Salmon P. Chase: A Biography

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 1995 M03 9 - 576 pages
Salmon P. Chase was one of the preeminent men of 19th-century America. A majestic figure, tall and stately, Chase was a leader in the fight to end slavery, a brilliant administrator who as Lincoln's Secretary of the Treasury provided crucial funding for a vastly expensive war, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court during the turmoil of Reconstruction, and the presiding officer of the impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson. Yet he was also a complex figure. As John Niven reveals in this magisterial biography, Chase was a paradoxical blend of idealism and ambition. If he stood for the highest moral purposes--the freedom and equality of all mankind--these lofty ideas failed to mask a thirst for power so deeply ingrained in his character that it drove away many who shared his principles, but mistrusted his motives. Niven provides a vivid description of Chase's early years--his childhood in New Hampshire (where his father's failed business venture and early death left the family all but destitute) and in Ohio (where he was sent to live with his uncle Philander, an Episcopal bishop), his education at Dartmouth, and his early law career in Cincinnati. Niven shows how the plight of the slaves stirred this reticent young lawyer, and how Chase gradually moved to the forefront of the antislavery movement. At the same time, we see how he used his growing prominence in the antislavery movement to forward his political ambitions. Niven illuminates Chase's long tenure as a public man. Twice elected United States Senator, twice chosen governor of Ohio (then the third most populous state in the Union), Chase organized the widespread but diffuse anti-slavery movement into a workable political organization, the Free Soil party (whose slogan "Free Soil, Free Labor, Freemen" Chase coined himself). We read of Chase's work in Lincoln's war cabinet and his tenure as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and we also follow his many political maneuvers, his attempts to undercut rivals, and his poorly run campaigns for presidential nominations. Niven also provides an intimate portrait of Chase's family life--his loss of three wives and four of his six children, and the unfortunate marriage of his beautiful daughter Kate to a rich but dissolute man--and a vivid picture of life at mid-century. What emerges is a portrait of a tragic figure, whose high qualities of heart and mind and whose many achievements were ultimately tarnished by an often unseemly quest for power. It is a striking look at an eminent statesman as well as a revealing glimpse into political life in 19th-century America, all set against a background of the anti-slavery movement, the Civil War, and the turmoil of Reconstruction.
 

Contents

1 Threshold
3
2 Trials and Triumphs
16
3 The Young Professional
29
4 Upward Bound
39
5 A Distant Shore
55
6 To Recognize the Distinctions
71
7 Climbing the Slippery Pole
87
8 Free Soil Free Labor and Free Men
99
19 War
243
20 No Other Recourse
259
21 Military Moves and Missions
274
22 High Stakes
290
23 Emancipation with Exceptions
302
24 Mixed Results
314
25 Old Greenbacks
330
26 Bad Company
346

9 Among the Great
114
10 Midpassage
129
11 Independent Democrat
140
12 An Uncertain Future
153
13 On the Campaign Trail
165
14 As Others See Us
176
15 For the Good of the Party
191
16 Defeat at the Summit
206
17 Visit to Springfield
222
18 Loaves and Fishes
233
27 It Is a Big Fish
355
28 So Help Me God
367
29 A Trip South
384
30 Universal Suffrage Universal Amnesty
397
31 Impeachment
415
32 One Clear Call
433
Abbreviations Used in Notes
453
Notes
459
Index
529
Copyright

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About the author (1995)

John Niven is Professor Emeritus of American History at Claremont Graduate School and is editor of the papers of Salmon P. Chase. His many books include Gideon Welles, Lincoln's Secretary of the Navy, Martin Van Buren and the Romantic Era of American Politics, and John C. Calhoun and the Price of Union: A Biography.

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