Even a casual
glance at
newspapers available to Ninth District residents in
the early months of
1916 would have revealed much of interest and grave
importance. The
armies
of France and Germany were locked in deadly embrace at
Verdun, a blood
bath that would produce over 700,000 casualties.
Interest in the 1916
presidential
election was already beginning to build. Woodrow
Wilson, in these
months,
advocated a program of national preparedness, fought
the Gore-McLemore
resolutions, congressional measures to reduce the
president's power to
conduct foreign affairs, and pushed the nation to the
brink of war with
an ultimatum to Germany following the sinking of the
Sussex in late
March.
From Richmond, a freshman state senator from
Wytheville, Elbert Lee
Trinkle,
received wide press coverage for his strong advocacy
of prohibition and
woman suffrage in the Virginia General Assembly.
Democratic
politicians
in the District were concerned about the events in
Europe and
Washington,
but they were more immediately interested in Trinkle's
impact. Since
1907,
the incumbent Ninth District Congressman had been a
Republican,
Campbell
Bascom Slemp of Big Stone Gap, and one of the fondest
dreams of the
Democracy
was to redeem the Ninth and return the state solidly
to Democratic
control.
Trinkle seemed a likely possibility to dethrone Slemp
and, even before
the session ended, Western papers were predicting
bigger things for the
Wytheville legislator. Two months later, political
breezes from the
mountain
counties hinted that Trinkle sentiment for the 1916
Congressional
campaign
was building.
By the first of
August,
with the District Democratic Convention only two weeks
away, several
possibilities
for the candidacy were being mentioned, but nobody
seemed anxious for
the
honor. A week before the convention, headlines
screamed, WILL NOT RUN
IN
NINTH, SAYS TRINKLE. The Roanoke Times had asked him
point blank what
his
intentions were and Trinkle, not very originally or
convincingly,
spelled
out why he would not seek the nomination. Trinkle
cited that he had two
years yet to serve as state senator. He had been
chosen
elector-at-large
at the state convention and wanted time to devote to
that; he had no
law
partner, and above all he felt there were men better
qualified. (1) He
left unsaid other and more pressing considerations. To
contest Slemp in
his lair, particularly with a late start, required
large expenditures
of
time and money with little chance of defeating the
incumbent.
Offsetting
these adverse considerations was the opportunity to
have the honor, to
make the good race, and to get the publicity so
necessary to future
political
aspirations.
The matter still was
not
settled when the district convention met in Bristol on
August 12. A
roll
call of the counties failed to produce a candidate. A
committee
composed
of one man from each of the thirteen counties and
headed by Governor
Stuart
retired to recommend someone. When they reconvened,
Stuart addressed
the
assembly, lauded the qualities and selflessness of
their choice, and
concluded
with Trinkle's name. Amid a long, vocal and
enthusiastic demonstration,
Trinkle, "red, perspiring and trembling with emotion,"
made his way to
the platform. Always ready for a speech and
undoubtedly having one
prepared,
Trinkle was piously and properly humble and singularly
optimistic. "If
ever a man on bended knee prayed to be delivered from
politics, I am
that
man...But if it please God that out of all these men
that I have been
chosen
to lead you, I accept." He went on to set the
directions of the
campaign
in a eulogy to President Wilson's program and the
solemn announcement
that
with Wilson, next only to Jefferson in principle and
purpose, this was
a Democratic year. (2)
Trinkle's campaign
plan
as simple. Legally, since poll taxes had to be paid
six months prior to
the general election, it was too late to qualify more
voters. The
Republicans,
of course had paid up their people for the
ever-possible challenge.
This
was not to be a vote-buying contest. Stuart in 1910
had proved the
futility
of that approach. Trinkle's only chance was to work
hard, to build upon
a few simple issues, and to try to force Bascom Slemp
into some
critical
mistake.
