Thomas E. Watson | |
|---|---|
Watsonc. 1920s | |
| United States Senator fromGeorgia | |
| In office March 4, 1921 – September 26, 1922 | |
| Preceded by | Hoke Smith |
| Succeeded by | Rebecca Latimer Felton |
| Member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromGeorgia's10th district | |
| In office March 4, 1891 – March 3, 1893 | |
| Preceded by | George Barnes |
| Succeeded by | James C. C. Black |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Thomas Edward Watson (1856-09-05)September 5, 1856 Thomson, Georgia, U.S. |
| Died | September 26, 1922(1922-09-26) (aged 66) Washington, D.C., U.S. |
| Party | Democratic (Before 1892, 1920–1922) Populist (1892–1909) |
| Spouse | Georgia Durham |
| Education | Mercer University |
Thomas Edward Watson (September 5, 1856 – September 26, 1922) was an American politician, attorney, newspaper editor, and writer fromGeorgia. In the 1890s Watson championed poor farmers as a leader of thePopulist Party, articulating anagrarian political viewpoint while attacking business, bankers, railroads, Democratic PresidentGrover Cleveland, and theDemocratic Party. He was the nominee for vice president with DemocratWilliam Jennings Bryan in1896 on the Populist ticket.
Elected to theUnited States House of Representatives in 1890, Watson pushed through legislation mandatingRural Free Delivery, called the "biggest and most expensive endeavor" ever instituted by theU.S. Postal Service. Politically, he was a leader on the left in the 1890s, calling on poor whites and poor blacks to unite against the elites. After 1900, he shifted tonativist attacks on blacks and Catholics, and after 1914 on Jews. He was elected to theUnited States Senate two years before his death, dying in office.
Thomas E. Watson was born September 5, 1856, inThomson, the county seat ofMcDuffie County, Georgia. He was ofEnglish descent.[1] After attendingMercer University (he did not graduate; family finances forced withdrawal after two years), he became a school teacher. AtMercer University, Watson was part of the Georgia Psi chapter ofSigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. Watson later studied law and was admitted to the Georgiabar in 1875. He joined theDemocratic Party and in 1882 was elected to theGeorgia Legislature.
As a state legislator, Watson struggled unsuccessfully to curb the abuses of the powerful railroad corporations. A bill subjecting railroads to county property taxes was voted down after U.S. SenatorJoseph E. Brown offered to provide the legislators with round-trip train fares to theLouisville Exposition of 1883. In disgust, Watson resigned his seat and returned to the practice of law before his term expired. He was apresidential elector for the Democratic ticket ofGrover Cleveland andAllen G. Thurman in the1888 election.

Watson began to support theFarmers' Alliance platform and was elected to theUnited States House of Representatives as an Alliance Democrat in 1890. He served in the House from 1891 until March 1893. InCongress, Watson was the onlySouthern Alliance Democrat to abandon the Democratic caucus, instead attending the firstPeople's Party congressional caucus. At that meeting, he was nominated forSpeaker of the House by the eightWestern Populist Representatives. Watson was instrumental in the founding of the Georgia Populist Party in early 1892.
The People's Party advocated the public ownership of the railroads, steamship lines, and telephone and telegraph systems. It also supported the free and unlimited coinage of silver, the abolition of national banks, a system of graduated income tax and the direct election ofUnited States senators. As a Populist, Watson tried to unite the agrarians across class lines, overcoming racial divides. He also supported the right of black men to vote. The failures of the Populists' attempt to make political progress throughfusion tickets with the Democrats in 1896 and 1898 deeply affected Watson.
