Early years (1841–1848) , taken between 1844 and 1860 By the end of the 1840 campaign, the
Log Cabin's circulation had risen to 80,000 and Greeley decided to establish a daily newspaper, the
New-York Tribune. At the time, New York had many newspapers, dominated by
James Gordon Bennett's
New York Herald, which, with a circulation of about 55,000, had more readers than its combined competition. As technology advanced, it became cheaper and easier to publish a newspaper, and the daily press came to dominate the weekly, which had once been the more common format for news periodicals. Greeley borrowed money from friends to get started, and published the first issue of the
Tribune on April 10, 1841—the day of a memorial parade in New York for President Harrison, who had died after a month in office and been replaced by Vice President Tyler. In the first issue, Greeley promised that his newspaper would be a "new morning Journal of Politics, Literature, and General Intelligence". New Yorkers were not initially receptive; the first week's receipts were $92 and expenses $525. The paper was sold for a cent a copy by newsboys who purchased bundles of papers at a discount. The price of advertising was initially four cents a line but was quickly raised to six cents. Through the 1840s, the
Tribune was four pages, that is, a single sheet folded. It initially had 600 subscribers and 5,000 copies were sold of the first issue. In the early days, Greeley's chief assistant was
Henry J. Raymond, who a decade later founded
The New York Times. To place the
Tribune on a sound financial footing, Greeley sold a half-interest in it to attorney Thomas McElrath (1807–1888), who became publisher of the
Tribune (Greeley was editor) and ran the business side. Politically, the
Tribune backed Kentucky Senator
Henry Clay, who had unsuccessfully sought the presidential nomination that fell to Harrison, and supported Clay's
American System for development of the country. Greeley was one of the first newspaper editors to have a full-time correspondent in Washington, an innovation quickly followed by his rivals. Part of Greeley's strategy was to make the
Tribune a newspaper of national scope, not merely local. One factor in establishing the paper nationally was the
Weekly Tribune, created in September 1841 when the
Log Cabin and
The New-Yorker were merged. With an initial subscription price of $2 a year, this was sent to many across the United States by mail and was especially popular in the Midwest. In December 1841, Greeley was offered the editorship of the national Whig newspaper, the
Madisonian. He demanded full control, and declined when not given it. Greeley, in his paper, initially supported the Whig program. As divisions between Clay and President Tyler became apparent, he supported the Kentucky senator and looked to a Clay nomination for president in
1844. However, when Clay was nominated by the Whigs, he was defeated by the
Democratic Party candidate, former Tennessee governor
James K. Polk, though Greeley worked hard on Clay's behalf. Greeley had taken positions in opposition to slavery as editor of
The New-Yorker in the late 1830s, opposing the annexation of the slaveholding
Republic of Texas to the United States. In the 1840s, Greeley became an increasingly vocal opponent of the expansion of slavery. Greeley hired
Margaret Fuller in 1844 as first literary editor of the
Tribune, for which she wrote over 200 articles. She lived with the Greeley family for several years, and when she moved to Italy, he made her a foreign correspondent. He promoted the work of
Henry David Thoreau, serving as literary agent and seeing to it that Thoreau's work was published.
Ralph Waldo Emerson also benefited from Greeley's promotion. Historian
Allan Nevins explained: Greeley, who had met his wife at a Graham boarding house, became enthusiastic about other social movements that did not last and promoted them in his paper. He subscribed to the views of
Charles Fourier, a French social thinker, then recently deceased,
who proposed the establishment of settlements called "phalanxes" with a given number of people from various walks of life, who would function as a corporation and among whose members profits would be shared. Greeley, in addition to promoting
Fourierism in the
Tribune, was associated with two such settlements, both of which eventually failed, though the town that eventually developed on the site of the one in Pennsylvania was after his death renamed
Greeley.
