Statesmen – City of Smoke https://www.cityofsmoke.com New York in History and Anecdote Sat, 26 Dec 2015 02:33:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 The Fallen Angel https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1308 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1308#respond Fri, 25 Dec 2015 00:53:38 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1308 Continue reading "The Fallen Angel"]]> https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1308/feed 0 The Best Man https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1458 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1458#respond Sun, 29 Nov 2015 03:57:09 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1458 On November 7, 1876 Samuel Jones Tilden, Democrat, of New York, won the election to succeed Ulysses S. Grant as President of the United States. On March 5, 1877 a Republican from Ohio placed his hand on the Bible, looked the Chief Justice in the eye, and repeated, "I, Rutherford Birchard Hayes, do solemnly swear..." The elections of 1876 are unique: the only time when we know the result was fixed and the loser entered the White House.]]> https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1458/feed 0 No Substitute for Experience https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1510 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1510#respond Thu, 05 Mar 2015 17:21:46 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1510 In Roscoe, William Kennedy continues working the vein prospected by two minor classics, William Riordan's Plunkett of Tammany Hall and Edwin O'Brien's The Last Hurrah. The seventh Kennedy novel set in the author's hometown of Albany, New York, is elegantly crafted, often uproariously funny, and betrays both a profound understanding of human frailty born of original sin and the sure knowledge that man born of woman is doomed to sorrow. His characters, of course, enjoy themselves as best they can, usually at each other's expense. Thus, one of Roscoe's numerous memorable minor characters, Mac, one of the cops who assassinated Legs Diamond

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How I Got Out of Politics https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1967 Tue, 17 Feb 2015 16:42:16 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1967 Eleven percent of all eligible New Yorkers voted on Tuesday, November 2, 1999. I was among them. I was also among a smaller minority. I was a candidate myself---for Richmond County district attorney on the Right to Life ticket. How did an Irish Catholic regular Democrat come to this? ]]> J. Thomas Heflin, Democrat https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1290 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1290#respond Mon, 16 Feb 2015 22:11:28 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1290 Some claim that Mother's Day was invented by Frank E. Hering, a district governor of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, who first called for Mother's Day in a 1904 speech in Indianapolis on February 7, 1904. Others hold that Anna M. Jarvis, a wealthy Philadelphia spinster, thought it up. Yet if any man fathered Mother's Day, he is the Hon. James Thomas "Cotton Tom" Heflin of Alabama, who as a ]]> https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1290/feed 0 Napoleon of the West https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1470 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1470#comments Wed, 11 Feb 2015 04:04:59 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1470 New York was mother of exiles long before Emma Lazarus bestowed that accolade on the Statue of Liberty. Some merely sought respite from the struggle. Giuseppe Garibaldi, between commanding the armies of the revolutionary Roman Republic in 1848 and the unification of Italy in 1860, spent a quiet year or so in Rosebank, Staten Island. Many Latin American revolutionaries also spent time in New York: the father of Cuban independence, Jose Martí, for instance, whose dashing features now adorn rum advertisements. In the late spring of 1866, one might have met another Latin American exile---a lesser man but a more successful politician---limping up Broadway ]]> https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1470/feed 1 Common Sense: Tom Paine, Pt. 1 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1052 Sun, 08 Feb 2015 19:44:03 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1052 He started as a fourteen-year-old corset-maker, and would be a sailor, tax collector, schoolteacher and Fleet Street hack. His parents' generosity gave him eight years' schooling; he made himself a political writer of force and eloquence comparable to Edmund Burke, Thomas Jefferson, and Abraham Lincoln, and wrote three]]> The Rights of Man: Tom Paine, Pt. 2 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1055 Fri, 06 Feb 2015 20:03:37 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1055 In 1789, two years after Thomas Paine's return to Europe with a prospectus for a 500-foot long single span bridge (like all his business schemes, it was a nonstarter), the King of France called the Estates-General into session for the first time in nearly 200 years to increase]]> “A Grand Old Hero He” https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/696 Sun, 01 Feb 2015 23:56:26 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=696 Congress, as Mark Twain tells us, is our native criminal class. Most of us believe Congressmen can get away with murder. Few get away with it in the first degree. In 1859, the Hon. Daniel Edgar Sickles, Democrat of New York, did. ]]> Our Dear Queen https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/407 Fri, 30 Jan 2015 16:38:01 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=407 The Royal Governors of the Province of New York, the men who ruled here in the names of Britain's kings and queens before the Revolutionary War, are forgotten. Place-names recall some. Fort Tryon Park bears the last royal governor's name. Staten Island's Dongan Hills commemorates Col. Thomas Dongan]]>