Thursday, March 12, 2015

Epilogue: The Fate of a Christian Liberal

Summary
After a final tour, William Jennings Bryan was buried at Arlington National Cemetery. His opponents such as Mencken belittled Bryan as insignificant while his admirers praised his influence as a reformer and a Christian. In the 1930s, Bryan's populist influence reappeared during the Great Depression and the New Deal. His legacy was handed down to his children who gained political roles and spoke about social issues. Fundamentalists and conservative evangelists followed in Bryan's example, and Catholic liberals became contributors in social activism. Although Bryan's memory gradually faded along with the Social Gospel movement, Bryan played an important role in the making of three amendments and starting up a series of reforms. Bryan began a new style of politics in which a candidate appeals to the common people in a friendly, approachable manner. All in all, Bryan deserves recognition for his impact on American history.

Key Terms
H. L. Mencken
Bible Belt
Great Depression
New Deal
Program for Social Reconstruction

Questions
What should William Jennings Bryan be primarily remembered for?
How does Bryan's legacy live on today?

12-foot statue of Bryan by Gutzon Borglum, dedicated to him by FDR
Statues and sculpture. William Jennings Bryan statue
Horydczak, Theodor, Statues and Sculpture. William Jennings Bryan statue, Photograph, from Library of Congress, accessed March 12, 2015, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/resource/thc.5a36017/

Ruth Bryan Owen, Bryan's daughter and congresswoman, and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt
File:Eleanor Roosevelt and Ruth Bryan Owen in Washington, Washington, D.C - NARA - 197265.jpg
Eleanor Roosevelt and Ruth Bryan Owen in Washington, Washington D.C, Photograph, from Wikimedia Commons, accessed March 12, 2015, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Eleanor_Roosevelt_and_Ruth_Bryan_Owen_in_Washington,_Washington,_D.C_-_NARA_-_197265.jpg


Kazin, Michael. "The Fate of a Christian Liberal." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 296-306, New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Chapter 12: Save the Children, 1920-1925

Summary
In postwar America, William Jennings Bryan dedicated his last few years of his life defending his faith. He battled against modernists and protested against the teaching of Darwinism in public schools. Bryan also continued to speak for prohibition and sexual equality. In the election of 1920, the Democratic Party nominated James Cox for President and Franklin D. Roosevelt for Vice President, but the Republican Party won by a landslide. Bryan's movements unintentionally gained the support of the Ku Klux Klan, and though Bryan did not approve of the Klan's hostility and intolerance, he as a politician did not condemn the group. In the election of 1924, the Democratic Party ran John Davis as President and Bryan's brother Charles Bryan as Vice President against incumbent Republican Calvin Coolidge and third party Progressive Robert La Follette. Bryan's party again lost crushingly, and Bryan lost much of his political influence because many in the party turned against him during the election. In 1925, Bryan assisted in the prosecution of John Thomas Scopes against the defense of Clarence Darrow in the State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes trial. Scopes was accused of teaching Darwinism at a public school which was against Tennessee law. The trial turned into a battle between modernism and fundamentalism. Despite the ruling in favor of the prosecution, the defense ridiculed Bryan during his questioning and demonstrated that fundamentalism and its direct interpretation of the Bible were illogical. A few days after the trial, Bryan went to take an afternoon nap and did not wake up.

Key Terms
Volstead Act
Teapot Dome
Fundamentalism
Modernism
Eighteenth Amendments
Ku Klux Klan
State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes
Clarence Darrow

Questions
What was the main impact of the Scopes trial?
Why did Bryan ignore the KKK's actions?
What goals did Bryan achieve in the time before his death?
What contributed to the Republican Party's success in the last two elections?


Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan during the trial, Photograph, from Famous Trials in American History, accessed March 12, 2015, http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/scopes/darrowbryan300.jpg


Kazin, Michael. "Save the Children." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 262-295, New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Chapter 11: Moralist in Retreat, 1916-1919

