Sherman in Retirement. |
Note: Adapted
from a post on June 5, 2010.
On June 5, 1884 William Tecumseh Sherman uttered words
we would long to hear from a good many venal, corrupt, stupid or simply
clueless folks who look into the mirror each morning and think, “there is the
next President of the United States.” Although variations are attributed to him,
the most commonly accepted is, “I do not choose to run. If nominated I will not accept. If elected I will not serve.”
Sherman rose to fame as
Ulysses S. Grant’s favorite
subordinate and most reliable commander.
They shared an unvarnished view of war stripped of myths of gallantry
and chivalry. Early in the Civil War Grant recalled Sherman after
he suffered a mental breakdown. Years
later Sherman said, “Grant stood by me when I was crazy, and I stood by him
when he was drunk, and now we stand by each other.”
As the General in
charge of cleaving the Confederacy in
half and destroying its industrial and transportation heartland in his drive
from Tennessee to Atlanta, the burning of Atlanta, the March to the Sea and then across South Carolina, Sherman was credited
with creating modern all out war not
only on enemy armies, but on enemy civilian populations. He is cited for pithy quotes in unapologetic
defense of his ferocity including, most famously “War is Hell” and “War is
cruelty. There’s
no use trying to reform it. The crueler it is, the sooner it will be over.”
This made him the most
hated man in the South, where generations of mothers frightened their children
to obedience by threatening them with “Sherman’s justice.”
It also made him wildly
popular in the North. Upon Grant’s election
to the Presidency in 1868, Sherman was the inevitable choice for Commanding General of the Army, a post
he held until his retirement in 1883.
Those years coincided
with some of the bloodiest Indian Wars
on the frontier, which the General pursued with the same grim determination
that marked his Civil War service. He
said, “The only good Indian is a dead Indian” and is one of several people to
whom the quote “nits make lice” is attributed as defense for killing
children.
In 1884 the Republican Party was divided and in
disarray. Chester Alan Arthur, the accidental President who rose to the White House from the Vice-Presidency with the assassination
of James Garfield, was wildly
unpopular. The former Collector of the Port of New York and a
product of the Spoils System had
unexpectedly become a reformer and advocate of Civil Service reform, which put him at odds with the Party’s Stalwart faction. But he was also no trusted by party liberals
and reformers. It was apparent that
Arthur would not get the nomination for a full term.
Maine
Senator James G. Blaine was the front runner, but he had many enemies in the
party himself. The Democrats were expected to surge that year as more southern states
emerged from Reconstruction. Recalling electoral success with Generals
Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, and
Garfield, it was natural for party leaders to turn to the most famous and
popular surviving General of the late War
of Rebellion.
Sherman would have none
of it. The nomination went to the Plumed Knight, Blaine, who promptly
lost the election to Democrat Grover
Cleveland.
Sherman died in 1891 at
the age of 71 after spending his final years in retirement giving speeches to Grand Army of the Republic gatherings
and business groups.
Speaking of corrupt, stupid or simply clueless folks who look into the mirror each morning and think, "there is the Executive Vice President of the Unitarian Universalist Associations". . . on June 1, 2012 Stikeman Elliott LLP lawyer Maitre Marc-André Coulombe "uttered" some words that The Emerson Avenger was positively overjoyed to "hear", even though these fateful words were actually in the form of writing in a PDF file image which was attached to an "electronic communication" aka email.
ReplyDeleteI dare say that Friday, June 1st, 2012, is "a date which will live in infamy" in Unitarian Universalist history. Not that there aren't a few other such infamous U*U dates that I can think of. . .