The Saline Courier Weekend

Ozro Hadley

- KEN BRIDGES

Reconstruc­tion was a time of chaos, violence, corruption, and confusion in Arkansas. Politician­s plotted against each other while lynchings and assassinat­ions bloodied the landscape. In the midst of the intrigue, one man rose from relative obscurity in the legislatur­e to catapult himself into the governor’s office, Ozro

Hadley.

Ozro Amander

Hadley was born into a farming family in

Chautauqua County,

New York, in 1826, in the southweste­rn corner of the state. As his father’s health declined, he took on more responsibi­lities of running the farm. Eventually, he started an insurance business. In 1855, he moved to Rochester, a small community in the southeaste­rn portion of the Minnesota Territory to again sell insurance. He was elected as a Republican as Olmseted County auditor and re-elected several times.

Consumed with ambition, he saw an opportunit­y with the close of the Civil

War and moved to Arkansas in 1865. He attempted to start a business, but the deep economic depression of postwar Arkansas, coupled with the embittered and disfranchi­sed former Confederat­e population determined to boycott Reconstruc­tion supporters like Hadley, doomed his enterprise from the start.

Hadley, like many other northern Republican­s settling in the South, turned to politics. In 1868, with a new state constituti­on supporting Radical Reconstruc­tion in place, Hadley ran for the state senate in a district that included Pulaski and White counties. He won easily and quietly rose to become president pro tempore of the Senate.

The new Radical Reconstruc­tion government was beset by numerous problems. Though the government supported civil rights for the freedmen, it faced intense hostility from Confederat­e veterans who had lost their right to vote for taking up arms against the Union. Though Hadley and his fellow Radicals supported building new railroads and new schools and even a proposed new state university that would become the University of Arkansas, these propositio­ns were expensive for a war-torn population that had lost everything.

As political and economic pressures increased, the Radicals increasing­ly turned on each other. They hurled insults and threats of impeachmen­t at each other often. Gov. Powell Clayton became a particular target, and anti-clayton forces schemed to get rid of him. The Arkansas legislatur­e elected Gov. Powell Clayton to the U. S. Senate after Sen. Alexander Mcdonald had only served two years. He resigned as governor on March 4, 1871, to assume what would be his only term in the Senate.

At this point, the lieutenant governor, James M. Johnson, would have become governor. But he had fallen out with many of his fellow Radical Republican­s as well. Hadley and his allies saw a valuable opening and schemed to keep Johnson out of the governor’s office. All it took was a bribe. Secretary of State Robert White was encouraged to resign, and the lucrative, appointed position was offered to Johnson, who resigned the higher office with lower pay for the lower office with higher pay. With both the positions of governor and lieutenant governor vacant, Hadley was next in line of succession and became governor on March 17.

As governor, he had to deal with continuing riots, lynchings, and uprisings against the Radicals. A series of assaults against law officers and a posse in Pope County nearly resulted in an assault by state militia troops and the imposition of martial law in summer 1871. Working with local officials, Hadley appointed an interim sheriff while investigat­ions continued, defusing the situation. Corruption and violence simmered during Hadley’s administra­tion. The appointmen­t of a state geologist, William F. Roberts, at the high salary of $15,000, caused an uproar among legislator­s, especially after Roberts continuall­y wandered through the streets of Little Rock drunk.

The situation was compounded by the disastrous 1872 election in which the two main Republican factions fought tooth-andnail across the state, stuffing ballot boxes, intimidati­ng voters and destroying opposition ballots. Hadley did nothing to stop the electoral fraud, which resulted in an election in which there was no clear legal winner. After Elisha Baxter assumed the governorsh­ip in January 1873, Hadley quietly left the state to spend a year in Europe, avoiding the violent clashes between the Republican factions fighting over the governor’s mansion.

When Hadley returned, he received a lucrative federal appointmen­t as postmaster of Little Rock in 1874. As his appointmen­t wound down, Hadley attempted to make a living as a farmer, buying plots in eastern Arkansas. Demoralize­d from his lackluster success and declining political fortunes, he left for the New Mexico Territory in 1879 to become a cattle rancher. At the age of 84, in 1910, Hadley left for Los Angeles to be near family. He died in California in 1915.

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