Summary
After he resigned, William Jennings Bryan and his wife moved to Villa Serena in Miami, Florida, where Bryan contributed to the community by speaking, teaching Bible classes, and supporting the Men's Club and YMCA. Woodrow Wilson began to advocate "preparedness" for the war while Bryan traveled speaking against the war. When Germany promised to search vessels for civilians before destroying them, Wilson started to advocate peace again, allowing the Democratic Party to settle disputes and have their convention. Bryan delivered a speech at the convention and agreed to help campaign for Wilson's reelection. But when Germany took back their promise and Wilson's request for "peace without victory" was rejected, Congress voted to declare war on Germany (Kazin 2006, 252). Wilson then asked Bryan to sell the war to the people, which Bryan did by telling people to conserve food and criticizing those who sought to profit from the war. The war allowed Bryan to push the prohibitionist movement more as well as the women's suffrage movement, which his wife also took part in. At the end of the war, Bryan was upset that Wilson did not allow him to partake in the Paris peace conference, so he became a skeptic regarding Wilson's future plans for the League of Nations. But he did advocate the idea of the League as "the greatest step toward peace in a thousand years" (Kazin 2006, 259). As many intellectuals started to suggest radical change, Bryan thought up his own "Constructive Program" that involved matters such as government ownership of railroads and voters' decision to declare war.

Key Terms
John Reed
The Great War
League of Nations
"Constructive Program"
Fascism
Nazism
Bolshevism/Bolshevik Revolution

Questions
Why did the war cause more people to support prohibition?
Why did Bryan decide to go from anti-war to defending the war?
What problems did Bryan have with Wilson's plans?
How did moving to Florida affect his political career geographically?

Villa Serena
Villa Serena, winter home of William Jennings Bryan - Miami, Florida
Fishbaugh, W. A. Villa Serena, winter home of William Jennings Bryan, 1922. Photograph. from Florida Memory, accessed March 12, 2015, https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/23966.


Kazin, Michael. "Moralist in Retreat." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 243-261, New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Chapter 10: Moralist at State, 1913-1915

Summary
Due to his support in the election, President Woodrow Wilson appointed William Jennings Bryan as his Secretary of State. Bryan proposed that the United States sign international arbitration treaties to prevent war and promote peace. Eastern newspapers criticized Bryan for hiring mostly only his Democratic followers from the South and West as well as often taking off to speak at Chautauqua assemblies. Bryan advocated the successes of the Wilson administration: the ratification of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Amendment, the lowering of tariff rates, the placement of bank regulation in government hands, and the creation of the Federal Trade Commission. However, Wilson increased restrictions on blacks in the South, and Bryan did not question it. Bryan contradicted his peaceful mission to guide Caribbean nations by making diplomatic mistakes and using US military intervention in Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Mexico. When WWI began, Bryan insisted that the US stay neutral and tried to make peace between the nations. However, after the passenger ship Lusitania sank, Wilson's protest to Germany caused Bryan's decision to resign from his position as Secretary of State. Bryan felt that he could assist the United States more outside of office. His resignation led to the downfall of his political career.

Key Terms
Lusitania
Archduke Francis Ferdinand
international arbitration
Sixteenth Amendment
Seventeenth Amendment
Federal Trade Commission
Pancho Villa
Venustiano Carranza
William Gibbs McAdoo

Questions
Why did Bryan decide to resign instead of persisting?
How did Bryan's beliefs about the US affect his choices regarding the Caribbean and Mexico?
What was Bryan's main success as Secretary of State?
What issues did Bryan agree with Wilson on? What issues did they disagree on?
What did the press's opposition reveal about Bryan?

Cartoon of Secretary of State Bryan reading war news in 1914
File:WJB-fromthewarfront-1914.jpg
News from the Front, Political Cartoon, from Wikipedia, accessed March 12, 2015, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:WJB-fromthewarfront-1914.jpg

Bryan and President Wilson
[Woodrow Wilson and William Jennings Bryan standing on steps in front of a building]
Woodrow Wilson and William Jennings Bryan standing on steps in front of a building, Photograph, from Library of Congress, accessed March 12, 2015, http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2004668354/


Kazin, Michael. "Moralist at State." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 215-242, New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Chapter 9: Bryan's People

Summary
William Jennings Bryan had a large following throughout his political career. Much of the people who wrote to his newspaper were evangelical Protestants and middle class people who tied themselves to the working class rather than the upper elite. Bryan was supported by his staff at The Commoner including his brother Charles Bryan, Richard L. Metcalfe, Helen Watts-McVey, and Will Maupin. His more loyal followers were pietist Democrats and what was left of the Populists. James Weaver came to see Bryan as a son while Josephus Daniels came to see him as a brother. Daniels, however, declared Anglo-Saxon superiority in North Carolina and highlighted the threat of black men on white women in order to gain Democratic victory. Other followers of Bryan included minister Charles Davis from Chillicothe, surgeon Charles Rosser from Dallas, and lawyer/politician Wayne Williams from Denver. During his 1896 campaign, he attracted the attention of some writers who wrote poems and made references to him. Writers included Edgar Lee Masters who ended turning from Bryan and Vachel Lindsay who eventually turned to socialism. All in all, Bryan's followers consisted of many different types of people.

