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Douglas finished by stating he had the Irish vote in the bag.
He also mopped it up in his senate race against Lincoln. From 1850 to 1859, Douglas was the pre-eminent voice in the US senate but his relative moderation on the slavery issue opened a gap to his right for a Southern hardliner to exploit. Without that split Democratic vote, Douglas would very likely have won the White House.
Little wonder, then, that when 1860 rolled around and Lincoln faced off against Douglas, the Irish were solidly in the Douglas camp. As Tip O’Neill might have put it, “All politics is local.” To his credit, Lincoln never took them to task over it and the relationship, once antagonistic and suspicious, was about to take on a much warmer glow forged by war.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Lincoln’s Irish White House Circle
The election of 1860 was never close, with the pro-slavery vote badly split. Lincoln took 40 percent of the vote, with Douglas second at 30 percent. Douglas was the only candidate to win both a pro-and anti-slave state. He won the Irish Catholic vote overwhelmingly, both North and South. Many Irish organizations stood guard during his rallies; there is one description of Ancient Order of Hibernian members forming a protective phalanx around him.
As Douglas faded from history (he would die a year later), Abraham Lincoln emerged in his full pomp.
On his first day in the White House, accompanied by his outgoing predecessor James Buchanan (arguably the worst president in history), they arrived at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, where usually the only security was the elderly Irish doorman Edward McManus. Old Edward had served every president since either Jackson or Polk, depending on the historian.
McManus is described around this time as “the short, thin, smiling, humorous-looking elderly Irishman, the all-but-historic doorkeeper who has been so great a favorite through so many administrations.”
“He is as well liked by his seventh president as he was even by General Taylor,” wrote William Stoddard, one of Lincoln’s private secretaries. Stoddard says, “There is no end of quiet fun in him as well as intelligence, and his other name is Fidelity. He is said to have been the only man in the White House to make President Lincoln laugh.”
He was also deeply trusted. Lincoln’s son Tad was what we would today call developmentally disabled. McManus was often entrusted with his care, and they became very close.
He was also the keeper of secrets. As Stoddard wrote, only McManus had any idea where Lincoln had headed when he took frequent solitary trips outside the White House.
It did not matter who was seeking him, cabinet secretary, congressman, or senator, McManus’s answer was always the same.
“He’s gone out, gentlemen. He didn’t say where he was going, sir. If he’s not at Mr. Seward’s, it’s most likely he has gone to some other place,” was how Stoddard described this oft-repeated scene when Lincoln would set out by himself to find a general, a colleague, or a friend on a moment’s impulse.
Stoddard stated McManus did not approve of some of Lincoln’s antics, writing that “Old Edward” had “his own ideas of presidential dignity” and “did not approve of the fact that Mr. Lincoln had roped his own trunks and boxes in Springfield, and marked them, ‘A. Lincoln, Washington, D.C.,’ the night before starting on his trip to the capital. The President, no less!”
Old Edward was equally appalled when Mr. Lincoln went out to Pennsylvania Avenue: “Sure he was only waving his arm and shouting at a newsboy to bring him the morning paper. The President of the United States, no less!”
The elderly Irishman and fellow Gael Thomas Burns, who guarded the second floor, were it as regards internal security. As historian James Conroy notes, it was a kind of “Mutt and Jeff” arrangement. Lincoln was sure he was safe, believing assassinations were not in the American mindset.
The Irish connections Lincoln cultivated upset the blue-nosed clique.
Journalist Noah Brooks informed his readers in 1863 that “the President has succeeded in getting about him a corps of attaches of Hibernian descent whose manner and style (were) as about as disagreeable as can be.”
There was one exception, Brooks wrote. “Charlie, a valet whose services during our late visit to the Army of the Potomac I hold in grateful remembrance. That was Charles Forbes, who was present and a key figure at Ford’s Theater on the night of the assassination.”
Forbes was exceptionally close to the president, who called him Charlie. He accompanied him everywhere, including to the secret peace talks in February 1865 with Confederate leaders at Fort Monroe, when he and Charlie sneaked out of the White House to attend.
