This Harper's Weekly cartoon by C. G. Bush caricatures John Kelly as
the confident "boss" of Tammany Hall, which is drawn literally as the
"political machine" of the Democratic party in New York City.
John Kelly was born in New York City to working-class, Irish-Catholic,
immigrant parents. Forced to drop out of school after his father's death, Kelly
became successful in the grate-setting business, and popular in his ward as the
captain of the local target-shooting club, a volunteer fireman, an amateur
boxer, and an amateur actor (particularly renowned for Shakespearean roles).
Kelly entered politics in the 1840s, and was elected to the city's board of
aldermen in 1853, supporting the measures of Tammany Hall. The next year,
however, he challenged their maverick congressman, Mike Walsh, and won by 18
votes, becoming the only Roman Catholic in Congress at the time. He served on
the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, and was reelected in 1856.
In 1858, at the urging of Tammany leaders, Kelly ran and won election as city
and county sheriff, resigning his congressional seat in the final months of his
second term. The sheriff did not receive a salary, but was paid with a
percentage of all fees the office collected. Kelly’s efficiency in the
position brought him considerable wealth and the (some said ironic) nickname
"Honest John." He accumulated a fortune through his financial
dealings as sheriff, businessman, and real estate investor, donating large sums
to Catholic charities.
In politics, Kelly had become increasingly dissatisfied with the way William
"Boss" Tweed ran Tammany Hall, so in 1868 agreed to run for mayor on a
Reform Democratic ticket against Tweed’s candidate, Oakey Hall. After losing,
Kelly went on an extended tour of Europe. He returned in the fall of 1871
when press revelations of "Tweed Ring" corruption and subsequent legal
prosecutions were crippling Tammany Hall as a political force. Democratic
reformers who helped topple Tweed and his cohorts did not want to see Tammany
Hall destroyed, so they offered Kelly leadership of the organization.
Kelly purged Tammany Hall of Tweed associates, and persuaded prominent,
respectable Democrats, such as George McClellan, Horatio Seymour, and Abram
Hewitt, to become members. Kelly consolidated power within the organization,
becoming more of a boss than Tweed had ever been. His control
would never be complete, though, as he was forced to battle challengers, such as
John Morrissey, founder of a competing Democratic political machine, Irving
Hall.
In 1876, Kelly won election as city comptroller (treasurer), and during his
four-year term reduced municipal debt by $2 million. In 1879, having broken with
Democratic governor Lucius Robinson, Kelly’s run for governor on the Tammany
Democratic ticket against Robinson allowed Republican Alonzo Cornell to win the
election. In the mid-1880s, Kelly suffered increasing ill health and transferred
much of the Tammany leadership duties to Richard Croker, who became the new boss
upon Kelly’s death in 1886.
In this cartoon, the source of Tammany Hall's power is a gin mill, and
Kelly's seat of authority is the barrel containing the gin, reflecting the
perspective of good-government reformers that Tammany Hall constituents were
ignorant, besotted immigrants (Irish Catholics, mainly) and workingmen.
The label "Bourbon" (on the board upon which Kelly's feet rest)
reinforces here the negative image of urban Democrats, but is also a nickname
for conservative Southerners, the party's other power base. Kelly's
hypocrisy concerning the issue of alcohol prohibition is emphasized by the
placard reading "This machine is run on Democratic temperance
principles."
A satisfied Kelly is able to read a newspaper in peace as the Tammany Hall
political machine he has built runs smoothly and effortlessly. The notice
on the wall refers to investigative hearings conducted by state assemblyman
Theodore Roosevelt's subcommittee. Roosevelt had proposed to amend the
city charter by applying civil service reform rules to the city
government. It was an attempt to undermine the power of Tammany Hall and,
more broadly, to establish what the
reformers hoped would be a more honest and efficient administration.
Roosevelt's civil service bill became law, but Tammany Hall's influence
continued.