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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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**** ****
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The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
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CHAPTER IV
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PRESIDENTS WHO WERE EPISCOPALIANS
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FRANKLIN PIERCE
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||
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Born, November 23, 1804. Died, October 8, 1869.
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President, March 4, 1853 -- March 4, 1857.
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||
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Had Franklin Pierce, of New Hampshire, left the Presidency as
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||
popular a man as he went into it, he would undoubtedly been the
|
||
most popular of our chief executives. In the election of 1852 he
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||
carried every State but four. No President, except Franklin D.
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||
Roosevelt, has been elected by such an overwhelming popular and
|
||
electoral vote. But when President Pierce left the White House he
|
||
was completely out of public favar, and remained in obscurity for
|
||
the remainder of his life. Not until 1914 did the State of New
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||
Hampshire erect a statue in commemoration of the only chief
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||
magistrate it had given to the nation. He was called "a northern
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||
man with southern principles," and was elected on a wave of
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||
sentiment which proclaimed that the only way to save the Union and
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||
prevent secession was to accede to all the demands of the slave-
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||
holders. Jefferson Davis was Pierce's Secretary of War and the
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||
future President of the Confederacy dictated his policies.
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||
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Information concerning Franklin Pierce is meager. Until
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||
recently the only biography of him available was that written, in
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||
1862, by his college-mate, the well-known American author,
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Nathaniel Hawthorne, as a "campaign document." Of Pierce's
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||
religion, Hawthorne said:
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||
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"General Pierce has naturally a strong endowment of
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||
religious feeling. At no period of his life, as is well known
|
||
to his friends, have the sacred relations of the human soul
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||
been a matter of indifference with him; and of more recent
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||
years, whatever circumstances of good or evil fortune may have
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||
befallen him, they have served to deepen this powerful
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||
sentiment. Whether in sorrow or success he has learned, in his
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||
own behalf, the good lesson, that religious faith is the most
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||
valuable and most sacred of human possessions; but with this
|
||
sense, there has come no narrowness or illiberality, but a
|
||
wide sympathy for the modes of Christian worship and a
|
||
reverence for religious belief, as a matter between the Deity
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||
and man's soul, and with which no other has a right to
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||
interfere." (Hawthorne's 'Life of Franklin Pierce,' p. 123.)
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||
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This is rather meager information, coming as it does from so
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||
intimate a friend of Nathaniel Hawthorne, the last night of whose
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||
life was spent in the company of Pierce. The same could be said of
|
||
a Catholic or a Protestant, a Mohammedan, a Buddhist or a
|
||
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||
Bank of Wisdom
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||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
Zoroastrian. The document issued by the State of New Hampshire,
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||
giving an account of the ceremonies at the unveiling of Pierce's
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||
statue in concord, on November 24, 1914, says nothing of his
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||
religious belief or church affiliation. He was a member of the
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||
constitutional convention of New Hampshire in 1850. There he made
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||
a strenuous fight as did John Adams in Massachusetts, to abolish
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||
that portion of the State Constitution which made the Protestant
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||
religion the official religion of the Granite State. Although
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||
Pierce, like Adams, was unsuccessful, his actions indicated that
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||
his religious views were in advance of his time.
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||
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However in my researches I discovered that President Pierce
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||
was always orthodox in his belief, even while in college, but that
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||
he did not join a Church until a few years before his death, when
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||
he united with and became a communicant of St. Paul's Episcopal
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||
Church, of Concord. While I was looking for definite information,
|
||
I was informed that Professor Roy F. Nichols, of the Department of
|
||
History, in the University of Pennsylvania, was engaged in writing
|
||
a life of Pierce. [NOTE: This book by Professor Nichols was
|
||
published in 1932.] I applied to him for information, and he
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||
responded in a private letter, as follows:
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||
|
||
"Pierce expressed himself in writing at least twice on
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||
the subject of religion, once in a manuscript fragment written
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||
in later life describing his beliefs in college which show
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||
them to be decidedly orthodox. The other was a letter he wrote
|
||
to his law partner in the early 1840's still expressing belief
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||
in orthodoxy but showing no vivid religious experience. He was
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||
a constant attendant at church. In Concord he attended the
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||
South Congregational Church and while President in Washington
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||
he attended Presbyterian churches, most frequently that on 4
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||
1/2 Street (now John Marshall Place). I think you may discount
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||
the statement that he attended St. John's Church. In all
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||
probability he went there once in a while but I doubt very
|
||
much that he made it a regular practice. In later life, during
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||
the Civil War, he was baptized, confirmed and became a regular
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||
communicant in St. Paul's Episcopal Church, in Coneord."
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Like most Public men of his time President Pierce was a man of
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||
convivial habits, and, like some others, he sometimes drank too
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||
much. When it was proposed to nominate him for the Presidency, this
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||
greatly alarmed his friends, who called on him to talk the matter
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||
over. He promised them that if elected he would at once cease
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||
drinking, and remain a total abstainer while his term lasted. He
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||
honorably kept his word.
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FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT
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Born, January 30, 1882 --
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president, March 4, 1933 --
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||
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The 32nd President of the United states is the third Democrat
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||
elected since the Civil War. Like the Harrison and Adams families,
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||
the Roosevelts have furnished two Presidents of the United States.
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||
Franklin D. Roosevelt is the fifth President to come from the State
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||
of New Yolk.
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||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
The Roosevelt family in America is of Dutch origin, all being
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||
desdendants of Klaes Martensen Roosevelt, who emigrated from
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||
Holland to the then colony of New Netherlands, in 1644. The subject
|
||
of this sketch is a fifth cousin of Theodore Roosevelt, who
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||
occupied the Presidential chair from Septerffber 14, 1901, until
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||
March 4, 1909. Both of the Roosevelts were graduated from Harvard,
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||
both were members of the New York legislature, and Assistant-
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||
Secretary of the Navy. Each had been Governor of New York. Each has
|
||
been a candidate for Vice President, Both have been prolific
|
||
writers. While one was a liberal Republican, the other has been an
|
||
equally Progressive Democrat.
|
||
|
||
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was born in Hyde Park, N.Y., on
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||
January 30, 1882. His father was James Roosevelt, and his mother,
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||
still living, Sarah Delano, whose family was of Flemish origin.
