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With Grant’s betrayal of Louis Dent
(albeit under duress), things were shaping up nicely for James Lusk Alcorn and
the Radical Republicans in the state, and there is little doubt in my mind that
this is how the “Regular” party leadership in Washington planned it. Both Mississippi’s
Radical and Conservative groups were in Washington the winter of 1868-1869, and during their stay, both
sides spent time strategizing with national leaders.
A note here for the reader: In
Mississippi, the Southern Republicans/Scalawags
under Mississippian and Confederate hero J. L. Wofford latched on to the name
of the national party—The National Union Republican Party—immediately after the
war and before the Carpetbaggers established themselves in the state. At the
national level, the name applied to the self-styled “Regulars,” the dominate
wing, more “affectionately” known to history as the Radicals. The conservative
wing of the Party was the Conservatives. So, as confusing as it appears, the
“conservatives” (Scalawags) in Mississippi were, officially, the National Union
Republican Party of Mississippi. That left the Radicals in the state with the term
“Republicans,” just the opposite of what one would think. For the sake of
clarity I will use the term Radicals or Carpetbaggers and Conservatives or Scalawags
to identify these groups. (Further muddying the waters, as of this election in
1869, the term “Conservatives” refers to the fusion group created by the
Scalawags and “New Departure” Democrats). So, you have, in 1869, the National
Union Republican Party of Mississippi (Dent) running against the Republican
Party of Mississippi (Alcorn).
Following the Radical Weekly Delta’s 2 June 1869 “hope” that James Lusk Alcorn would be considered a
likely candidate on the Republican
(Radical) ticket, Robert Alcorn called to order a meeting of the local
Republican Party (Coahoma County/Friar’s Point, and beyond, so annotated because Robert was from Yalobusha County). This
local group selected Alcorn as its gubernatorial nominee for the state Republican
Party convention in Jackson scheduled for 30 September and chose Robert Alcorn as
its representative. By early August, James Alcorn was campaigning for the Radical Party and indirectly for himself as governor. He was also busy
creating a faction loyal to the national party within the state as well as to
himself and not necessarily in that order. His creation of a faction loyal to
him would have met with fewer blessings from party leadership within Mississippi.
Certainly there was mistrust. Northern Carpetbaggers within the state did not,
as a rule, want leadership invested in a Southerner, hence the snubbing of
the indigenous party leader Wofford, which led to his rallying fellow
Southerners (primarily Democrats, without whom he could have never pulled it
off) to defeat the Radical agenda in the summer of ’68. My gut feeling is that
the national party leadership in Washington, thwarted in Mississippi as it had
been, risked championing Alcorn, who had, during the winter sojourn, convinced them of the ineffectiveness
of Eggleston and the threat posed by
the Scalawag Wofford, who was now aligned with and would betray the Republican agenda to the Democrats. [Actually is was the “enlightened” Democrats who betrayed principle, not the other way around.] Republican
Party minions in Mississippi had already
ostracized the presumptuous Wofford, and they were no doubt wary of Alcorn. But
they could only shout out a warning, then obey.
On 30 August, Alcorn spoke in
Hernando, Mississippi, his focus on the “Democratic Party,” a clear indication of how he
viewed the makeup of the Conservative group. He accused his counterparts of
deceiving the Negroes and attacked the Democrats as not being law abiding. He
provided “statistics” to support these charges, and I can’t help but wonder if his
were as good as the ones James Burnie Beck
had brought up the previous winter before Congress, exposing Republican charges
of fraud and violence as self-aggrandizing lies and fabrications. Wanna bet the
source data was similarly derived? One month later, on 30 September, convention
delegates nominated him for governor by an overwhelming majority. R. C. Powers,
ex-United States Army, was chosen to be his lieutenant governor. Adelbert Ames
had appointed Powers as sheriff of Noxubee County earlier in his
administration.
Powers would become
governor after Alcorn arranged his own sojourn to the Senate, and all
indications are that Powers was an honest, forthright man who served well under
difficult circumstances. His subsequent castigation of the state Radicals for
corruption could support the man’s being honest.
This convention gave the Negro a
little more consideration than the previous one (November 1867), nominating an Indiana mulatto, the Reverend
James Lynch, for secretary of state. The man who
would run for auditor on the Alcorn ticket was Henry Musgrove,
another ex of the United States Army. H. R. Pease of Connecticut, again ex-U.
S. Army, filled the slot for superintendent of education. These nominations were
made in the presence of the provisional governor and Commander of the Fourth Military District, General Adelbert Ames. General
Ames offered Alcorn and the Republican Party his full support, and he remained
to applaud Alcorn’s acceptance speech. So much for the non-partisanship by Grant’s
military that the president had promised for the election. Oh, well, maybe the
argument could be made Ames was there in his capacity as provisional governor—pretty
lame, huh? The truth was Ames’ reward for his support was to be one of
Mississippi’s U. S. Senate slots. Yes, at a time when good, informed leadership was desperately needed for an exhausted state, a pious New England prick was to
represent the interests of agrarian Mississippi in the U. S. Senate.
I’ll continue with the state Radical
convention next time. Thanks for reading.
Charlsie