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John Davis Long

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Massachusetts governor and Congressman; Secretary of the Navy (1838–1915)

John Davis Long
Chair of theMassachusetts Republican Party
In office
1902–1903
Preceded byA. H. Goetting
Succeeded byThomas Talbot
34thUnited States Secretary of the Navy
In office
March 6, 1897 – April 30, 1902
PresidentWilliam McKinley
Theodore Roosevelt
Preceded byHilary A. Herbert
Succeeded byWilliam Moody
32ndGovernor of Massachusetts
In office
January 8, 1880 – January 4, 1883
LieutenantByron Weston
Preceded byThomas Talbot
Succeeded byBenjamin Butler
Member of theU.S. House of Representatives
fromMassachusetts's2nd district
In office
March 4, 1883 – March 3, 1889
Preceded byBenjamin W. Harris
Succeeded byElijah A. Morse
31stLieutenant Governor of Massachusetts
In office
January 2, 1879 – January 8, 1880
GovernorThomas Talbot
Preceded byHoratio G. Knight
Succeeded byByron Weston
Speaker of theMassachusetts House of Representatives
In office
1876–1878
Preceded byJohn E. Sanford
Succeeded byLevi C. Wade
Member of theMassachusetts House of Representatives
In office
1875–1878
Personal details
Born(1838-10-27)October 27, 1838
DiedAugust 28, 1915(1915-08-28) (aged 76)
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)
Mary Glover
(m. 1869; died 1882)

Agnes Pierce
Children3
EducationHarvard University(BA,LLB)
Signature

John Davis Long (October 27, 1838 – August 28, 1915) was an American lawyer, politician, and writer fromMassachusetts. He was the 32ndgovernor of Massachusetts, serving from 1880 to 1883. He later served as theSecretary of the Navy from 1897 to 1902, a period that included the primarily navalSpanish–American War.

Born inBuckfield, Maine, Long was educated as a lawyer atHarvard University, later settling inHingham, Massachusetts. He became active inRepublican Party politics in the 1870s, winning election for thestate legislature in 1874. He rose rapidly in prominence, and was elected lieutenant governor in 1879 and governor in 1880. He advocated modest reforms during his three years as governor, which were relatively uneventful.

After returning to private practice he was offered a cabinet post by his friend, PresidentWilliam McKinley, in 1896. He chose to become Secretary of the Navy despite lacking detailed knowledge of naval matters. He clashed with his Under-Secretary,Theodore Roosevelt, over expansion of the Navy when the Spanish–American War broke out in 1898. He resigned the post after Roosevelt became president, and resumed his law practice. He died at his home in 1915; his publications include a lifelong journal, a history of the Spanish–American War, and a verse translation ofVirgil'sAeneid.

Early years

[edit]
Mary Woodford Glover

John Davis Long was born inBuckfield, Maine on October 27, 1838, to Zadoc Long and Julia Temple (Davis) Long. He was named forMassachusetts GovernorJohn Davis, a cousin of his maternal grandfather. He received his primary education atHebron Academy until attending Harvard University where he graduatedPhi Beta Kappa in 1857.[1][2] At Harvard he was a member of theDelta Kappa Epsilon fraternity's Alpha chapter.[3] Long wrote both prose and verse for a student magazine, and was chosen to write an ode for his class's graduation.[4] He also began a private journal some time before his arrival at Harvard, which he maintained throughout his life.[5]

After two years as headmaster ofWestford Academy inWestford, Massachusetts, Long began attendingHarvard Law School, becoming a member of the Massachusetts bar in 1861.[1] He practiced law, first without success in Buckfield, and then inBoston, and was active in the state militia during theAmerican Civil War.[6] He moved toHingham, Massachusetts in 1869, and the following year married Mary Woodford Glover of Hingham.[1] The couple had two daughters (and one stillborn birth) before her death in 1882.[7]

