<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h1> PLUNKITT OF TAMMANY HALL </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> By George Washington Plunkitt </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p>A Series of Very Plain Talks on Very Practical Politics, Delivered by
Ex-senator George Washington Plunkitt, the Tammany Philosopher, from His
Rostrum—the New York County Court House Bootblack Stand</p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> Recorded by William L. Riordon </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<h3> Contents </h3>
<table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
<tr>
<td>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PREF"> Preface </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> A Tribute to Plunkitt by the Leader of
Tammany Hall </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> <b>PLUNKITT OF TAMMANY HALL</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> Chapter 1. Honest Graft and Dishonest Graft</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> Chapter 2. How to Become a Statesman </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> Chapter 3. The Curse of Civil Service
Reform </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> Chapter 4. Reformers Only Mornin' Glories</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> Chapter 5. New York City Is Pie for the
Hayseeds </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> Chapter 6. To Hold Your District: Study
Human Nature and Act Accordin' </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> Chapter 7. On The Shame of the Cities </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> Chapter 8. Ingratitude in Politics </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> Chapter 9. Reciprocity in Patronage </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> Chapter 10. Brooklynites Natural-Born
Hayseeds </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> Chapter 11. Tammany Leaders Not Bookworms</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> Chapter 12. Dangers of the Dress Suit in
Politics </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> Chapter 13. On Municipal Ownership </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> Chapter 14. Tammany the Only Lastin'
Democracy </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0015"> Chapter 15. Concerning Gas in Politics </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0016"> Chapter 16. Plunkitt's Fondest Dream </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0017"> Chapter 17. Tammany's Patriotism </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0018"> Chapter 18. On the Use of Money in Politics</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0019"> Chapter 19. The Successful Politician Does
Not Drink </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0020"> Chapter 20. Bosses Preserve the Nation </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0021"> Chapter 21. Concerning Excise </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0022"> Chapter 22. A Parting Word on the Future of
the Democratic Party in </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0023"> Chapter 23. Strenuous Life of the Tammany
District Leader </SPAN></p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Preface </h2>
<p>THIS volume discloses the mental operations of perhaps the most thoroughly
practical politician of the day—George Washington Plunkitt, Tammany
leader of the Fifteenth Assembly District, Sachem of the Tammany Society
and Chairman of the Elections Committee of Tammany Hall, who has held the
offices of State Senator, Assemblyman', Police Magistrate, County
Supervisor and Alderman, and who boasts of his record in filling four
public offices in one year and drawing salaries from three of them at the
same time.</p>
<p>The discourses that follow were delivered by him from his rostrum, the
bootblack stand in the County Court-house, at various times in the last
half-dozen years. Their absolute frankness and vigorous unconventionality
of thought and expression charmed me. Plunkitt said right out what all
practical politicians think but are afraid to say. Some of the discourses
I published as interviews in the New York Evening Post, the New York Sun,
the New York World, and the Boston Transcript. They were reproduced in
newspapers throughout the country and several of them, notably the talks
on "The Curse of Civil Service Reform" and "Honest Graft and Dishonest
Graft," became subjects of discussion in the United States Senate and in
college lectures. There seemed to be a general recognition of Plunkitt as
a striking type of the practical politician, a politician, moreover, who
dared to say publicly what others in his class whisper among themselves in
the City Hall corridors and the hotel lobbies.</p>
<p>I thought it a pity to let Plunkitt's revelations of himself—as
frank in their way as Rousseau's Confessions—perish in the files of
the newspapers; so I collected the talks I had published, added several
new ones, and now give to the world in this volume a system of political
philosophy which is as unique as it is refreshing.</p>
<p>No New Yorker needs to be informed who George Washington Plunkitt is. For
the information of others, the following sketch of his career is given. He
was born, as he proudly tells, in Central Park—that is, in the
territory now included in the park. He began life as a driver of a cart,
then became a butcher's boy, and later went into the butcher business for
himself. How he entered politics he explains in one of his discourses. His
advancement was rapid. He was in the Assembly soon after he cast his first
vote and has held office most of the time for forty years.</p>
<p>In 1870, through a strange combination of circumstances, he held the
places of Assemblyman, Alderman, Police Magistrate and County Supervisor
and drew three salaries at once—a record unexampled in New York
politics.</p>
<p>Plunkitt is now a millionaire. He owes his fortune mainly to his political
pull, as he confesses in "Honest Graft and Dishonest Graft." He is in the
contracting, transportation, real estate, and every other business out of
which he can make money. He has no office. His headquarters is the County
Courthouse bootblack stand. There he receives his constituents, transacts
his general business and pours forth his philosophy.</p>
<p>Plunkitt has been one of the great powers in Tammany Hall for a quarter of
a century. While he was in the Assembly and the State Senate he was one of
the most influential members and introduced the bills that provided for
the outlying parks of New York City, the Harlem River Speedway, the
Washington Bridge, the 155th Street Viaduct, the grading of Eighth Avenue
north of Fifty-seventh Street, additions to the Museum of Natural History,
the West Side Court, and many other important public improvements. He is
one of the closest friends and most valued advisers of Charles F. Murphy,
leader of Tammany Hall.</p>
<p>William L. Riordon</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> A Tribute to Plunkitt by the Leader of Tammany Hall </h2>
<p>SENATOR PLUNKITT is a straight organization man. He believes in party
government; he does not indulge in cant and hypocrisy and he is never
afraid to say exactly what he thinks. He is a believer in thorough
political organization and all-the-year-around work, and he holds to the
doctrine that, in making appointments to office, party workers should be
preferred if they are fitted to perform the duties of the office. Plunkitt
is one of the veteran leaders of the organization; he has always been
faithful and reliable, and he has performed valuable services for Tammany
Hall.</p>
<p>CHARLES F. MURPHY <SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<h2> PLUNKITT OF TAMMANY HALL </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 1. Honest Graft and Dishonest Graft </h2>
<p>EVERYBODY is talkin' these days about Tammany men growin' rich on graft,
but nobody thinks of drawin' the distinction between honest graft and
dishonest graft. There's all the difference in the world between the two.
Yes, many of our men have grown rich in politics. I have myself. I've made
a big fortune out of the game, and I'm gettin' richer every day, but I've
not gone in for dishonest graft—blackmailin' gamblers,
saloonkeepers, disorderly people, etc.—and neither has any of the
men who have made big fortunes in politics.</p>
<p>There's an honest graft, and I'm an example of how it works. I might sum
up the whole thing by sayin': "I seen my opportunities and I took 'em."</p>
<p>Just let me explain by examples. My party's in power in the city, and it's
goin' to undertake a lot of public improvements. Well, I'm tipped off,
say, that they're going to lay out a new park at a certain place.</p>
<p>I see my opportunity and I take it. I go to that place and I buy up all
the land I can in the neighborhood. Then the board of this or that makes
its plan public, and there is a rush to get my land, which nobody cared
particular for before.</p>
<p>Ain't it perfectly honest to charge a good price and make a profit on my
investment and foresight? Of course, it is. Well, that's honest graft.</p>
<p>Or supposin' it's a new bridge they're goin' to build. I get tipped off
and I buy as much property as I can that has to be taken for approaches. I
sell at my own price later on and drop some more money in the bank.</p>
<p>Wouldn't you? It's just like lookin' ahead in Wall Street or in the coffee
or cotton market. It's honest graft, and I'm lookin' for it every day in
the year. I will tell you frankly that I've got a good lot of it, too.</p>
<p>I'll tell you of one case. They were goin' to fix up a big park, no matter
where. I got on to it, and went lookin' about for land in that
neighborhood.</p>
<p>I could get nothin' at a bargain but a big piece of swamp, but I took it
fast enough and held on to it. What turned out was just what I counted on.
They couldn't make the park complete without Plunkitt's swamp, and they
had to pay a good price for it. Anything dishonest in that?</p>
<p>Up in the watershed I made some money, too. I bought up several bits of
land there some years ago and made a pretty good guess that they would be
bought up for water purposes later by the city.</p>
<p>Somehow, I always guessed about right, and shouldn't I enjoy the profit of
my foresight? It was rather amusin' when the condemnation commissioners
came along and found piece after piece of the land in the name of George
Plunkitt of the Fifteenth Assembly District, New York City. They wondered
how I knew just what to buy. The answer is—I seen my opportunity and
I took it. I haven't confined myself to land; anything that pays is in my
line.</p>
<p>For instance, the city is repavin' a street and has several hundred
thousand old granite blocks to sell. I am on hand to buy, and I know just
what they are worth.</p>
<p>How? Never mind that. I had a sort of monopoly of this business for a
while, but once a newspaper tried to do me. It got some outside men to
come over from Brooklyn and New Jersey to bid against me.</p>
<p>Was I done? Not much. I went to each of the men and said: "How many of
these 250,000 stories do you want?" One said 20,000, and another wanted
15,000, and other wanted 10,000. I said: "All right, let me bid for the
lot, and I'll give each of you all you want for nothin'."</p>
<p>They agreed, of course. Then the auctioneer yelled: "How much am I bid for
these 250,000 fine pavin' stones?"</p>
<p>"Two dollars and fifty cents," says I.</p>
<p>"Two dollars and fifty cents!" screamed the auctioneer. "Oh, that's a
joke! Give me a real bid."</p>
<p>He found the bid was real enough. My rivals stood silent. I got the lot
for $2.50 and gave them their share. That's how the attempt to do Plunkitt
ended, and that's how all such attempts end.</p>
<p>I've told you how I got rich by honest graft. Now, let me tell you that
most politicians who are accused of robbin' the city get rich the same
way.</p>
<p>They didn't steal a dollar from the city treasury. They just seen their
opportunities and took them. That is why, when a reform administration
comes in and spends a half million dollars in tryin' to find the public
robberies they talked about in the campaign, they don't find them.</p>
<p>The books are always all right. The money in the city treasury is all
right. Everything is all right. All they can show is that the Tammany
heads of departments looked after their friends, within the law, and gave
them what opportunities they could to make honest graft. Now, let me tell
you that's never goin' to hurt Tammany with the people. Every good man
looks after his friends, and any man who doesn't isn't likely to be
popular. If I have a good thing to hand out in private life, I give it to
a friend—Why shouldn't I do the same in public life?</p>
<p>Another kind of honest graft. Tammany has raised a good many salaries.
There was an awful howl by the reformers, but don't you know that Tammany
gains ten votes for every one it lost by salary raisin'?</p>
<p>The Wall Street banker thinks it shameful to raise a department clerk's
salary from $1500 to $1800 a year, but every man who draws a salary
himself says: "That's all right. I wish it was me." And he feels very much
like votin' the Tammany ticket on election day, just out of sympathy.</p>
<p>Tammany was beat in 1901 because the people were deceived into believin'
that it worked dishonest graft. They didn't draw a distinction between
dishonest and honest graft, but they saw that some Tammany men grew rich,
and supposed they had been robbin' the city treasury or levyin' blackmail
on disorderly houses, or workin' in with the gamblers and lawbreakers.</p>
<p>As a matter of policy, if nothing else, why should the Tammany leaders go
into such dirty business, when there is so much honest graft lyin' around
when they are in power? Did you ever consider that?</p>
<p>Now, in conclusion, I want to say that I don't own a dishonest dollar. If
my worst enemy was given the job of writin' my epitaph when I'm gone, he
couldn't do more than write:</p>
<p>"George W. Plunkitt. He Seen His Opportunities, and He Took 'Em."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 2. How to Become a Statesman </h2>
<p>THERE'S thousands of young men in this city who will go to the polls for
the first time next November. Among them will be many who have watched the
careers of successful men in politics, and who are longin' to make names
and fortunes for themselves at the same game—It is to these youths
that I want to give advice. First, let me say that I am in a position to
give what the courts call expert testimony on the subject. I don't think
you can easily find a better example than I am of success in politics.
After forty years' experience at the game I am—well, I'm George
Washington Plunkitt. Everybody knows what figure I cut in the greatest
organization on earth, and if you hear people say that I've laid away a
million or so since I was a butcher's boy in Washington Market, don't come
to me for an indignant denial I'm pretty comfortable, thank you.</p>
<p>Now, havin' qualified as an expert, as the lawyers say, I am goin' to give
advice free to the young men who are goin' to cast their first votes, and
who are lookin' forward to political glory and lots of cash. Some young
men think they can learn how to be successful in politics from books, and
they cram their heads with all sorts of college rot. They couldn't make a
bigger mistake. Now, understand me I ain't sayin' nothin' against
colleges. I guess they'll have to exist as long as there's book-worms, and
I suppose they do some good in a certain way, but they don't count in
politics. In fact, a young man who has gone through the college course is
handicapped at the outset. He may succeed in politics, but the chances are
100 to 1 against him.</p>
<p>Another mistake: some young men think that the best way to prepare for the
political game is to practice speakin' and becomin' orators. That's all
wrong. We've got some orators in Tammany Hall, but they're chiefly
ornamental. You never heard of Charlie Murphy delivering a speech, did
you? Or Richard Croker, or John Kelly, or any other man who has been a
real power in the organization? Look at the thirty-six district leaders of
Tammany Hall today. How many of them travel on their tongues? Maybe one or
two, and they don't count when business is doin' at Tammany Hall. The men
who rule have practiced keepin' their tongues still, not exercisin' them.
