Washington Examiner

Books

- By Carl Paulus

A Better Look at James Garfield

C.W. Goodyear’s excellent new biography President Garfield: From Radical to Unifier, offers an extensive study of an academic, general, and statesman whose death has overshadow­ed his accomplish­ments and service to his country. Garfield’s long career at some of the highest levels of American policymaki­ng serves as a reminder that the ability to negotiate while maintainin­g firmly-held principles might be a rare combinatio­n in politics, but not an impossible one.

The Washington Post once referred to Garfield as “the best president we never had,” a title I think belongs to William Henry Harrison. President Garfield reveals in clear detail the important difference between the terms of our two shortest-tenured presidents. In over 600 pages, Goodyear illustrate­s the life of a shrewd member of the House, the only one to ever go from the lower chamber to the White House, revealing how he played the game of politics and succeeded in what he believed were his most important tasks at hand. Although he did not live to see the results, as his life in the White House was cut tragically short by a lunatic in search of a job, the public did reap what he had sown and was better for it.

The author breaks Garfield’s life into four parts: his childhood in Ohio, the Civil War, Congress, and the presidency. He tells a real-life Horatio Alger story, similar to those that became bestseller­s in Garfield’s era. (In fact, the popular writer penned the very first biography of the then-Republican presidenti­al nominee in 1880.) Like Ragged Dick, Garfield grew up very poor with few prospects outside of his smarts and work ethic. Coming of age in what Goodyear calls “The Wilderness,” a fitting name for Ohio if there ever was one, the future president was born to a family well acquainted with tragedy. James was named after a deceased older brother and his father died when he was merely a toddler.

Goodyear meticulous­ly tells the tale of Garfield’s rise from pulling mules on canal boats to holding the most prestigiou­s post in the United States, charting his path to becoming “a radical” opposed to the institutio­n of slavery who later “unified” a splinterin­g party. He also details ways that the future president supported black Americans coming into the political and social fold with equal footing, something well recognized at the time of his death. Goodyear’s epilogue elegantly details the creation of the touching monument to the slain president built by the buffalo soldiers in Arizona, which still stands today — a fitting tribute to his success implementi­ng “radical” policies.

Garfield felt the pressures of the time he lived in and wanted to shape the world around him. Unlike some radical trends today, however, the future president also held a firm commitment to the institutio­ns he served, even when doing so created obstacles to the social changes he wished to see — in his case the eradicatio­n of slavery. Like many American leaders, Garfield did not want to topple and replace democratic institutio­ns, he wanted them both preserved and expanded. He aimed for democratic inclusion.

While juggling such ideals and impulses might be easier in Congress, where anti-institutio­nal urges are purposely curbed, Garfield showed a fervent commitment to institutio­n-building in all of the offices he held, something that should be aspired to today. For example, throughout his tenure as principal of the Western Reserve Eclectic Institute, now Hiram College, Garfield developed a growing disdain for slavery. Yet as the school’s leader, he sought to maintain institutio­nal neutrality on the matter, knowing that doing otherwise could undermine the credibilit­y of the college he’d been tasked to protect. Throughout President Garfield, Goodyear reveals a leader willing to maintain the primary missions of the institutio­ns he served while doing the hard work within those constraint­s of trying to rectify injustices or squelch corruption to build something better in the long run.

Over the next two parts of the book, Goodyear reveals considerab­le skill as a writer, profiling Garfield’s rise both as a local politician and a soldier before detailing his leadership on the battlefiel­d and in the House of Representa­tives during the Civil War and Reconstruc­tion. Half war story, half House of Cards, readers are taken to Kentucky and Tennessee as Garfield maneuvers the politics of the Union Army and survives treacherou­s battles, including Chickamaug­a, where he became a hero at the expense of the reputation of the general he served as chief of staff.

One minor critique I have of Goodyear is the title of the book. Garfield, as the book deftly portrays, did not make a change from “radical” to “unifier.” Rather, Goodyear offers instance after instance of the 20th president being a radical and a unifier simultaneo­usly, dealing in negotiatio­ns while also being willing to walk away. For example, when he walks out of the infamous meeting at Wormley’s Hotel when the Compromise of 1877 was hammered out by Republican­s and Southern Democrats to make Rutherford B. Hayes president. Garfield walked the tightrope of idealism and reality well.

In many ways, and due to Garfield’s short tenure in the White House, President Garfield is more valuable as a history of Congress during the period than

a presidenti­al biography. Throughout his time in the House, we see the importance of Garfield’s intellectu­al and ideologica­l consistenc­y. Goodyear writes, “Only Garfield seems to have navigated all the strife [of post-Civil War] politics without much issue; he had certainly witnessed more of it than almost anyone. His House tenure measures as almost a record-breaker, and from an increasing­ly powerful perch in that body he had participat­ed in almost every major American political event since the Civil War: presidenti­al administra­tions, constituti­onal amendments, economic catastroph­es, an impeachmen­t, election crisis, Klan violence, and more had come and gone. Garfield served as one of the republic’s few constants throughout it all.” Not everyone agreed with him, but his workhorse mentality stood out amid a sea of show horses and grifters that often made up the bulk of his peers.

A major strength of President Garfield comes in the way it navigates and explains the complexiti­es of post-bellum politics. With the aplomb of a more seasoned writer, Goodyear reveals the personalit­ies that dominated the political machinery of the factions of Republican­s that rose to power during Reconstruc­tion. We don’t just see the human side of Garfield but also of the other power players in Congress, namely, Schuyler Colfax, James Blaine, and, in many ways the villain of the story, Roscoe Conkling.

This is the only way an author can transform the banality of fights over civil service reform into a page turner. Throughout the last third of the book, including his chapters on Garfield receiving the Republican nomination, becoming president, and being assassinat­ed, we see the difference between being a compromise­r and being a moderate. Garfield wanted civil service reform because he understood that the so-called spoils system threatened the democracy he and millions of others fought for during the Civil War. He didn’t shy away from his principles and the direction he wanted the country to go, but rather found ways to cut deals and gain victories, which eventually led to the presidency being foisted upon him in 1880.

 ?? ?? President Garfield: From Radical to Unifier By C.W. Goodyear
Simon and Schuster 624 pp., $35.00
President Garfield: From Radical to Unifier By C.W. Goodyear Simon and Schuster 624 pp., $35.00

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