McManus, Burke, Forbes, Burns, O’Leary, Mangan, McGee, the list went on. Clearly Lincoln was comfortable with Irish around, even though many in his cabinet and party despised them.
He was not a hard taskmaster, but kept a distance. Secretary Stoddard wrote, “Towards his immediate subordinates, private secretaries, messengers, and other officials or servants, it may almost be said that he had no manner at all, he took their presence and the performance of their duties so utterly for granted. Not one of them was ever made to feel, unpleasantly, the fact of his inferior position by reason of any look or word of the President. All were well assured that they could not get a word from him unless the business which brought them to his elbow justified them in coming.”
Even after battle defeats, Lincoln appeared to internalize the strain. Aides spoke of the heavy “tramp tramp” across the bedroom floor over their heads from the residential part of the White House after major defeats like Antietam and Fredericksburg. Back and forth until the early hours, Lincoln would go walking. They remembered his amazing resilience too, often appearing the next day with virtually no sleep ready to press on with the war.
There were certainly a lot of Irish at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue; the building itself designed by an Irishman, architect James Hoban. Lincoln was also a huge fan of the writing of “Private Miles O’Reilly,” a pseudonym for Irish emigrant Charles Halpine who had achieved officer status in the Union Army. Halpine wrote as Miles to critique those prosecuting the war and attack those leaders not devoted enough to Lincoln. Lincoln would sometimes wake one of his personal secretaries late at night and read gobs of O’Reilly to him as he battled his own insomnia.
It was hardly surprising there were so many Irish on the White House staff. Salaries were $800 a year when the average working man was making just $300 and jobs were highly sought after. Oftentimes, Irish were discriminated against when seeking such jobs, but not under Lincoln.
It is clear from one eyewitness account that Lincoln had no prejudice against the Irish. Laurance Mangan’s brother was a White House coachman. Laurance recalled a week in which he substituted for his sick brother:
President Lincoln was a grand man. Quiet and gentle in every respect, he was always thoughtful of those who served him, and although I was but a youngster in those days and not very long over (from) Ireland, Mr. Lincoln treated me with the same consideration he always bestowed on his regular men. President Lincoln was spending the summer at what is now the Soldiers’ Home grounds, occupying the house of the governor of the Home as was then the custom, and it was there I reported to him. I drove him down to the offices that first morning and that evening when we returned, the President asked me to have the horses around again after supper, as he wanted to go out and look at the stars through that big new telescope they had installed at the naval observatory. I drove him out there that night and was also permitted to look through the telescope.
The trip to the observatory was about the only long one on which I drove the President. It sounds funny, I know, to talk about that as a long trip this day and time but it was a fairly long distance in those days. Mr. Lincoln was very regular about his habits. He called for his carriage every morning about the same hour, and while I was with him at least, he left for his home every night about the same time. He was greatly interested in his children and they used to come to meet him and ride up to the house with him.
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bsp; The Old Soldiers’ Home was located three miles from the White House on one of the highest points in the topography. Lincoln stayed in a thirty-four room Gothic cottage there and found the cooler breezes beneficial. He went there every June to November from 1862 to 1864 and wrote much of the Emancipation Proclamation there.
One-third of the residents of the main house were Irish soldiers who had fought for the Union and were disabled. Immigrants had little or no family structures to take care of them, so they fell back on institutional care. Despite the name of the institution, the average age was only forty-one; ten percent were under thirty years of age. The Old Soldiers’ Home became the forerunner of the veterans’ hospitals movement, where those who fought wars for their country were housed and helped with their lives after the combat stopped. Lincoln spent countless hours among them. He heard the Irish language used extensively and gathered a store of Irish stories. His opinion of the benefits of emigration after contact with the Irish and other foreign soldiers soared.
He wrote: “I regard our emigrants as one of the principal replenishing streams provided by Providence to repair the ravages of internal war and the waste of national strength and health.”
Not all Irish employed by the White House were reputable, however.
