Vedika - Copy of Political Machines
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San Francisco State University *
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SOCIAL
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History
Date
Dec 6, 2023
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Pages
4
Uploaded by JudgeKudu1768
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Topics / Urban Life, 1860-1900 / Machine Politics and Bossism / Machine Politics
and Bossism (Overview)
The Society of St. Tammany was
founded in 1788, the same year George
Washington was first elected president.
"St. Tammany" was not a saint, but a
famous Delaware chief. Soon called
Tammany Hall, this political club
quickly became a New York
institution. It was designed to promote
ethics and democratic ideals amongst
its membership. Most of its members
were Irish Americans who were
excluded from the city's older and
more traditional clubs because of their
Irish and working-class backgrounds.
Tammany Hall became their club and
slowly took over their political party,
New York's Democratic Party.
Tammany Hall
Tammany Hall could help or hurt. A political machine worker might find a poor family or a
new immigrant a place to live, which would earn their gratitude. The machine might also take
a kickback from the landlord for bringing renters. If a landlord was uncooperative or
insufficiently grateful, the political worker might show up with a city building inspector at his
side; the inspector would be sure to find costly violations. The local ward boss would assist
immigrants and thus assure their votes for the machine. Through its vast network of political
workers, the machine had its hand in every aspect of city life. The official government of the
cities, overwhelmed by the rapid growth of the population, could not compete with the
machines in supplying services to the needy.
Machine Corruption
George Washington Plunkitt was a New York State senator and a Tammany chief. Politics
made him both wealthy and powerful. Plunkitt acknowledged that the money to keep his
political machine going came from graft and that graft made him personally wealthy. But, he
insisted, his money came from "honest" graft, not from "dishonest" graft. Dishonest graft,
according to Plunkitt, was "blackmailin' gamblers, saloon-keepers, disorderly people, etc."
Honest graft, on the other hand, meant using your political connections to find out about
where the city was going to build a new bridge or a new park, then buying up the land, and
reselling the land to the city at a big profit. According to Plunkitt, and according to
Tammany, honest graft was part of political life. Bribing judges and election officials was
also part of the system of corruption to maintain machine political power.
In 1871, the
New York Times
took issue with Tammany's "honest" graft. "Gigantic Frauds of
the Ring Exposed," announced the July 22 headline. The story described a group that came
to be called the "forty thieves," who made money from contracts for the city's new
courthouse. Of course, the thieves came from Tammany. At that time, the average worker
made $1 a day. Contractors building the courthouse charged the city $400,000 for safes,
$175,000 for carpets, and $7,500 for thermometers. The total cost for the courthouse
exceeded $13 million. The head of Tammany Hall, William Marcy Tweed, and several of his
henchmen were tried, convicted, and jailed in the scandal.
Political Bosses and Opposition
The trial of one man, or even of several men, could not stop the Tammany political
machine. John Kelly had served as sheriff and earned the nickname "Honest John," though
the wealth he accumulated probably meant that the nickname was undeserved. In 1868,
unsatisfied with Tweed's leadership, Kelly had run against Tweed's candidate for mayor as a
"reform" candidate. He lost the election but became head of the Tammany organization
after Tweed went to jail. While Kelly threw out many Tweed associates, he also ran
Tammany Hall as a political machine. After his death in 1886, Tammany was headed by
George Croker. The machine continued to run New York City for most of a century.
Tammany Hall was the best-known political machine in the United States, but hardly the
only one. Other large cities had their own political machines, and many of these machines
continued to hold power throughout 19th century and well into the 20th century. Later
political bosses, following the example of Tweed, included Richard J. Daley in Chicago,
James Michael Curley in Boston, and Thomas Prendergast in Kansas City, Missouri.
Through dishonest and honest graft, bosses maintained their political power and voter
support. Also, through the spoils system, or by providing jobs for their supporters through
their patronage, they could also ensure support. Critics associated with the progressive
movement made it their goal to expose the level of corruption practiced by political
machines. Lincoln Steffens's book,
The Shame of the Cities
(1904), reported on the corruption
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