Congressman (1848–1849) In November 1848, Congressman
David S. Jackson, a Democrat, of New York's 6th district was unseated for election fraud. Jackson's term was to expire in March 1849 but, during the 19th century, Congress convened annually in December, making it important to fill the seat. Under the laws then in force, the Whig committee from the Sixth District chose Greeley to run in the special election for the remainder of the term, though they did not select him as their candidate for the seat in the following Congress. The Sixth District, or Sixth Ward as it was commonly called, was mostly Irish-American, and Greeley proclaimed his support for Irish efforts towards independence from the
United Kingdom. He easily won the November election and took his seat when Congress convened in December 1848. Greeley's selection was procured by the influence of his ally,
Thurlow Weed. As a congressman for three months, Greeley introduced legislation for a
homestead act that would allow settlers who improved land to purchase it at low rates—a fourth of what speculators would pay. He was quickly noticed because he launched a series of attacks on legislative privileges, taking note of which congressmen were missing votes, and questioning the office of
House Chaplain. This was enough to make him unpopular. But he outraged his colleagues when on December 22, 1848, the
Tribune published evidence that many congressmen had been paid excessive sums as travel allowance. In January 1849, Greeley supported a bill that would have corrected the issue, but it was defeated. He was so disliked, he wrote a friend, that he had "divided the House into two parties—one that would like to see me extinguished and the other that wouldn't be satisfied without a hand in doing it." Other legislation introduced by Greeley, all of which failed, included attempts to end flogging in the Navy and to ban alcohol from its ships. He tried to change the name of the United States to "Columbia", abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, and increase tariffs. One lasting effect of the term of Congressman Greeley was his friendship with a fellow Whig, serving his only term in the House, Illinois's
Abraham Lincoln. Greeley's term ended after March 3, 1849, and he returned to New York and the
Tribune, having, according to Williams, "failed to achieve much except notoriety".
Influence (1849–1860) '' editorial staff, with Greeley third from the left in the front row By the end of the 1840s, Greeley's
Tribune was not only solidly established in New York as a daily paper, it was highly influential nationally through its weekly edition, which circulated in rural areas and small towns. Journalist
Bayard Taylor deemed its influence in the Midwest second only to that of the Bible. According to Williams, the
Tribune could mold public opinion through Greeley's editorials more effectively than could the president. Greeley sharpened those skills over time, laying down what future Secretary of State
John Hay, who worked for the
Tribune in the 1870s, deemed the "Gospel according to St. Horace". The
Tribune remained a Whig paper, but Greeley took an independent course. In
1848, he had been slow to endorse the Whig presidential nominee, General
Zachary Taylor, a Louisianan and hero of the
Mexican–American War. Greeley opposed both the war and the expansion of slavery into the new territories seized from Mexico and feared Taylor would support expansion as president. Greeley considered endorsing former President
Martin Van Buren, candidate of the
Free Soil Party, but finally endorsed Taylor, who was elected; the editor was rewarded for his loyalty with the congressional term. Greeley vacillated on support for the
Compromise of 1850, which gave victories to both sides of the slavery issue, before finally opposing it. In the
1852 presidential campaign, he supported the Whig candidate, General
Winfield Scott, but savaged the Whig platform for its support of the Compromise. "We defy it, execrate it, spit upon it." Such party divisions contributed to Scott's defeat by former New Hampshire senator
Franklin Pierce. In 1853, with the party increasingly divided over the slavery issue, Greeley printed an editorial disclaiming the paper's identity as Whig and declaring it to be nonpartisan. He was confident that the paper would not suffer financially, trusting in reader loyalty. Some in the party were not sorry to see him go: the
Republic, a Whig organ, mocked Greeley and his beliefs: "If a party is to be built up and maintained on
Fourierism,
Mesmerism,
Maine Liquor laws,
Spiritual Rappings,
Kossuthism,
Socialism,
Abolitionism, and forty other
