more about the anti-union record of the National Party.

The National Party then nominated 72-year old George Wilson, a newsstand and drugstore operator in Vineland, NJ as their nominee. Wilson had been connected with the People's Party and was a member of Coxey's Army in 1894. 62-year old J.A. Parker of Blytheville, Penn. was picked as his running mate.

Wilson said he would only accept the nomination on the condition the National Party merged with the Farmer-Labor (which was home to Jacob Coxey in 1932) and Liberty parties. Zahnd, who ran his party with an iron fist, would have none of that, so Wilson was out. As Fate would have it, the National Party and Liberty Party would indeed merge on the Indiana ballot a month or two later.

With time getting short, Zahnd himself stepped up to the nomination at some point in late August or early September. Florence Garvin of Rhode Island was selected as his running mate.

Indiana was the only state where the Zahnd/Garvin could be found on a ballot.

The campaign (1936):

In 1936 the Zahnd/Garvin ticket ran again, this time under the banner of the National Greenback Party. They were not on the ballot in any states.

Election history:
1924 - US House of Representatives (Del.) (Prohibition Party) - defeated

Other occupations: author, suffragette, Vice-President of the Women's National Single Tax League 

Buried: Swan Point Cemetery (Providence, RI)

Notes:
Daughter of Lucius Garvin, Gov. of Rhode Island 1903-1905.
Buried in the same cemetery as Ambrose Burnside, Nelson Aldrich, Thomas Wilson Dorr, H.P. Lovecraft.