Massachusetts politics

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Long began his involvement in politics at the local level in Hingham in 1870.[8]Temperance was a major issue which dominated his political beliefs.[9] His early politics was somewhat independent: he supported the reformistRepublicanBenjamin Butler for governor in 1871, but received an unsolicitedDemocratic nomination later that year for a seat in theMassachusetts House of Representatives. He did not campaign, and lost the election.[10] Nominated by both Democrats and reformist Republicans in 1872, he lost again. He thereafter became more of a Republican stalwart, convinced that reform would be best accomplished from within the party organization.[11]

In 1874 Long chaired the state Republican convention, and finally won election to the state legislature. He formed a close relationship with SpeakerJohn E. Sanford, and in what historian James Hess describes as a probable move of political calculation, supported the successful gubernatorial candidate in 1875,Alexander H. Rice, even though Rice supported liberal legislation on alcohol sales that Long opposed. He was able to parlay this support into his own election to the speakership in 1876.[12] He widened his reform views to the national stage by supportingBenjamin Bristow in his unsuccessful bid for the Republican presidential nomination.[13]

Lieutenant Governor (1879–80)

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In 1877, Long unsuccessfully challenged the incumbent Rice for the gubernatorial nomination.[14] When Rice announced his retirement the following year, Long again sought the nomination. It went to former Lieutenant GovernorThomas Talbot, but Long won the lieutenant governor nomination by acclamation.[15] The Democratic opposition was divided by Benjamin Butler's return to that party, and the Republican ticket won the general election.[16] Long capitalized on Talbot's avoidance of public ceremonies to maintain a high profile despite his post's relative unimportance.

Governor (1880–83)

[edit]

In 1879, Long was easily nominated for governor when Talbot announced he would not run for reelection, despite a lack of support from the party leadership.[15] The election was highly divisive, pitting Long against Butler and the divided Democrats.[16][17] Long was criticized for his lack of Civil War service and attacked for his diversions from the party line, but won a comfortable victory. He was reelected by comfortable margins the two following years.[18]

Long's time as governor was described by historian P.A.M. Tayler as relatively uneventful. He proposed a number of modest reforms, including a measured expansion of women's voting rights (then restricted to voting for school committees), and allowing women to sit on state boards. Most of these reforms were not implemented during his tenure, although some were later enacted into law by his successors.[19] He kept a busy schedule, attending all manner of civic events across the state.[18]

Gov. Long re-organized the state government, disputed a statewide law regarding thedeath penalty, and cut taxes on mortgages in addition to local shipping.[20] Viewing his administration as efficient, Long wrote in his journal that he "filled [the governorship] well and honestly and not without grace and brilliancy."[21]

In one of his last acts as governor, he appointedOliver Wendell Holmes Jr., to theMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. Thelame duck appointment was occasioned by the sudden resignation ofOtis Lord, a Republican who may have resigned in order to deny the appointment opportunity to the incoming Democratic Governor, Benjamin Butler.[22] The appointment was made on December 8, 1882, the last day of Long's term when theGovernor's Council (which had to approve the appointment) was scheduled to meet.[23]

Strategist for "Half-Breed" Republicans

[edit]

Long's support forcivil service reform aligned him with the congressional "Half-Breed" faction. Along with Massachusetts senatorsHenry L. Dawes andGeorge F. Hoar, he formulated a strategy for the Half-Breeds in the1880 United States presidential election.[24]

Ultimately, the devised strategy was to push for staunch Half-Breed Vermont senatorGeorge F. Edmunds at theRepublican National Convention to avoid nominating eitherUlysses S. Grant, a favorite of the opposing congressionalStalwarts, orBlaine faction leaderJames G. Blaine, both of whom opposed civil service reform.[24] Two factors contributed to caution surrounding the strategy of the Edmunds supporters, one being an abundance of carefulness not to reveal their plans too soon and the other pertaining to Edmunds' lack of enthusiasm for becoming president.

In early April 1880, Sen. Hoar instructed political followers of Half-Breeds that the state needed to send men to the party convention with "no labels about their necks" while also sending at-large delegates to be labeled conspicuously as supporters of Edmunds.[24] The Massachusetts state convention later that month endorsed Edmunds for president. Edmunds ultimately was unable to garner enough votes to be nominated, though the Half-Breeds managed to block Grant from being selected.[24] A last-minute maneuvering between the Half-Breeds and supporters of Blaine led to the nomination ofdark horse candidateJames A. Garfield,[24] who went on to win the general election.