So you want to drop the orator idea unless you mean to go into politics
just to perform the skyrocket act.</p>
<p>Now, I've told you what not to do; I guess I can explain best what to do
to succeed in politics by tellin' you what I did. After goin' through the
apprenticeship of the business while I was a boy by workin' around the
district headquarters and hustlin' about the polls on election day, I set
out when I cast my first vote to win fame and money in New York City
politics. Did I offer my services to the district leader as a
stump-speaker? Not much. The woods are always full of speakers. Did I get
up a hook on municipal government and show it to the leader? I wasn't such
a fool. What I did was to get some marketable goods before goin' to the
leaders. What do I mean by marketable goods? Let me tell you: I had a
cousin, a young man who didn't take any particular interest in politics. I
went to him and said: "Tommy, I'm goin' to be a politician, and I want to
get a followin'; can I count on you?" He said: "Sure, George". That's how
I started in business. I got a marketable commodity——one vote.
Then I went to the district leader and told him I could command two votes
on election day, Tommy's and my own. He smiled on me and told me to go
ahead. If I had offered him a speech or a bookful of learnin', he would
have said, "Oh, forget it!"</p>
<p>That was beginnin' business in a small way, wasn't it? But that is the
only way to become a real lastin' statesman. I soon branched out. Two
young men in the flat next to mine were school friends—I went to
them, just as I went to Tommy, and they agreed to stand by me. Then I had
a followin' of three voters and I began to get a bit chesty. Whenever I
dropped into district head-quarters, everybody shook hands with me, and
the leader one day honored me by lightin' a match for my cigar. And so it
went on like a snowball rollin' down a hill I worked the flat-house that I
lived in from the basement to the top floor, and I got about a dozen young
men to follow me. Then I tackled the next house and so on down the block
and around the corner. Before long I had sixty men back of me, and formed
the George Washington Plunkitt Association.</p>
<p>What did the district leader say then when I called at headquarters? I
didn't have to call at headquarters. He came after me and said: "George,
what do you want? If you don't see what you want, ask for it. Wouldn't you
like to have a job or two in the departments for your friends?" I said:
"I'll think it over; I haven't yet decided what the George Washington
Plunkitt Association will do in the next campaign." You ought to have seen
how I was courted and petted then by the leaders of the rival
organizations I had marketable goods and there was bids for them from all
sides, and I was a risin' man in politics. As time went on, and my
association grew, I thought I would like to go to the Assembly. 1 just had
to hint at what I wanted, and three different organizations offered me the
nomination. Afterwards, I went to the Board of Aldermen, then to the State
Senate, then became leader of the district, and so on up and up till I
became a statesman.</p>
<p>That is the way and the only way to' make a lastin' success in politics.
If you are goin' to cast your first vote next November and want to go into
politics, do as I did. Get a followin', if it's only one man, and then go
to the district leader and say: "I want to join the organization. I've got
one man who'll follow me through thick and thin." The leader won't laugh
at your one-man followin'. He'll shake your hand warmly, offer to propose
you for membership in his club, take you down to the corner for a drink
and ask you to call again. But go to him and say: "I took first prize at
college in Aristotle; I can recite all Shakespeare forwards and backwards;
there ain't nothin' in science that ain't as familiar to me as blockades
on the elevated roads and I'm the real thing in the way of silver-tongued
orators." What will he answer? He'll probably say: "I guess you are not to
blame for your misfortunes, but we have no use for you here."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 3. The Curse of Civil Service Reform </h2>
<p>This civil service law is the biggest fraud of the age. It is the curse of
the nation. There can't be no real patriotism while it lasts. How are you
goin' to interest our young men in their country if you have no offices to
give them when they work for their party? Just look at things in this city
today. There are ten thousand good offices, but we can't get at more than
a few hundred of them. How are we goin' to provide for the thousands of
men who worked for the Tammany ticket? It can't be done. These men were
full of patriotism a short time ago. They expected to be servin' their
city, but when we tell them that we can't place them, do you think their
patriotism is goin' to last? Not much. They say: "What's the use of
workin' for your country anyhow? There's nothin' in the game." And what
can they do? I don't know, but I'll tell you what I do know. I know more
than one young man in past years who worked for the ticket and was just
overflowin' with patriotism, but when he was knocked out by the civil
service humbug he got to hate his country and became an Anarchist.</p>
<p>This ain't no exaggeration. I have good reason for sayin' that most of the
Anarchists in this city today are men who ran up against civil service
examinations. Isn't it enough to make a man sour on his country when he
wants to serve it and won't be allowed unless he answers a lot of fool
questions about the number of cubic inches of water in the Atlantic and
the quality of sand in the Sahara desert? There was once a bright young
man in my district who tackled one of these examinations. The next I heard
of him he had settled down in Herr Most's saloon smokin' and drinkin' beer
and talkin' socialism all day. Before that time he had never drank
anything but whisky. I knew what was comm' when a young Irishman drops
whisky and takes to beer and long pipes in a German saloon. That young man
is today one of the wildest Anarchists in town. And just to think! He
might be a patriot but for that cussed civil service.</p>
<p>Say, did you hear about that Civil Service Reform Association kickin'
because the tax commissioners want to put their fifty-five deputies on the
exempt list, and fire the outfit left to them by Low? That's civil service
for you. Just think! Fifty-five Republicans and mugwumps holdin' $8000 and
$4000 and $5000 jobs in the tax department when 1555 good Tammany men are
ready and willin' to take their places! It's an outrage! What did the
people mean when they voted for Tammany? What is representative
government, anyhow? Is it all a fake that this is a government of the
people, by the people and for the people? If it isn't a fake, then why
isn't the people's voice obeyed and Tammany men put in all the offices?</p>
<p>When the people elected Tammany, they knew just what they were doin'. We
didn't put up any false pretenses. We didn't go in for humbug civil
service and all that rot. We stood as we have always stood, for reward—in'
the men that won the victory. They call that the spoils system. All right;
Tammany is for the spoils system, and when we go in we fire every
anti-Tammany man from office that can be fired under the law. It's an
elastic sort of law and you can bet it will be stretched to the limit Of
course the Republican State Civil Service Board will stand in the way of
our local Civil Service Commission all it can; but say!—suppose we
carry the State sometime, won't we fire the upstate Board all right? Or
we'll make it work in harmony with the local board, and that means that
Tammany will get everything in sight. I know that the civil service humbug
is stuck into the constitution, too, but, as Tim Campbell said: "What's
the constitution among friends?"</p>
<p>Say, the people's voice is smothered by the cursed civil service law; it
is the root of all evil in our government. You hear of this thing or that
thing goin' wrong in the nation, the State or the city. Look down beneath
the surface and you can trace everything wrong to civil service. I have
studied the subject and I know. The civil service humbug is underminin'
our institutions and if a halt ain't called soon this great republic will
tumble down like a Park Avenue house when they were buildin' the subway,
and on its ruins will rise another Russian government.</p>
<p>This is an awful serious proposition. Free silver and the tariff and
imperialism and the Panama Canal are triflin' issues when compared to it.
We could worry along without any of these things, but civil service is
sappin' the foundation of the whole shootin' match, let me argue it out
for you. I ain't up on sillygisms, but I can give you some arguments that
nobody can answer.</p>
<p>First, this great and glorious country was built up by political parties;
second, parties can't hold together if their workers don't get the offices
when they win; third, if the parties go to pieces, the government they
built up must go to pieces, too; fourth, then there'll be h——
to pay.</p>
<p>Could anything be clearer than that? Say, honest now; can you answer that
argument? Of course you won't deny that the government was built up by the
great parties. That's history, and you can't go back of the returns. As to
my second proposition, you can't deny that either. When parties can't get
offices, they'll bust. They ain't far from the bustin' point now, with all
this civil service business keepin' most of the good things from them. How
are you goin' to keep up patriotism if this thing goes On? You can't do
it. Let me tell you that patriotism has been dying out fast for the last
twenty years. Before then when a party won, its workers got everything in
sight. That was somethin' to make a man patriotic. Now, when a party wins
and its men come forward and ask for their rewards, the reply is, "Nothin'
doin', unless you can answer a list of questions about Egyptian mummies
and how many years it will take for a bird to wear out a mass of iron as
big as the earth by steppin' on it once in a century?"</p>
<p>I have studied politics and men for forty-five years, and I see how things
are driftin'. Sad indeed is the change that has come over the young men,
even in my district, where I try to keep up the fire of patriotism by
gettin' a lot of jobs for my constituents, whether Tammany is in or out.
The boys and men don't get excited any more when they see a United States
flag or hear "The Star-Spangled Banner." They don't care no more for
firecrackers on the Fourth of July. And why should they? What is there in
it for them? They know that no matter how hard they work for their country
in a campaign, the jobs will go to fellows who can tell about the mummies
and the bird steppin' on the iron. Are you surprised then that the young
men of the country are beginnin' to look coldly on the flag and don't care
to put up a nickel for firecrackers?</p>
<p>15 The Curse of Civil Service Reform</p>
<p>Say, let me tell of one case—After the battle of San Juan Hill, the
Americans found a dead man with a light complexion, red hair and blue
eyes. They could see he wasn't a Spaniard, although he had on a Spanish
uniform. Several officers looked him over, and then a private of the
Seventy-first Regiment saw him and yelled, "Good Lord, that's Flaherty."
That man grew up in my district, and he was once the most patriotic
American boy on the West Side. He couldn't see a flag without yellin'
himself hoarse.</p>
<p>Now, how did he come to be lying dead with a Spanish uniform on? I found
out all about it, and I'll vouch for the story. Well, in the municipal
campaign of 1897, that young man, chockful of patriotism, worked day and
night for the Tammany ticket. Tammany won, and the young man determined to
devote his life to the service of the city. He picked out a place that
would suit him, and sent in his application to the head of department. He
got a reply that he must take a civil service examination to get the
place. He didn't know what these examinations were, so he went, all
lighthearted, to the Civil Service Board. He read the questions about the
mummies, the bird on the iron, and all the other fool questions—and
he left that office an enemy of the country that he had loved so well. The
mummies and the bird blasted his patriotism. He went to Cuba, enlisted in
the Spanish army at the breakin' out of the war, and died fightin' his
country.</p>
<p>That is but one victim of the infamous civil service. If that young man
had not run up against the civil examination, but had been allowed to
serve his country as he wished, he would be in a good office today,
drawin' a good salary. Ah, how many young men have had their patriotism
blasted in the same way!</p>
<p>Now, what is goin' to happen when civil service crushes out patriotism?
Only one thing can happen: the republic will go to pieces. Then a czar or
a sultan will turn up, which brings me to the fourthly of my argument—that
is, there will be h—— to pay. And that ain't no lie.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 4. Reformers Only Mornin' Glories </h2>
<p>COLLEGE professors and philosophers who go up in a balloon to think are
always discussin' the question: "Why Reform Administrations Never Succeed
Themselves!" The reason is plain to anybody who has learned the a, b, c of
politics.</p>
<p>I can't tell just how many of these movements I've seen started in New
York during my forty years in politics, but I can tell you how many have
lasted more than a few years—none. There have been reform committees
of fifty, of sixty, of seventy, of one hundred and all sorts of numbers
that started Out to do up the regular political Organizations. They were
mornin' glories—looked lovely in the mornin' and withered up in a
short time, while the regular machines went on flourishin' forever, like
fine old oaks. Say, that's the first poetry I ever worked off. Ain't it
great?</p>
<p>Just look back a few years. You remember the People's Municipal League
that nominated Frank Scott for mayor in 1890? Do you remember the
reformers that got up that league? Have you ever heard of them since? I
haven't. Scott himself survived because he had always been a first-rate
politician. But you'd have to look in the newspaper almanacs of 1891 to
find out who made up the People's Municipal League. Oh, yes! I remember
one name: Ollie Teall; dear, pretty Ollie and his big dog. They're about
all that's left of the League.</p>
<p>Now take the reform movement of 1894. A lot of good politicians joined in
that—the Republicans, the State Democrats, the Stecklerites and the
O'Brienites, and they gave us a lickin', but the real reform part of the
affair, the Committee of Seventy that started the thing goin', what's
become of those reformers? What's become of Charles Stewart Smith? Where's
Bangs? Do you ever hear of Cornell, the iron man, in politics now? Could a
search party find R. W. G. Welling? Have you seen the name of Fulton
McMahon or McMahon Fulton—I ain't sure which—in the papers
lately? Or Preble Tucker? Or—but it's no use to go through the list
of the reformers who said they sounded in the death knell of Tammany in
1894. They're gone for good, and Tammany's pretty well, thank you. They
did the talkin' and posin', and the politicians in the movement got all
the plums. It's always the case.</p>
<p>The Citizens' Union has lasted a little bit longer than the reform crowd
that went before them, but that's because they learned a thing or two from
us. They learned how to put up a pretty good bluff—and bluff Counts
a lot in politics. With only a few thousand members, they had the nerve to
run the whole Fusion movement, make the Republicans and other
organizations come to their headquarters to select a ticket and dictate
what every candidate must do or not do. I love nerve, and I've had a sort
of respect for the Citizens Union lately, but the Union can't last. Its
people haven't been trained to politics, and whenever Tammany calls their
bluff they lay right down. You'll never hear of the Union again after a
year or two.</p>
<p>And, by the way, what's become of the good government clubs, the political
nurseries of a few years ago?</p>
<p>Do you ever hear of Good Government Club D and P and Q and Z any more?
What's become of the infants who were to grow up and show us how to govern
the city? I know what's become of the nursery that was started in my
district. You can find pretty much the whole outfit over in my
headquarters, Washington Hall.</p>
<p>The fact is that a reformer can't last in politics. He can make a show for
a while, but he always comes down like a rocket. Politics is as much a
regular business as the grocery or the dry-goods or the drug business.