isms, we have no disposition to mix with any such companions." When, in 1854, Illinois Senator
Stephen Douglas introduced his
Kansas–Nebraska Bill, allowing residents of each territory to decide whether it would be slave or free, Greeley strongly fought the legislation in his newspaper. After it passed, and the
Border War broke out in
Kansas Territory, Greeley was part of efforts to send free-state settlers there, and to arm them. In return, proponents of slavery recognized Greeley and the
Tribune as adversaries, stopping shipments of the paper to the South and harassing local agents. Nevertheless, by 1858, the
Tribune reached 300,000 subscribers through the weekly edition, and it would continue as the foremost American newspaper through the years of the
Civil War. The Kansas–Nebraska Act helped destroy the Whig Party, but a new party with opposition to the spread of slavery at its heart had been under discussion for some years. Beginning in 1853, Greeley participated in the discussions that led to the founding of the
Republican Party and may have coined its name. Greeley attended the first New York state Republican Convention in 1854 and was disappointed not to be nominated either for governor or lieutenant governor. The switch in parties coincided with the end of two of his longtime political alliances: in December 1854, Greeley wrote that the political partnership between Weed,
William Seward (who was by then senator after serving as governor) and himself was ended "by the withdrawal of the junior partner". Greeley was angered over patronage disputes and felt that Seward was courting the rival
The New York Times for support. In 1853, Greeley purchased a farm in rural
Chappaqua, New York, where he experimented with farming techniques. In 1856, he designed and built
Rehoboth, one of the first
concrete structures in the United States. In 1856, Greeley published a campaign biography by an anonymous author for the first Republican presidential candidate,
John C. Frémont. The
Tribune continued to print a wide variety of material. In 1851, its managing editor,
Charles A. Dana, recruited
Karl Marx as a foreign correspondent in London. Marx collaborated with
Friedrich Engels on his work for the
Tribune, which continued for over a decade, covering 500 articles. Greeley felt compelled to print, "Mr. Marx has very decided opinions of his own, with some of which we are far from agreeing, but those who do not read his letters are neglecting one of the most instructive sources of information on the great questions of current European politics." Greeley sponsored a host of reforms, including pacifism and feminism and especially the ideal of the hard-working free laborer. Greeley demanded reforms to make all citizens free and equal. He envisioned virtuous citizens who would eradicate corruption. He talked endlessly about progress, improvement, and freedom, while calling for harmony between labor and capital. Greeley's editorials promoted social democratic reforms and were widely reprinted. They influenced the free-labor ideology of the Whigs and the radical wing of the Republican Party, especially in promoting the free-labor ideology. Before 1848 he sponsored an American version of Fourierist socialist reform. but backed away after the failed revolutions of 1848 in Europe. To promote multiple reforms Greeley hired a roster of writers who later became famous in their own right, including
Margaret Fuller, Charles A. Dana,
George William Curtis,
William Henry Fry,
Bayard Taylor,
Julius Chambers, and
Henry Jarvis Raymond, who later co-founded
The New York Times. For many years
George Ripley was the staff literary critic.
Jane Swisshelm was one of the first women hired by a major newspaper. In 1859, Greeley traveled across the continent to see the West for himself, to write about it for the
Tribune, and to publicize the need for a
transcontinental railroad. He also planned to give speeches to promote the Republican Party. In May 1859, he went to Chicago, and then to
Lawrence in
Kansas Territory, and was unimpressed by the local people. Nevertheless, after speaking before the first ever Kansas Republican Party Convention at
Osawatomie, Kansas, Greeley took one of the first stagecoaches to Denver, seeing the town then in course of formation as a mining camp of the
Pike's Peak Gold Rush. Sending dispatches back to the
Tribune, Greeley took the
Overland Trail, reaching
Salt Lake City, where he conducted a two-hour interview with the
Mormon leader
Brigham Young—the first newspaper interview Young had given. Greeley encountered Native Americans and was sympathetic but, like many of his time, deemed Indian culture inferior. In California, he toured widely and gave many addresses.
