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“Reform—By George”

"With all its drawbacks, and horrors, and shortcomings, the great epoch of the French Revolution, now but a century gone, is about to repeat itself here."--Extract from Speech by Henry George, at Nilsson Hall.--N. Y. Sun, October 14.

In
1886, economist and reformer Henry George ran unsuccessfully for mayor
of New York City. In this
cartoon, George’s pie-in-the sky theories are bound together with
real-world violence by his calculated campaign for votes.
Henry George was born in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, in 1839, into a deeply religious Episcopalian family. He was educated at home by a tutor, read widely, and attended
lectures at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. During his teenage years (1852-1858), he labored as a store
clerk, a ship’s foremast boy, and apprentice typesetter.
In 1858, George took a job as a steward on a ship bound for San
Francisco, where, after a failed stint as a gold prospector, he worked
as a printer and reporter for several of the city’s newspapers.
He went bankrupt after the folding of the San Francisco
Evening Journal, of which he had become part owner.
He married in 1861, but continued in poverty, eventually
supporting his family in 1865 by begging in the street.
During the Civil War, George supported the policies
of the Lincoln administration (1861-1865).
After the war, he joined the San Francisco Times as a
printer and writer. In
1868, Overland Monthly published his essay, “What the Railroad
Will Bring Us,” in which he first articulated his conviction that the
American economic system fostered wealth for the few at the expense of
poverty for the many. He gained national attention on a trip to New York City when the New
York Tribune published his article condemning immigrant Chinese
laborers on the West Coast.
He claimed that the “heathen” and “treacherous” Chinese
were unfairly taking jobs from white workers.
His remarks brought him a hero’s welcome upon returning to San
Francisco.
During the 1870s, George supported the Liberal
Republicans (1872), joined the American Free Trade League, wrote
editorials critical of railroad subsidies and supportive of tax reform,
and failed in both a bid for election to the California legislature and
for an economics chair at the University of California.
He also published more detailed accounts of his economic theory in Our
Land and Land Policy (1871) and Progress and Poverty (1879).
He argued that large landowners were unjustly profiting off the
rent and toil of others, and urged that all taxes on business and
consumers be abolished and replaced with a single steep tax on land.
The influential Progress and Poverty provoked
international interest in his theory and sparked the “single-tax”
movement.
A few weeks after the publication of Progress
and Poverty, the Irish land
war (1879-1882) began, and
in 1881 George traveled to Ireland as a correspondent for the Irish
World, an American newspaper. He
became popular with Irish Americans, who repeated his claims that the
Irish land situation was not unique, but also applied to the United
States. Back
in the United States, George wrote a series of articles for Frank
Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper in response to essays by
laissez-faire economist William Graham Sumner.
In 1884-1885, Britain’s Radical Liberals sponsored George’s
lecture tour in which he delivered 75 speeches in 35 cities throughout
England, Scotland, and Ireland.
On October 5, 1886, George accepted the United
Labor Party’s nomination for mayor of New York City (where he had
moved in 1880). Besides his
land-tax, the party platform endorsed government ownership of railroads
and telegraphs; higher wages, shorter hours, and better working
conditions for laborers; and an end to police interference with peaceful
assemblies. The latter was
a reaction to labor disputes
that had culminated in Chicago's Haymarket Riot
earlier in the summer. Beside the tense labor situation, the mayoral campaign of
1886 occurred in the midst of revelations of massive corruption
in the municipal government leading to the arrest of 22
aldermen. George declared,
“this government of New York City—our whole political system—is
rotten to the core.”
To face the challenge to its working-class
constituency, the Tammany Hall Democratic machine selected a leader of
the rival Irving Hall faction, Abram Hewitt, to run for mayor.
Hewitt attacked the Republican candidate Theodore Roosevelt
as a tool of rich businessmen.
The Democratic nominee warned that “anarchists, nihilists,
communists, [and] socialists” controlled the United Labor Party, and
that the practical result of George’s economic theory would be “the
horrors of the French Revolution and the atrocities of the Commune.”
As this cartoon's caption indicates, George himself compared the situation
in contemporary American with that of France on the eve of its 1789
revolution.
On November 2, 1886, Hewitt was elected mayor with
41% of the vote to George’s 31% and Roosevelt’s 28%.
George did best among Catholic voters and second-generation Irish
and Germans, but lost the vote of the poorest and most recent immigrants to
Hewitt. Roosevelt lost a
substantial number of middle-class and wealthy voters who cast ballots
for Hewitt out of fear that the three-way race might result in a victory
for George.
In 1887, the United Labor Party nominated George
for the statewide office of secretary of state, but by that time the
coalition that had supported him the previous year in his run for mayor
had splintered, and he lost handily.
Nevertheless, a group of businessmen who supported George’s tax
policy in the hope that it would rid them of corporate taxation
organized the Single Tax League. George himself enthusiastically backed President Grover
Cleveland’s call for tariff reform, and endorsed the Democratic
president’s reelection in 1888 and 1892.
While on another foreign speaking tour in December 1890, George
suffered a stroke that undermined his general health.
He was able, though, to begin writing the Science of Political
Economy, and to campaign for William Jennings Bryan in 1896.
In 1897, a coalition of reformers and anti-Tammany
Democrats nominated George for mayor of New York City.
It was the first election held after the five boroughs had
consolidated into one municipality, and he faced three other candidates:
Tammany’s Robert Van Wyck (the eventual winner), reformer Seth
Low, and Republican Benjamin Tracy. The campaign, however, was too strenuous for the ailing
George, who suffered a stroke and died one week before the election.
Robert C. Kennedy
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