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of trade or commerce;〃 and Stewart was disqualified。 Adolph E。
Borie of Philadelphia; whose qualifications were the possession
of great wealth and the friendship of the President; was named
Secretary of the Navy。 Another personal friend; John A。 Rawlins;
was named Secretary of War。 A third friend; Elihu B。 Washburne of
Illinois; was made Secretary of State。 Washburne soon resigned;
and Hamilton Fish of New York was appointed in his place。 Fish;
together with General Jacob D。 Cox of Ohio; Secretary of the
Interior; and Judge E。 Rockwood Hoar of Massachusetts;
Attorney…General; formed a strong triumvirate of ability and
character in the Cabinet。 But; while Grant displayed pleasure in
the companionship of these eminent men; they never possessed his
complete confidence。 When the machinations for place and favor
began; Hoar and Cox were in the way。 Hoar had offended the Senate
in his recommendations for federal circuit judges (the circuit
court was then newly established); and when the President named
him for Justice of the Supreme Court; Hoar was rejected。 Senator
Cameron; one of the chief spoils politicians of the time; told
Hoar frankly why: 〃What could you expect for a man who had
snubbed seventy Senators!〃 A few months later (June; 1870); the
President bluntly asked for Hoar's resignation; a sacrifice to
the gods of the Senate; to purchase their favor for the Santo
Domingo treaty。

Cox resigned in the autumn。 As Secretary of the Interior he had
charge of the Patent Office; Census Bureau; and Indian Service;
all of them requiring many appointments。 He had attempted to
introduce a sort of civil service examination for applicants and
had vehemently protested against political assessments levied on
clerks in his department。 He especially offended Senators Cameron
and Chandler; party chieftains who had the ear of the President。
General Cox stated the matter plainly: 〃My views of the necessity
of reform in the civil service had brought me more or less into
collision with the plans of our active political managers and my
sense of duty has obliged me to oppose some of their methods of
action。〃 These instances reveal how the party chieftains insisted
inexorably upon their demands。 To them the public service was
principally a means to satisfy party ends; and the chief duty of
the President and his Cabinet was to satisfy the claims of party
necessity。 General Cox said that distributing offices occupied
〃the larger part of the time of the President and all his
Cabinet。〃 General Garfield wrote (1877): 〃One…third of the
working hours of Senators and Representatives is hardly
sufficient to meet the demands made upon them in reference to
appointments to office。〃

By the side of the partizan motives stalked the desire for gain。
There were those to whom parties meant but the opportunity for
sudden wealth。 The President's admiration for commercial success
and his inability to read the motives of sycophants multiplied
their opportunities; and in the eight years of his administration
there was consummated the baneful union of business and politics。

During the second Grant campaign (1872); when Horace Greeley was
making his astounding run for President; the New York Sun hinted
at gross and wholesale briberies of Congressmen by Oakes Ames and
his associates who had built the Union Pacific Railroad; an
enterprise which the United States had generously aided with
loans and gifts。

Three committees of Congress; two in the House and one in the
Senate (the Poland Committee; the Wilson Committee; and the
Senate Committee); subsequently investigated the charges。 Their
investigations disclosed the fact that Ames; then a member of the
House of Representatives; the principal stockholder in the Union
Pacific; and the soul of the enterprise; had organized; under an
existing Pennsylvania charter; a construction company called the
Credit Mobilier; whose shares were issued to Ames and his
associates。 To the Credit Mobilier were issued the bonds and
stock of the Union Pacific; which had been paid for 〃at not more
than thirty cents on the dollar in road…making。〃* As the United
States; in addition to princely gifts of land; had in effect
guaranteed the cost of construction by authorizing the issue of
Government bonds; dollar for dollar and side by side with the
bonds of the road; the motive of the magnificent shuffle; which
gave the road into the hands of a construction company; was
clear。 Now it was alleged that stock of the Credit Mobilier;
paying dividends of three hundred and forty per cent; had been
distributed by Ames among many of his fellow…Congressmen; in
order to forestall a threatened investigation。 It was disclosed
that some of the members had refused point blank to have anything
to do with the stock; others had refused after deliberation;
others had purchased some of it outright; others; alas!; had
〃purchased〃 it; to be paid for out of its own dividends。