1860 presidential election Although he remained on cordial terms with Senator Seward, Greeley never seriously considered supporting him in his bid for the Republican nomination for president. Instead, during the run-up to the
1860 Republican National Convention in Chicago, he pressed the candidacy of former Missouri representative
Edward Bates, an opponent of the spread of slavery who had freed his own slaves. In his newspaper, in speeches, and in conversation, Greeley pushed Bates as a man who could win the North and even make inroads in the South. Nevertheless, when one of the
dark horse candidates for the Republican nomination, Abraham Lincoln, came to New York to give
an address at
Cooper Union, Greeley urged his readers to go hear Lincoln, and was among those who accompanied him to the platform. Greeley thought of Lincoln as a possible nominee for vice president. Greeley attended the convention as a substitute for Oregon delegate Leander Holmes, who was unable to attend. In Chicago, he promoted Bates but deemed his cause hopeless and felt that Seward would be nominated. In conversations with other delegates, he predicted that, if nominated, Seward could not carry crucial battleground states such as Pennsylvania. Greeley's estrangement from Seward was not widely known, giving the editor more credibility. Greeley (and Seward) biographer Glyndon G. Van Deusen noted that it is uncertain how great a part Greeley played in Seward's defeat by Lincoln—he had little success gaining delegates for Bates. On the first two ballots, Seward led Lincoln, but on the second only by a small margin. After the third ballot, on which Lincoln was nominated, Greeley was seen among the Oregon delegation, a broad smile on his face. According to Pulitzer Prize-winning historian
Doris Kearns Goodwin, "it is hard to imagine Lincoln letting Greeley's resentment smolder for years as Seward did". Seward's forces made Greeley a target of their anger at the senator's defeat. One subscriber cancelled, regretting the three-cent stamp he had to use on the letter; Greeley supplied a replacement. When he was attacked in print, Greeley responded in kind. He launched a campaign against corruption in the
New York Legislature, hoping voters would defeat incumbents and the new legislators would elect him to the Senate when Seward's term expired in 1861. (Before 1913, senators were elected by state legislatures.) But his main activity during the campaign of 1860 was boosting Lincoln and denigrating the other presidential candidates. He made it clear that a Republican administration would not interfere with slavery where it already was and denied that Lincoln was in favor of voting rights for African Americans. He kept up the pressure until Lincoln was elected in November. Lincoln soon let it be known that Seward would be
Secretary of State, which meant that he would not be a candidate for re-election to the Senate. Weed wanted
William M. Evarts elected in his place, while the anti-Seward forces in New York gathered around Greeley. The crucial battleground was the Republican caucus, as the party held the majority in the legislature. Greeley's forces did not have enough votes to send him to the Senate, but they had enough strength to block Evarts's candidacy. Weed threw his support to
Ira Harris, who had already received several votes, and who was chosen by the caucus and elected by the legislature in February 1861. Weed was content to have blocked the editor, and stated that he had "paid the
first installment on a large debt to Mr. Greeley".
Civil War War breaks out After Lincoln's election, there was talk of secession in the South. The
Tribune was initially in favor of peaceful separation, with the South becoming a separate nation. According to an editorial on November 9: Similar editorials appeared through January 1861, after which
Tribune editorials took a hard line on the South, opposing concessions. Williams concludes that "for a brief moment, Horace Greeley had believed that peaceful secession might be a form of freedom preferable to civil war". This brief flirtation with disunion would have consequences for Greeley—it was used against him when he ran for president in 1872. In the days leading up to
Lincoln's inauguration, the
Tribune headed its editorial columns each day, in large capital letters: "No compromise!/No concession to traitors!/The Constitution as it is!" Greeley attended the inauguration, sitting close to
Senator Douglas, as the
Tribune hailed the beginning of Lincoln's presidency. When southern forces
attacked Fort Sumter, the
Tribune regretted the loss of the fort, but applauded the fact that war to subdue the rebels, who formed the
Confederate States of America, would now take place. The paper criticized Lincoln for not being quick to use force. Through the spring and early summer of 1861, Greeley and the
Tribune beat the drum for a Union attack. "On to Richmond", a phrase coined by a
Tribune stringer, became the watchword of the newspaper as Greeley urged the occupation of the rebel capital of Richmond before the
Confederate Congress could meet on July 20. In part because of the public pressure, in mid-July Lincoln sent the half-trained
Union Army into the field at the
First Battle of Bull Run, where it was soundly beaten. The defeat threw Greeley into despair, and he may have suffered a nervous breakdown.