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||
Philip, the founder of the American branch of the Delano family,
|
||
came to this country in 1624. They were a sea-faring family and are
|
||
said to have owned and operated ships in all parts of the world.
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||
|
||
As Franklin Delano Roosevelt descended from two old American
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||
patrician families, he began life with many advantages. In 1904 he
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||
was graduated from Harvard University, later studying at Columbia
|
||
University Law School, and he practiced for several years in New
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||
York City. He was elected and reelected to the New York State
|
||
Senate, and Under President Wilson was Assistant-Secretary of the
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||
Navy. In 1920 he was nominated for Vice President on the Democratic
|
||
ticket, his running-mate being James M. Cox, of Ohio. Roosevelt
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||
supported Alfred E. Smith for the Presidential nomination in 1924,
|
||
and worked for him when he was nominated in 1928. At Smith's
|
||
suggestion, Roosevelt consented to become the Democratic candidate
|
||
for Governor of New York, in 1928. He was successful, and was again
|
||
elected in 1930, by a majority of 725,000 votes, the largest that
|
||
any candiclate ever received in the history of the State.
|
||
|
||
Roosevelt had a strong Republican legislature to oppose him,
|
||
as well as Tammany Hall, the local New York City Democratic
|
||
organization, yet he effected many reforms. He soon became the most
|
||
prominent contender for the Democratic Presidential nomination, and
|
||
in Chicago, on June 27. 1932, he was nominated on the fourth
|
||
ballot, receiving 945 out of 1,154 votes. During the campaign he
|
||
visited all sections of the country and was frequently heard over
|
||
the radio.
|
||
|
||
The campaign was an exciting one. For three years the United
|
||
States had been in the throes of the worst economic crisis of its
|
||
history, and the Hoover administration had became thoroughly
|
||
discredited. The people were also in rebellion against Prohibition,
|
||
which most right-minded persons held to be ineffective, a farce and
|
||
a disgrace to the land. It soon became apparent that the Republican
|
||
candidate, Herbert Hoover, was not to be counted in the running. He
|
||
carried but six States, while Roosevelt carried 42, with a popular
|
||
majority of 7,000 000. It was the greatest victory since 1852, when
|
||
the Demoepitic party elected Franklin Pierce.
|
||
|
||
On February 15, 1933, the President-elect narrowly escaped
|
||
assassination when he was shot at by a demented Italian, one
|
||
Zangara, in Miama, Fla. Mayor Anton Cermak of Chicago was hit
|
||
instead by the bullet and after lingering for a few days died.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
There can be no doubt that President Roosevelt has faced
|
||
greater and more serious problems than has any other peace-time
|
||
Psesident, and that he has handled these problems with great
|
||
courage and vigor.
|
||
|
||
In 1905, Franklin D. Roosevelt married Miss Anne Eleanor
|
||
Roosevelt, a distant cousin. They have five children. Mrs.
|
||
Roosevelt, like the President, takes an active interest in social
|
||
welfare, which she manifests by her various activities and by her
|
||
public utterances.
|
||
|
||
Both are members and communicants in the Protestant Episcopal
|
||
Church, the President being a vestryman in the church of Hyde Park,
|
||
N.Y. It is said that no pressure of piiblic duties has ever
|
||
interfered with his duties to his Church. Yet, unlike many, he does
|
||
not make merchandise of his religion, and his speeches, messages
|
||
and other public utterances are singuarly free from religious cant
|
||
and platitude so commonly resorted to by politicians to catch the
|
||
church vote. His Thanksgiving proclamation in 1933 was one of the
|
||
briefest ever known.
|
||
|
||
The cliergy seem to be cold toward him because he advocated
|
||
the repeal of the 18th Amendment. This led a Methodist bishop to
|
||
call him an "alley President," while another Methodist minister,
|
||
the Rev. Clarence True Wilson, in comparing him with his
|
||
Presidential namesake, said that Theorore Roosevelt was "100,%
|
||
American," while Franklin Delano Roosevelt was "2%," both of which
|
||
statements illustrate the milignity of the clerical mind under
|
||
opposition. The collapse and repeal of their favorite law, which
|
||
was a failure for the purposes for which it was enacted, to say
|
||
nothing of bringing in its wake other evils, has put a considerable
|
||
crimp in the political activities of the Churches.
|
||
|
||
It is said that while President Roosevelt is a church member
|
||
and a church offical, he is a more irregular attendant upon church
|
||
services than some Presidents who were not professing Christians.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER V
|
||
|
||
PRESIDENTS WHO WERE NOT MEMBERS OF ANY CHURCH
|
||
|
||
WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON
|
||
|
||
Born, February 9, 1773. Died, April 4, 1841.
|
||
|
||
President, march 4 -- April 4, 1841.
|
||
|
||
William Henry Harrison, a son of a signer of the Declaration
|
||
of Independence, was the last President who had witnessed scenes in
|
||
the Revolution, and the first to die in office, which he held but
|
||
30, days. He early went into the army, distinguighed himself in
|
||
Indian wars, commanded at the battle of Tippecanoe, where he
|
||
defeated Tecumseh, the Indian chief who was so troulolesome to the
|
||
settlers. It was to General Harrison that Commodore Perry sent the
|
||
famous message, "We have met the enemy and they are ours." Later he
|
||
fought a battle on the River Thames, in Canada, where the British
|
||
were defeated, and their ally, Tecumseh, was slain.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
After the War of 1812. General Harrison was continually in
|
||
public life, a member of Congress, the State Senate of Ohio and the
|
||
U.S. Senate, a presidential elector and minister to the United
|
||
States of Columbia. The Whigs thought a military hero was needed as
|
||
a candidate for President; hence in 1836 he was nominated to oppose
|
||
Martin Van Buren, by whom he was defeated. in 1840, the two
|
||
opposing candidates were before the people again, and General
|
||
Harrison won, in the famous hard cider and log cabin campaign.
