A 1928 Republican Party Election poster. |
On March 4, 1929 Charles Curtis was sworn into office as
the 31st Vice President of the United
States.
Historically, Vice-Presidents tend
to be an obscure lot. The job has only
two prescribed duties—presiding over the Senate
and being the stand-by in case the President kicks the bucket, is impeached, or is somehow indisposed. Unless a Vice President succeeds to the big
job, he is usually destined for oblivion.
In recent years the job has been seen as a stepping stone, but only the
senior George Bush succeeded in
actually getting elected president on his own directly from the second rank job
and he turned out to be a one termer.
Through most of our history the running mate on the Presidential ticket was at best an
afterthought who was usually chosen for reasons of political expediency—to balance
the ticket geographically or between party factions. But since the job had so little power or
authority, it was typically shunned by those with either serious credentials or
real career aspirations. No wonder that
one disgruntled former Veep, John Nance Garner described the job as
“not worth a warm bucket of piss.”
Given the low status of the job and
inattention paid to it by even through history buffs, you may be forgiven for
never having heard of Charles Curtis,
who had the misfortune of being elected as Herbert
Hoover’s running mate. But unlike
others of his era, Curtis came to the job with a long and distinguished
political history including exercising real power, most recently as Senate Majority Leader. But Curtis was also a Native American and enrolled member of the Kaw tribe.
Curtis was born in January of 1860
in Topeka in Kansas Territory. His
mother, Ellen Papin was mixed
Kaw, Osage, Pottawatomi, and French. She was descended from the Kaw Chief White Plume and Osage Chief Pawhuska. His white father was evidently something of a
scoundrel. He spent most of his early childhood among
his mother’s people on the Kaw reservation. His father got into serious trouble in the Army during the Civil War and was in prison for
much of the war. After his mother died
in 1863 his care was split between his maternal and paternal grandparents,
although he spent most of his time on the reservation until his Curtis
grandparent took him in so that he could complete high school in Topeka. His father was in and out of his life, mostly
out. He later tried to take control of
land in Topeka that the boy inherited from his mother, but was squelched when
his own parents intervened on the boy’s behalf.
Charlie,
as the boy was known, was an adept horseman. In 1868 he and an older companion made a
famous 60 mile ride from the Kaw reservation to Topeka to get help when Cheyenne Dog Soldiers threatened to
attack the reservation. He was soon an
accomplished an in demand jockey for
match races across the state.
Charles Curtis as 24 |
After graduating from high school
Curtis read law in Topeka and was
admitted to the bar. He was both
personable and intelligent and soon had a thriving practice. He entered politics and became Shawnee County Prosecutor in 1885 just
four years after passing the bar. In
1892 he was elected to the first of six terms as a Republican Congressman. In
the House he was naturally
interested in Indian affairs. Because of his own experience, he advocated
education and assimilation of Native Americans into the broader culture as
their best option for the future. He
authored the Curtis Act of 1898 which placed sever limitations
on the so-called Five Civilized tribes
in Indian Territory including
limitations on the authority of their tribal council and courts and ended their
exemptions from land allotments under the Dawes
Act. Communal tribal lands were broken up and distributed as parcels to
enrolled members. The Curtis Act helped
pave the way for Oklahoma statehood
a few years later. Curtis wrote later
that he was disappointed in the final draft of the Act as it emerged from the
Senate because it stripped many of his proposals for easing the transition.
In 1907 Curtis was elected by the
Kansas legislature to fill the few remaining days of a Senate vacancy and then
to a full six year term. Although he was
not re-elected at the end of his term, he was only out of the Senate for two
years before being elected again. After
the passage of the 17th Amendment which
called for direct election of Senators,
Curtis twice won re-election by the popular
vote.
Senator Curtis at the steps of the Capitol. |
His career really took off in the
Senate. He was noted for his skills for
quietly moving legislation
forward. Legendary powerhouse Idaho Senator William Borah praised Curtis as “a great reconciler, a walking political encyclopedia and one of the best political poker
players in America.” He advanced to the Chairmanship of the Committee on Expenditures in the Department
of the Interior and of Coastal Defenses
as well as being Chair of the Republican
Conference. He was Minority Whip from 1915 to 1924 and
Majority Leader from 1925 to 1929.
During his time in the Senate, Curtis became an original sponsor of the Equal Rights Amendment.
In 1928 the hugely popular Secretary
of Commerce Herbert Hoover, who
anticipated an easy election walk-over for President against New York Governor Al Smith, a Catholic and anti-prohibitionist,
defied the conventions of “ticket balancing” to tap Curtis for the second spot
despite the fact that he came from an adjacent state to the native Iowan.
Together they romped to victory 58% of the popular vote and even managed
to break-up the Solid South, by
winning the electoral votes of Florida, North Carolina, Virginia, and Texas.
With Chief Plenty Coups and other Crow dignitaries at a Montana fair grounds during the 1928 campaign. |
The Stock Market Cash and
ensuing Great Depression doomed
Hoover’s and Curtis’s chances of reelection. There was some tension between the running
mates the second time around as Curtis openly advocated the five-day work week, with no reduction
in wages, as a work-sharing solution to unemployment. Maybe Hoover should have listened to
him. At any rate, they were crushed at
the polls by Franklin D. Roosevelt
and his running mate John Nance Garner.
After being involuntarily retired from public life, Curtis decided to stay
in Washington where he practiced law
and lobbied Congress on behalf of his clients.
He died of a heart attack in the city in 1936. His remains were returned to Kansas where he
was laid to rest beside his wife in Topeka.
And then, for all of his accomplishments, his reputation faded into
obscurity.
Patrick, I am working on a short documentary and a long biography of Curtis and hopefully that will remove him from obscurity! Great post!
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm working on a book - based on the manuscript he left behind that was never published. Kansas is working on getting his story told again! I portray his paternal grandmother, Permelia Hubbard Curtis, who helped raise him after his mother died. His story is amazing and complicated. www.kansashistoricalperformers.com
ReplyDelete