Key Terms
Charles Bryan
Richard Metcalfe
Helen Watts-McVey
Will Maupin
James Baird Weaver
Josephus Daniels

Questions
What was the main reason for Bryan's vast following?
Did all of his followers see Bryan in the same or different ways?
What is the significance of the variety?
What made some stop following Bryan? What made others continue?

William Jennings Bryan and his brother, Charles Bryan
File:ChasW+WmJBryan.jpg
Bain News Service photographer, C.W. & W.J. Bryan, Photograph, from Wikimedia Commons, accessed March 11, 2015, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:ChasW%2BWmJBryan.jpg.


Kazin, Michael. "Bryan's People." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 193-214, New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Chapter 8: Conscience of the Party, 1909-1912

Summary
In 1909, William Jennings Bryan started to support the prohibition movement, arguing against saloons and alcohol. Since many of his supporters were women, he also supported womens' rights and suffrage. In the time leading up to the election of 1912, the Republican Party was split into conservatives and progressives because President Taft became disliked in the party. Bryan decided not to run in this election, but he had a great amount of influence in the Democratic Party. Bryan wanted to lead the party in the right direction by making sure the nominee for president fit his standards. The contest for nomination was mostly between James "Champ" Clark, the Speaker of the House, and Woodrow Wilson, Princeton's president. Bryan accepted the offer from The World to write and report for them. At the convention in Baltimore, Bryan shocked the convention with his telegram of protest to the candidates and his demand for the withdrawal of anyone associated with the privileged. When New York and Tammany Hall declared their support for Clark, Bryan changed from being neutral to supporting Woodrow Wilson, rejecting Clark because of New York. Bryan's support for Woodrow Wilson allowed Wilson to win the nomination and the presidential election afterwards.

Key Terms
Woodrow Wilson
James "Champ" Clark
Robert La Follette
The World
Anti-Saloon League
Women's Christian Temperance Union

Questions
Why did Bryan decide not to run for the election of 1912?
How did the election of 1912 show Bryan's strong influence on the party?
What was the purpose of Bryan's telegram and demand during the nominating convention?
How were Clark and Wilson similar and different?
Even before New York's support for Clark, why did Bryan seem to be tilting towards Wilson despite the fact that Wilson previously was against Bryan?

Map/Still:Results of the American presidential election, 1912Presidential CandidatePolitical PartyElectoral VotesPopular VotesWoodrow WilsonDemocratic4356,293,454Theodore RooseveltProgressive (Bull Moose)884,119,207William Howard TaftRepublican83,483,922Eugene V. DebsSocialist900,369Eugene W. ChafinProhibition207,972Arthur E. ReimerSocialist Labor29,374Sources: Electoral and popular vote totals based on data from the United States Office of the Federal Register and Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections, 4th ed. (2001).
American presidential election, 1912, Map, from Britannica Online for Kids, accessed March 11, 2015, http://kids.britannica.com/comptons/art-67679.


Kazin, Michael. "Conscience of the Party." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 169-192, New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Chapter 7: The Ordeal of Reform, 1906-1908

Summary
When William Jennings Bryan returned from his trip abroad, Bryan began his next presidential campaign. At Madison Square Garden, Bryan proposed that railroads be publically owned and dually operated by federal and state government. However, many expressed their worries of his proposal due to concerns about socialism and race problems, so Bryan retreated from his proposal in accordance to majority opinion. Roosevelt decided not to run for reelection and chose William Howard Taft as his successor. Bryan took the Democratic Party nomination first at the Denver Convention with John Kern also on the ticket. Due to Roosevelt's rhetorical presidency and the small difference between the Republican and Democratic platforms, Bryan tried to find reform proposals that would be unlikely for Taft to also support. Bryan decided to support the American labor movement, creating an alliance with Samuel Gompers ans the American Federation of Labor. In this campaign, Bryan tried to appear less radical than previous elections by saying he supported reformation not revolution. Opponents of his campaign used his alliance with the AFL against him, by claiming that Samuel Gompers was telling the organization what to do and who to vote for. W.E.B. Du Bois and the Niagara movement's turn away from Taft provided an opportunity for votes from African American voters, but Bryan decided to reassert his racist view and support of Jim Crow instead. Bryan believed he had a good chance at winning this election because the Democratic Party was more united, but he was disappointed when he yet again lost to Taft. When he asked his supporters why the Mystery of 1908 happened, some suggested the idea that it was due to corporate corruption and others blamed the Catholics.