Cornelius O’Leary was a doorkeeper to the president’s office who replaced Edward McManus. McManus had been fired in the strangest of circumstances by Mrs. Lincoln. Given her own financial problems, it was strongly rumored by an opposition newspaper that she had done so to place O’Leary in the job, where he would solicit bribes for access to the president and share the rewards with her.
He was found to have been taking bribes of up to $50 in order to expedite the freedom of Confederate prisoners who could take an amnesty oath not to fight again against the Union.
Contemporary journalist Noah Brooks recorded what happened:
Everybody knows that it is the constant practice of the President to discharge prisoners of war who take the amnesty oath upon proper application being made by the Congressmen who represent the districts where their homes are located. This application was made by a Union Congressman from Kentucky, and, it now appears, was laid before the President by H.W. Harrington, of Indiana, into whose hands O’Leary gave the paper.
The same result would have been attained if the application had been sent to the President through the hands of his Private Secretary, but Etheridge (Emerson Etheridge, a congressman from Tennessee who somehow became involved), with his innate love of intrigue, appeared to prefer bribing a servant to accomplish what any man could do in the regular way, and then, having extorted forcibly his bribe from the tempted servant, he rushed his own disgrace and shame into print, as if he had done a very fine thing.
O’Leary, of course, was instantly dismissed from service when the president ascertained what had been done; but whatever may be the public verdict in his case no sane man can regard with any degree of tolerance the part which Emerson Etheridge has played in the matter.
O’Leary himself was an extraordinary figure and may well have been scapegoated to protect Mrs. Lincoln, who may have inveigled him into the scheme.
O’Leary was an adventurer who left Tipperary at an early age.
In 1858, he was part of the Irish Papal Brigade, charged with restoring the pope to Rome after the Garibaldi rebellion. He then came to the US and fought in the Civil War, enlisting in the Irish Brigade. He was wounded at Malvern Hill.
On his recovery, he was appointed postmaster of Lincoln Hospital in D.C. Then he replaced the legendary McManus as the White House doorkeeper and found himself in hot water over the pardons scheme after Lincoln himself personally looked into the issue.
O’Leary was a Fenian and was asked to go back and help organize units for the abortive rebellion that happened in 1867. En route, he was captured and jailed by the British but was later released on the understanding that he would return to America. He did and resettled in Brooklyn, and he still has direct descendants in the New York area.
But the Lincolns had not heard the last of “Old Edward.” After Mrs. Lincoln fired McManus, according to historian Stephen B. Oates, “she and Lincoln had an ugly scene. In her misery, Mary told one of her male friends about the quarrel, but later wrote the man to keep it a ‘sacredly guarded’ secret that she’d talked with him about her marital troubles. Because she knew how Lincoln grieved ‘over any coolness of mine,’ she went to him, and they made up and had ‘quite a little laugh together.’”
McManus did not go quietly. He moved to New York, where he told stories about financial improprieties by Mrs. Lincoln and some say even alleged affairs. One of his key listeners was the influential newspaper editor Thurlow Weed, who widely publicized the allegations, which impacted Mrs. Lincoln’s historical reputation.
Mary Todd Lincoln was furious. She wrote to a New York acquaintance that she could scarcely believe that people were taking McManus’s allegations seriously. She described him as a “discarded menial” and suggested he was out of his mind. Clearly McManus knew too much for her liking.
Mary Todd Lincoln never did share her husband’s fondness for the Irish, dating back to her treatment of her Irish servant girls. She treated the venerable McManus no better. She always preferred the company of Elizabeth Keckley, a former slave. Perhaps she felt more at home, as her family had been slave owners.
Her temper and frequent demands, however, led even Lincoln’s loyal secretary John Hay to call her “The Hellcat.” Once, when Lincoln was reviewing the Army of the Potomac, Mary arrived late and found Major General O. C. Ord’s wife riding alongside the president.