|
||
|
||
When he took the chair, in 1841, General Harrison was 68 years
|
||
old, and in feeble health. He had taken cold on the day of the
|
||
inauguration. He over-exerted himself, and died when but a month in
|
||
office. President Harrison had never been a church member, as is
|
||
proved by the following account of his funeral, to be found both in
|
||
Montgomery's 'Life of Harrison,' and in 'The Diary of John Quincy
|
||
Adams.'
|
||
|
||
"At half past 11 o'clock, the Rev. Mr. Hawley, Rector of
|
||
St. John's Church arose, and observed that he would mention an
|
||
incident connected with the Bible which lay on the table
|
||
before him (covered with black silk velvet). 'This Bible,'
|
||
said he, 'was purchased by the President on the fifth of
|
||
Mareh. He has since been in the habit of daily reading it. He
|
||
was accustomed not only to attend church, but to join audibly
|
||
in the services, and to kneel humbly before his maker.'
|
||
|
||
"Dr. Hawley stated that had the President lived, and been
|
||
in health, he intended on the next Sabbath to become a
|
||
communicant at the Lord's table."
|
||
|
||
This proves that, at the age of 68, President Harrison did not
|
||
own a Bible, and had not thought religion worthy of his attention,
|
||
for if he had was he not derelict in his duty all his life? Or, did
|
||
he suddenly take an interest because he was in public office? This
|
||
would appear suspicious in a politician. And was it any credit to
|
||
the Rev. Hawley to convert a broken-down oId man, whom, when he was
|
||
in the bloom of youth and health, all the Churches and ministers
|
||
had failed to draw into the fold? For all this, we have no evidence
|
||
except the word of the clergyman. Yet if all he has said is true,
|
||
the transaction sheds no luster on either President Harrison or
|
||
himself.
|
||
|
||
ANDREW JOHNSON
|
||
|
||
Born, December 29, 1808. Died, July 31, 1875.
|
||
|
||
President, April 15, 1865 -- March 4, 1869.
|
||
|
||
The successor of Abraham Lincoln as President of the United
|
||
States, and the third to become President through death, Andrew
|
||
Johnson, is one of the interesting characters of American history.
|
||
Springing from that class of people called in the South, "Poor
|
||
white trash," he was without educational advantages in his youth.
|
||
A tailor by trade, he learned to read while working in a shop.
|
||
After his marriage, his wife taught him to write. He began at the
|
||
bottom of the ladder politically, serving as alderman, mayor.,
|
||
member of the legislature of Tennessee, a member of Congress,
|
||
Senator, and finally President.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
Until recently Andrew Johnson was one of the most
|
||
misrepresented men in American history, and one of the most common
|
||
errors concerning him is the statement that he was a member of the
|
||
Methodist Church. Anyone who will only take the trouble to
|
||
investigate will learn that this was not a fact, as will be proved
|
||
in this chapter. Johnson had the courage to stand firm against the
|
||
political spoilsmen of his time. This was "the head and front of
|
||
his offending." [NOTE: For proof of this statement, see a recent
|
||
work (1929), 'Andrew Johnson, A Study in Courage,' by Lloyd Paul
|
||
Stryker. The Macmillan Co.]
|
||
|
||
The truth is, that after the death of Lincoln, Johnson
|
||
determine to follow the policy of the deceased Psesident in the
|
||
reconstructioin of the States lately in rebellion. This did not
|
||
please demagogues like Thaddeus Stevens, Benjamin F. Wade and
|
||
Charles Sumner, who stood at the head of the party seeking revenge
|
||
upon the South and an opportunity to persecute and plunder its
|
||
people. Had Lincoln lived he would have had the same conflict on
|
||
his hands -- in fact, it begun ibefore his assassination,
|
||
|
||
When the cotton States seceded in 1861, and their Senator and
|
||
Conoessmen went South to aid in the rebellion, Andrew Johnson was
|
||
the only one who stood by the Union and remained in his seat in the
|
||
Senate. President Lincoln sent him to Tennessee, in 1862, as
|
||
military governor of that State. At the risk of his life he did his
|
||
duty, brought his State back into the Union, restored the authority
|
||
of the national government, and as a reward was elected Vice
|
||
President, with Lincoln, in 1864.
|
||
|
||
In spite of this service, malignant partisans have called him
|
||
a traitor. He was even accused of complicity in the murder of
|
||
Lincoln. Articles of Impeachment, born of malice, were framed-up
|
||
against him, that he might be expelled from the White House, and
|
||
one of the South-hating radicals put in his place. It was a close
|
||
contest; Johnson escaped impeachment by only one vote. There were,
|
||
however, enough honest men in the then corrupt Senate of the United
|
||
States to prevent this disgrace of the law-making body of the
|
||
American people. Most of those involved in this great wrong, among
|
||
them Charles Sumner, who was its chief instigator, afterwards
|
||
expressed their regret that they were connected with it.
|
||
|
||
Andrew Johnson was not a Methodist, nor was he a member of any
|
||
other Church, though he always claimed to be a reliious man. At one
|
||
time William G. ("Parson") Brownlow accused him of being an
|
||
"Infidel." This is usually a term of reproach. Mr. Johnson replied,
|
||
"As for my religion, it is the doctrine of the Bible, as taught and
|
||
practised by Jesus Christ." (See The Age of Hate, by G.F. Minton,
|
||
p. 80.)