U.S. Representative (1883–89)

[edit]

Long was elected to theUnited States Congress in the 1882 election, and served until 1889, declining to run for reelection in the 1888 election.[25] In 1886, he was encouraged to stand for the Senate byHenry Cabot Lodge, although Lodge's support was apparently part of a ruse to test the strength of the state party leadership. Lodge withdrew his support at the last minute, throwing it instead to the incumbentHenry L. Dawes, and the legislature reelected Dawes to the seat. The incident cooled relations between Lodge and Long.[26] In the wheeling and dealing that preceded the Senate election, Long was offered Democratic support by Butler, but refused, believing that such votes would be seen as tainted by an unsavory political deal.[27]

Long's tenure in Congress was uneventful, since the Congress was under Democratic Party control for the six years he served.[28] In addition to lobbying the administration for patronage appointments, he sat on a joint committee examining interests of shipbuilding and shipowners, as well as on conference committees dealing with pensions andNavy financing.[29] In 1886 Long married again, to Agnes Pierce, a teacher and daughter of a Universalist minister; they had one son, born in 1887.[30]

Return to private practice

[edit]

Long decided in 1888 not to run for another term in Congress,[28] and spent the next eight years in private practice. His clients were typically corporate interests, and he appeared on their behalf in court as well as in legislative committee hearings. He was sought after as a public speaker, something he engaged in for many years.[31] He remained somewhat active in Republican Party circles, supportingRoger Wolcott's Young Men's Republican Club, which sought to bring new blood into the party. When offered the opportunity to challenge longtime Republican SenatorGeorge Frisbie Hoar, he refused.[32] In 1889 he was appointed to the committee overseeing the enlargement of theMassachusetts State House, a post he held until 1897.[33]

Secretary of the Navy

[edit]

As a Congressman, Long had become a close friend ofWilliam McKinley, who was electedPresident in1896.[2] McKinley offered Long his choice of several cabinet posts;[34] he choseSecretary of the Navy. He was confirmed by theUnited States Senate on March 2, 1897.[2] The appointment brought on a storm of criticism from Henry Cabot Lodge. Lodge had been elected to the Senate, dominated the Republican Party in Massachusetts, and had expected to have a say in choosing a cabinet nominee in return for his support of McKinley. One of Lodge's supporters complained that Long was in poor health, and that he would not give the administration "back-bone and vigor".[35] (Long had back from his law practice after anervous breakdown.)[36]

Theodore Roosevelt as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, 1898

Lodge compensated for the setback by helping secure the position ofAssistant Secretary forTheodore Roosevelt, a brash and aggressiveNew Yorker.[37] Long and Roosevelt did not get along: in addition to personality differences, Roosevelt pushed a view to aggressively modernize and expand the Navy against Long's more studied and conservative approach. He preferred to expand the Navy gradually. As the nation's global interests grew, Long committed himself to the nation's peaceful growth in line with McKinley's policies. As a result of his disagreements with Roosevelt, Long took steps to control his subordinate.[2] Roosevelt, on the other hand, sought ways to spur Long into action, writing "I only wish that I could poison his mind so as to make him a shade more truculent in international matters".[38] He also chafed against Long's policy of deferring much of the department's work to its permanent bureau chiefs, which resulted in constraints on the flow of information the administration received.[39] Long was somewhat proud of the fact that he knew little of the detail of naval affairs, commenting that he was "a civilian who does not know thestem from thestern of a ship".[40]

Long believed that ongoing tensions betweenSpain were unlikely to lead to war, and should it, that the war would be easily won.[41] He consequently did not take significant steps to prepare the Navy for that contingency.[2] In January 1898, he ordered theUSSMaine toHavana,Cuba, as a matter of "customary relations". He and McKinley were concerned for the safety of Americans in Cuba due to the ongoingCuban War of Independence.[42] By early February 1898, tensions had reached crisis proportions, and Long was compelled to begin drawing up plans for war. The explosion and sinking of theMaine at Havana on February 15 was the spark that ignited theSpanish–American War. The administration was opposed to war, but the public outcry over the sinking could not be ignored. Ten days after the sinking, Long took a day off, and Roosevelt used his authority in Long's absence to issue a number of orders designed to increase the Navy's readiness for war, including famously orderingCommodoreGeorge Dewey into an aggressive offensive posture in theSpanish Philippines. Long countermanded some of Roosevelt's orders afterward, but began stepping up naval war preparations.[43]