In a jealous rage, she gave the unfortunate woman a tongue-lashing that reduced her to tears, and she berated Lincoln in front of his officers. This incident and others led Julia Grant, wife of Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant, to declare she would not spend another evening with “that woman.”
CHAPTER NINE
Lincoln’s Love for Irish Ballads Displayed
The White House Historical Association (WHA) notes that despite having no musical talent, Lincoln used music as a panacea for getting away from his problems and relaxing. Among his favorites, the WHA says, were the Irish ballads “Kathleen Mavourneen,” “Last Rose of Summer,” “Old Rosin the Beau,” and “Annie Laurie,” all of which held their own special poignancy and charm.
Of all the songs of the Civil War that evoke that period, “Kathleen Mavourneen,” an Irish ballad of love and farewell, was a huge staple. Some believe that next to “Dixie,” it was the most popular song, especially on the Confederate side.
That is not surprising, as it was written by Englishman Frederick Crouch, who came to America in 1849 and joined the Confederate army as a trumpeter. Despite its origins, Irish emigrant soldiers adopted it as their own.
On Crouch’s death in 1896, it was estimated that two million copies of the song sheet music had been sold, but he had failed to copyright it and got little or no money as a result.
The song, which means “Kathleen My Beloved” is a sad song of emigration and departure. It exploded in popularity after Irish soprano Catherine Hayes sang the song for Queen Victoria in 1849. Hayes, on tour, sang it across the United States and, as a result, “Kathleen Mavourneen” became a staple.
Writer James Parton recalled opera singer Adelaide Phillips performing it in a posh home in New York and a young Irish maid sobbing.
It became a historic part of the Civil War era after Almira Hancock, wife of Union hero General Winfield Hancock, recalled it was sung at an emotional farewell dinner for a group of army officers and colleagues just before the Civil War began.
Wes Clark, a Civil War buff, noted, “It was in the early summer of 1861 that the famous farewell party noted in Almira Hancock’s memoirs was held at the Hancock home in Los Angeles. Close friends like Albert Sidney Johnston, Richard Garnett, and Lewis Armistead bid their final goodbyes to the Hancocks. Johnston would be killed at Shiloh, and Garnett and Armistead would later ba
ttle Hancock’s forces at Gettysburg.”
Will Gorenfeld, also a Civil War buff, states, “Winfield Scott Hancock, Lewis Armistead, and Dick Garnett had all served together in California and Mexico in the 6th US Infantry. They were close friends. Armistead and Garnett died during Pickett’s futile charge against General Hancock’s position. General Johnston died at Shiloh.”
The story of the grand party first appeared in Almira Hancock’s biography of her late husband, which was published in 1887, a year after the general’s death. Given the source, several generations of historians have taken it on faith that there was a grand farewell party at the Hancock’s Los Angeles home in which six or so future Confederate officers, including Albert Sidney Johnston, Garnett, and Armistead, all attended. Mrs. Hancock wrote about the sadness of the evening as Mrs. Johnston sang “Kathleen Mavourneen.” At this, she said, “Hearts were filled with sadness over the surrendering of lifelong ties.”
Some historians have since questioned that account, but the song has become enshrined in Civil War folklore with its opening verse, known to hundreds of thousands:
Kathleen, Mavourneen, the grey dawn is breaking,
The horn of the hunter is heard on the hill;
The lark from her light wing the bright dew is shaking;
Kathleen, Mavourneen, What! slumbering still?
Oh! hast thou forgotten how soon we must sever?
Oh! hast thou forgotten, this day we must part;
It may be for years, and it may be forever?
Oh! why art thou silent, thou voice of my heart?
It may be for years, and it may be forever?
Oh! why art thou silent, Kathleen, Mavourneen?
In 1862, soon after the death of their beloved twelve-year-old son Willie, the Lincolns invited Adelina Patti, the most famous singer of her time, for a recital. Her second-to-last song that night in the Red Room was by Irish composer Thomas Moore, entitled “The Last Rose of Summer.” It was a Lincoln favorite, and one of ten songs on Mary Todd Lincoln’s music box, which is now in the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Illinois.