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Eliza Johnson was a Methodist, and, like a loyal husband,
|
||
Johnson would sometimes accompany her to services. We will now give
|
||
the facts as told by Winston. (Life of Andrew Johnson, p. 101):
|
||
|
||
"I have stated that the influence of Mrs. Johnson over
|
||
her husband was unbounded, and yet into one place he would not
|
||
follow her, the organized Church. She might find satisfaction
|
||
in such a Church, but he could not. Like Lincoln, if he could
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
have found an organization based on the personality of Christ,
|
||
without creed or dogmas, without class distinctions or the
|
||
exaltation and deification of money, he was willing to join it
|
||
'with all his soul.' But so far as he could make out, there
|
||
was no such Church. Believing in a rule of right and in a
|
||
revealed religion, he took Christ as a model, yet he feared
|
||
that the Christians of his day were further away from the
|
||
simplicity, the charity and the love of their fellows, which
|
||
Christ enjoined, than many a heathen was."
|
||
|
||
As the Methodist Church was somewhat interested in the
|
||
impeachment proceedings against President Johnson, the truth of
|
||
history demands that we say something albout that Church at this
|
||
period. Its clergy have always insisted that Methodism is
|
||
synonymous with patriotism and all other virtues. This depends
|
||
largely upon the epoch and the geographical location. During the
|
||
Revolution it took the side of England, following the example of
|
||
its founder, John Wesley. As a result, Methodist preachers were
|
||
obliged to leave the country, or go into hiding, as did Francis
|
||
Asbury, who afterwards became the first Methodist Bishop in the
|
||
United states.
|
||
|
||
Upon the question of slavery, John Wesey said it was "the sum
|
||
of all villainies." This was said in England, before buying and
|
||
selling Negroes became profitable in the United States. When it
|
||
became profitable, from 1820 on, the position of the Church was
|
||
either in favor of Negro servitude or it was equivocal. At its
|
||
General Conference, held in 'Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1836, it censured
|
||
by an overwhelming vote some members who had attended an Abolition
|
||
meetin. In 1841, at the meeting of the General Conference, the
|
||
Church split, and the Methodist Church South was organized.
|
||
|
||
Most assuredly, the Southern church was pro-slavery. The
|
||
mistake many make is in assuming that the Northern Church was anti-
|
||
slavery. The fact is that members of the Northern Church continued
|
||
to hold slaves without coming into conflict with the Discipline,
|
||
and it was not until the Conference of 1864, a year after the
|
||
Emancipation Proclamation, that the Northern Conference came to the
|
||
conclusion that slavery was wrong. They had plenty of time to think
|
||
it over, and were now certain they were on the safe side, as all
|
||
church organizations in polities aim to be. Hence, while the
|
||
Southern Church was always proslavery, that of the North trimmed
|
||
its sails to float with the tide.
|
||
|
||
It might be asked why the Methodist Church of the North took
|
||
such a great interest in the impeachment of president Johnson, and
|
||
why their Conference of 1868 was so anxious to throw him out of the
|
||
White House. The reason was that it followed the hue and cry of
|
||
politicians, expecting thereby to attain some advantage to itself.
|
||
We have seen such a case in our own day. While our ministers were
|
||
preaching peace before the United States entered the European war,
|
||
none were more belligerent than these game reverend gentlemen after
|
||
we did enter it. They expected their reward, and they received it.
|
||
They obtained chaplaincies. They were permitted, with the aid of
|
||
the Government, to stage "drives" for money, which were so
|
||
remunerative that they tried to continue them after the war was
|
||
over. The canteen service in the Army was turned over to religious
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
organizations, some of whom obtained as much as they could free of
|
||
charge, and charged the soldiers all they could. and made millions.
|
||
|
||
The presiding Bishop at the Conference of 1868 was Matthew
|
||
Simpson, who for years had been an astute Republican politician.
|
||
The Methodists had been influential enough to have President
|
||
Lincoln appoint James Harlan, who was once one of their preachers,
|
||
Secretary of the Interior instead of appointing as he wished to do,
|
||
his old Illinois friend, Jesse K. DuBois. Harlan served in the
|
||
Cabinet for about a year under President Johnson, and then
|
||
resigned. He went back to Iowa, was again elected to the Senate,
|
||
was on hand in 1868 -- one of the bitterest enemies of his former
|
||
chief in the impeachment proceedings. It appeared that there would
|
||
not be enough Senators opposed to President Johnson to make out a
|
||
case. As Senator Willey, of West Virginia, was a Methodist, the
|
||
influence of the Conference was brought to bear upon him, and he
|
||
voted for the impeachment. Then they offered a resolution for an
|
||
hour of prayer that they might ask God to cast out the President of
|
||
the United States. Under these conditions, why ask the Senate of
|
||
the United States to waste its time further? Why not turn President
|
||
Johnson over to the Methodist Conference actin under the direct
|
||
influence of the Almighty? one of their members saw they were in a
|
||
very ticklish position. He called their attention to the fact that
|
||
the Senate was under oath to decide the case under the law and the
|
||
evidence, and that this resolution could only be interpreted as
|
||
demanding that they violate that oath, and decide regardless of the
|
||
law and the evidence, for it placed the Methodist Church above
|
||
both. Bishop Simpson saw the point, and unctuously introduced
|
||
another resolution praying "to save our Senators from error." This
|
||
would take them out of a very embarrassing situation, and they had
|
||
faith that God would understand them just the same. At the same
|
||
time the white Methodists were in conference in Chicawo, the Negro
|
||
members of that Church were in session in Washington. They also
|
||
took up the question of President Johnson's impeachment. They
|
||
did not bother God at all about it. They appealed first hand to the
|
||
Senate to impeach him.
|
||
|
||
It is needless to say these proceedings of the Methodists,
|
||
white and black, did not please the President. Out of courtesy to
|
||
his wife he had been attending their Church. Now he ceased going,
|
||
and went to the Catholic St. Patrick's Cathedral to hear Father
|
||
McGuire, who, he said, "cut out politics." He admired the Catholic
|
||
Church "because of its treatment of the rich and poor alike. in the
|
||
cathedral there were no high-priced pews and no reserved seats, the
|
||
old woman with calico dress and poke bonnet sitting up high and
|
||
being as welcome as the richest." (Plebeian and Patriot, b. 47,6.)
|
||
|
||
Andrew Johnson died at his home in Tennessee, in 1875. just
|
||
after taking his seat as United States Senator from that State. He
|
||
had been a Mason, and the lodge to which he belonged conducted his
|
||
funeral.
|
||
|
||
ULYSSES SIMPSON GRANT
|
||
|
||
Born, April 27, 1822. Died July 23, 1885.