The loss of theMaine highlighted to the administration the nation's shortage of modern warships, setting off a scramble for the acquisition of more ships.[44] One significant order given by Long was to transfer theUSSOregon (one of the Navy's most powerful ships) from the west coast to the Caribbean;[45] the ship made the journey aroundCape Horn fromSan Francisco toKey West, Florida, in 66 days.[46] War was declared in April 1898. Roosevelt resigned his post the next month, a move Long thought foolhardy but later acknowledged was significant in advancing Roosevelt's career.[47]

Long directed the Navy's activities throughout the war, significantly increasing its size in the process.[48] He ordered Dewey to neutralize the Spanish fleet in the Philippines, orderedthe seizure of Spanish Guam, and worked to support a blockade and offensive operations againstCuba.[49][50][51] He also directed naval resources into threatening postures against mainland Spain to encourage the Spanish recall of a fleet destined for the Philippines.[52]

In response to increasing pressure from Navy leaders, Long created a permanent advisory staff after the war. The board, created in March 1900, was designed to unify the work of theOffice of Naval Intelligence, theNaval War College, and the fleet leadership for the production of war plans and the proper preparation, planning, and deployment of naval resources in pursuit of objectives defined in those plans.[53] After the war, Long pushed forward plans to establish a naval base in the Philippines, however, the funding for plans was held up in Congress, which repeatedly sought review of potential base locations in the islands.[54] The matter was also caught up in branch rivalry with theWar Department, which objected to the Navy's establishment of a permanent base there that was not under its authority. Construction of theSubic Bay Naval Base did not begin until after Long left office.[55]

Long was promoted as a potential vice presidential candidate by the Massachusetts delegation to the1900 Republican National Convention, and was a personal favorite of McKinley's for the position.[56][57] However, party leaders objected to him on geographic grounds,[56] and Lodge (with whom Long continued to feud) disingenuously wore a Long banner, even though he supported Roosevelt, who easily won the nomination. The McKinley–Roosevelt ticketwon the election, and Long decided to stay on for McKinley's second term.[57]

Later years

[edit]

AfterMcKinley was assassinated in September 1901, Long had a change of heart, and tendered his resignation to President Roosevelt on May 1, 1902. The exact reasons for this are unclear, but several factors probably contributed. First, Roosevelt had a close relationship with Long's political rival Lodge, was known to disagree with Long on naval matters, and was not welcoming of his presence at theWhite House. Second, an inquiry into the actions of AdmiralWinfield Scott Schley around the July 1898Battle of Santiago de Cuba had resulted in a significant amount of criticism of Long's role in the war. Third, one of his daughters died in October 1901, less than a month after McKinley's assassination.[58] These matters drove Long into a depression, and the situation was further exacerbated when Roosevelt squabbled with him over the beginning of the war, and then made newsworthy overrides of some of his decisions.[59] Historian Wendell Garrett notes that Roosevelt took a great personal interest in the Navy, and had difficulty working with subsequent secretaries.[60]

Long returned to Massachusetts, where he resumed his law practice and remained interested in party politics. He sat on a few corporate boards and served as president of the Puritan Trust Company.[61] He was in 1914 a member of Harvard's Board of Overseers.[62] He continued to advocate for women's suffrage, and served on the boards of several private schools, include his alma mater, Hebron Academy. He regularly spent time in Maine (having in 1882 repurchased the family home in Buckfield), and fell ill there in August 1915. He returned home to Hingham, where he died on August 28.[63]

Writings and legacy

[edit]

In addition to Long's extensive journal, he wrote on a variety of other subjects. During his unsuccessful attempt to start a law practice in Buckfield he produced a paper on Congressional power and slavery.[7] While in Boston in the early 1860s he had a play produced locally.[64] In 1878 he produced a verse translation ofVirgil'sAeneid.[65] In 1903 he publishedThe New American Navy, a history of the Spanish–American War and the development of the Navy during that time.[66]

