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Merriam-Webster's CollegiateŽ Dictionary
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Quotation
"You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns, you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold." -William Jennings Bryan
Go to http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/seminar/unit8/crgold.htm

By the Numbers
Republicans, led by McKinley's campaign manager Mark Hanna, raised a record $3,500,000 for the 1896 Presidential election.
Go to http://www.history.ohio-state.edu/projects/mckinley/hanna/default.htm

Check it Out!
Had it not been for President McKinley's assassination at the 1901 Pan-American Exposition, the "big story" might have been the fellow who walked from Nebraska to Buffalo to attend the Expo!
Go to http://intotem.buffnet.net/bhw/panamex/assassination/remarkbl.htm

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PoliticalFest 2000
On the Campaign Trail
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1a. First Modern Election: 1896 -- GOP Victorious

The "Great Commoner" William Jennings Bryan gave William McKinley a "run for his money" in 1896 after his famed "Cross of Gold" speech at the Democratic Convention in Chicago.
It was called the first modern election. Mark Hanna, William McKinley's campaign manager, was innovative in two ways. He raised a staggering amount of money ($3.5 million) from the business community. Second, he "marketed" McKinley as if he were a product. Big Bill's robust physique and character was pitched as a metaphor for a recovering robust American economy. It worked.

As the soup lines grew larger, so did voters' anger at the present system. Everything seemed to be falling into place for the Populists.

William McKinley captured the election of 1896 with only 51% of the popular vote, but a comfortable electoral vote tally of 271 to William Jennings Bryan's 176.
Populist James Weaver made an impressive showing in 1892, and now Populist ideas were being discussed across the nation. The Panic of 1893 was the worst financial crisis to date in American history. When Jacob S. Coxey of Ohio marched his "army" of 200 supporters into the nation's capital to demand reforms in the spring of 1894, many thought a revolution was brewing. The climate seemed to ache for change. All that the Populists needed was a winning Presidential candidate in 1896.

William Jennings Bryan was the unlikely candidate.

Ironically, Bryan the person who defended the Populist platform that year came from the Democratic Party. An attorney from Lincoln, Nebraska, Bryan's speaking skills were among the best of his generation. Known as the "Great Commoner," Bryan quickly developed a reputation as defender of the farmer.

When Populist ideas began to spread, Democratic voters of the South and West gave their enthusiastic endorsement. At the Chicago Democratic convention in 1896, Bryan delivered a speech that made his career. Demanding the free coinage of silver, Bryan shouted, "You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold!"

Chicago Record, 1896
"A great exhibition, but rather trying on the man in the middle." William Jennings Bryan is shown pulled in two directions as he campaigned on both the Democratic and the Populist Party platforms.

Thousands of delegates roared their approval, and at the age of 36, the "Boy Orator" received the Democratic nomination. Faced with a difficult choice between surrendering their identity and hurting their own cause, the Populist Party also nominated Bryan as their candidate.

Soaring 375 feet into the sky, the Electric Tower was the centerpiece of Buffalo, N.Y.'s Pan-American Exposition of 1901. Though it was intended to be a showcase of technology and progress, it was at this exposition that William McKinley was assassinated.
The Republican competitor was William McKinley, the governor of Ohio. He had the support of the moneyed eastern establishment. Behind the scenes, a wealthy Cleveland industrialist named Mark Hanna was determined to see McKinley elected. He, like many of his class, believed that the free coinage of silver would bring financial ruin to America.

Using his vast wealth and power, Hanna directed a campaign based on fear of a Bryan victory. McKinley campaigned from his home, leaving the politicking to the party faithful. Bryan revolutionized campaign politics by launching a nationwide whistle-stop effort, making twenty to thirty speeches per day. When the results were finally tallied, McKinley had beaten Bryan by an electoral vote margin of 271 to 176.

Leon Czolgosz, a blacksmith from Cleveland, Ohio, assassinated William McKinley in September 1901. By October, Czolgosz had been tried and executed for his crime.
Many factors led to Bryan's defeat. He was unable to win a single state in the populous Northeast. Laborers feared the free silver idea as much as their bosses. While inflation would help the debt-ridden, mortgage-paying farmers, it could hurt the wage-earning, rent-paying factory workers. In a sense, the election came down to city versus country.

By 1896, the urban forces won. Bryan's campaign marked the last time a major party attempted to win the White House by exclusively courting the rural vote. The economy of 1896 was also on the upswing. Had the election occurred in the heart of the Panic of 1893, the results may have differed. Farm prices were rising in 1896, albeit slowly. The Populist Party fell apart with Bryan's loss. Although they continued to nominate candidates, most of their membership had reverted to the major parties. The ideas, however, did endure.

Although the free silver issue died, the graduated income tax, direct election of senators, initiative, referendum, recall, and the secret ballot were all later enacted. These issues were kept alive by the next standard bearers of reform — the Progressives.



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