|
||
|
||
President, March 4, 1869 -- March 4, 1877.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
The life of U.S. Grant, commanding general of the Union forces
|
||
in the Civil War, was, in large part, tragic. He was graduated from
|
||
the U.S. Military Academy, but his scholastic record at West Point
|
||
was not brilliant. His career in the Mexican War was honorable, but
|
||
he did not like the army. In the earlier 5O's he was sent to
|
||
California, where, possibly because of the monotony of army life on
|
||
the frontier, he took to excessive drinking, as a result of which
|
||
he was obliged to resign. This habit grew on him, to the great
|
||
detriment of himself and his family.
|
||
|
||
The opening of the Civil War found him in Galena, Ill., a
|
||
clerk in the leather store of his younger brothers. With great
|
||
difficulty he obtained a commission as colonel of an Illinois
|
||
regiment. Here he found his opportunity in middle life. From small-
|
||
town clerk to commanding general and, eventually, to the
|
||
Presidency, Was quite a stride for the unknown and almost penniless
|
||
man of eight year's before.
|
||
|
||
President Grant was wholly unacquainted with and without
|
||
training in statecraft; he innocently became the victim of
|
||
dishonest politicions, and his two administrations have passed into
|
||
history as the most corrupt on record. He was obliged to bear some
|
||
of the infamy of this, although it is generally agreed that Grant
|
||
himself retained his integrity.
|
||
|
||
He was as unfamiliar with business affairs as with polities,
|
||
and innocently permitted his name to be associated with that of a
|
||
sharper in a fraudulent banking enterprise. It collapsed, after
|
||
victims in all sections of the country had been fleeced. General
|
||
and Mrs. Grant, their children and other relatives were ruined
|
||
financially in this debacle. An ex-President of the United States,
|
||
the most successful general of modern times, he was thrown back
|
||
into the poverty of earlier years and at the same time he had to
|
||
endure the implied reflection upon his character. As though this
|
||
were not enouoh, General Grant developed a cancer, and, after
|
||
months of patient suffering, died. We do not believe the history of
|
||
the world records a case more pathetic. While his health and life
|
||
capitulated to disease and death, General Grant at no time
|
||
surrendered his principles or his honor. He was more of a hero as
|
||
he lay in the cottage at Mt. McGregor, than before Donelson,
|
||
Vicksburg or in the Valley of Virginia.
|
||
|
||
It has been erroneously maintained that General Grant was a
|
||
Methodist. The fact is, he was not a member of any Church, and had
|
||
not even been baptized. Once, while a cadet at West Point, he
|
||
failed to attend chapel. For this he received eight demerits, and
|
||
was placed under arrest. He tells of this incident in a letter
|
||
written to his cousin, McKinsey Grifflith, September 22, 1839. He
|
||
objected to being compelled to go to church, saying, "This is not
|
||
republican." (Brown's 'Life of Grant,' p. 320.)
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Julia Dent Grant was a Methodist, a member and attendant
|
||
of the Metropolitan Methodist Church of New York City, after the
|
||
Grant family made the metropolis their home, Her husband
|
||
accompanied her, as many other husbands have done when their wives
|
||
have been church members. Some men who do not dance accompany their
|
||
wives to balls. Does this make them dancers?
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
The minister of this church was the Rev. J.P. Newman, D.D.,
|
||
afterwards a Methodist bishop. He was a lover of notoriety, and
|
||
ever sought to have his name on the front page of the newspapers,
|
||
as was demonstrated by the following incident.
|
||
|
||
In 1869 there was a great contreversy in Utah over the subject
|
||
of polygamy. The government was trying to suppress it, but the
|
||
Mormons were defendinol, it and chief among their defenses was the
|
||
plea that it was sustained by the Bible. The Rev. Newman traveled
|
||
to Utah and challenged the Mormons to debate the question with him.
|
||
His offer was accepted, and Elder Orson Pratt, one of the leading
|
||
Mormon preachers, was selected to meet him. The Mormons were so
|
||
jublant over the success of their champion that they issued the
|
||
discussion in pamphlet form as a campain document, and for years
|
||
circulated it as a justification of polygamy from a biblical
|
||
standpoint. When I first visited Salt Lake City, in 1897, I bought
|
||
a copy of this work at the church bookstore.
|
||
|
||
From the time General Grant became seriously ill, in the
|
||
spring of 1886, until his death, on July 23, the Rev. Newman
|
||
devoted to him almost all his attention. He became a member of the
|
||
family, leading in family prayer, and endeavoring to point out to
|
||
the General the way of salvation. He made as inglorious a failure
|
||
in this endeavor as he did in trying to convince the Mormons that
|
||
the Bible did not sanction Polygamy. He did succeed, as W.E.
|
||
Woodward says, in "making a fool of himself."
|
||
|
||
We may well wonder why he was thus permitted to plague the
|
||
dying man. General Chaffee, one of whose daughters General Grant's
|
||
son married, enlightens us, in the following words: "There has been
|
||
a good deal of nonsense in the papers about Dr. Newman's visits.
|
||
General Grant does not believe that Dr. Newman's prayers will save
|
||
him. He allows the doctor to pray simply because he does not want
|
||
to hurt his feelings, He is indifferent on his own account to
|
||
everything." General Chaffee had formerly been a senator from
|
||
Colorado, was with Grant frequently during his illness and knew
|
||
whereof he spoke.
|
||
|
||
A contemporary journalist said: "His acceptance of the
|
||
effusive and offensive ministrations of the peripatetic preacher
|
||
was probably due as much to his regard for the feelings of his
|
||
family and his tolerance of his ministerial friend as to any faith
|
||
in religion. All the press can gather now about his religious
|
||
belief is filtered through Dr. Newman, and must, therefore, be
|
||
largely discounted." To what extent this writer is telling the
|
||
truth will appear hereafter.
|
||
|
||
Yet, the Rev. Newman had a reason of his own for being there
|
||
and he was candid enough to tell it. It was not to save from hell
|
||
the soul of the man who had witnessed so much death, destruction
|
||
and carnage on the field of battle. He said, "Great men may gain
|
||
nothing from relegion, but religion can gain much from great men,"
|
||
In other words he was there to obtain publicity for his Church and
|
||
for himself.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
When Stephen A. Douglas, Lincoln's great opponent, who, like
|
||
General Grant, was not a church member, lay dying in Chicage, Mrs.