The Democratic
campaign
opened at Pulaski on September 4, and, amid his
cousins and friends,
Trinkle
made a speech in which pathos, flag-waving, scorn and
biting ridicule
held
equal sway - a speech with variations he would make
all over the
district.
He recalled with glee that in 1912, Slemp, Pulaski
editor Tom Muncy,
and
imported Republican orators had toured the district
arguing that if the
tariff laws were changed, the Ninth's economy would
collapse and babies
would die for lack of nourishment. Yet, all mines were
running at full
production, all men were working, agricultural prices
were up and
babies
were growing fat "upon the milk and honey of
Democratic prosperity." He
lauded in detail Wilson's domestic program, then
turning to foreign
policy
and the preparedness issue, Trinkle praised peace,
America, Wilson, and
God, and the four became one:
America, dear old
America,
has had the flag made up of the stars and stripes, the
emblem of our
nationality,
floating and waving triumphantly during that very same
period, and
under
a Democratic administration, and under the leadership
of that great and
fearless American Woodrow Wilson, over a people to
whom there has been
given more happiness, more prosperity, and more of
peace than has ever
been vouchsafed to any other nation of the world. God,
in his merciful
providence, seems to have selected as the chief
instrumentality for the
accomplishment of this good to our nation, Woodrow
Wilson, the
president
of the United States of America. Nothing short of
Divine guidance,
Divine
support, Divine intelligence, and Divine physical
constitutional
make-up
could have given to us such leadership as we have had.
At the setting
of
the sun of each passing day we knew not what would
happen with the
coming
rays over the eastern hills in glory the morning next.
We have
patiently
and quietly and confidently felt that at the helm was
brain- power of
unlimited
foresight, muscle of untiring strength and hands of
never-ceasing
activity
and have laid ourselves down at nightfall to pleasant
sleep, in this
period
of turmoil, disquietude, and fraternal strife,
believing that all would
be well under his guidance. How wisely our belief was
placed and how
satisfying
has been our reward! Can America ever pay to Woodrow
Wilson the debt
that
it owes? Can any American citizen, who has in his
make-up one spark of
gratitude, ever cast his vote to take away such a man
from the
leadership
of the nation?
Attacking the
Republicans,
he compared Charles Evans Hughes, the Republican
presidential
candidate,
and Slemp to the wonder that was Wilson. Hughes "has
dwindled from a
high
position as a capable jurist to less than a cross
roads politician." As
in subsequent speeches, Trinkle charged that Hughes
had uttered no word
that history would record: he had offered no
constructive leadership.
To
compare him with Wilson was to liken the ridiculous
with the sublime.
To
compare the Democracy with Republicanism was to match
the party of
peace,
happiness, and prosperity with that of the corporate
interests, the
trusts
and the money kings.
Bascom Slemp,
Trinkle
added, had done nothing for the Ninth or for his
country. He had sent
out
complimentary packets of garden seeds at government
expense: he had
never
consumed more than a half hour of Congress' time with
anything he had
ever
said: he had favored public buildings for the Ninth,
but so had the
rest
of the state's delegation; he promised more offices
than either
Congress
or the President had the power to give; and he had
consistently voted
against
the interests of the people. By implication, Trinkle
would back the
President
fully, and under Democratic guidance, the Ninth would
continue to be
prosperous,
and the nation would remain at peace. (3)
Immediately upon
Slemp's
nomination in absentia on August 29, Trinkle sent him
an open challenge
to debate throughout the district. Slemp sidestepped
it, and thus
provided
Trinkle with an additional barb. "When I have been to
Congress as long
as C. Bascom Slemp and some mountain boy invites me to
meet him in
joint
debate I'll met him if he skins me alive." (4)
In the first major
effort
to dethrone Slemp since 1910, Democratic state leaders
found their way
into the district to help the "boy orator", offering
speeches, money,
and
their own considerable experience in organizing.
