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I frequently read up on some relatively esoteric US political history, looking through NY Times articles on a computerized archive of NY Times. I post these things to my blog, and here and there. Looking into the 1928 election between Hoover and Smith, well... History would repeat itself in 1948, 1964, 1968, and the Southern Dixiecrat's hatred of Truman and Johnson for their Civil Rights programs, which would lead them into the Republican tent, and the legacy lives on today.
And, oh yes, Bob Jones makes an appearance in this little tale of the origins of how the Republicans won the South.
7-17-1928: Opponents to the candidacy of Governor Smith crystallized here today at a conference of anti-Smith Democrats of Texas who pledged a state-wide campaign for the election of Secretary Hoover. About 500 persons attended the rally and among the speakers were half a dozen party leaders, ministers, and prohibition workers. Resolutions were adopted denouncing Governor Smith for his advocacy of a modification of the prohibition law; declaring resentment "of the efforts of Tammany Hall to nullify the 18th Amendment and to scrap the Volstead Act"; condemning the appointment of J.T. Roskab as chairman of the National Democratic Executive Committee, and denoucning "Tammany Democrats for the treatment with contempt the notice given by evangelical bodies of the South that they would not accept a wet nominee." <...>
Governor Smith's message to the Houston convention in which he reaffirmed his stand for modification of the prohibition statues was characterized as "treason" by several speakers. His nomination was termed "The vilest insult ever hurled at Southern Democrats."
V.A. Collins: "Any man who strike down the 18th Amendment also would strike down section 3 article 6 of the constitution pertaining to religious freedom. I don't know if there is still a Ku Klux Klan organization in Texas. But if they are opposed to Al Smith I wish there were 10,000,000 of them in the state." ..............................
7-11: A few days ago a well known Washington correspondent wrote "political observers are surprised to see all the anti-Smith bitterness disappearing and the entire South getting ready to give a solid vote for the nominee." Political observers not only in Washington but in the South are entitled to be "surprised" as the foregoing statement appeared in the Birmingham News and Age Herald in the column next to the "lynching" of Governor Smith in effigy at Wahouma, Alabama by the Nathan Bedford Forrest Klan of that Klux-ridden community. It was not an ordinary mob "lynching an effigy". All the joys of Ku Kluxery were indulged. A straw effigy was introduced as "Al Smith, Democratic nominee for President". Asked what should be done the crowd yelled, "Lynch him!" A vengeful Democratic Klansman plunged a knife into the effigy's throat, while another poured on mercurochrome to heighten the effect of the "assassination." A shot or two was fired into the effigy and it was then, amid the frenzy of the klan and its sympathizers, dragged around to hall to allow those present to vent their anger with kicks. The Robert E Lee Klavern in Alabama also assailed Governor Smith and did everything except "lynch" the Democratic candidate.
It should be said that the persons responsible in most cases for keeping alive and formenting hatred against Governor Smith in Georgia and Alabama are the preachers, those women who are members of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, and a handful of anti-Catholic newspapers. .........................................
10-7, Alabama dispatch: The primary objection to Smith is his Catholicism. His wet views com second, his Tammany affiliation third. But it is hard to tell where one leaves off and the other begins. The simple truth is that there would be only a negligible amount of bolting among Democrats if Smith were not Catholic, regardless of his Tammany affiliations and his opposition to prohibition and regardless of his supposed views on immigration and his fondness for "those dirty Italians" as some speakers characterize them.
Klan politicians and preachers in Methodist and Baptist pulpits are the chief purveyors of evil reports about Smith. Some of these are Democrats, some are Republicans. All of them, however, enjoy the blessing of the Republican Campaign Committee of Alabama; indeed the Republican National Committee ChairMan, Oliver D Street, last year a bitter foe of the Klan, now is attacking Smith because of his religion and printing his attack in a Klan organ, The American Standard of Birmingham. <...>
Dr. Bob Jones, best known Methodist evangelist in the South and proprietor of Bob Jones College, is making 100 speeches for Hoover in Alabama. Jones tells his audiences that Catholics regard the children of non-Catholic parents as illegitimate. Though a vehement prohibitionist, Jones has repeatedly said, "I'd rather see a saloon on every corner than a Catholic in the White House." He also is fond of saying that he'd "rather see a nigger" president than Smith. We are told that in Italy the watchword of the priests is, "If you can't convert 'em, kill 'em." Jones assures us this is true.
Other speakers, including Senator Heflin, say that every American President who has been assassinated was killed by a Catholic and that a Catholic shot Roosevelt. The "Anti-Smith Democratic Campaign Committee", Judge Hugh A Locke Chairman, in his campaign book denoucnes Smith as a "negro lover", and a "negro boot-licker". He asserts that Smith favors and practices social equality (oh, the horror of it all!) and favors miscegenation. "Al Smith owes his entire political career to support by the lowest element of society. His plan of campaign is and has always been to divide the decent element of society between himself and his opponent, and then get the office by solidifying the negro, the alien, and the criminal element behind him." ..........................................................