You've got to be trained up to it or you're sure to fail. Suppose a man
who knew nothing about the grocery trade suddenly went into the business
and tried to conduct it according to his own ideas. Wouldn't he make a
mess of it? He might make a splurge for a while, as long as his money
lasted, but his store would soon be empty. It's just the same with a
reformer. He hasn't been brought up in the difficult business of politics
and he makes a mess of it every time.</p>
<p>I've been studyin' the political game for forty-five years, and! don't
know it all yet. I'm learnin' somethin' all the time. How, then, can you
expect what they call "business men" to turn into politics all at once and
make a success of it? It is just as if I went up to Columbia University
and started to teach Greek. They usually last about as long in politics as
I would last at Columbia.</p>
<p>You can't begin too early in politics if you want to succeed at the game.
I began several years before I could vote, and so did every successful
leader in Tammany Hall. When I was twelve years old I made myself useful
around the district headquarters and did work at all the polls on election
day. Later on, I hustled about gettin' out voters who had jags on or who
were too lazy to come to the polls. There's a hundred ways that boys can
help, and they get an experience that's the first real step in
statesmanship. Show me a boy that hustles for the organization on election
day, and I'll show you a comin' statesman.</p>
<p>That's the a, b, c of politics. It ain't easy work to get up to q and z.
You have to give nearly all your time and attention to it. Of course, you
may have some business or occupation on the side, but the great business
of your life must be politics if you want to succeed in it. A few years
ago Tammany tried to mix politics and business in equal quantities, by
havin' two leaders for each district, a politician and a business man.
They wouldn't mix. They were like oil and water. The politician looked
after the politics of his district; the business man looked after his
grocery store or his milk route, and whenever he appeared at an executive
meeting, it was only to make trouble. The whole scheme turned out to be a
farce and was abandoned mighty quick.</p>
<p>Do you understand now, why it is that a reformer goes down and out in the
first or second round, while a politician answers to the gong every time?
It is because the one has gone into the fight without trainin', while the
other trains all the time and knows every fine point of the game.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 5. New York City Is Pie for the Hayseeds </h2>
<p>THIS city is ruled entirely by the hayseed legislators at Albany. I've
never known an upstate Republican who didn't want to run things here, and
I've met many thousands of them in my long service in the Legislature. The
hayseeds think we are like the Indians to the National Government—that
is, sort of wards of the State, who don't know how to look after ourselves
and have to be taken care of by the Republicans of St. Lawrence, Ontario,
and other backwoods counties. Why should anybody be surprised because
ex-Governor Odell comes down here to direct the Republican machine?
Newburg ain't big enough for him. He, like all the other upstate
Republicans, wants to get hold of New York City. New York is their pie.</p>
<p>Say, you hear a lot about the downtrodden people of Ireland and the
Russian peasants and the sufferin' Boers. Now, let me tell you that they
have more real freedom and home rule than the people of this grand and
imperial city. In England, for example, they make a pretense of givin' the
Irish some self-government In this State the Republican government makes
no pretense at all. It says right out in the open: "New York City is a
nice big fat Goose. Come along with your carvin' knives and have a slice."
They don't pretend to ask the Goose's consent.</p>
<p>We don't own our streets or our docks or our waterfront or anything else.
The Republican Legislature and Governor run the whole shootin' match.
We've got to eat and drink what they tell us to eat and drink, and have
got to choose our time for eatin' and drinkin' to suit them. If they don't
feel like takin' a glass of beer on Sunday, we must abstain. If they have
not got any amusements up in their backwoods, we mustn't have none. We've
got to regulate our whole lives to suit them. And then we have to pay
their taxes to boot.</p>
<p>Did you ever go up to Albany from this city with a delegation that wanted
anything from the Legislature? No? Well, don't. The hayseeds who run all
the committees will look at you as if you were a child that didn't know
what it wanted, and will tell you in so many words to go home and be good
and the Legislature will give you whatever it thinks is good for you. They
put on a sort of patronizing air, as much as to say, "These children are
an awful lot of trouble. They're wantin' candy all the time, and they know
that it will make them sick. They ought to thank goodness that they have
us to take care of them." And if you try to argue with them, they'll smile
in a pityin' sort of way as if they were humorin' a spoiled child.</p>
<p>But just let a Republican farmer from Chemung or Wayne or Tioga turn up at
the Capital. The Republican Legislature will make a rush for him and ask
him what he wants and tell him if he doesn't see what he wants to ask for
it. If he says his taxes are too high, they reply to him: "All right, old
man, don't let that worry you. How much do you want us to take off?"</p>
<p>"I guess about fifty per cent will about do for the present," says the
man. "Can you fix me up?"</p>
<p>"Sure," the Legislature agrees. "Give us somethin', 'New York City Is Pie
for the Hayseeds,' try harder, don't be bashful. We'll take off sixty per.
cent. if you wish. That's what we're here for."</p>
<p>Then the Legislature goes and passes a law increasin' the liquor tax or
some other tax in New York City, takes a half of the proceeds for the
State Treasury and cuts down the farmers' taxes to suit. It's as easy as
rollin' off a log—when you've got a good workin' majority and no
conscience to speak of.</p>
<p>Let me give you another example. It makes me hot under the collar to tell
about this. Last year some hay-seeds along the Hudson River, mostly in
Odell's neighborhood, got dissatisfied with the docks where they landed
their vegetables, brickbats, and other things they produce in the river
counties. They got together and said: "Let's take a trip down to New York
and pick out the finest dock we can find. Odell and the Legislature will
do the rest." They did come down here, and what do you think they hit on?
The finest dock in my district Invaded George W. Plunkitt's district
without sayin' as much as "by your leave." Then they called on Odell to
put through a bill givin' them this dock, and he did.</p>
<p>When the bill came before Mayor Low I made the greatest speech of my life.
I pointed out how the Legislature could give the whole waterfront to the
hayseeds over the head of the Dock Commissioner in the same way, and
warned the Mayor that nations had rebelled against their governments for
less. But it was no go. Odell and Low were pards and—well, my dock
was stolen.</p>
<p>You heard a lot in the State campaign about Odell's great work in reducin'
the State tax to almost nothin', and you'll hear a lot more about it in
the campaign next year. How did he do it? By cuttin' down the expenses of
the State Government? Oh, no! The expenses went up. He simply performed
the old Republican act of milkin' New York City. The only difference was
that he nearly milked the city dry. He not only ran up the liquor tax, but
put all sorts of taxes on corporations, banks, insurance companies, and
everything in sight that could be made to give up. Of course, nearly the
whole tax fell on the city. Then Odell went through the country districts
and said: "See what I have done for you. You ain't got any more taxes to
pay the State. Ain't I a fine feller?"</p>
<p>Once a farmer in Orange County asked him: "How did you do it, Ben?"</p>
<p>"Dead easy," he answered. "Whenever I want any money for the State
Treasury, I know where to get it," and he pointed toward New York City.</p>
<p>And then all the Republican tinkerin' with New York City's charter. Nobody
can keep up with it. When a Republican mayor is in, they give him all
sorts of power. If a Tammany mayor is elected next fall I wouldn't be
surprised if they changed the whole business and arranged it so that every
city department should have four heads, two of them Republicans. If we
make a kick, they would say: "You don't know what's good for you. Leave it
to us. It's our business."</p>
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<h2> Chapter 6. To Hold Your District: Study Human Nature and Act Accordin' </h2>
<p>There's only one way to hold a district: you must study human nature and
act accordin'. You can't study human nature in books. Books is a hindrance
more than anything else. If you have been to college, so much the worse
for you. You'll have to unlearn all you learned before you can get right
down to human nature, and unlearnin' takes a lot of time. Some men can
never forget what they learned at college. Such men may get to be district
leaders by a fluke, but they never last.</p>
<p>To learn real human nature you have to go among the people, see them and
be seen..1 know every man, woman, and child in the Fifteenth District,
except them that's been born this summer—and I know some of them,
too. I know what they like and what they don't like, what they are strong
at and what they are weak in, and I reach them by approachin' at the right
side.</p>
<p>For instance, here's how I gather in the young men. I hear of a young
feller that's proud of his voice, thinks that he can sing fine. I ask him
to come around to Washington Hall and join our Glee Club. He comes and
sings, and he's a follower of Plunkitt for life. Another young feller
gains a reputation as a baseball player in a vacant lot. I bring him into
our baseball dub. That fixes him. You'll find him workin' for my ticket at
the polls next election day. Then there's the feller that likes rowin' on
the river, the young feller that makes a name as a waltzer on his block,
the young feller that's handy with his dukes—I rope them all in by
givin' them opportunities to show themselves off. I don't trouble them
with political arguments. I just study human nature and act accordin'.</p>
<p>But you may say this game won't work with the high-toned fellers, the
fellers that go through college and then join the Citizens' Union. Of
course it wouldn't work. I have a special treatment for them. I ain't like
the patent medicine man that gives the same medicine for all diseases. The
Citizens' Union kind of a young man! I love him! He's the daintiest morsel
of the lot, and he don't often escape me.</p>
<p>Before telling you how I catch him, let me mention that before the
election last year, the Citizens' Union said they had four hundred or five
hundred enrolled voters in my district. They had a lovely headquarters,
too, beautiful roll-top desks and the cutest rugs in the world. If I was
accused of havin' contributed to fix up the nest for them, I wouldn't deny
it under oath. What do I mean by that? Never mind. You can guess from the
sequel, if you're sharp.</p>
<p>Well, election day came. The Citizens' Union's candidate for Senator, who
ran against me, just polled five votes in the district, while I polled
something more than 14,000 votes. What became of the 400 or 500 Citizens'
Union enrolled voters in my district? Some people guessed that many of
them were good Plunkitt men all along and worked with the Cits just to
bring them into the Plunkitt camp by election day. You can guess that way,
too, if you want to. I never contradict stories about me, especially in
hot weather. I just call your attention to the fact that on last election
day 395 Citizens' Union enrolled voters in my district were missin' and
unaccounted for.</p>
<p>I tell you frankly, though, how I have captured some of the Citizens'
Union's young men. I have a plan that never fails. I watch the City Record
to see when there's civil service examinations for good things. Then I
take my young Cit in hand, tell him all about the good thing and get him
worked up till he goes and takes an examination. I don't bother about him
any more. It's a cinch that he comes back to me in a few days and asks to
join Tammany Hall. Come over to Washington Hall some night and I'll show
you a list of names on our roll' marked "C.S." which means, "bucked up
against civil service."</p>
<p>As to the older voters, I reach them, too. No, I don't send them campaign
literature. That's rot. People can get all the political stuff they want
to read—and a good deal more, too—in the papers. Who reads
speeches, nowadays, anyhow? It's bad enough to listen to them. You ain't
goin' to gain any votes by stuffin' the letter boxes with campaign
documents. Like as not you'll lose votes for there's nothin' a man hates
more than to hear the letter carrier ring his bell and go to the letter
box ex pectin' to find a letter he was lookin' for, and find only a lot of
printed politics. I met a man this very mornin' who told me he voted the
Democratic State ticket last year just because the Republicans kept
crammin' his letter box with campaign documents.</p>
<p>What tells in holdin' your grip on your district is to go right down among
the poor families and help them in the different ways they need help. I've
got a regular system for this. If there's a fire in Ninth, Tenth, or
Eleventh Avenue, for example, any hour of the day or night, I'm usually
there with some of my election district captains as soon as the fire
engines. If a family is burned out I don't ask whether they are
Republicans or Democrats, and I don't refer them to the Charity
Organization Society, which would investigate their case in a month or two
and decide they were worthy of help about the time they are dead from
starvation. I just get quarters for them, buy clothes for them if their
clothes were burned up, and fix them up till they get things runnin'
again. It's philanthropy, but it's politics, too—mighty good
politics. Who can tell how many votes one of these fires bring me? The
poor are the most grateful people in the world, and, let me tell you, they
have more friends in their neighborhoods than the rich have in theirs.</p>
<p>If there's a family in my district in want I know it before the charitable
societies do, and me and my men are first on the ground. I have a special
corps to look up such cases. The consequence is that the poor look up to
George W. Plunkitt as a father, come to him in trouble—and don't
forget him on election day.</p>
<p>Another thing, I can always get a job for a deservin' man. I make it a
point to keep on the track of jobs, and it seldom happens that I don't
have a few up my sleeve ready for use. I know every big employer in the
district and in the whole city, for that matter, and they ain't in the
habit of sayin' no to me when I ask them for a job.</p>
<p>And the children—the little roses of the district! Do I forget them?
Oh, no! They know me, every one of them, and they know that a sight of
Uncle George and candy means the same thing. Some of them are the best
kind of vote-getters. I'll tell you a case. Last year a little Eleventh
Avenue rosebud, whose father is a Republican, caught hold of his whiskers
on election day and said she wouldn't let go till he'd promise to vote for
me. And she didn't.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 7. On The Shame of the Cities </h2>
<p>I'VE been readin' a book by Lincoln Steffens on 'The Shame of the Cities'.
Steffens means well but, like all reformers, he don't know how to make
distinctions. He can't see no difference between honest graft and
dishonest graft and, consequent, he gets things all mixed up. There's the
biggest kind of a difference between political looters and politicians who
make a fortune out of politics by keepin' their eyes wide open. The looter
goes in for himself alone without considerin' his organization or his
city. The politician looks after his own interests, the organization's
interests, and the city's interests all at the same time. See the
distinction? For instance, I ain't no looter. The looter hogs it. I never
hogged. I made my pile in politics, but, at the same time, 1 served the
organization and got more big improvements for New York City than any
other livin' man. And I never monkeyed with the penal code.</p>
<p>The difference between a looter and a practical politician is the
difference between the Philadelphia Republican gang and Tammany Hall.