Key Terms
The Leader by Mary Dillon
National Farmers Union
American Federation of Labor
Samuel Gompers
William Howard Taft
W.E.B. Du Bois
Niagara movement
American Protective Association

Questions
How did Bryan's campaign in 1908 compare to the ones in 1896 and 1900?
Does Bryan's racism agree or disagree with Bryan's beliefs of Social Gospel and progressivism? Why does he ignore the colored issue?
Why did Bryan give up his railroad proposal so easily when he was known for staying true to his beliefs?
How does Mary Dillon's The Leader reflect Bryan's reputation?

American presidential election, 1908
American presidential election, 1908, Map, from Encyclopaedia Britannica Online, accessed March 10, 2015, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/media/67678/Results-of-the-American-presidential-election-1908-Presidential-Candidate-Political


Kazin, Michael. "The Ordeal of Reform." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 142-168, New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Chapter 6: Prophet on the Road

Summary
Starting in 1905, William Jennings Bryan took his family travelling around both the country and the world. He spoke in many different settings, preaching Social Gospel and Applied Christianity, the application of Jesus's teachings to society and economy. Bryan associated privilege, corruption, and big money with the Antichrist and criticized those who were faithful Christians yet still participated in exploitation and corruption. Bryan particularly found respect for a Russian novelist-sage named Leo Tolstoy who emphasized the practice of the Golden Rule--devoting oneself to treat and help others as one would want to be treated. Bryan wrote about his tour in Europe during which he observed the foreign politics. Bryan greatly admired Japan and their drive for improvement as well; he even allowed a Japanese boy Yamashita Yasichiro study by his side so that he could later apply what he learned back in Japan. Bryan also visited colonies of Western powers which fueled his arguments against imperialism. Furthermore, Bryan spoke at Chautauqua assemblies, which provided sermons about piety, adult education, as well as entertainment. He mainly delivered two speeches: "The Value of an Ideal" and "The Prince of Peace." "The Value of an Ideal" was a call to public service that connected the teachings of Jesus and Jefferson. "The Prince of Peace" speech expressed the religious foundation of morality--that good behavior was a "personal responsibility to God."

Key Terms
Social Gospel
Applied Christianity
Leo Tolstoy
Yamashita Yasichiro
Jane Addams
Chautauqua movement
Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle

Questions
How did Bryan's traveling bestow statesmanlike status?
How did Bryan differ from other progressives?
What impact did the Chautauqua circuit play on Bryan's reputation and career?
How did Bryan's speeches portray his underlying beliefs?

Hon. W.J. Bryan addressing the thousands assembled at Madison, Indiana chautauqua, July 6, 1901
Whiting View Company, Hon. W.J. Bryan Addressing the Thousands Assembled at Madison, Indiana Chautauqua, July 6th, 1901, Photograph, from Library of Congress, accessed March 10, 2015, http://cdn.loc.gov/service/pnp/cph/3a10000/3a12000/3a12400/3a12452r.jpg


Kazin, Michael. "Prophet on the Road." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 121-142, New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Chapter 5: I Have Kept the Faith, 1901-1904

Summary
After Bryan's second loss, Bryan continued to speak as a freelance political celebrity and started his weekly newspaper The Commoner. President William McKinley was assassinated by an anarchist in September 1901, making Theodore Roosevelt the new president. Roosevelt's anti-trust and environmental conservation reforms made him hard competition for the Democrats. Meanwhile, the there was a split in the Democratic Party, so Bryan spoke up for a series of reform focusing on money, monopoly, and empire in order to help his faction of Democrats against the anti-Bryanite "reorganizers" of the party. At the St. Louis convention, Bryan delivered a speech that allowed him to regain respect from his party. Alton Parker, a conservative Democrat, won the nomination against Hearst and Cockrell, but in the election of 1904, he lost to Roosevelt by a landslide. Although the election was a tragic loss for the Democrats, Bryan achieved in "keeping the faith" as well as rising up in his party as a leader again.

Key Terms
Frances Willard
Bellamy's Looking Backward
The Commoner
"reorganizers"
Bureau of Corporations
Alton Parker
William Randolph Hearst
Francis Cockrell

Questions
What was the significance of Bryan's The Commoner in rebuilding Bryan's reputation?
How did Bryan's proposed reforms compare to those of Roosevelt's?
Even though he did not run, how did the election of 1904 impact Bryan's political life?