"The Prayer of Twenty Millions" Restored to health by two weeks at the farm he had purchased in Chappaqua, Greeley returned to the
Tribune and a policy of general backing of the Lincoln administration, even having kind words to say about Secretary Seward, his old foe. He was supportive even during the military defeats of the first year of the war. Late in 1861, he proposed to Lincoln through an intermediary that the president provide him with advance information as to its policies, in exchange for friendly coverage in the
Tribune. Lincoln eagerly accepted, "having him firmly behind me will be as helpful to me as an army of one hundred thousand men." By early 1862, however, Greeley was again sometimes critical of the administration, frustrated by the failure to win decisive military victories, and perturbed at the president's slowness to commit to the emancipation of the slaves once the Confederacy was defeated, something the
Tribune was urging in its editorials. This was a change in Greeley's thinking which began after First Manassas, a shift from preservation of the Union being the primary war purpose to wanting the war to end slavery. By March, the only action against slavery that Lincoln had backed was a proposal for compensated emancipation in the
border states that had remained loyal to the Union, though he signed legislation abolishing slavery in the
District of Columbia. Lincoln supposedly asked a
Tribune correspondent, "What in the world is the matter with Uncle Horace? Why can't he restrain himself and wait a little while?" Greeley's prodding of Lincoln culminated in a letter to him on August 19, 1862, reprinted on the following day in the
Tribune as "The Prayer of Twenty Millions". By this time, Lincoln had informed his Cabinet of his draft of the preliminary
Emancipation Proclamation, and Greeley was told of it the same day the prayer was printed. In his letter, Greeley demanded action on emancipation and strict enforcement of the
Confiscation Acts. Lincoln must "fight slavery with liberty", and not fight "wolves with the devices of a sheep." Lincoln's reply would become famous, much more so than the prayer that provoked it. "My paramount object in this struggle
is to save the Union, and is
not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing
any slave, I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing
all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that. What I do about slavery, and the colored race, I do because it helps to save the Union; and what I forbear, I forbear because I do
not believe it would help to save the Union." Lincoln's statement angered abolitionists; William Seward's wife
Frances complained to her husband that Lincoln had made it seem "that the mere keeping together a number of states is more important than human freedom." Greeley felt Lincoln had not truly answered him, "but I'll forgive him everything if he'll issue the proclamation". When Lincoln did issue the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation on September 22, Greeley hailed the Emancipation Proclamation as a "great boon of Freedom". According to Williams, "Lincoln's war for Union was now also Greeley's war for emancipation."
Draft riots and peace efforts on a 1961 U.S. postage stamp After the Union victory
at Gettysburg in early July 1863, the
Tribune wrote that the rebellion would be quickly "stamped out". A week after the battle, the
New York City draft riots erupted. Greeley and the
Tribune were generally supportive of
conscription, though feeling that the rich should not be allowed to evade it by hiring substitutes. Support for the draft made them targets of the mob, and the
Tribune Building was surrounded, and at least once invaded. Greeley secured arms from the
Brooklyn Navy Yard, and 150 soldiers kept the building secure. Mary Greeley and her children were at the farm in Chappaqua; a mob threatened them but dispersed without doing harm. In August 1863, Greeley was requested by a firm of Hartford publishers to write a history of the war. Greeley agreed, and over the next eight months he penned a 600-page volume, which would be the first of two, entitled
The American Conflict. The books were very successful, selling a total of 225,000 copies by 1870, a large sale for the time. Throughout the war, Greeley played with ideas as to how to settle it. In 1862, Greeley had approached the French minister to Washington,
Henri Mercier, to discuss a mediated settlement. However, Seward rejected such talks, and the prospect of European intervention receded after the bloody Union victory at
Antietam in September 1862. In July 1864, Greeley received word that there were Confederate commissioners in Canada, empowered to offer peace. In fact, the men were in
Niagara Falls, Canada, in order to aid
Peace Democrats and otherwise undermine the Union war effort, but they played along when Greeley journeyed to Niagara Falls, at Lincoln's request. The president was willing to consider any deal that included reunion and emancipation. The Confederates had no credentials and were unwilling to accompany Greeley to Washington under safe conduct. Greeley returned to New York, and the episode, when it became public, embarrassed the administration. Lincoln said nothing publicly concerning Greeley's credulous conduct, but he privately indicated that he had no confidence in him anymore. Greeley did not initially support Lincoln for nomination in 1864, casting about for other candidates. In February, he wrote in the
Tribune that Lincoln could not be elected to a second term. Nevertheless, no candidate made a serious challenge to Lincoln, and Lincoln was nominated in June, which the
Tribune applauded slightly. In August, fearing a Democratic victory and acceptance of the Confederacy, Greeley engaged in a plot to get a new convention to nominate another candidate, with Lincoln withdrawing. The plot came to nothing. Once
Atlanta was taken by Union forces on September 3, Greeley became a fervent supporter of Lincoln. He was one of the 33
electors in
New York pledged to Lincoln. Greeley was gratified by both
Lincoln's re-election and continued Union victories.