Steffens seems to think they're both about the same; but he's all wrong.
The Philadelphia crowd runs up against the penal code. Tammany don't. The
Philadelphians ain't satisfied with robbin' the bank of all its gold and
paper money. They stay to pick up the nickels and pennies and the cop
comes and nabs them. Tammany ain't no such fool. Why, I remember, about
fifteen or twenty years ago, a Republican superintendent of the
Philadelphia almshouse stole the zinc roof off the buildin' and sold it
for junk. That was carryin' things to excess. There's a limit to
everything, and the Philadelphia Republicans go beyond the limit. It seems
like they can't be cool and moderate like real politicians. It ain't fair,
therefore, to class Tammany men with the Philadelphia gang. Any man who
undertakes to write political books should never for a moment lose sight
of the distinction between honest graft and dishonest graft, which I
explained in full in another talk. If he puts all kinds of graft on the
same level, he'll make the fatal mistake that Steffens made and spoil his
book.</p>
<p>A big city like New York or Philadelphia or Chicago might be compared to a
sort of Garden of Eden, from a political point of view. It's an orchard
full of beautiful apple trees. One of them has got a big sign on it,
marked: "Penal Code Tree—Poison." The other trees have lots of
apples on them for all. Yet the fools go to the Penal Code Tree. Why? For
the reason, I guess, that a cranky child refuses to eat good food and
chews up a box of matches with relish. I never had any temptation to touch
the Penal Code Tree. The other apples are good enough for me, and 0 Lord!
how many of them there are in a big city!</p>
<p>Steffens made one good point in his book. He said he found that
Philadelphia, ruled almost entirely by Americans, was more corrupt than
New York, where the Irish do almost all the governin'. I could have told
him that before he did any investigatin' if he had come to me. The Irish
was born to rule, and they're the honestest people in the world. Show me
the Irishman who would steal a roof off an almhouse! He don't exist. Of
course, if an Irishman had the political pull and the roof was much worn,
he might get the city authorities to put on a new one and get the contract
for it himself, and buy the old roof at a bargain—but that's honest
graft. It's goin' about the thing like a gentleman, and there's more money
in it than in tearin' down an old roof and cartin' it to the junkman's—more
money and no penal code.</p>
<p>One reason why the Irishman is more honest in politics than many Sons of
the Revolution is that he is grateful to the country and the city that
gave him protection and prosperity when he was driven by oppression from
the Emerald Isle. Say, that sentence is fine, ain't it? I'm goin' to get
some literary feller to work it over into poetry for next St. Patrick's
Day dinner.</p>
<p>Yes, the Irishman is grateful. His one thought is to serve the city which
gave him a home. He has this thought even before he lands in New York, for
his friends here often have a good place in one of the city departments
picked out for him while he is still in the old country. Is it any wonder
that he has a tender spot in his heart for old New York when he is on its
salary list the mornin' after he lands?</p>
<p>Now, a few words on the general subject of the so called shame of cities.
I don't believe that the government of our cities is any worse, in
proportion to opportunities, than it was fifty years ago. I'll explain
what I mean by "in proportion to opportunities." A half a century ago, our
cities were small and poor. There wasn't many temptations lyin' around for
politicians. There was hardly anything to steal, and hardly any
opportunities for even honest graft. A city could count its money every
night before goin' to bed, and if three cents was missin', all the fire
bells would be rung. What credit was there in bein' honest under them
circumstances'? It makes me tired to hear of old codgers back in the
thirties or forties boastin' that they retired from politics without a
dollar except what they earned in their profession or business. If they
lived today, with all the existin' opportunities, they would be just the
same as twentieth-century politicians. There ain't any more honest people
in the world just now than the convicts in Sing Sing. Not one of them
steals anything. Why? Because they can't. See the application?</p>
<p>Understand, I ain't defendin' politicians of today who steal. The
politician who steals is worse than a thief. He is a fool. With the grand
opportunities all around for the man with a political pull, there's no
excuse for stealin' a cent. The point I want to make is that if there is
some stealin' in politics, it don't mean that the politicians of 1905 are,
as a class, worse than them of 1835. It just means that the old-timers had
nothin' to steal, while the politicians now are surrounded by all kinds of
temptations and some of them naturally—the fool ones—buck up
against the penal code.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 8. Ingratitude in Politics </h2>
<p>THERE's no crime so mean as ingratitude in politics, but every great
statesman from the beginnin' of the world has been up against it. Caesar
had his Brutus; that king of Shakespeare's—Leary, I think you call
him—had his own daughters go back on him; Platt had his Odell, and
I've got my "The" McManus. It's a real proof that a man is great when he
meets with political ingratitude. Great men have a tender, trustin'
nature. So have I, outside of the contractin' and real estate business. In
politics I have trusted men who have told me they were my friends, and if
traitors have turned up in my camp well, I only had the same experience as
Caesar, Leary, and the others. About my Brutus. McManus, you know, has
seven brothers and they call him "The" because he is the boss of the lot,
and to distinguish him from all other McManuses. For several years he was
a political bushwhacker. In campaigns he was sometimes on the fence,
sometimes on both sides of the fence, and sometimes under the fence.
Nobody knew where to find him at any particular time, and nobody trusted
him—that is, nobody but me. I thought there was some good in him
after all and that, if I took him in hand, I could make a man of him yet.</p>
<p>I did take him in hand, a few years ago. My friends told me it would be
the Brutus Leary business all over again, but I didn't believe them. I put
my trust in "The." I nominated him for the Assembly, and he was elected. A
year afterwards, when I was runnin' for re-election as Senator, I
nominated him for the Assembly again on the ticket with me. What do you
think happened? We both carried the Fifteenth Assembly District, but he
ran away ahead of me. Just think! Ahead of me in my own district! I was
just dazed. When I began to recover, my election district captains came to
me and said that McManus had sold me out with the idea of knockin' me out
of the Senatorship, and then tryin' to capture the leadership of the
district. I couldn't believe it. My trustin' nature couldn't imagine such
treachery.</p>
<p>I sent for McManus and said, with my voice tremblin' with emotions: "They
say you have done me dirt, 'The.' It can't be true. Tell me it ain't
true."</p>
<p>"The" almost wept as he said he was innocent.</p>
<p>"Never have I done you dirt, George," he declared. "Wicked traitors have
tried to do you. I don't know just who they are yet, but I'm on their
trail, and I'll find them or abjure the name of 'The' McManus. I'm goin'
out right now to find them."</p>
<p>Well, "The" kept his word as far as goin' out and findin' the traitors was
concerned. He found them all right—and put himself at their head.
Oh, no! He didn't have to go far to look for them. He's got them gathered
in his clubrooms now, and he's doin' his best to take the leadership from
the man that made him. So you see that Caesar and Leary and me's in the
same boat, only I'll come out on top while Caesar and Leary went under.</p>
<p>Now let me tell you that the ingrate in politics never flourishes long. I
can give you lots of examples. Look at the men who done up Roscoe Conkling
when he resigned from the United States Senate and went to Albany to ask
for re-election! What's become of them? Passed from view like a movin'
picture. Who took Conkling's place in the Senate? Twenty dollars even that
you can't remember his name without looking in the almanac. And poor old
Plattt He's down and out now and Odell is in the saddle, but that don't
mean that he'll always be in the saddle. His enemies are workin' hard all
the time to do him, and I wouldn't be a bit surprised if he went out
before the next State campaign.</p>
<p>The politicians who make a lastin' success in politics are the men who are
always loyal to their friends, even up to the gate of State prison, if
necessary; men who keep their promises and never lie. Richard Croker used
to say that tellin' the truth and stickin' to his friends was the
political leader's stock in trade. Nobody ever said anything truer, and
nobody lived up to it better than Croker. That is why he remained leader
of Tammany Hall as long as he wanted to. Every man in the organization
trusted him. Sometimes he made mistakes that hurt in campaigns, but they
were always on the side of servin' his friends.</p>
<p>It's the same with Charles F. Murphy. He has always stood by his friends
even when it looked like he would be downed for doin' so. Remember how he
stuck to McClellan in 1903 when all the Brooklyn leaders were against him,
and it seemed as if Tammany was in for a grand smash-up! It's men like
Croker and Murphy that stay leaders as long as they live; not men like
Brutus and McManus.</p>
<p>Now I want to tell you why political traitors, in New York City
especially, are punished quick. It's because the Irish are in a majority.
The Irish, above all people in the world, hates a traitor. You can't hold
them back when a traitor of any kind is in sight and, rememberin' old
Ireland, they take particular delight in doin' up a political traitor.
Most of the voters in my district are Irish or of Irish descent; they've
spotted "The" McManus, and when they get a chance at him at the polls next
time, they won't do a thing to him.</p>
<p>The question has been asked: Is a politician ever justified in going' back
on his district leader? I answer: "No; as long as the leader hustles
around and gets all the jobs possible for his constituents." When the
voters elect a man leader, they make a sort of a contract with him. They
say, although it ain't written out: "We've put you here to look out for
our Interests. You want to see that this district gets all the jobs that's
comm' to it. Be faithful to us, and we'll be faithful to you."</p>
<p>The district leader promises and that makes a solemn contract. If he lives
up to it, spends most of his time chasm' after places in the departments,
picks up jobs from railroads and contractors for his followers, and shows
himself in all ways a true statesman, then his followers are bound in
honor to uphold him, just as they're bound to uphold the Constitution of
the United States. But if he only looks after his own interests or shows
no talent for scenting out jobs or ain't got the nerve to demand and get
his share of the good things that are going', his followers may be
absolved from their allegiance and they may up and swat him without bein'
put down as political ingrates.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 9. Reciprocity in Patronage </h2>
<p>WHENEVER Tammany is whipped at the polls, the people set to predictin'
that the organization is going' to smash. They say we can't get along
without the offices and that the district leaders are going' to desert
wholesale. That was what was said after the throwdowns in 1894 and 1901.
But it didn't happen, did it? Not one big Tammany man deserted, and today
the organization is stronger than ever.</p>
<p>How was that? It was because Tammany has more than one string to its bow.</p>
<p>I acknowledge that you can't keep an organization together without
patronage. Men ain't in politics for nothin'. They want to get somethin'
out of it.</p>
<p>But there is more than one kind of patronage. We lost the public kind, or
a greater part of it, in 1901, but Tammany has an immense private
patronage that keeps things going' when it gets a setback at the polls.</p>
<p>Take me, for instance. When Low came in, some of my men lost public jobs,
but I fixed them all right. I don't know how many jobs I got for them on
the surface and elevated railroads—several hundred.</p>
<p>I placed a lot more on public works done by contractors, and no Tammany
man goes hungry in my district. Plunkitt's O.K. on an application for a
job is never turned down, for they all know that Plunkitt and Tammany
don't stay out long. See!</p>
<p>Let me tell you, too, that I got jobs from Republicans in office—Federal
and otherwise. When Tammany's on top I do good turns for the Republicans.
When they're on top they don't forget me.</p>
<p>Me and the Republicans are enemies just one day in the year—election
day. Then we fight tooth and nail The rest of the time it's live and let
live with us.</p>
<p>On election day I try to pile up as big a majority as I can against George
Wanmaker, the Republican leader of the Fifteenth. Any other day George and
I are the best of friends. I can go to him and say: "George, I want you to
place this friend of mine." He says: "Mi right, Senator." Or vice versa.</p>
<p>You see, we differ on tariffs and currencies and all them things, but we
agree on the main proposition that when a man works in politics, he should
get something out of it.</p>
<p>The politicians have got to stand together this way or there wouldn't be
any political parties in a short time. Civil service would gobble up
everything, politicians would be on the bum, the republic would fall and
soon there would be the cry of "Vevey le roil".</p>
<p>The very thought of this civil service monster makes my blood boil. I have
said a lot about it already, but another instance of its awful work just
occurs to me.</p>
<p>Let me tell you a sad but true story. Last Wednesday a line of carriages
wound into Cavalry Cemetery. I was in one of them. It was the funeral of a
young man from my district—a bright boy that I had great hopes of.</p>
<p>When he went to school, he was the most patriotic boy in the district.
Nobody could sing "The Star-Spangled Banner" like him, nobody was as fond
of waving a flag, and nobody shot off as many firecrackers on the Fourth
of July. And when he grew up he made up his mind to serve his country in
one of the city departments. There was no way of gettin' there without
passin' a civil service examination. Well, he went down to the civil
service office and tackled the fool questions. I saw him next day—it
was Memorial Day, and soldiers were marchin' and flags flyin' and people
cheerin'.</p>
<p>Where was my young man? Standin' on the corner, scowlin' at the whole
show. When I asked him why he was so quiet, he laughed in a wild sort of
way and said: "What rot all this is!"</p>
<p>Just then a band came along playing "Liberty." He laughed wild again and
said: "Liberty? Rats!"</p>
<p>I don't guess I need to make a long story of it.</p>
<p>From the time that young man left the civil service office he lost all
patriotism. He didn't care no more for his country. He went to the dogs.</p>
<p>He ain't the only one. There's a gravestone over some bright young man's
head for every one of them infernal civil service examinations. They are
underminin' the manhood of the nation and makin' the Declaration of
Independence a farce. We need a new Declaration of Independence,
independence of the whole fool civil service business.</p>
<p>I mention all this now to show why it is that the politicians of two big
parties help each other along, and why Tammany men are tolerably happy
when not in power in the city. When we win I won't let any deservin'
Republican in my neighborhood suffer from hunger or thirst, although, of
course, I look out for my own people first.</p>
<p>Now, I've never gone in for nonpartisan business, but I do think that all
the leaders of the two parties should get together and make an open,
nonpartisan fight against civil service, their common enemy. They could
keep up their quarrels about imperialism and free silver and high tariff.