Hindmarsh, R.B. Mr. Bryan in front of the office of the Commoner, Photograph, from the Clarence Darrow Digital Collection, accessed March 10, 2015, http://darrow.law.umn.edu/photos/Bryan_Commoner_newspaper.jpg

American presidential election, 1904
American presidential election, 1904, Map, from Encyclopaedia Britannica Online, accessed March 10, 2015, http://britannica.com/EBchecked/media/67677/Results-of-the-American-presidential-election-1904-Presidential-Candidate-Political


Kazin, Michael. "I Have Kept the Faith." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 109-120. New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Monday, March 9, 2015

Chapter 4: A Republic, Not an Empire, 1897-1900

Summary
Despite his loss in the election of 1896, William Jennings Bryan maintained large support from his fans and began his campaign for the next election in 1900. The Spanish-American War broke out in 1898 as President McKinley demanded that Spain grant independence to Cuba. Bryan enlisted in the Nebraska National Guard, but his volunteer regiment remained at Camp Cuba Libre in Florida "away from combat, with all its potential glory" (Kazin 2006, 88). After he resigned from his commission, Bryan argued against colonization and imperialism, but approved of the treaty to annex the Philippines to officially end the war intending to later vote for Filipino independence. The ratification of this treaty led to an imperial war with the the Filipino Army of Liberation which linked to the Anti-Imperialist League. Talk of Anglo-Saxon supremacy revealed Bryan's tendency to ignore the race problem and disenfranchisement. Due to weaker demand for free silver, Bryan struggled in finding a message that appealed to all the factions, but he eventually decided to focus on anti-imperialism. Theodore Roosevelt, who was running for vice president in the Republican Party, became Bryan's oratorical rival during the presidential campaigns with Roosevelt advocating "a new, yet essentially conservative social order" (Kazin 2006, 105). In spite of all his efforts to gain more support, Bryan again lost the election to McKinley and Roosevelt.

Key Terms
Nebraska National Guard
Cuba libre
Filipino Army of Liberation
Emilio Aguinaldo
insurrectos
Anti-Imperialist League
Theodore Roosevelt

Questions
How does Bryan's campaign in 1900 compare to that of 1896?
How did disenfranchisement in the South affect the election of 1900?
What caused the disappearance of the Populist Party?
Why did Nebraska, Bryan's home state, turn to the Republicans?
Will Bryan attempt to run again, or will he turn to something else?

American presidential election, 1900
American presidential election, 1900, Map, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online, accessed March 09, 2015, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/media/67676/Results-of-the-American-presidential-election-1900-Presidential-Candidate-Political


Kazin, Michael. "A Republic, Not an Empire." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 80-108. New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Chapter 3: In the Armor of a Righteous Cause, 1895-1896

Summary
In order to win the nomination, Bryan spoke for free silver and a graduated income tax in a wider range of settings, aiming to build support for his nomination. At the Democratic Party nominating convention in Chicago, a debate was held between silver supporters and gold standard supporters. Bryan's speech captured the insurgents' belief that the silver cause was a holy cause of humanity  which defended the common man and called for moral equity. Bryan's Cross of Gold speech stunned the audience and resulted in Bryan's nomination. Although Bryan's nomination created opposition from urban press and supporters of elite rule, Bryan managed to earn Populist support and create a Democratic-Populist fusion ticket. While McKinley campaigned from his front-porch with the help of Marcus Hanna, Bryan went on a railroad speaking tour in attempt to appeal to urban workers and labor organizations. His campaign created a popular culture of Bryanism which praised Bryan's Christian principles, labeling him as a godly hero. Bryan lost the election partly due to the lack of appeal to urban areas. McKinley's victory marked the end of the hope for a producer's republic, but the Democratic Party's views were altered by Bryan's campaign nonetheless.

Key Terms 
Ben Tillman
Wilson-Gorman Bill
William McKinley
Chicago Coliseum
Marcus Hanna
American Federation of Labor

Questions
What did Bryan plan to do after he lost the election?
Why did Bryan not appeal to urban areas?
How could urban areas benefit from Bryan being in office?
How did Bryan's speech at the convention compare to Ben Tillman's?
What were the strengths and weaknesses of Bryan's campaign? Of McKinley's?


Photograph:A William Jennings Bryan poster from the 1900 U.S. presidential campaign.
Bryan, William Jennings, Photograph, from Britannica Online for Kids, Accessed March 8, 2015, http://kids.britannica.com/comptons/art-52109.