Watson, though a member of a minority faction in Congress, was nonetheless effective in passing landmark legislation. The most significant was a law to require the Post Office to deliver mail to remote farm families.Rural Free Delivery (RFD), legislation that Watson pushed through Congress in 1893, eliminated the need for individuals living in more remote homesteads to pick up mail, sometimes at distant post offices, or to pay private carriers for delivery.[2] The legislation was opposed by private carriers, and by many small-town merchants who worried the service would reduce farm families' weekly visits to town to obtain goods and merchandise, or that mail order merchants selling throughcatalogs, such asSears, Roebuck and Company might present significant competition.[3] RFD became an official service in 1896.[3] That year, 82 rural routes were put into operation. A massive undertaking, nationwide RFD service took several years to implement, and remains the "biggest and most expensive endeavor" ever instituted by the U.S. Postal Service.[4]
Watson campaigned for re-election but was defeated, leaving office in March 1893. In this period, regular Democrats worked to reduce the voting power of blacks and poor whites to prevent such coalitions as the Populists, or alliances with Republicans. Democrats controlled the state legislature: they passed laws todisfranchise blacks and were successful in pushing them off the voter rolls by such requirements as cumulative poll taxes (1877),[5] literacy tests, and residency requirements. In 1908, Georgia also institutedwhite primaries,[6] another way of excluding blacks in what had become a one-party state, where in 1900 African Americans made up 46.7% of the population.[7]
After being defeated, Watson returned to work as a lawyer inThomson, Georgia. He also served as editor and business manager of thePeople's Party Paper, published in Atlanta.[8]
The masthead of Watson's newspaper in 1894 declared that it "is now and will ever be a fearless advocate of theJeffersonian Theory of Popular Government, and will oppose to the bitter end theHamiltonian Doctrines of Class Rule, Moneyed Aristocracy, National Banks, High Tariffs, Standing Armies and formidable Navies — all of which go together as a system of oppressing the people."[9]
In the1896 presidential election the leaders of the Populist Party entered into talks withWilliam Jennings Bryan, the proposed Democratic Party candidate. They were led to believe that Watson would become Bryan's running mate. After the 1896 Populist convention nominated Bryan, the latter announced thatArthur Sewall, a more conservative banker from Maine, would be hisvice presidential choice on the Democratic ticket.
This created a split in the Populist Party. Some refused to support Bryan, whereas others, such asMary Lease, reluctantly campaigned for him. Watson's name remained on the ballot as Bryan's vice presidential nominee on the Populist Party ticket, while Sewall was listed as Bryan's Democratic Party vice presidential nominee. Watson received 217,000 votes for vice president, less than a quarter of the number of votes received by the1892 Populist ticket. However, Watson received more votes than any national Populist candidate from this time on.
Bryan's defeat damaged the Populist Party. While Populists held some offices in Western states for several years, the party ceased to be a factor in Georgia politics.
Watson had long supported black enfranchisement in Georgia and throughout the South, as a basic tenet of his populist philosophy.[10] He condemnedlynching and tried to protect black voters from lynch mobs. However, after 1900 his interpretation of populism shifted. He no longer viewed the populist movement as being racially inclusive. By 1908, Watson identified as awhite supremacist and ran as such during his presidential bid. He used his highly influential magazine and newspaper to launch vehement diatribes against blacks.[10]
Although he had been less racist than most politicians in 1890s Georgia, Watson had never been a true believer in racial equality. For example, Watson had opposed theLodge Bill to protect voting rights in 1890, and Watson had opposed Grover Cleveland's strikebreaking in part because he thought it set a precedent for the federal government to break "state's rights" and get involved in Southern race relations. Watson had often made 3 speeches about the same subjects: one speech to appeal to racist white voters, one speech to appeal to black voters, and a third speech that was meant to appeal to both white and black voters.[11]

Watson was nominated as the Populist Party's candidate in1904 and received 117,183 votes. This was double the Populists' showing in 1900, but less than one-eighth of the party's support from just 12 years earlier. The Populist Party's fortunes declined in the1908 presidential campaign, and Watson as the party's standard bearer, with judgeSamuel W. Williams as his running mate, attracted just 29,100 votes. While Watson never received more than 1% of the nationwide vote, he had respectable showings in selected Western and Southern states. In the 1904 and 1908 campaigns, Watson received 18% and 12% respectively in his home state of Georgia. After the 1908 campaign, the Populist Party was dissolved.
Watson denouncedsocialism, which had drawn many converts from the ashes of Populism. Retaining his rural Populist and nativist ideology, and responding to the view that eastern urban America was dominated by Catholics, Watson also became a vigorousanti-Catholic crusader.
Through his publicationsWatson's Magazine andThe Jeffersonian, Watson continued to have great influence on public opinion, especially in his native Georgia.
In 1913 Watson played a prominent role through his newspaper in inflaming public opinion in the case ofLeo Frank, aJewish American factory manager who was accused of the murder ofMary Phagan, a 13-year-old factory worker.[12]
When Frank was arrested in 1913, his wealthy family asked Watson to take on his legal defense, offering a substantial fee.[12] Watson, who opposed the death penalty, "enjoyed a formidable reputation" as a defense attorney in capital cases. But he declined the offer. HistorianAlbert Lindemann wrote that "Frank's friends and family would not have approached Watson to defend Frank if Watson had been known to be anti-Semitic."