They don't count for much alongside of civil service, which strikes right
at the root of the government. The time is fast coming when civil service
or the politicians will have to go. And it will be here sooner than they
expect if the politicians don't unite, drop all them minor issues for a
while and make a stand against the civil service flood that's sweepin'
over the country like them floods out West.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 10. Brooklynites Natural-Born Hayseeds </h2>
<p>SOME people are wonderin' why it is that the Brooklyn Democrats have been
sidin' with David B. Hill and the upstate crowd. There's no cause for
wonder. I have made a careful study of the Brooklynite, and I can tell you
why. It's because a Brooklynite is a natural-born hay. seed, and can never
become a real New Yorker. He can't be trained into it. Consolidation
didn't make him a New Yorker, and nothin' on earth can. A man born in
Germany can settle down and become a good New Yorker. So can an Irishman;
in fact, the first word an Irish boy learns in the old country is "New
York," and when he grows up and comes here, he is at home right away. Even
a Jap or a Chinaman can become a New Yorker, but a Brooklynite never can.</p>
<p>And why? Because Brooklyn don't seem to be like any other place on earth.
Once let a man grow up amidst Brooklyn's cobblestones, with the odor of
Newton Creek and Gowanus Canal ever in his nostrils, and there's no place
in the world for him except Brooklyn. And even if he don't grow up there;
if he is born there and lives there only in his boyhood and then moves
away, he is still beyond redemption. In one of my speeches in the
Legislature, I gave an example of this, and it's worth repeatin' now. Soon
after I became a leader on the West Side, a quarter of a century ago, I
came across a bright boy, about seven years old, who had just been brought
over from Brooklyn by his parents. I took an interest in the boy, and when
he grew up I brought him into politics. Finally, I sent him to the
Assembly from my district Now remember that the boy was only seven years
old when he left Brooklyn, and was twenty-three when he went to the
Assembly. You'd think he had forgotten all about Brooklyn, wouldn't you? I
did, but I was dead wrong. When that young fellow got into the Assembly he
paid no attention to bills or debates about New York City. He didn't even
show any interest in his own district. But just let Brooklyn be mentioned,
or a bill be introduced about Gowanus Canal, or the Long Island Railroad,
and he was all attention. Nothin' else on earth interested him.</p>
<p>The end came when I caught him—what do you think I caught him at?
One mornin' I went over from the Senate to the Assembly chamber, and there
I found my young man readin'—actually readin' a Brooklyn newspaper!
When he saw me comm' he tried to hide the paper, but it was too late. I
caught him dead to rights, and I said to him: "Jimmy, I'm afraid New York
ain't fascinatin' enough for you. You had better move back to Brooklyn
after your present term." And he did. I met him the other day crossin' the
Brooklyn Bridge, carryin' a hobbyhorse under one arm, and a doll's
carriage under the other, and lookin' perfectly happy.</p>
<p>McCarren and his men are the same way. They can't get it into their heads
that they are New Yorkers, and just tend naturally toward supportin' Hill
and his hay-seeds against Murphy. I had some hopes of McCarren till
lately. He spends so much of his time over here and has seen so much of
the world that I thought he might be an exception, and grow out of his
Brooklyn surroundings, but his course at Albany shows that there is no
exception to the rule. Say, I'd rather take a Hottentot in hand to bring
up as a good New Yorker than undertake the job with a Brooklynite. Honest,
I would.</p>
<p>And, by the way, come to think of it, is there really any upstate
Democrats left? It has never been proved to my satisfaction that there is
any. I know that some upstate members of the State committee call
themselves Democrats. Besides these, I know at least six more men above
the Bronx who make a livin' out of professin' to be Democrats, and I have
just heard of some few more. But if there is any real Democrats up the
State, what becomes of them on election day? They certainly don't go near
the polls or they vote the Republican ticket. Look at the last three State
elections! Roosevelt piled up more than 100,000 majority above the Bronx;
Odell piled up about 160,000 majority the first time he ran and 131,000
the second time. About all the Democratic votes cast were polled in New
York City. The Republicans can get all the votes they want up the State.
Even when we piled up 123,000 majority for Coler in the city In 1902, the
Republicans went it 8000 better above the Bronx.</p>
<p>That's why it makes me mad to hear about upstate Democrats controllin' our
State convention, and sayin' who we shall choose for President. It's just
like Staten Island undertakin' to dictate to a New York City convention. I
remember once a Syracuse man came to Richard Croker at the Democratic
Club, handed him a letter of introduction and said: "I'm lookin' for a job
in the Street Cleanin' Department; I'm backed by a hundred upstate
Democrats." Croker looked hard at the man a minute and then said: "Upstate
Democrats! Upstate Democrats! I didn't know there was any upstate
Democrats. Just walk up and down a while till I see what an upstate
Democrat looks like."</p>
<p>Another thing. When a campaign is on, did you ever hear of an upstate
Democrat makin' a contribution? Not much. Tammany has had to foot the
whole bill, and when any of Hill's men came down to New York to help him
in the campaign, we had to pay their board. Whenever money is to be
raised, there's nothin' doin' up the State. The Democrats there—always
providin' that there is any Democrats there—take to the woods.
Supposin' Tammany turned over the campaigns to the Hill men and then held
off, what would happen? Why, they would have to hire a shed out in the
suburbs of Albany for a headquarters, unless the Democratic National
Committee put up for the campaign expenses. Tammany's got the votes and
the cash. The Hill crowd's only got hot air.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 11. Tammany Leaders Not Bookworms </h2>
<p>You hear a lot of talk about the Tammany district leaders bein' illiterate
men. If illiterate means havin' common sense, we plead guilty. But if they
mean that the Tammany leaders ain't got no education and ain't gents they
don't know what they're talkin' about. Of course, we ain't all bookworms
and college professors. If we were, Tammany might win an election once in
four thousand years. Most of the leaders are plain American citizens, of
the people and near to the people, and they have all the education they
need to whip the dudes who part their name in the middle and to run the
City Government. We've got bookworms, too, in the organization. But we
don't make them district leaders. We keep them for ornaments on parade
days.</p>
<p>Tammany Hall is a great big machine, with every part adjusted delicate to
do its own particular work. It runs so smooth that you wouldn't think it
was a complicated affair, but it is. Every district leader is fitted to
the district he runs and he wouldn't exactly fit any other district.
That's the reason Tammany never makes the mistake the Fusion outfit always
makes of sendin' men into the districts who don't know the people, and
have no sympathy with their peculiarities—We don't put a silk
stockin' on the Bowery, nor do we make a man who is handy with his fists
leader of the Twenty-ninth. The Fusionists make about the same sort of a
mistake that a repeater made at an election in Albany several years ago.
He was hired to go to the polls early in a half-dozen election districts
and vote on other men's names before these men reached the polls. At one
place, when he was asked his name by the poll clerk, he had the nerve to
answer "William Croswell Doane."</p>
<p>"Come off. You ain't Bishop Doane," said the poll clerk.</p>
<p>"The hell I ain't, you—I" yelled the repeater.</p>
<p>Now, that is the sort of bad judgment the Fusionists are guilty of. They
don't pick men to suit the work they have to do.</p>
<p>Take me, for instance. My district, the Fifteenth, is made up of all sorts
of people, and a cosmopolitan is needed to run it successful. I'm a
cosmopolitan. When I get into the silk-stockin' part of the district, I
can talk grammar and all that with the best of them. I went to school
three winters when I was a boy, and I learned a lot of fancy stuff that I
keep for occasions. There ain't a silk stockin' in the district who ain't
proud to be seen talkin' with George Washington Plunkitt, and maybe they
learn a thing or two from their talks with me. There's one man in the
district, a big banker, who said to me one day: "George, you can sling the
most vigorous English I ever heard. You remind me of Senator Hoar of
Massachusetts." Of course, that was puttin' it on too thick; but say,
honest, I like Senator Hoar's speeches. He once quoted in the United
States Senate some of my remarks on the curse of civil service, and,
though he didn't agree with me altogether, I noticed that our ideas are
alike in some things, and we both have the knack of puttin' things strong,
only he put on more frills to suit his audience.</p>
<p>As for the common people of the district, I am at home with them at all
times. When I go among them, I don't try to show off my grammar, or talk
about the Constitution, or how many volts there is in electricity or make
it appear in any way that I am better educated than they are. They
wouldn't stand for that sort of thing. No; I drop all monkeyshines. So you
see, I've got to be several sorts of a man in a single day, a lightnin'
change artist, so to speak. But I am one sort of man always in one
respect: I stick to my friends high and low, do them a good turn whenever
I get a chance, and hunt up all the jobs going for my constituents. There
ain't a man in New York who's got such a scent for political jobs as I
have. When I get up in the mornin' I can almost tell every time whether a
job has become vacant over night, and what department it's in and I'm the
first man on the ground to get it. Only last week I turned up at the
office of Water Register Savage at 9 A.M. and told him I wanted a vacant
place in his office for one of my constituents. "How did you know that
O'Brien had got out?" he asked me. "I smelled it in the air when I got up
this mornin'," I answered. Now, that was the fact. I didn't know there was
a man in the department named O'Brien, much less that he had got out, but
my scent led me to the Water Register's office, and it don't often lead me
wrong.</p>
<p>A cosmopolitan ain't needed in all the other districts, but our men are
just the kind to rule. There's Dan Finn, in the Battery district, bluff,
jolly Dan, who is now on the bench. Maybe you'd think that a court justice
is not the man to hold a district like that, but you're mistaken. Most of
the voters of the district are the janitors of the big office buildings on
lower Broadway and their helpers. These janitors are the most dignified
and haughtiest of men. Even I would have trouble in holding them. Nothin'
less than a judge on the bench is good enough for them. Dan does the
dignity act with the janitors, and when he is with the boys he hangs up
the ermine in the closet and becomes a jolly good fellow.</p>
<p>Big Tom Foley, leader of the Second District, fits in exactly, too. Tom
sells whisky, and good whisky, and he is able to take care of himself
against a half dozen thugs if he runs up against them on Cherry Hill or in
Chatharn Square. Pat Ryder and Johnnie Ahearn of the Third and Fourth
Districts are just the men for the places. Ahearn's constituents are about
half Irishmen and half Jews. He is as popular with one race as with the
other. He eats corned beef and kosher meat with equal nonchalance, and
it's all the same to him whether he takes off his hat in the church or
pulls it down over his ears in the synagogue.</p>
<p>The other downtown leaders, Barney Martin of the Fifth, Tim Sullivan of
the Sixth, Pat Keahon of the Seventh, Florrie Sullivan of the Eighth,
Frank Goodwin of the Ninth, Julius Harburger of the Tenth, Pete Dooling of
the Eleventh, Joe Scully of the Twelfth, Johnnie Oakley of the Fourteenth,
and Pat Keenan of the Sixteenth are just built to suit the people they
have to deal with. They don't go in for literary business much downtown,
but these men are all real gents, and that's what the people want—even
the poorest tenement dwellers. As you go farther uptown you find a rather
different kind of district leader. There's Victor Dowling who was until
lately the leader of the Twenty-fourth. He's a lulu. He knows the Latin
grammar backward. What's strange, he's a sensible young fellow, too. About
once in a century we come across a fellow like that in Tammany politics.
James J. Martin, leader of the Twenty-seventh, is also something of a
hightoner and publishes a law paper, while Thomas E. Rush, of the
Twenty-ninth, is a lawyer, and Isaac Hopper, of the Thirty-first, is a big
contractor. The downtown leaders wouldn't do uptown, and vice versa. So,
you see, these fool critics don't know what they're talkin' about when
they criticize Tammany Hall, the most perfect political machine on earth.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 12. Dangers of the Dress Suit in Politics </h2>
<p>PUTIN' on style don't pay in politics. The people won't stand for it. If
you've got an achin' for style, sit down on it till you have made your
pile and landed a Supreme Court Justiceship with a fourteen-year term at
$17,000 a year, or some job of that kind. Then you've got about all you
can get out of politics, and you can afford to wear a dress suit all day
and sleep in it all night if you have a mind to. But, before you have
caught onto your life meal ticket, be simple. Live like your neighbors
even if you have the means to live better. Make the poorest man in your
district feel that he is your equal, or even a bit superior to you.</p>
<p>Above all things, avoid a dress suit. You have no idea of the harm that
dress suits have done in politics. They are not so fatal to young
politicians as civil service reform and drink, but they have scores of
victims. I will mention one sad case. After the big Tammany victory in
1897, Richard Croker went down to Lakewood to make up the slate of offices
for Mayor Van Wyck to distribute. All the district leaders and many more
Tammany men went down there, too, to pick up anything good that was goin.'
There was nothin' but dress suits at dinner at Lakewood, and Croker
wouldn't let any Tammany men go to dinner without them. Well, a bright
young West Side politician, who held a three-thousan dollar job in one of
the departments, went to Lakewood to ask Croker for something better. He
wore a dress suit for the first time in his hie. It was his undoin'. He
got stuck on himself. He thought he looked too beautiful for anything, and
when he came home he was a changed man. As soon as he got to his house
every evenin' he put on that dress Suit and set around in it until
bedtime. That didn't satisfy him long. He wanted others to see how
beautiful he was in a dress suit; so he joined dancin' clubs and began
goin' to all the balls that was given in town. Soon he began to neglect
his family. Then he took to drinkin', and didn't pay any attention to his
political work in the district. The end came in less than a year. He was
dismissed from the department and went to the dogs. The other day I met
him rigged out almost like a hobo, but he still had a dress-suit vest on.