Reconstruction As the war drew to a close in April 1865, Greeley and the
Tribune urged magnanimity towards the defeated Confederates, arguing that making martyrs of Confederate leaders would only inspire future rebels. This talk of moderation ceased when
Lincoln was assassinated by
John Wilkes Booth. Many concluded that Lincoln had fallen as the result of a final rebel plot, and the new president,
Andrew Johnson, offered $100,000 for the capture of fugitive Confederate president
Jefferson Davis. After the rebel leader was caught, Greeley initially advocated that "punishment be meted out in accord with a just verdict". Through 1866, Greeley editorialized that Davis, who was being held at
Fortress Monroe, should either be set free or put on trial. Davis's wife
Varina urged Greeley to use his influence to gain her husband's release. In May 1867, a Richmond judge set bail for the former Confederate president at $100,000 (~$ in ). Greeley was among those who signed the
bail bond, and the two men met briefly at the courthouse. This act resulted in public anger against Greeley in the North. Sales of the second volume of his history (published in 1866) declined sharply. Subscriptions to the
Tribune (especially the
Weekly Tribune) also dropped off, though they recovered during the
1868 election. Initially supportive of Andrew Johnson's lenient
Reconstruction policies, Greeley soon became disillusioned, as the president's plan allowed the quick formation of state governments without securing
suffrage for the freedman. When Congress convened in December 1865, and gradually took control of Reconstruction, he was generally supportive, as
Radical Republicans pushed hard for universal male suffrage and civil rights for freedmen. Greeley ran for Congress in 1866 but lost badly. He ran for Senate in the legislative election held in early 1867 but lost to
Roscoe Conkling. As the president and Congress battled, Greeley remained firmly opposed to the president, and when
Johnson was impeached in March 1868, Greeley and the
Tribune strongly supported his removal, attacking Johnson as "an aching tooth in the national jaw, a screeching infant in a crowded lecture room," and declaring, "There can be no peace or comfort till he is out." Nevertheless, the president was acquitted by the Senate, much to Greeley's disappointment. Also in 1868, Greeley sought the Republican nomination for governor but was frustrated by the Conkling forces. Greeley supported the successful Republican presidential nominee, General
Ulysses S. Grant in the
1868 election.
Grant years In 1868,
Whitelaw Reid joined the
Tribune's staff as managing editor. In Reid, Greeley found a reliable second-in-command. Also on the Tribune's staff in the late 1860s was
Mark Twain.
Henry George sometimes contributed pieces, as did
Bret Harte. In 1870,
John Hay joined the staff as an editorial writer. Greeley soon pronounced Hay the most brilliant at that craft ever to write for the
Tribune. Greeley maintained his interest in
associationism. Beginning in 1869, he was heavily involved in an attempt to found the
Union Colony of Colorado, a utopia on the prairie, in a scheme led by
Nathan Meeker. The new town of
Greeley,
Colorado Territory was named after him. He served as treasurer and lent Meeker money to keep the colony afloat. In 1871, Greeley published a book entitled
What I Know About Farming, based on his childhood experience and that from his country home in Chappaqua. Greeley continued to seek political office, running for
state comptroller in 1869 and the House of Representatives in 1870, losing both times. In 1870, President Grant offered Greeley the post of minister to Santo Domingo (today, the
Dominican Republic), which he declined. ==Presidential candidate==