|
||
Douglas, who was a devout Roman Catholic, called in Bishop Duggan,
|
||
of that Church, to see her husband. Wives who are religious
|
||
naturally think their husbands ought to be the same, so we can
|
||
account for the attitude of Mrs. Douglas and Mrs. Grant. The Bishop
|
||
asked Senator Douglas whether he had ever been baptized according
|
||
to the rites of any Church. "Never," replied the Senator. "Do you
|
||
wish to have mass said after the ordinances of the holy Catholic
|
||
Church?" inquired the Bishop. "No, sir," was the prompt reply.
|
||
"When I do, I will communicate with you freely." The next day Mrs.
|
||
Douglas again sent for the Bishop. Coming to the Senator's bedside,
|
||
he said: "Mr. Douglas, you know your condition fully, and in view
|
||
of your dissolution, do you desire the ceremony of extreme unction
|
||
to be performed?" "No," replied the dying man, "I have no time to
|
||
discuss these things now." The Bishop left the room, as any other
|
||
clergyman who was also a gentleman would have done.
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Dr. Newman, however, was a sticker. When he found
|
||
that General Grant had never been baptized, he did not ask
|
||
permission to perform the rite. While Grant was asleep, he took a
|
||
pan of water and sprinkled him. He was determined that General
|
||
Grant should go to heaven, in spite of himself.
|
||
|
||
The reverend doctor frequently questioned General Grant,
|
||
hoping that in his replies he would say something that would commit
|
||
him to the Methodist faith. When he refused to do this, Dr. Newman
|
||
put words into Grant's mouth which he never uttered. Once he quoted
|
||
him as saying: "Three times have I been in the valley of the shadow
|
||
of death, and three times have I returned thither." Mark Twain
|
||
called the attention of the public to this misrepresentation,
|
||
saying the General always spoke in plain, blunt language and never
|
||
used figures of speech. Mark Twain was a personal friend of the
|
||
General, frequently called on him while he was sick, and was the
|
||
publisher of his Memoirs after his death. Fortunately, we know just
|
||
what Grant did say. It was true that his life was despaired of
|
||
three times and he later recovered. The last time, he was revived
|
||
by the physicians with the aid of brandy. General Adam Badeau, an
|
||
old personal friend, who was on his staff during the war, was
|
||
present at the time and gives the exact facts, and the exact words
|
||
uttered:
|
||
|
||
"At this crisis he did not wish to live. 'THE DOCTORS ARE
|
||
RESPONSIBLE THREE TIMES,' HE SAID, 'FOR MY BEING ALIVE, AND --
|
||
UNLESS THEY CAN CURE ME -- I DON'T THANK THEM.' He had no desire to
|
||
go through the agony again. For he had suffered death; be had
|
||
parted with his family; he had undergone every physical pang that
|
||
could have come had he died before the brandy was administered."
|
||
(Badeau's 'Grant in Peace,' p. 450.)
|
||
|
||
Quite a difference between these words and those attributed to
|
||
him the Rev. Newman, who interpolated three times have I been in
|
||
the shadow of death," and "three times have I returned thither," to
|
||
give the incident a dramatic effect and a pious air.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
At another time Dr. Newman asked General Grant what was the
|
||
supreme thought on his mind when death was so near? The answer was
|
||
"The comfort of the consciousness that I have tried to live a good
|
||
and honerable life." Would that all men could say this when they
|
||
are about to leave this world, but it did not please the reverend
|
||
doctor, nor did it please his friends, the religious press. The
|
||
'New York Independant' commented thus:
|
||
|
||
"The honest effort 'to live a good and honerable life'
|
||
may well be a source of comfort at any time, and especially so
|
||
in the hour and article of death: and we see no impropriety in
|
||
referring to it as such. But it would be a great mistake to
|
||
make such an effort, or such a life, even though the best that
|
||
any man ever lived, the basis on which sinners are to rest for
|
||
their peace with God and their hope of salvation. Sinners are
|
||
saved, if at all, through grace, and by the suffering and
|
||
death of Christ, and upon the condition of their repentance
|
||
toward God, and faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. This is the
|
||
gospel plan of salvation as Christ himself taught it and the
|
||
Apostles preached it. There is no other plan known to the
|
||
Bible.
|
||
|
||
"Great men and small men viewed simply as men, as
|
||
subjects of the moral government of God, and as sinners, stand
|
||
at a common level in respect to their wants and the method of
|
||
their relief; and they must alike build their hopes on
|
||
Christ."
|
||
|
||
We will let the New York 'Commercial Advertiser' tell the
|
||
story of General Giant's death, and the relation of the Rev. Dr.
|
||
Newman to that event:
|
||
|
||
"About 7:15 o'clock on the morning that Grant died
|
||
Dr.Newman said he thought he would go over to the hotel and
|
||
get a little breakfast. The physician warned him that a change
|
||
might occur at any moment, and that he had better not go. He
|
||
turned to Henry, the nurse, and asked his advice. Henry
|
||
thought the General would live for an hour. so off went the
|
||
Doctor and ate his breakfast. In the meantime, Dr. sands, who
|
||
had left the cottage at 10 o'clock the previous evening in
|
||
order to have a good night's rest, came back about 7:50, just
|
||
in time. Dr. Newman was not so fortunate. After breakfast, he
|
||
came up the path at so quick a rate, his arms waving, that he
|
||
was short of breath. Dr. Shrady saw him coming, walked out,
|
||
and said, 'Hush! he's dead.' The Doctor almost fell. His
|
||
terrible disappointment was depicted on his face."
|
||
|
||
The secular press did not hesitate to ridicule the
|
||
Rev. Newman and call him a mountebank. Other religious journals
|
||
criticised him, even more severely than did the 'New York
|
||
Independent., The 'New York World' said: "Dr. Newman beautifully
|
||
remarks that 'some of the last scenes of General Grant's death were
|
||
pitiful and at the same time eloquent,' which is alike creditable
|
||
to Dr. Newman's elocution and eyesight, since he witnessed these
|
||
scenes from the breakfast table at the hotel some distance away
|
||
from the cottage occupied by the general."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
On the morning followinl, the General's death, the 'World'
|
||
said: General Grant, as it would appear, had no settled convictions
|
||
on the subject of religion. Having been interrogated during his
|
||
last illiness on the question of religion, he replied that he had
|
||
not given it deep study, and was unprepared to express an opinion.