When I asked him what he was doin', he said: "Nothin' at present, but I
got a promise of a job enrollin' voters at Citizens' Union head-quarters."
Yes, a dress Suit had brought him that low!</p>
<p>I'll tell you another case right in my own Assembly District. A few years
ago I had as one of my lieutenants a man named Zeke Thompson. He did fine
work for me and I thought he had a bright future. One day he came to me,
said he intended to buy an option on a house, and asked me to help him
out. I like to see a young man acquirin' property and I had so much
confidence in Zeke that I put up for him on the house.</p>
<p>A month or so afterwards I heard strange rumors. People told me that Zeke
was beginnin' to put on style. They said he had a billiard table in his
house and had hired Jap servants. I couldn't believe it. The idea of a
Democrat, a follower of George Washington Plunkitt in the Fifteenth
Assembly District havin' a billiard table and Jap servants! One mornin' I
called at the house to give Zeke a chance to clear himself. A Jap opened
the door for me. I saw the billiard table—Zeke was guilty! When I
got over the shock, I said to Zeke: "You are caught with the goods on. No
excuses will go. The Democrats of this district ain't used to dukes and
princes and we wouldn't feel comfortable in your company. You'd overpower
us. You had better move up to the Nineteenth or Twenty-seventh District,
and hang a silk stocking on your door." He went up to the Nineteenth,
turned Republican, and was lookin' for an Albany job the last I heard of
him.</p>
<p>Now, nobody ever saw me puttin' on any style. I'm the same Plunkitt I was
when I entered politics forty years ago. That is why the people of the
district have confidence in me. If I went into the stylish business, even
I, Plunkitt, might be thrown down in the district. That was shown pretty
clearly in the senatorial fight last year. A day before the election, my
enemies circulated a report that I had ordered a $10,000 automobile and a
$125 dress suit. I sent out contradictions as fast as I could, but I
wasn't able to stamp out the infamous slander before the votin' was over,
and I suffered some at the polls. The people wouldn't have minded much if
I had been accused of robbin' the city treasury, for they're used to
slanders of that kind in campaigns, but the automobile and the dress suit
were too much for them.</p>
<p>Another thing that people won't stand for is showin' off your learnin'.
That's just puttin' on style in another way. If you're makin' speeches in
a campaign, talk the language the people talk. Don't try to show how the
situation is by quotin' Shakespeare. Shakespeare was all right in his way,
but he didn't know anything about Fifteenth District politics. If you know
Latin and Greek and have a hankerin' to work them off on somebody, hire a
stranger to come to your house and listen to you for a couple of hours;
then go out and talk the language of the Fifteenth to the people. I know
it's an awful temptation, the hankerin' to show off your learnin'. I've
felt it myself, but I always resist it. I know the awful consequences.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 13. On Municipal Ownership </h2>
<p>I AM for municipal ownership on one condition: that the civil service law
be repealed. It's a grand idea—the city the railroads, the gas works
and all that. Just see how many thousands of new places there would be for
the workers in Tammany. Why, there would be almost enough to go around, if
no civil service law stood in the way. My plan is this: first get rid of
that infamous law, and then go ahead and by degrees get municipal
ownership.</p>
<p>Some of the reformers are sayin' that municipal ownership won't do because
it would give a lot of patronage to the politicians. How those fellows mix
things up when they argue! They're givin' the strongest argument in favor
of municipal ownership when they say that. Who is better fitted to run the
railroads and the gas plants and the ferries than the men who make a
business of lookin' after the interests of the city? Who is more anxious
to serve the city? Who needs the jobs more?</p>
<p>Look at the Dock Department! The city owns the docks, and how beautiful
Tammany manages them! I can't tell you how many places they provide for
our workers. I know there is a lot of talk about dock graft, but that talk
comes from the outs. When the Republicans had the docks under Low and
Strong, you didn't hear them sayin' anything about graft, did you? No;
they' just went in and made hay while the sun shone—That's always
the case. When the reformers are out they raise the yell that Tammany men
should be sent to jail. When they get in, they're so busy keepin' out of
jail themselves that they don't have no time to attack Tammany.</p>
<p>All I want is that municipal ownership be postponed till I get my bill
repealin' the civil service law before the next legislature. It would be
all a mess if every man who wanted a job would have to run up against a
civil service examination. For instance, if a man wanted a job as motorman
on a surface car, it's ten to one that they would ask him: "Who wrote the
Latin grammar, and, if so, why did he write it? How many years were you at
college? Is there any part of the Greek language you don't know? State all
you don't know, and why you don't know it. Give a list of all the sciences
with full particulars about each one and how it came to be discovered.
Write out word for word the last ten decisions of the United States
Supreme Court and show if they conflict with the last ten decisions of the
police courts of New York City."</p>
<p>Before the would-be motorman left the civil service room, the chances are
he would be a raving lunatic Anyhow I wouldn't like to ride on his car.
Just here I want to say one last final word about civil service. In the
last ten years I have made an investigation which I've kept quiet till
this time. Now I have all the figures together, and I'm ready to announce
the result. My investigation was to find out how many civil service
reformers and how many politicians were in state prisons. I discovered
that there was forty per cent more civil service reformers among the
jailbirds. If any legislative committee wants the detailed figures, I'll
prove what I say. I don't want to give the figures now, because I want to
keep them to back me up when I go to Albany to get the civil service law
repealed. Don't you think that when I've had my inning, the civil service
law will go down, and the people will see that the politicians are all
right, and that they ought to have the job of runnin' things when
municipal ownership comes?</p>
<p>One thing more about municipal ownership. If the city owned the railroads,
etc., salaries would be sure to go up. Higher salaries is the cryin' need
of the day. Municipal ownership would increase them all along the line and
would stir up such patriotism as New York City never knew before. You
can't be patriotic on a salary that just keeps the wolf from the door. Any
man who pretends he can will bear watchin'. Keep your hand on your watch
and pocketbook when he's about. But, when a man has a good fat salary, he
finds himself hummin' "Hail Columbia," all unconscious and he fancies,
when he's ridin' in a trolley car, that the wheels are always sayin':
"Yankee Doodle Came to Town." I know how it is myself. When I got my first
good job from the city I bought up all the firecrackers in my district to
salute this glorious country. I couldn't wait for the Fourth of July 1 got
the boys on the block to fire them off for me, and I felt proud of bein'
an American. For a long time after that I use to wake up nights singin'
"The Star-Spangled Banner."</p>
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<h2> Chapter 14. Tammany the Only Lastin' Democracy </h2>
<p>I've seen more than one hundred "Democracies" rise and fall in New York
City in the last quarter of a century. At least a half-dozen new so-called
Democratic organizations are formed every year. All of them go in to down
Tammany and take its place, but they seldom last more than a year or two,
while Tammany's like the everlastin' rocks, the eternal hills and the
blockades on the "L" road—it goes on forever.</p>
<p>I recall offhand the County Democracy, which was the only real opponent
Tammany has had in my time, the Irving Hall Democracy, the New York State
Democracy, the German-American Democracy, the Protection Democracy, the
Independent County Democracy, the Greater New York Democracy, the Jimmy
O'Brien Democracy, the Delicatessen Dealers' Democracy, the Silver
Democracy, and the Italian Democracy. Not one of them is livin' today,
although I hear somethin' about the ghost of the Greater New York
Democracy bein' seen on Broadway once or twice a year.</p>
<p>In the old days of the County Democracy, a new Democratic organization
meant some trouble for Tammany—for a time anyhow. Nowadays a new
Democracy means nothin' at all except that about a dozen bone-hunters have
got together for one campaign only to try to induce Tammany to give them a
job or two, or in order to get in with the reformers for the same purpose.
You might think that it would cost a lot of money to get up one of these
organizations and keep it goin' for even one campaign, but, Lord bless
you! it costs next to nothin'. Jimmy O'Brien brought the manufacture of
"Democracies" down to an exact science, and reduced the cost of production
so as to bring it within the reach of all. Any man with $50 can now have a
"Democracy" of his own.</p>
<p>I've looked into the industry, and can give rock-bottom figures. Here's
the items of cost of a new "Democracy</p>
<p>A dinner to twelve bone-hunters $12.00<br/>
A speech on Jeffersonian Democracy 00.00<br/>
A proclamation of principles (typewriting) 2.00<br/>
Rent of a small room one month for headquarters 12.00<br/>
Stationery 2.00<br/>
Twelve secondhand chairs 6.00<br/>
One secondhand table 2.00<br/>
Twenty-nine cuspidors 9.00<br/>
Sign painting 5.00<br/>
Total ———<br/>
$50.00<br/></p>
<p>Is there any reason for wonder, then, that "Democracies" spring up all
over when a municipal campaign is comm' on? If you land even one small
job, you get a big return on your investment. You don't have to pay for
advertisin' in the papers. The New York papers tumble over one another to
give columns to any new organization that comes out against Tammany. In
describin' the formation of a "Democracy" on the $50 basis, accordin' to
the items I give, the papers would say somethin' like this: "The
organization of the Delicatessen Democracy last night threatens the
existence of Tammany Hall. It is a grand move for a new and pure Democracy
in this city. Well may the Tammany leaders be alarmed; panic has already
broke loose in Fourteenth Street. The vast crowd that gathered at the
launching of the new organization, the stirrin' speeches and the
proclamation of principles mean that, at last, there is an uprisin' that
will end Tammany's career of corruption. The Delicatessen Democracy will
open in a few days spacious headquarters where all true Democrats may
gather and prepare for the fight."</p>
<p>Say, ain't some of the papers awful gullible about politics? Talk about
come-ons from Iowa or Texas they ain't in it with the childlike simplicity
of these papers.</p>
<p>It's a wonder to me that more men don't go into this kind of manufacturin'
industry. It has bigger profits generally than the green-goods business
and none of the risks. And you don't have to invest as much as the
green-goods men. Just see what good things some of these "Democracies" got
in the last few years! The New York State Democracy in 1897 landed a
Supreme Court Justiceship for the man who manufactured the concern—a
fourteen-year term at $17,500 a year, that is $245,000. You see, Tammany
was rather scared that year and was bluffed into givin' this job to get
the support of the State Democracy which, by the way, went out of business
quick and prompt the day after it got this big plum. The next year the
German Democracy landed a place of the same kind. And then see how the
Greater New York Democracy worked the game on the reformers in 1901! The
men who managed this concern were former Tammanyites who had lost their
grip; yet they made the Citizens' Union innocents believe that they were
the real thing in the way of reformers, and that they had 100,000 voter
back of them. They got the Borough President of Manhattan, the President
of the Board of Aldermen, the Register and a lot of lesser places, it was
the greatest bunco game of modern times.</p>
<p>And then, in 1894, when Strong was elected mayor, what a harvest it was
for all the little "Democracies", that was made to order that year! Every
one of them got somethin' good. In one case, all the nine men in an
organization got jobs payin' from $2000 to $5000. I happen to know exactly
what it cost to manufacture that organization. It was $42.04. They left
out the stationery, and had only twenty-three cuspidors. The extra four
cents was for two postage stamps.</p>
<p>The only reason I can imagine why more men don't go into this industry is
because they don't know about it. And just here it strikes me that it
might not be wise to publish what I've said. Perhaps if it gets to be
known what a snap this manufacture of "Democracies" is, all the
green-goods men, the bunco-steerers, and the young Napoleons of finance
will go into it and the public will be humbugged more than it has been.
But, after all, what difference would it make? There's always a certain
number of suckers and a certain number of men lookin' for a chance to take
them in, and the suckers are sure to be took one way or another. It's the
everlastin' law of demand and supply.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 15. Concerning Gas in Politics </h2>
<p>SINCE the eighty-cent gas bill was defeated in Albany, everybody's talkin'
about senators bein' bribed. Now, I wasn't in the Senate last session, and
I don't know the ins and outs of everything that was done, but I can tell
you that the legislators are often hauled over the coals when they are all
on the level I've been there and I know. For instance, when I voted in the
Senate in 1904, for the Remsen Bill that the newspapers called the
"Astoria Gas Grab Bill," they didn't do a thing to me. The papers kept up
a howl about all the supporters of the bill bein' bought up by the
Consolidated Gas Company, and the Citizens' Union did me the honor to call
me the commander-in-chief of the "Black Horse Cavalry."</p>
<p>The fact is that I was workin' for my district all this time, and I wasn't
bribed by nobody. There's several of these gashouses in the district, and
I wanted to get them over to Astoria for three reasons: first, because
they're nuisances; second, because there's no votes in them for me any
longer; third, because—well, I had a little private reason which
I'll explain further on. I needn't explain how they're nuisances. They're
worse than open sewers. Still, I might have stood that if they hadn't
degenerated so much in the last few years.</p>
<p>Ah, gashouses ain't what they used to be! Not very long ago, each gashouse
was good for a couple of hundred votes. All the men employed in them were
Irishmen and Germans who lived in the district. Now, it is all different.