At that point in Watson's life, "he had repeatedly expressed friendly words for Jews in his various publications, and Jewish merchants, even if hostile to [Watson's Populist political views], had regularly bought advertising space in those publications".[12] Watson's taste for sensationalism was fully expressed in his publications' coverage of Frank's trial. Yet it "rarely and only in inconsequential ways touched upon Jews".[12] After Frank's conviction, and for the next year, during the appeals process, Watson "scrupulously refrained from comment about the case".[12]
Then in March 1914, an editorial in theAtlanta Journal demanded a new trial for Frank. TheJournal was widely regarded as the organ of Watson's bitter political rival U.S. SenatorHoke Smith, who was up for re-election. Watson's hatred of Smith was "a blinding obsession".[13] He thought that theJournal editorial showed that Smith was receiving "Jewish money" to champion Frank's cause, so Watson determined to disgrace Smith. For many years he had attacked the Catholic Church; now he began a campaign against rich Jews and Northerners who were, in his view, trying to free a murderer. In this effort he pulled out all the stops, spewing "graphically vicious remarks about Jews".[12] Lindemann suggests two reasons for Watson's attacks: the feud with Senator Smith, and Watson's long-held Populist views about the power of the rich and their ability to escape penalty for things which brought harsh punishment for the poor. In keeping with this view, Watson wrote "Frank belongs to the Jewish aristocracy, and it was determined by the rich Jews that no aristocrat of their race should die for the death of a working-class Gentile."
In response to the condemnation of Georgia in the national press after Frank was lynched, Watson responded inThe Jeffersonian intimating that "another Ku Klux Klan may be organized to restore home rule."[14] However, Watson's biographer found no evidence that Watson had any connection to thesecond KKK that was later formed.[13]
With the outbreak ofWorld War I in 1914, Watson was sympathetic to the insurgentSocialist Party of America, and he opposed American entry into the war. By opposing the war, Watson made himself vulnerable to his political opponents, most of whom supported the war. Watson mustered political resistance with headlines asking, "Do You Want Your Son Killed in Europe in A Quarrel You Have Nothing to Do With?".[15] As a result of his Socialist association, his continued criticism of the war after the American entry in 1917, and his class-based arguments against theSelective Service Act of 1917, the U.S. Post Office refused to deliver his publications, bringing them to an end.[16]
In 1918, Watson made a late bid for Congress but lost toCarl Vinson,[17] who had been a strong supporter of American involvement in World War I. Watson rejoined the Democratic Party, and in 1920 was elected to the U.S. Senate, defeating his bitter rivalHoke Smith.
Watson died of acerebral hemorrhage in 1922 at age 66.Rebecca L. Felton was appointed to succeed him and served (for 24 hours) as the first female U.S. Senator.

Named for Watson is the "Thomas E. Watson Highway", a portion ofU.S. Route 23 inHabersham County, Georgia.[18][19]
Watson was honored with a 12-foot-high (3.7 m) bronzestatue on the lawn of theGeorgia State Capitol inAtlanta over the legend "A champion of right who never faltered in the cause."[20] In October 2013, GovernorNathan Deal signed an order for the relocation of the statue to Park Plaza, which is across the street from the Capitol. He said that the relocation was part of a renovation.[21] On November 29, 2013, Watson's statue was removed from the steps of the state Capitol, and relocated across the street at Park Plaza.[22]
Watson is portrayed in the 1997 Broadway musicalParade, which follows the events of Leo Frank's arrest, trial and death. The musical portrays Watson as a primary force behind the antisemitic outcry against Frank and the inspiration for his eventual kidnapping and murder.
Thomas Watson.
Thomas Watson.
Thomas Watson.
Thomas Watson.
| U.S. House of Representatives | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Member of theU.S. House of Representatives fromGeorgia's 10th congressional district 1891–1893 | Succeeded by |
| Party political offices | ||
| Preceded by | Populist nominee forVice President of the United States 1896 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Populist nominee forPresident of the United States 1904,1908 | Party dissolved |
| Preceded by | Democratic nominee forU.S. Senator fromGeorgia (Class 1) 1920 | Succeeded by |
| U.S. Senate | ||
| Preceded by | U.S. Senator (Class 3) from Georgia 1921–1922 Served alongside:William J. Harris | Succeeded by |