11-12, FDR surveys the wreckage: While Mr. Roosevelt has remained silent on this phrase of the situation, it is said that he believes the survey will show that many Democrats in the South who left the party to vote for Herbert Hoover can be brought back within the regular ranks if they are handled tactfully. He is said to feel that if intensive work is carried on, not for three months but for at least three years, not only can the losses of November 6 be met but important gains can be effected. .....................
11-15: In his letter, Mr. Hoover says he is not at all unmindful of the conditions which for years brought about the political solidarity of the South, an apparent reference to the race question and resentment to the Republican Party's reconstruction policy following the Civil War; but he expresses the belief "that the time has come when in all sections men and women should vote from their convictions as to conditions at the present time and not based on things of former generations." ..........................
11-25: The press of Tennessee and Arkansas has been much concerned since the election with the future political status of the negro, due to the break in the solid south. The word has passed that negro leaders in the North are prepared to fight in Congress for relief from the "Jim Crow" laws of the South and that they are going to call upon the Republicans, whose cause they aided in the recent election, to help them win their point. Previous efforts to break the "Jim Crow" law have been defeated by the votes of the Congressmen from the Solid South and Tammany Hall, but in the light of the events of the past few weeks the old cohesion is gone and the situation has reached panicky stage in some quarters. For instance, editorial expression from Chattanooga is that Senator Glass and Senator Swanson of Virginia and Senator Sheppard of Texas, whose states refused to listen to them in the fight for the election of Governor Smith, will be keen to combat the rumored plans of the Republicans when the onslaught of the south begins in Congress. These men were in a sense repudiated by the voters of their states and it is quite possible that they will be more or less quiescent.
It is understood that John R Hawkins, the negro who seconded the nomination of Hoover, is to lead the fight and that the first assault will be on the "Jim Crow" law of Virignia, because it joins DC where no such law exists. Virginia will be only the first step, it is understood, and other states of the South may expect o be asked to defend their right to enforce an act that deals with racial discrimination.
Newspapers of the region that supported the Democratic cause valiantly wax sarcastic in their comment on the situation, and although they express chagrin that things are as they are, they insist that Democratic bolters are merely being "given a taste of the menu which has been prepared for them by the negro leaders of the North." The intimation is that they deserve all they recieve. ...........................
12-4: At a meeting of the Presbyterian Ministers Association of New York, Reverend Harry Bowlby: "The revolt of the Solid South was a rebuke to Governor Smith, who had the effrontery to kick aside the Democratic platform and to pose before the country as being himself the Democratic Party. Now that Governor Smith has discovered his avowed attitudes as the cahmpion of the open saloon has nearly wrecked the Democratic Party, I believe that he has the good sense to step aside."
11-16, CH Patterson: What do the American people care about really statesmanlike questions, such as cooperation with foreign nations, peace and international trade? They are willing to vote on strict party lines, unless their prejudices are involved. Apparently, they neither know nor care about what such questions mean. The small futilities, however, engage them desparately.
One prominent paper in New England speaks of the "immense benefit" to the South of the election of Herbert Hoover! Any northerner who has lived in teh South knows that it is a disaster. I acknowledge, as a Republican, that Hoover's election is a good thing for the country as a whole, but for the South especially it is a misfortune. Not that the South loved Hoover more but that it loves Catholics and liquor less! The choice of Hoover confirms all their prejudices. This victory will set back the progress of religious liberty and education in the South. ...................
11-27: Hiram Wesley Evans, Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, has little use for the World Court, Governor Alfred Smith, Senator Reed of Missouri, or violations of the 18th Amendment. He made this plian in an address here tonight when he outlined Klan policies for the coming two years. The organization would continue along the line of its present endevor, he said.
"The Klan restored control in Reconstruction Days, and we will do the same now," he said referring to violation of Prohibition. Governor Smith came in for a hearty share of the Wizard's vocal artillery. The Governor has proved himself a "bad citizen" by advocating the repeal of the Mullen=Gage law in New York, he charged. He referred to Governor Smith as "the great nullifer of today" and declared that "what was good for Calhourn, the first Great Nullifier, will be ample for Al Smith in 1928." I don't have time to google it -- either refreshing my memory or teaching it to me for the first time, so will some historian please tell me what happened to Calhourn? "The Catholic Church is all right for Al Smtih but it does not fit an Imperial Wizard." I think I'll frame that quote. "Georgia will have her revenge in 1928 for the insult furnished at the national convention by the playing of 'Marching Through Georgia'. He asserted that a coffin would lead a procession with a funeral dirge, and that the inscription of the conffin would tell the uninformed "Here lies the political remains of Al Smith."
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