The men are dagoes who live across in Jersey and take no interest in the
district. What's the use of havin' ill-smellin' gashouses if there's no
votes in them?</p>
<p>Now, as to my private reason. Well, I'm a business man and go in for any
business that's profitable and honest. Real estate is one of my
specialties. I know the value of every foot of ground in my district, and
I calculated long ago that if them gashouses was removed, surroundin'
property would go up 100 per cent. When the Remsen Bill, providin' for the
removal of the gashouses to Queens County came up. I said to myself:
"George, hasn't your chance come?" I answered: "Sure." Then I sized up the
chances of the bill. I found it was certain to pass the Senate and the
Assembly, and I got assurances straight from headquarters that Governor
Odell would sign it. Next I came down to the city to find out the mayor's
position. I got it straight that he would approve the bill, too.</p>
<p>Can't you guess what I did then? Like any sane man who had my information,
I went in and got options on a lot of the property around the gashouses.
Well, the bill went through the Senate and the Assembly all right and the
mayor signed it, but Odell backslided at the last minute and the whole
game fell through. If it had succeeded, I guess I would have been accused
of graftin'. What I want to know is, what do you call it when I got left
and lost a pot of money?</p>
<p>I not only lost money, but I was abused for votin' for the bill. Wasn't
that outrageous? They said I was in with the Consolidated Gas Company and
all other kinds of rot, when I was really only workin' for my district and
tryin' to turn an honest penny on the side. Anyhow I got a little fun out
of the business. When the Remsen Bill was up, I was tryin' to put through
a bill of my own, the Spuyten Duyvil Bill, which provided for fillin' in
some land under water that the New York Central Railroad wanted. Well, the
Remsen managers were afraid of bein' beaten and they went around offerin'
to make trades with senators and assemblymen who had bills they were
anxious to pass. They came to me and offered six votes for my Spuyten
Duyvil Bill in exchange for my vote on the Remsen Bill. I took them up in
a hurry, and they felt pretty sore afterwards when they heard I was goin'
to vote for the Remsen Bill anyhow.</p>
<p>A word about that Spuyten Duyvil Bill—I was criticized a lot for
introducin' it. They said I was workin' in the interest of the New York
Central, and was goin' to get the contract for fillin' in. The fact is,
that the fillin' in was a good thing for the city, and if it helped the
New York Central, too, what of it? The railroad is a great public
institution, and I was never an enemy of public institutions. As to the
contract, it hasn't come along yet. If it does come, it will find me at
home at all proper and reasonable hours, if there is a good profit in
sight.</p>
<p>The papers and some people are always ready to find wrong motives in what
us statesmen do. If we bring about some big improvement that benefits the
city and it just happens, as a sort of coincidence, that we make a few
dollars out of the improvement, they say we are grafters. But we are used
to this kind of ingratitude. It falls to the lot of all statesmen,
especially Tammany statesmen. All we can do is to bow our heads in silence
and wait till time has cleared our memories.</p>
<p>Just think of mentionin' dishonest graft in connection with the name of
George Washington Plunkitt, the man who gave the city its magnificent
chain of parks, its Washington Bridge, its Speedway, its Museum of Natural
History, its One Hundred and Fifty-fifth Street Viaduct and its West Side
Courthouse! 1 was the father of the bills that provided for all these;
yet, because I supported the Remsen and Spuyten Duyvil bills, some people
have questioned my honest motives. If that's the case, how can you expect
legislators to fare who are not the fathers of the parks, the Washington
Bridge, the Speedway and the Viaduct?</p>
<p>Now, understand; I ain't defendin' the senators who killed the eighty-cent
gas bill. I don't know why they acted as they did; I only want to impress
the idea to go slow before you make up your mind that a man, occupyin' the
exalted position that 1 held for so many years, has done wrong. For all I
know, these senators may have been as honest and high minded about the gas
bill as I was about the Remsen and Spuyten Duyvil bills.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 16. Plunkitt's Fondest Dream </h2>
<p>The time is comm' and though I'm no youngster, I may see it, when New York
City will break away from the State and become a state itself. It's got to
come. The feelin' between this city and the hayseeds that make a livin' by
plunderin' it is every bit as bitter as the feelin' between the North and
South before the war. And, let me tell you, if there ain't a peaceful
separation before long, we may have the horrors of civil war right here in
New York State. Why, I know a lot of men in my district who would like
nothin' better today than to go out gunnin' for hayseeds!</p>
<p>New York City has got a bigger population than most of the states in the
Union. It's got more wealth than any dozen of them. Yet the people here,
as I explained before, are nothin' but slaves of the Albany gang. We have
stood the slavery a long, long time, but the uprisin' is near at hand. It
will be a fight for liberty, just like the American Revolution. We'll get
liberty peacefully if we can; by cruel war if we must.</p>
<p>Just think how lovely things would be here if we had a Tammany Governor
and Legislature meetin', say in the neighborhood of Fifty-ninth Street,
and a Tammany Mayor and Board of Aldermen doin' business in City Hall! How
sweet and peaceful everything would go on!</p>
<p>The people wouldn't have to bother about nothin'. Tammany would take care
of everything for them in its nice quiet way. You wouldn't hear of any
conflicts between the state and city authorities. They would settle
everything pleasant and comfortable at Tammany Hall, and every bill
introduced in the Legislature by Tammany would be sure to go through. The
Republicans wouldn't count.</p>
<p>Imagine how the city would be built up in a short time! At present we
can't make a public improvement of any consequence without goin' to Albany
for permission, and most of the time we get turned down when we go there.
But, with a Tammany Governor and Legislature up at Fifty-ninth Street, how
public works would hum here! The Mayor and Aldermen could decide on an
improvement, telephone the Capitol, have a bill put through in a jiffy and—there
you are. We could have a state constitution, too, which would extend the
debt limit so that we could issue a whole lot more bonds. As things are
now, all the money spent for docks, for instance, is charged against the
city in calculatin' the debt limit, although the Dock Department provides
immense revenues. It's the same with some other departments. This humbug
would be dropped if Tammany ruled at the Capitol and the City Hall, and
the city would have money to burn.</p>
<p>Another thing—the constitution of the new state wouldn't have a word
about civil service, and if any man dared to introduce any kind of a civil
service bill in the Legislature, he would be fired out the window. Then we
would have government of the people by the people who were elected to
govern them. That's the kind of government Lincoln meant. 0 what a
glorious future for the city! Whenever I think of it I feel like goin' out
and celebratin', and I'm really almost sorry that I don't drink.</p>
<p>You may ask what would become of the upstate people if New York City left
them in the lurch and went into the State business on its own account.
Well, we wouldn't be under no obligation to provide for them; still I
would be in favor of helpin' them along for a while until they could learn
to work and earn an honest livin', just like the United States Government
looks after the Indians. These hayseeds have been so used to livin' off of
New York City that they would be helpless after we left them. It wouldn't
do to let them starve. We might make some sort of an appropriation for
them for a few years, but it would be with the distinct understandin' that
they must get busy right away and learn to support themselves. If, after
say five years, they weren't self-supportin', we could withdraw the
appropriation and let them shift for themselves. The plan might succeed
and it might not. We'd be doin' our duty anyhow.</p>
<p>Some persons might say: "But how about it if the hayseed politicians moved
down here and went in to get control of the government of the new state?"
We could provide against that easy by passin' a law that these politicians
couldn't come below the Bronx without a sort of passport limitin' the time
of their stay here, and forbiddin' them to monkey with politics here. I
don't know just what kind of a bill would be required to fix this, but
with a Tammany Constitution, Governor, Legislature and Mayor, there would
be no trouble in settlin' a little matter of that sort.</p>
<p>Say, I don't wish I was a poet, for if I was, I guess I'd be livin' in a
garret on no dollars a week instead of runnin' a great contractin' and
transportation business which is doin' pretty well, thank you; but,
honest, now, the notion takes me sometimes to yell poetry of the
red-hot-hail-glorious-land kind when I think of New York City as a state
by itself.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 17. Tammany's Patriotism </h2>
<p>TAMMANY's the most patriotic organization on earth, notwithstandin' the
fact that the civil service law is sappin' the foundations of patriotism
all over the country. Nobody pays any attention to the Fourth of July any
longer except Tammany and the small boy. When the Fourth comes, the
reformers, with Revolutionary names parted in the middle, run off to
Newport or the Adirondacks to get out of the way of the noise and
everything that reminds them of the glorious day. How different it is with
Tammany! The very constitution of the Tammany Society requires that we
must assemble at the wigwam on the Fourth, regardless of the weather, and
listen to the readin' of the Declaration of Independence and patriotic
speeches.</p>
<p>You ought to attend one of these meetin's. They're a liberal education in
patriotism. The great hall upstairs is filled with five thousand people,
suffocatin' from heat and smoke. Every man Jack of these five thousand
knows that down in the basement there's a hundred cases of champagne and
two hundred kegs of beer ready to flow when the signal is given. Yet that
crowd stick to their seats without turnin' a hair while, for four solid
hours, the Declaration of Independence is read, long-winded orators speak,
and the glee dub sings itself hoarse.</p>
<p>Talk about heroism in the battlefield! That comes and passes away in a
moment. You ain't got time to be anything but heroic. But just think of
five thousand men sittin' in the hottest place on earth for four long
hours, with parched lips and gnawin' stomachs, and knowin' all the time
that the delights of the oasis in the desert were only two flights
downstairs! Ah, that is the highest kind of patriotism, the patriotism of
long sufferin' and endurance. What man wouldn't rather face a cannon for a
minute or two than thirst for four hours, with champagne and beer almost
under his nose?</p>
<p>And then see how they applaud and yell when patriotic things are said! As
soon as the man on the platform starts off with "when, in the course of
human events," word goes around that it's the Declaration of Independence,
and a mighty roar goes up. The Declaration ain't a very short document and
the crowd has heard it on every Fourth but they give it just as fine a
send off as if it was brand-new and awful excitin'. Then the "long
talkers" get in their work, that is two or three orators who are good for
an hour each. Heat never has any effect on these men. They use every
minute of their time. Sometimes human nature gets the better of a man in
the audience and he begins to nod, but he always wakes up with a hurrah
for the Declaration of Independence.</p>
<p>The greatest hero of the occasion is the Grand Sachem of the Tammany
Society who presides. He and the rest of us Sachems come on the stage
wearin' stovepipe hats, accordin' to the constitution, but we can shed
ours right off, while the Grand Sachem is required to wear his hat all
through the celebration. Have you any idea what that means? Four hours
under a big silk hat in a hall where the heat registers 110 and the smoke
250! And the Grand Sachem is expected to look pleasant all the time and
say nice things when introducin' the speakers! Often his hand goes to his
hat, unconscious-like, then he catches himself up in time and looks around
like a man who is in the tenth story of a burnin' building' seekin' a way
to escape. I believe that Fourth-of-July silk hat shortened the life of
one of our Grand Sachems, the late Supreme Court Justice Smyth, and I know
that one of our Sachems refused the office of Grand Sachem because he
couldn't get up sufficient patriotism to perform this four-hour hat act.
You see, there's degrees of patriotism just as there's degrees in
everything else.</p>
<p>You don't hear of the Citizens' Union people holdin' Fourth-of-July
celebrations under a five-pound silk hat, or any other way, do you? The
Cits take the Fourth like a dog I had when I was a boy. That dog knew as
much as some Cits and he acted just like them about the glorious day.
Exactly forty-eight hours before each Fourth of July, the dog left our
house on a run and hid himself in the Bronx woods. The day after the
Fourth he turned up at home as regular as clockwork. He must have known
what a dog is up against on the Fourth. Anyhow, he kept out of the way.
The name-parted-in-the-middle aristocrats act in just the same way. They
don't want to be annoyed with firecrackers and the Declaration of
Independence, and when they see the Fourth comm' they hustle off to the
woods like my dog.</p>
<p>Tammany don't only show its patriotism at Fourth-of-July celebrations.
It's always on deck when the country needs its services. After the
Spanish-American War broke Out, John J. Scannell, the Tammany leader of
the Twenty-fifth District, wrote to Governor Black offerin' to raise a
Tammany regiment to go to the front. If you want proof, go to Tammany Hall
and see the beautiful set of engrossed resolutions about this regiment.
It's true that the Governor didn't accept the offer, but it showed
Tammany's patriotism. Some enemies of the organization have said that the
offer to raise the regiment was made after the Governor let it be known
that no more volunteers were wanted, but that's the talk of envious
slanderers.</p>
<p>Now, a word about Tammany's love for the American flag. Did you ever see
Tammany Hall decorated for a celebration? It's just a mass of flags. They
even take down the window shades and put flags in place of them. There's
flags everywhere except on the floors. We don't care for expense where the
American flag is concerned, especially after we have won an election. In
1904 we originated the custom of givin' a small flag to each man as he
entered Tammany Hall for the Fourth-of-July celebration. It took like
wildfire. The men waved their flags whenever they cheered and the sight
made me feel so patriotic that I forgot all about civil service for a
while. And the good work of the flags didn't stop there. The men carried
them home and gave them to the children, and the kids got patriotic, too.