Davis, Ellyson,
Pollard,
all eager for exposure for the coming gubernatorial
campaign, were
there
along with Martin, Flood, Swanson, Glass, Tucker, and
Montague,
bringing
flowing, empty oratory and practical, shirt-sleeve
politics, all for
the
people who loved it best. (5) Enthusiasm was high, and
the miners,
tobacco
farmers, and moonshiners came out of the hills and
valleys to mingle,
to
listen, to revel in it, and, ultimately, to vote for
Bascom Slemp.
(6)
Most of the thunder
in
the mountainous Ninth was stirred up by the Democrats.
The Republicans
seemed uninterested and in fact carried on a very
lackluster campaign.
Slemp knew that Trinkle was no real threat. The
Republicans had been
duly
registered and "paid up" as usual that spring. There
was probably a
three
or four thousand Republican majority on the capitation
rolls, and the
county
chairmen and the precinct captains could be counted on
to get out the
vote.
Slemp's interest that entire year had been on national
politics and
most
of his work was at that level.
Bascom Slemp was
rapidly
becoming the South's most powerful Republican. His
interest was less
and
less in trying to build a strong party in the state
and more and more
in
being the chief Republican patronage dispenser in the
state and in the
South. This insured his control of the Virginia
delegation to the
national
conventions and the control of many delegates
throughout the South.
Thus
by simply holding on to his Ninth District fiefdom, he
had a safe power
base from which to exercise tremendous personal
political influence.
Aside
from the pure enjoyment of having and exercising
political power, his
probable
aim was a cabinet post, an honor he sought and was
denied three times.
Lewis P. Summers of
Abingdon
was Slemp's chief lieutenant. In 1915 and 1916,
through Slemp, Summers
served as political errand boy for the conservative
Republican National
Congressional Committee, and as a paid organizer for
an aspiring
presidential
candidate. The National Republican party in 1916 was
optimistic that it
could seal the break of 1912 and regain the
presidency. Candidates were
numerous. There was a groundswell for Taft; Roosevelt
was engineering a
groundswell for himself; there was great support for
Hughes.
Surreptitiously,
many conservative business men and standpat
politicians were backing
another
eager hopeful, Senator John W. Weeks of Massachusetts.
(7)
Certainly by
December
1915 and probably before, men like Summers were
traveling over the
country
with a dual purpose - to raise money to organize and
finance the
campaigns
of businessman congressional candidates and to seek
convention support
for Weeks. The appeal to business men for money was an
interesting one.
It was an outright plea to actively organize business
interests to
influence
legislation in their favor by turning out the
"demagogues, busters, and
smashers" and electing a legislature of business men.
(8)
Although Weeks'
candidacy
died at the convention, Slemp was honored in August by
being chosen to
head the Speaker's Bureau for the national campaign.
This would keep
him
out of the district until well into September, while
Trinkle's campaign
seemingly gained momentum. (9)
Slemp was in no
danger.
Summers' papers are full of ungrammatical but
indicative letters like
the
following:
Mr. Summar if you
can
arrang to have my pole tax pay I have work here at
homme will distaine
me frome coming to Abingdon on Satursday and if you
shall attend to
this
little matter for me, I will consider it a great
accomadation to me.
(10)
After the deadline
for
tax payment, Slemp told Summers that the district
appeared to be in
better
shape than any time since 1904, and he judged their
majority at 3000.
Since
this had been Slemp's life-blood since 1902, there is
no reason to
doubt
the accuracy of his estimate. Characteristically,
Slemp was careful to
note the passage of the absentee vote law in the 1916
Assembly and
instructed
Summers to give careful attention to it. He was
particularly interested
in the possibility of getting troops on the Mexican
border to vote. (11)
Slemp finally opened
his
campaign at Abingdon on September 25. IN a dull,
measured and
fact-filled
address, he stated his position. He apologized for
being absent at the
convention in August, explained his work for the
national ticket, and
then
recited a long list of "progressive" acts for which he
had voted and on
which Trinkle had "misrepresented" his position. He
pointed out other
measures
which Trinkle had praised and for which he had voted,
including the
good
roads bill and the income tax amendment. He claimed
responsibility for
establishing the Good Roads Committee, quoted letters
to prove it, and
said that he had become a member of the Appropriations
Committee in
order
to insure that the Ninth received its fair share of
the monies. But all
this was only part of the ritual. Slemp, who spoke
seldom and not well
did so not to win votes, but because it was expected.