|
||
He intimated that he saw no use of devoting, any special thought to
|
||
theology at so late a day, and that he was prepared to take his
|
||
chances with the millions of people who went before him."
|
||
|
||
The 'Christian Statesman' said: "It is not on record that he
|
||
(Grant] spoke at any time of the Saviour, or expressed his sense of
|
||
dependence on his atonement and mediation." The Nashville
|
||
'Christian Advocate,' a Methodist organ, rebuked Dr. Newman in
|
||
these words:
|
||
|
||
"Some ministers seem to have an incurable itch for
|
||
claiming that all the men who have figured prominently in
|
||
public life are Christians. Mr. Lincoln has almost been
|
||
canonized, and General Grant has been put forward as
|
||
possessing all the graces, though neither one of them ever
|
||
joined the Church or made the slightest public profession of
|
||
faith in Jesus. Has it (Christianity) anything to gain by
|
||
decking itself with the ambiguous compliments of men who never
|
||
submitted themselves to its demands? The less of all this the
|
||
better. We are sick of the pulpit toadyism that pronounces its
|
||
best eulogies over those who are not the real disciples of
|
||
Jesus Christ."
|
||
|
||
After General Grant's death, Dr. Newman issued, a statement
|
||
filled with rhetoric and generalities. but he does not assert that
|
||
the subject of his great solicitude acknowledged faith in Christ.
|
||
That was further than he could go in safety.
|
||
|
||
General Grant was a firm believer in separation of church and
|
||
state, and had no patience with clerical interference with the
|
||
government. In his 'Memoirs' (vol. 1, p, 213), he said: "No
|
||
political party can, or ought to, exist when one of its corner-
|
||
stones is opposition to freedom of thought. If a sect sets up its
|
||
laws as binding above the state laws, whenever the two come in
|
||
conflict, this claim must be resisted and suppressed at any cost.
|
||
|
||
He was opposed to all types of religious interference with the
|
||
public schools. In his speech before the Army of the Tennessee,
|
||
delivered in Des Moines Iowa, in 1875, General Grant used these
|
||
words, which are often quoted:
|
||
|
||
"The free school is the promoter of that intelligence
|
||
which is to preserve us as a nation. If we were to have
|
||
another contest in the near future of our national existence,
|
||
I prediet that the dividing line will not be Mason's and
|
||
Dixon's, but between patriotism and intelligence on one side,
|
||
and superstition, ambition and ignorance on the other. Let us
|
||
all labor to add all needful guarantees for the more perfect
|
||
security of FREE THOUGHT, FREE SPEECH AND FREE PRESS, pure
|
||
morals, unfettered religious sentiments, and of equal rights
|
||
and privileges to all men, irrespective of nationality, color
|
||
or religion. Encourage free schools, and resolve that not one
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
dollar of money be appropriated to the support of any
|
||
sectarian school. Resolve that neither the State nor nation,
|
||
or both combined, shall support institutions of learning other
|
||
than those sufficient to afford every child growing up in the
|
||
land the opportunity of a good common education, unmixed with
|
||
sectarian, pagan or atheistical tenets. Leave the matter of
|
||
religion to the family altar, the Church, and the private
|
||
schools, supported entirely by private contributions. KEEP
|
||
CHURCH AND STATE FOREVER SEPARATE."
|
||
|
||
Some persons said that General Grant was here attacking the
|
||
Catholic schools. On this point, his friend, General Sherman, says,
|
||
"The Des Moines speech was prompted by a desire to defend the
|
||
freedom of our public schools from sectarian influences, and, as I
|
||
remember the conversation which led him to write that speech, it
|
||
was because of the clamor for set religious exercises in the public
|
||
schools, not from Catholic but from Protestant denominations."
|
||
(Packard'S 'Grant's Tour Around the World,' p. 566.)
|
||
|
||
General Grant believed that church property should be taxed
|
||
the same as other property. In an annual message to Congress
|
||
(1875), he used this language:
|
||
|
||
"In connection with this important question, I would also
|
||
call your attention to the importance of correcting an evil
|
||
that if permitted to continue, will probably lead to great
|
||
trouble in our land before the close of the 19th Century. It
|
||
is the acquisition of vast amounts of untaxed Church property.
|
||
In 1850, I believe, the Church property of the United States,
|
||
Which paid no tax, municipal or State, amounted to
|
||
$87,000,000. in 1860 the amount had doubled. In 1870 it was
|
||
$354,483,587. By 1900, without a check, it is safe to say this
|
||
property will reach a sum exceeding $3,000,000,000. So vast a
|
||
sum, receiving all the protection and benefits of the
|
||
government, without bearing its proportion of the burdens and
|
||
expenses of the same, will not be looked upon acquiescently by
|
||
those who have to pay the taxes. In a growing country, where
|
||
real estate enhances so rapidly with time as in the United
|
||
States, there is scarcely a limit to the wealth that may be
|
||
acquired by corporations, religious or otherwise, if allowed
|
||
to retain real estate without taxation. The contemplation of
|
||
so vast a property as here alluded to, without taxation, may
|
||
lead to sequestration without constitutional authority, and
|
||
through blood. I would suggest the taxation of all property
|
||
equally."
|
||
|
||
Two weeks before he died, General Grant wrote the following
|
||
note, addressed to his wife, which was found on his person after
|
||
his death:
|
||
|
||
"Look after our dear children and direct them in the
|
||
paths of rectitude. It would distress me far more to think
|
||
that one of them could depart from an honorable, upright, and
|
||
virtuous life than it would to know that they were prostrated
|
||
on a bed of sickness from which they were never to arise
|
||
alive. They have never given us any cause for alarm on this
|
||
account, and I trust they never will. With these few
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
injunctions and the knowled@e I have of your love and
|
||
affection and the dutiful affection of all our children, I bid
|
||
you a final farewell, until we meet in another and, I trust,
|
||
a better world. You will find this on my person after my
|
||
demise."
