A Lincoln in Quincy in 1892

When Quincyans think of Lincoln speaking in the Gem City, their thoughts naturally go back to the Lincoln-Douglas Debate in Washington Square on that clear, crisp day of Oct. 13, 1858.
Thirty-four years later, another Lincoln addressed a throng of thousands in Washington Square and spoke not of slavery or a desire to be elected to the U.S. Senate, but for the re-election of President Benjamin Harrison.
Robert Todd Lincoln, eldest son of Abraham and Mary Todd Lincoln and U.S. minister to the Court of St. James (London), returned to America in 1892 to appear on behalf of his political benefactor.
Born in Springfield in 1843, Robert lacked the strong bond with his father that his brothers Willie and Tad shared. Nevertheless, Robert deeply admired his father and wept openly at his deathbed in 1865. After his father's death, Robert moved with his mother and brother Tad to Chicago where Robert studied law before being admitted to the bar in 1867. The 1870s saw Robert embroiled in the controversial admission of his mother to a mental institution, which led to a profound estrangement between mother and son.
In 1877, Robert Lincoln declined President Rutherford B. Hayes' offer to become assistant secretary of state but later accepted an appointment as President James Garfield's secretary of war, serving from 1881 to 1885 under Presidents Garfield and Chester A. Arthur. Lincoln's ambassadorship to the United Kingdom lasted from 1889 to 1893. Afterward, he returned to private business as lawyer.
Local Republicans were keen with anticipation as Wednesday, Oct. 26, 1892, dawned cool and breezy. They hoped that Robert Lincoln's appearance would bolster the chances of not only President Harrison but local and state Republican candidates as well.
Former Illinois Gov. Richard Oglesby, Lincoln, and George S. Willets, a Republican congressional candidate, arrived by train the morning of Oc. 26, 1892. Greeted by members of the Republican reception committee, the distinguished visitors were escorted to the Newcomb Hotel at Fourth and Maine where Lincoln and Willetts breakfasted.
A reporter for The Quincy Daily Journal described Robert Lincoln's appearance as "above the average height, rather large in frame, has an erect carriage, a pleasant open face, wears a dark brown mustache, and is very easy and cordial in speech and manner."
Also arriving that morning were a number of non-politicians intent on showing their support for President Harrison. The Golden Republican Marching Club, accompanied by the Golden Cornet Band and Drum Corps, marched from the station carrying a flag and banner while several club members wore shirt fronts of the national colors.
A six-coach train came from Carthage, packed with Harrison supporters and two marching clubs with drum corps. The steamer "City of Quincy" brought down about 40 persons from LaGrange and Canton, Mo.
A five-block-long parade formed at Eighth and Broadway and marched to the reviewing stand on the northwest corner of Washington Square. In addition to Lincoln and other political figures, the parade included bands, drum corps, Civil War veterans, and more than 50 members of the Tippecanoe Club, consisting of Adams County men who had voted for President Harrison's grandfather (William Henry Harrison) in the 1840 election.
Newspaper reporters speculated that by the time the rally began at 1:45 p.m., between 3,000 and 5,000 people were gathered in Washington Square and the adjoining streets. While fewer than the 12,000 to 15,000 who had come in 1858 to see Robert Lincoln's father, everybody present was eager to get a look at the son of the 16th Ppresident.
The Macomb Glee Club warmed up the crowd with the song, "Great is American Crow." The lines, "If you wish to keep a good Democrat, feed him on American crow," were the cause of much merriment. The Quincy Herald reported that as the song progressed, "the squirrels in the park emerged from retirement and whisked their bushy tails with glee."
At 2 p.m., the Hon. Robert T. Lincoln was introduced to the crowd. Speaking from a manuscript in support of President Benjamin Harrison, Lincoln reminded the crowd that in his father's time, the Democrat Party stood with slave owners in upholding slavery as a divine institution. Southern Democrats had spoken contemptuously of northern workmen as "the mud sills of humanity." He reminded the crowd that in 1864, the Democrat Party had declared the war to be a miserable failure. Lincoln continued, "At the close of the war, it fell to the Republican Party to reorganize the government and make sound laws. ... From that day to this, the Democracy has never been in power. For thirty-two years, for the lifetime of a generation, you have lived and the country has prospered under Republican laws, despite all efforts of the Democrats to overthrow them."
Perhaps the statement which drew the most applause was when Lincoln said, "The Democratic Party survives to this day as the party of obstruction, destruction, and calamity -- and of nothing else." Lincoln went on to praise existing tariff laws and to criticize the Democratic candidate, Grover Cleveland, for wanting to "return to the worthless wild-cat currency of old Democratic rule."
In conclusion, Lincoln urged his listeners to "Go to the polls and vote early. I do not advise you to, as the Democrats do, vote early and often, but I urge you all to vote, and the earlier the better."
Other speakers followed Robert Lincoln and by the time the rally drew to a close in the late afternoon, many in the public square were thoroughly chilled. Others may have had another problem as the Quincy Herald reported that the planks that were put down were unprotected and sitters had to sit easy or get filled with splinters.
After time to be warmed and fed, many of those in attendance marched through the streets of Quincy in a torchlight parade considerably larger than the parade which preceded the rally.
Not surprisingly, the Quincy Daily Whig, the Republican paper, was lavish in its praise for Mr. Lincoln and his advocacy of President Harrison. Bold headlines exclaimed, "The Republican rally was a magnificent success in every respect." The Whig continued, "Republicans have every reason to feel proud and jubilant over the magnificent success which they have achieved in this stronghold of democracy. It was a magnificent turnout, and in numbers, enthusiasm, and brilliancy of display totally eclipsed the (Democrat) crowd of 10 days ago."
The Democrat paper, the Quincy Herald, was full of succinct comments about the Republican gathering. "The vast billows of excitement that surged over the majestic masses in the park yesterday was something thousands would stay away miles from seeing." "It would have required a search warrant to find yesterday's crowd." "The drum corps boys looked very chilly in their light summer jackets. But they're getting prepared for the chills that will come November 8."
Robert T. Lincoln was not spared from the Herald's barbs. "The good man was striving, as best he knows how, to earn a big government salary ($17,500 per year) by advocating the re-election of the president who appointed him. Robert Lincoln knows that he is the son of Abraham Lincoln. He found occasion to remind his hearers of that fact more than once. It might have seemed necessary, as no one uninformed of the fact would guess that this stolid, middle-aged nitterer of exploded sophisms and dreary commonplace was son of the political giant who met Douglas in debate in Quincy thirty-four years ago."
Determined in its attempt to belittle the Republican rally, the Quincy Herald sank to a journalistic low, even by the standards of the 1890s, when it commented on the black faces in the parade and rally supporting President Harrison. "Who would believe there were so many darkies in town?" included only one, and perhaps the mildest, of the Herald's derogatory and racially prejudice characterizations of the African Americans who had attended the rally.
Two weeks later, Democrat Grover Cleveland was elected President. Despite a Lincoln's appeal here, Cleveland carried 15 of Quincy's 18 precincts to win the city by a vote of 3,946 to 2,724. Cleveland carried Adams County as well, except for Camp Point, Clayton, Beverly, and the Soldiers' Home precincts.
Phil Germann is a retired executive director of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County, having served 19 years. He is a former history teacher, a local historian and speaker, a member of several history-related organizations and a civic volunteer.
Sources
Emerson, Jason. Giant in the Shadows: The Life of Robert T. Lincoln. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2012.
Quincy Daily Journal. October 25-28, 1892.
Quincy Daily Whig. October 25-28, 1892.
Quincy Herald. October 25-28, 1892.