* Testimony before the Wilson Committee。


The majority of the members involved in the nasty affair were
absolved by the Poland Committee from 〃any corrupt motive or
purpose。〃 But Oakes Ames of Massachusetts and James Brooks of New
York were recommended for expulsion from the House and Patterson
of New Hampshire from the Senate。 The House; however; was content
with censuring Ames and Brooks; and the Senate permitted
Patterson's term to expire; since only five days of it remained。
Whatever may have been the opinion of Congress; and whatever a
careful reading of the testimony discloses to an impartial mind
at this remote day; upon the voters of that time the revelations
came as a shock。 Some of the most trusted Congressmen were drawn
into the miasma of suspicion; among them Garfield; Dawes;
Scofield; Wilson; the newly elected Vice…President; Colfax; the
outgoing Vice…President。 Colfax had been a popular idol; with the
Presidency in his vision; now bowed and disgraced; he left the
national capital never to return with a public commission。

In 1874 came the disclosures of the Whiskey Ring。 They involved
United States Internal Revenue officers and distillers in the
revenue district of St。 Louis and a number of officials at
Washington。 Benjamin H。 Bristow; on becoming Secretary of the
Treasury in June of that year; immediately scented corruption。 He
discovered that during 1871…74 only about one…third of the
whiskey shipped from St。 Louis had paid the tax and that the
Government had been defrauded of nearly 3;000;000。 〃If a
distiller was honest;〃 says James Ford Rhodes; the eminent
historian; 〃he was entrapped into some technical violation of the
law by the officials; who by virtue of their authority seized his
distillery; giving him the choice of bankruptcy or a partnership
in their operations; and generally he succumbed。〃

McDonald; the supervisor of the St。 Louis revenue district; was
the leader of the Whiskey Ring。 He lavished gifts upon President
Grant; who; with an amazing indifference and innocence; accepted
such favors from all kinds of sources。 Orville E。 Babcock; the
President's private secretary; who possessed the complete
confidence of the guileless general; was soon enmeshed in the net
of investigation。 Grant at first declared; 〃If Babcock is guilty;
there is no man who wants him so much proven guilty as I do; for
it is the greatest piece of traitorism to me that a man could
possibly practice。〃 When Babcock was indicted; however; for
complicity to defraud the Government; the President did not
hesitate to say on oath that he had never seen anything in
Babcock's behavior which indicated that he was in any way
interested in the Whiskey Ring and that he had always had 〃great
confidence in his integrity and efficiency。〃 In other ways the
President displayed his eagerness to defend his private
secretary。 The jury acquitted Babcock; but the public did not。 He
was compelled to resign under pressure of public condemnation;
and was afterwards indicted for conspiracy to rob a safe of
documents of an incriminating character。 But Grant seems never to
have lost faith in him。 Three of the men sent to prison for their
complicity in the whiskey fraud were pardoned after six months。
McDonald; the chieftain of the gang; served but one year of his
term。

The exposure of the Whiskey Ring was followed by an even more
startling humiliation。 The House Committee on Expenditures in the
War Department recommended that General William W。 Belknap;
Secretary of War; be impeached for 〃high crimes and misdemeanors
while in office;〃 and the House unanimously adopted the
recommendation。 The evidence upon which the committee based its
drastic recommendation disclosed the most sordid division of
spoils between the Secretary and his wife and two rascals who
held in succession the valuable post of trader at Fort Sill in
the Indian Territory。

The committee's report was read about three o'clock in the
afternoon of March 2; 1876。 In the forenoon of the same day
Belknap had sent his resignation to the President; who had
accepted it immediately。 The President and Belknap were personal
friends。 But the certainty of Belknap's perfidy was not removed
by the attitude of the President; nor by the

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