|
||
|
||
Here is shown no partiality for any creed, Church or religion.
|
||
General Grant hoped for a future life, as do all religionists, and
|
||
even some Agnostics. [NOTE: For the facts about the religions
|
||
opinions of General Grant, I am largely indebted to 'Six Historic
|
||
Americans,' by John E. Remsburg; to 'Grant in Peace,' by Adam
|
||
Badeau, and to 'Meet General Grant,' by W.E. Woodward.]
|
||
|
||
RUTHERFORD BIRCHARD HAYES
|
||
|
||
Born, October 4, 1822. Died, January 17, 1893.
|
||
President, March 4, 1877 -- March 4, 1881.
|
||
|
||
While Rutherford Birchard Hayes was President of the United
|
||
States, it was said by his enemies that he was ruled by his wife,
|
||
who was, in fact, the Chief Executive. While this statement
|
||
contained an element of truth, it grossly exaggerated the
|
||
situation, particularly in regard to President Hayes' religious
|
||
belief.
|
||
|
||
As is well known, Mrs. Lucy Webb Hayes was a Methodist of the
|
||
strictest type. When she took charge of the White House, cards,
|
||
dancing, and low neeked dresses were banished. Wine and liquors
|
||
disappeared from the table -- even the glasses in which they had
|
||
been served were put out of sight. The Discipline of the Methodist
|
||
Church prevailed. Yet the good lady was unable to convince her
|
||
husband of the superiority of the doctrines of John Wesley, for
|
||
President Hayes was not a Methodist, held views contrary to the
|
||
Discipline, and was not a member of any Church. Many persons were
|
||
astonished when President Hayes' Biography was published, and the
|
||
real facts of his religious views given to the world.
|
||
|
||
The mother of President Hayes was a Presbyterian. He attended
|
||
Kenyon College, where he had Episcopalian instructors, but his
|
||
biographer, Charles Richard Williams, says: "While he felt himself
|
||
to be a Christian in all essential respects, he never united with
|
||
any Church. There were declarations of belief in the orthodox
|
||
creeds, that he could not conscientiously make." (Vol. 2, p. 435.)
|
||
|
||
In his Diary (May 17, 1890), he states his position: "I am not
|
||
a subscriber to any creed. I belong to no Church. But in a sense
|
||
satisfactory to myself, and believed by me to be important, I try
|
||
to be a Christian and to help do Christian work." (P. 435.)
|
||
|
||
Before his last sickness he said: "I am a Christian according
|
||
to my conscience, in belief, not, of course, in character and
|
||
conduct, but in purpose and wish: not, of course, by the orthodox
|
||
standard. But I am content and have a feeling of trust and safety."
|
||
(P. 437.)
|
||
|
||
He read and admired Emerson, who was not orthodox but a
|
||
Pantheist. From him he said he obtained "mental improvment,
|
||
information and kept the mental faculties alert and alive." He
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents
|
||
|
||
thought the Sage of Concord prepared us "for the inevitable, to be
|
||
content at least for the time, and also for the future," and that
|
||
he "developed and strengthened character." "How Emerson prepares
|
||
one to meet the disappointmerts and griefs of this mortal life! His
|
||
writings seem to me to be religion. They bring peace, consolation;
|
||
that rest for the mind and heart which we all long for -- content."
|
||
(pp. 433-434.)
|
||
|
||
President Hayes was an admirer of the closing declaration of
|
||
the will of Charles Dickens, which read: "I commend my soul to the
|
||
mercy of God through our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ, and I
|
||
exhort my dear children humbly to try to guide themselves by the
|
||
teaching the New Testament in its broad spirit, and to put no faith
|
||
in any man's narrow construction of the letter here, or there."
|
||
(Dickens attended the old South Place Unitarian Chapel in Finsbury,
|
||
London.)
|
||
|
||
Hayes copied this in his Diary (p. 437), under date of March
|
||
13, 1892. Were President Hayes to be classified religiously, he
|
||
might find a proper place among the Unitarians of the middle of the
|
||
19th Century.
|
||
|
||
In writing of President Hayes, we cannot forbear, mentioning
|
||
the case of D.M. Bennett; first, because it involved the President
|
||
himself; second, it involved religion; third, it aroused great
|
||
controversy in 1879; fourth, it is one of the noted cases in the
|
||
Federal Reports.
|
||
|
||
Bennett was a Freethinker and edited a Freethought, or, as
|
||
Some preferred to call it, an "Infidel," weekly in New York City.
|
||
He smote the popular orthodoxy of his time "hip and thigh." He also
|
||
published many books and cheap tracts, all attacking the
|
||
supernatural claims of Christianity. He had no pretensions to
|
||
learning or literary ability. He was, however, thoroughly honest
|
||
and earnest, and a "hard hitter." Quite naturally, such a journal
|
||
would arouse the antipathy of orthodox religionists. The old
|
||
tactics of suppressing by law those whose ideas one does not like
|
||
were not out of vogue in the 1870's, nor are they today. The ultra
|
||
Evangelicals sought a method to put this troublesome man Bennett
|
||
out of business, As he was a small publisher with little capital,
|
||
it was hoped that a prosecution followed by a term in prison would
|
||
accomplish the object. Blasphemy laws were in existence, although
|
||
they were unpopular; and there was also a law providing severe
|
||
penalties for sending obscene matter through the Mails.
|
||
|
||
This law was passed in 1873, just at the close of the
|
||
congressional session. Attention was then called to the nature of
|
||
the bill. Among other things it was pointed out that it could be
|
||
utilized to throttle free press and penalize the discussion of
|
||
legitmate questions upon which the people ought to be informed.
|
||
This law was very flexable, and might, and did, result in the
|
||
imprisonment of those who sent through the mails articles or
|
||
literature that offended the prejudices of judge or jury. As
|
||
further evidence of its flexibility, we can point to 84 other
|
||
decisions.
|
||
|
||
@@@@
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
|
||
|