Trinkle, who
spoke
well and often, spoke because he loved it, because he
looked to a
future
day, and because it was his only chance of victory. A
better indication
of the way the campaign was progressing is the fact
that Slemp and
Summers
apparently exchanged no significant letters concerning
the campaign
after
Slemp took the field.
Election day found
Slemp
with his usual majority; he even carried Wythe County
by two votes.
Trinkle
explained to Andrew Jackson Montague that it was
"simply a case of too
many poll taxes unpaid by Democrats, and too large a
campaign fund in
hands
of the opposition." His public statement was similar,
emphasizing his
belief
that even in defeat the campaign had served to cement
the party for the
future. Trinkle's evaluation was not quite accurate.
As long as Bascom
Slemp chose to run he was unbeatable. For Trinkle,
however, the
campaign
served a valuable purpose. He had worked closely with
the state
Democratic
power structure with ample opportunity to display his
talents. When
these
state leaders needed a gubernatorial candidate in 1921
with energy,
considerable
talent and a definite oratorical flair, Trinkle was
readily available.
The time and money invested in the campaign against
Slemp paid valuable
dividends.
Footnotes:
(1) Roanoke Times, March 4, 18, August
6,
1916; conversation with Stuart B. Campbell,
Wytheville, August 24,
1966.
(2) Roanoke Times, August 13; Bristol
Herald
Courier, August 12; Big Stone Gap Post, August 16,
1916.
(3) SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA ENTERPRISE,
September
8; Roanoke Times, September 5; Bristol Herald
Courier, September 5,
1916;
lest one be too inclined to scoff at the rhetoric,
Stuart Campbell said
that he read what must have been this speech before
Trinkle ever
delivered
it and thought it empty. Yet, he heard Trinkle give
it three times and
cried with him every time.
(4) Roanoke Times, September 13,
1916.
(5) See W. J. Cash, THE MIND OF THE
SOUTH,
(New York, 1941), 52-54 for a discussion of oratory
as an integral part
of the Southern mind.
(6) Patrick Henry Drewry Papers,
University
of Virginia, Drewry to Trinkle, September 7, 1916;
the Roanoke Times
and
the Bristol Herald Courier give the campaign good
coverage. See, in
particular,
October 1, 5, 26 and 28 in the Times.
(7) George Mowry, THEODORE ROOSEVELT
AND
THE PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT (New York, 1942), 337 ff,
see letters from O.
E. Wellers, Weeks' staff man, to Summers,
December-June, 1915-1916, W.
P. Summers Papers, University of Virginia.
(8) Summers to W. Cooper Procter,
Cincinnati,
February 25, 1915, IBID.
(9) See letters to Summers from
National
Congressional Committee, June-August, 1916; Slemp to
Summers, August
25,
September 1, 1916, IBID; Histories of the 1916
Republican campaign
ignore
Weeks although he was second to Hughes on the first
ballot; see Mowry,
THEODORE ROOSEVELT, 345-359; William S. Myers, THE
REPUBLICAN PARTY,
(New
York, 1928), 416-425; George Mayer, THE REPUBLICAN
PARTY 1854-1964 (New
York, 1965), 339-342; William Harbaugh, THE LIFE AND
TIMES OF THEODORE
ROOSEVELT, (New York, 1963), 457-460.
(10) John Brisen to Summers, May 5,
1916,
Summers Papers
(11) Slemp to Summers, September 5,
1916,
Summers Papers; Horn, "Democratic Party", 199; ACTS
OF ASSEMBLY,
"Chapter
369," 633.
Pages 18 to 26
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