Among Long's charitable works was funding the establishment of a public library in Buckfield in 1900, which is now known as theZadoc Long Free Library.[67]USSLong (DD-209) was named in his honor.[68]

Publications

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As author
As editor

See also

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^abcJohnson and Brown
  2. ^abcdeBeedle, p. 259
  3. ^Eliot, p. 236
  4. ^Taylor, pp. 74–75
  5. ^Taylor, pp. 71–72
  6. ^Taylor, pp. 75–76
  7. ^abTaylor, p. 79
  8. ^Hess, p. 57
  9. ^Hess, p. 59
  10. ^Hess, p. 58
  11. ^Hess, pp. 58–59
  12. ^Hess, pp. 61–63
  13. ^Hess, p. 63
  14. ^Hess, p. 65
  15. ^abHess, p. 66
  16. ^abWest, p. 369
  17. ^Hess, p. 67
  18. ^abTaylor, p. 82
  19. ^Taylor, pp. 83–84
  20. ^Gov. John Davis Long.National Governors Association. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
  21. ^John Davis Long Papers.Massachusetts Historical Society. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
  22. ^White (1996), p. 202
  23. ^White (2000), p. 52
  24. ^abcdeWelch, Richard E. Jr. (1968).George Edmunds of Vermont: Republican Half-Breed, p. 67–68.Vermont History. Retrieved March 5, 2022.
  25. ^Taylor, pp. 84–85
  26. ^Garrett, pp. 293–294
  27. ^Hess, p. 72
  28. ^abHess, p. 71
  29. ^Taylor, pp. 85–86
  30. ^Taylor, p. 88
  31. ^Taylor, pp. 88–90
  32. ^Chase, p. 123
  33. ^Roe, p. 29
  34. ^Taylor, p. 89
  35. ^Garrett, pp. 294–295
  36. ^Traxel, p. 91
  37. ^Garrett, p. 295
  38. ^Garrett, p. 299
  39. ^Garrett, p. 301
  40. ^Garrett, p. 296
  41. ^Taylor, p. 90
  42. ^Trask, pp. 24–25
  43. ^Beedle, p. 260
  44. ^Traxel, pp. 109–110
  45. ^Traxel, pp. 109, 117–118
  46. ^O'Toole, p. 221
  47. ^Garrett, p. 302
  48. ^Trask, p. 86
  49. ^Braisted, p. 21
  50. ^Trask, pp. 84–85
  51. ^Traxel, p. 123
  52. ^O'Toole, p. 252
  53. ^Beers, pp. 53–54
  54. ^Braisted, pp. 21–25
  55. ^Braisted, p. 26
  56. ^abMorgan, p. 375
  57. ^abGarrett, p. 304
  58. ^Garrett, pp. 306–308
  59. ^Garrett, pp. 308–309
  60. ^Garrett, p. 311
  61. ^Taylor, pp. 91–92
  62. ^"The Board of Overseers".Catalog of the Officers and Students of the University in Cambridge. 1918. p. 4.
  63. ^Taylor, pp. 92–94
  64. ^Taylor, p. 76
  65. ^Taylor, p. 81
  66. ^Garrett, p. 310
  67. ^Cole and Whitman, pp. 440-444
  68. ^"Long".Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.Navy Department,Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved2016-07-15.

References

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External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toJohn Davis Long.
Political offices
Preceded bySpeaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
1876–1878
Succeeded by
Preceded byLieutenant Governor of Massachusetts
1879–1880
Succeeded by
Preceded byGovernor of Massachusetts
1880–1883
Succeeded by
Preceded byUnited States Secretary of the Navy
1897–1902
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded byRepublican nominee forGovernor of Massachusetts
1879,1880,1881
Succeeded by
Preceded by
A. H. Goetting
Chair of theMassachusetts Republican Party
1902–1903
Succeeded by
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of theU.S. House of Representatives
fromMassachusetts's 2nd congressional district

1883–1889
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