American presidential election, 1896
American presidential election, 1896, Map, from Encyclopedia Britannica Online, accessed March 08, 2015, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/media/67675/Results-of-the-American-presidential-election-1896-Presidential-Candidate-Political


Kazin, Michael. "In the Armor of a Righteous Cause." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 45-79. New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Saturday, March 7, 2015

Chapter 2: Speaker in the House, 1891-1894

Summary
As a Democratic congressman in the House of Representatives, William Jennings Bryan delivered a speech against tariffs, urging reform and the removal of those on wool and twine. His eloquence and his class-conscious view on tariffs attracted the attention of many, and Bryan became one of  the Democratic Party's most popular orators. Furthermore, Bryan spoke in support of the free coinage of silver, which was a significant political issue of the time and caused Bryan to become closer to the Populists. After Grover Cleveland won the election of 1892 against Ben Harrison and James Weaver, the Panic of 1893 struck the United States, causing Cleveland to call for the repeal of the Sherman Act. As a result, Bryan spoke in opposition to Cleveland, delivering another stirring speech in the House against the repeal. Though Bryan's speech was exalted by pro-silver papers, Bryan's remarkable rhetoric caused his opponents to claim that a good performer was all that he was. Bryan later became editor of the Omaha World-Herald and decided to run for the higher position of senator, fighting for a graduated income tax, federal insurance, and right to join unions and strike. Although the Bryan-influenced alliance between Democrats and Populists succeeded in electing a governor in Nebraska, Bryan was not elected in the election of 1894 and Republicans regained the majority. Despite his loss, Bryan's supporters suggested the idea of running Bryan for president.

Key Terms
"Reed rules"
Crime of '73
Sherman Silver Purchase Act
Grover Cleveland
James Weaver
Hazen Pingree
Jacob Coxey
American Protective Association
stalwarts

Questions
How did the "Reed rules" in the house boost "the value of an individual congressman such as Bryan"?
How did Bryan's reputation made out by his opponents affect his later political and religious campaigns?
What does Bryan's response to his wife's concerns reveal about Bryan's character and ambition?
Who mainly makes up Bryan's supporters?
What is the extent of the connection and relationship between the Populists and Bryan's insurgent Democrats?


File:WilliamJBryan1902.png
Purdy, J.E. William Jennings Bryan. Digital Image. from Wikimedia Commons. c.1902. Accessed March 7, 2015. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:WilliamJBryan1902.png


Kazin, Michael. "Speaker in the House." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 29-44. New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Chapter 1: Education of a Hero, 1860-1890

Summary
Will Bryan was raised in Salem, Illinois, where he was not vastly exposed to other races or religious groups. He was raised by his parents Mariah Bryan, a member of temperance groups, and Silas Bryan, a pious Democratic judge. Will Bryan went to private school in Jacksonville and attended Illinois College, an environment that contrasted greatly with his hometown. Bryan had a passion for oratory and entered speaking contests. He married Mary Baird, who became a helpful partner in his career. He attended Union Law College in Chicago and worked for a former attorney, Lyman Trumbull. After, Bryan moved to Lincoln, Nebraska where he created a law partnership with Adolphus Talbot. At the end of the 1880s, the Democratic Party split into the conservative "Bourbons" and the group of insurgents who sympathized with the victims of corporate manipulation. After a series of calamities in Nebraska, Bryan ran in the 1890 election in support of the agrarian revolution and angry farmers. Due to his "rhetorical mastery," Bryan became the 2nd Democratic congressman in Nebraska.

Key Terms
Cumberland Presbyterians
President Grover Cleveland
"Bourbons"
Knights of Labor
Farmers' Alliance
J. Sterling Morton
Agrarian rebellion
William Connell
The Independent Party
Populists
Tammany Hall

Questions
How did Bryan's early life and education impact his political career?
Did the split of the Democratic Party correspond with regional areas? If so, which regions primarily made up each group?
How did Bryan incorporate his religious beliefs with his political career?
In what ways did the Bryan's parents affect the development of Bryan's political views?
What were Bryan's strengths and weaknesses in his campaign?


File:William Jennings Bryan Boyhood Home.jpg
Nytett. William Jennings Bryan Boyhood Home. Digital image. from Wikimedia Commons. 2012. accessed March 1, 2015. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:William_Jennings_Bryan_Boyhood_Home.jpg


Kazin, Michael. "Education of a Hero." In A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan, 3-28. New York, NY: Anchor Books, 2006.