Of course, it all cost a pretty penny, but what of that? We had won at the
polls the precedin' November, had the offices and could afford to make an
extra investment in patriotism.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 18. On the Use of Money in Politics </h2>
<p>THE civil service gang is always howlin' about candidates and
officeholders puttin' up money for campaigns and about corporations
chippin' in. They might as well howl about givin' contributions to
churches. A political organization has to have money for its business as
well as a church, and who has more right to put up than the men who get
the good things that are goin'? Take, for instance, a great political
concern like Tammany Hall It does missionary work like a church, it's got
big expenses and it's got to be supported by the faithful. If a
corporation sends in a check to help the good work of the Tammany Society,
why shouldn't we take it like other missionary societies? Of course, the
day may come when we'll reject the money of the rich as tainted, but it
hadn't come when I left Tammany Hall at 11:25 A.M. today.</p>
<p>Not long ago some newspapers had fits became the Assemblyman from my
district said he had put up $500 when he was nominated for the Assembly
last year. Every politician in town laughed at these papers. I don't think
there was even a Citizens' Union man who didn't know that candidates of
both parties have to chip in for campaign expenses. The sums they pay are
accordin' to their salaries and the length of their terms of office, if
elected. Even candidates for the Supreme Court have to fall in line. A
Supreme Court Judge in New York County gets $17,500 a year, and he's
expected, when nominated, to help along the good cause with a year's
salary. Why not? He has fourteen years on the bench ahead of him, and ten
thousand other lawyers would be willin' to put up twice as much to be in
his shoes. Now, I ain't sayin' that we sell nominations. That's a
different thing altogether. There's no auction and no regular biddin'. The
man is picked out and somehow he gets to understand what's expected of him
in the way of a contribution, and he ponies up—all from gratitude to
the organization that honored him, see?</p>
<p>Let me tell you an instance that shows the difference between sellin'
nominations and arrangin' them in the way I described. A few years ago a
Republican district leader controlled the nomination for Congress in his
Congressional district. Four men wanted it. At first the leader asked for
bids privately, but decided at last that the best thing to do was to get
the four men together in the back room of a certain saloon and have an
open auction. When he had his men lined up, he got on a chair, told about
the value of the goods for sale, and asked for bids in regular auctioneer
style. The highest bidder got the nomination for $5000. Now, that wasn't
right at all. These things ought to be always fixed up nice and quiet.</p>
<p>As to officeholders, they would be ingrates if they didn't contribute to
the organization that put them in office. They needn't be assessed. That
would be against the law. But they know what's expected of them, and if
they happen to forget they can be reminded polite and courteous. Dan
Donegan, who used to be the Wiskinkie of the Tammany Society, and received
contributions from grateful officeholders, had a pleasant way of
remindin'. If a man forgot his duty to the organization that made him, Dan
would call on the man, smile as sweet as you please and say: "You haven't
been round at the Hall lately, have you?" If the man tried to slide around
the question, Dan would say: "It's gettin' awful cold." Then he would have
a fit of shiverin' and walk away. What could be more polite and, at the
same time, more to the point? No force, no threats—only a little
shiverin' which any man is liable to even in summer.</p>
<p>Just here, I want to charge one more crime to the infamous civil service
law. It has made men turn ungrateful. A dozen years ago, when there wasn't
much civil service business in the city government, and when the
administration could turn out almost any man holdin' office, Dan's shiver
took effect every time and there was no ingratitude in the city
departments. But when the civil service law came in and all the clerks got
lead-pipe cinches on their jobs, ingratitude spread right away. Dan
shivered and shook till his bones rattled, but many of the city employees
only laughed at him. One day, I remember, he tackled a clerk in the Public
Works Department, who used to give up pretty regular, and, after the usual
question, began to shiver. The clerk smiled. Dan shook till his hat fell
off. The clerk took ten cents out of his pocket, handed it to Dan and
said: "Poor man! Go and get a drink to warm yourself up." Wasn't that
shameful? And yet, if it hadn't been for the civil service law, that clerk
would be contributin' right along to this day.</p>
<p>The civil service law don't cover everything, however. There's lots of
good jobs outside its clutch, and the men that get them are grateful every
time. I'm not speakin' of Tammany Hall alone, remember! It's the same with
the Republican Federal and State officeholders, and every organization
that has or has had jobs to give out—except, of course, the
Citizens' Union. The Cits held office only a couple of years and, knowin'
that they would never be in again, each Cit officeholder held on for dear
life to every dollar that came his way.</p>
<p>Some people say they can't understand what becomes of all the money that's
collected for campaigns. They would understand fast enough if they were
district lead-em. There's never been half enough money to go around.
Besides the expenses for meetin's, bands and all that, there's the bigger
bill for the district workers who get men to the polls. These workers are
mostly men who want to serve their country but can't get jobs in the city
departments on account of the civil service law. They do the next best
thing by keepin' track of the voters and seem' that they come to the polls
and vote the right way. Some of these deservin' citizens have to make
enough on registration and election days to keep them the rest of the
year. Isn't it right that they should get a share of the campaign money?</p>
<p>Just remember that there's thirty-five Assembly districts in New York
County, and thirty-six district leaders reachin' out for the Tammany
dough-bag for somethin' to keep up the patriotism of ten thousand workers,
and you wouldn't wonder that the cry for more, more, is goin' up from
every district organization now and forevermore. Amen.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 19. The Successful Politician Does Not Drink </h2>
<p>I HAVE explained how to succeed in politics. I want to add that no matter
how well you learn to play the political game, you won't make a lastin'
success of it if you're a drinkin' man. I never take a drop of any kind of
intoxicatin' liquor. I ain't no fanatic. Some of the saloonkeepers are my
best friends, and I don't mind goin' into a saloon any day with my
friends. But as a matter of business I leave whisky and beer and the rest
of that stuff alone. As a matter of business, too, I take for my
lieutenants in my district men who don't drink. I tried the other kind for
several years, but it didn't pay. They cost too much. For instance, I had
a young man who was one of the best hustlers in town. He knew every man in
the district, was popular everywhere and could induce a half-dead man to
come to the polls on election day. But, regularly, two weeks before
election, he started on a drunk, and I had to hire two men to guard him
day and night and keep him sober enough to do his work. That cost a lot of
money, and I dropped the young man after a while.</p>
<p>Maybe you think I'm unpopular with the saloonkeepers because 1 don't
drink. You're wrong. The most successful saloonkeepers don't drink
themselves and they understand that my temperance is a business
proposition, just like their own. I have a saloon under my headquarters.
If a saloonkeeper gets into trouble he always knows that Senator Plunkitt
is the man to help him out. If there is a bill in the Legislature makin'
it easier for the liquor dealers, I am for it every time. I'm one of the
best friends the saloon men have—but I don't drink their whisky. I
won't go through the temperance lecture dodge and tell you how many'
bright young men I've seen fall victims to intemperance, but I'll tell you
that I could name dozens—young men who had started on the road to
statesmanship who could carry their districts every time, and who could
turn out any vote you wanted at the primaries. I honestly believe that
drink is the greatest curse of the day, except, of course. civil service,
and that it has driven more young men to ruin than anything except civil
service examinations.</p>
<p>Look at the great leaders of Tammany Hall! No regular drinkers among them.
Richard Croker's strongest drink was vichy. Charlie Murphy takes a glass
of wine at dinner sometimes, but he don't go beyond that A drinkin' man
wouldn't last two weeks as leader of Tammany Hall. Nor can a man manage an
assembly district long if he drinks. He's got to have a clear head all the
time. I could name ten men who, in the last few years lost their grip in
their districts because they began drinkin'. There's now thirty-six
district leaders in Tammany Hall, and I don't believe a half-dozen of them
ever drink anything except at meals. People have got an idea that because
the liquor men are with us in campaigns. our district leaders spend most
of their time leanin' against bars. There couldn't be a wronger idea. The
district leader makes a business of politics, gets his livin' out of it,
and, in order to succeed, he's got to keep sober just like in any other
business.</p>
<p>Just take as examples "Big Tim" and "Little Tim" Sullivan. They're known
all over the country as the Bowery leaders and, as there's nothin' but
saloons on the Bowery, people might think that they are hard drinkers. The
fact is that neither of them has ever touched a drop of liquor in his life
of even smoked a cigar. Still they don't make no pretenses of being better
than anybody else, and don't go around deliverin' temperance lectures. Big
Tim made money out of liquor—sellin' it to other people. That's the
only way to get good out of liquor.</p>
<p>Look at all the Tammany heads of city departments? There's not a real
drinkin' man in the lot. Oh, yes, there are some prominent men in the
organization who drink sometimes, but they are not the men who have power.
They're ornaments, fancy speakers and all that, who make a fine show
behind the footlights, but am I in it when it comes to directin' the city
government and the Tammany organization. The men who sit in the executive
committee room at Tammany Hall and direct things are men who celebrate on
apollinaris or vichy. Let me tell you what I saw on election night in
1897, when the Tammany ticket swept the city: Up to 10 P.M. Croker, John
F. Carroll, Tim Sullivan, Charlie Murphy, and myself sat in the committee
room receivin' returns. When nearly all the city was heard from and we saw
that Van Wyck was elected by a big majority, I invited the crowd to go
across the street for a little celebration. A lot of small politicians
followed us, expectin' to see magnums of champagne opened. The waiters in
the restaurant expected it, too, and you never saw a more disgusted lot of
waiters when they got our orders. Here's the orders: Croker, vichy and
bicarbonate of soda; Carroll, seltzer lemonade; Sullivan, apollinaris;
Murphy, vichy; Plunkitt, ditto. Before midnight we were all in bed, and
next mornin' we were up bright and early attendin' to business, while
other men were nursin' swelled heads. Is there anything the matter with
temperance as a pure business proposition?</p>
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<h2> Chapter 20. Bosses Preserve the Nation </h2>
<p>WHEN I retired from the Senate, I thought I would take a good, long rest,
such a rest as a man needs who has held office for about forty years, and
has held four different offices in one year and drawn salaries from three
of them at the same time. Drawin' so many salaries is rather fatiguin',
you know, and, as I said, I started out for a rest; but when I seen how
things were goin' in New York State, and how a great big black shadow hung
over us, I said to myself: "No rest for you, George. Your work ain't done.
Your country still needs you and you mustn't lay down yet."</p>
<p>What was the great big black shadow? It was the primary election law,
amended so as to knock out what are called the party bosses by lettin' in
everybody at the primaries and givin' control over them to state
officials. Oh, yes, that is a good way to do up the so-called bosses, but
have you ever thought what would become of the country if the bosses were
put out of business, and their places were taken by a lot of cart-tail
orators and college graduates? It would mean chaos. It would be just like
takin' a lot of dry-goods clerks and settin' them to run express trains on
the New York Central Railroad. It makes my heart bleed to think of it.
Ignorant people are always talkin' against party bosses, but just wait
till the bosses are gone! Then, and not until then, will they get the
right sort of epitaphs, as Patrick Henry or Robert Emmet said.</p>
<p>Look at the bosses of Tammany Hall in the last twenty years. What
magnificent men! To them New York City owes pretty much all it is today.
John Kelly, Richard Croker, and Charles F. Murphy—what names in
American history compares with them, except Washington and Lincoln? They
built up the grand Tammany organization, and the organization built up New
York. Suppose the city had to depend for the last twenty years on
irresponsible concerns like the Citizens' Union, where would it be now?
You can make a pretty good guess if you recall the Strong and Low
administrations when there was no boss, and the heads of departments were
at odds all the time with each other, and the Mayor was at odds with the
lot of them. They spent so much time in arguin' and makin' grandstand
play, that the interests of the city were forgotten. Another
administration of that kind would put New York back a quarter of a
century.</p>
<p>Then see how beautiful a Tammany city government runs, with a so-called
boss directin' the whole shootin' match! The machinery moves so noiseless
that you wouldn't think there was any. If there's any differences of
opinion the Tammany leader settles them quietly and his orders go every
time. How nice it is for the people to feel that they can get up in the
mornin' without hem' afraid of seem' in the papers that the Commissioner
of Water Supply has sandbagged the Dock Commissioner, and that the Mayor
and heads of the departments have been taken to the police court as
witnesses! That's no joke. I remember that, under Strong, some
commissioners came very near sandbaggin' one another.</p>
<p>Of course, the newspapers like the reform administration. Why? Because
these administrations, with their daily rows, furnish as racy news as
prizefights or divorce cases. Tammany don't care to get in the papers. It
goes right along attendin' to business quietly and only wants to be let
alone. That's one reason why the papers are against us.</p>
<p>Some papers complain that the bosses get rich while devotin' their lives
to the interests of the city. What of it? If opportunities for turnin' an
honest dollar comes their 'way, why shouldn't they take advantage of them,
just as I have done? As I said, in another talk, there is honest graft and
dishonest graft. The bosses go in for the former. There is so much of it
in this big town that they would be fools to go in for dishonest graft.</p>
<p>Now, the primary election law threatens to do away with the boss and make
the city government a menagerie. That's why I can't take the rest I
counted on. I'm goin' to propose a bill for the next session of the
legislature repealin' this dangerous law, and leavin' the primaries
entirely to the organizations themselves, as they used to be. Then will
return the good old times, when our district leaders could have nice
comfortable primary elections at some place selected by themselves and let
in only men that they approved of as good Democrats. Who is a better judge
of the Democracy of a man who offers his vote than the leader of the
district? Who is better equipped to keep out undesirable voters?</p>
<p>The men who put through the primary law are the same crowd that stand for
the civil service blight and they have the same objects in view—the
destruction of governments by party, the downfall of the constitution and
hell generally.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 21. Concerning Excise </h2>
<p>ALTHOUGH I'm not a drinkin' man myself, I mourn with the poor liquor
dealers of New York City, who are taxed and oppressed for the benefit of
the farmers up the state. The Raines liquor law is infamous It takes away
nearly all the profits of the saloonkeepers, and then turns in a large
part of the money to the State treasury to relieve the hayseeds from
taxes. Ah, who knows how many honest, hard-workin' saloonkeepers have been
driven to untimely graves by this law! I know personally of a half-dozen
who committed suicide—because they couldn't pay the enormous license
fee, and I have heard of many others. Every time there is an increase of
the fee, there is an increase in the suicide record of the city. Now, some
of these Republican hayseeds are talkin' about makin' the liquor tax
$1500, or even $2000 a year. That would mean the suicide of half of the
liquor dealers in the city.</p>
<p>Just see how these poor fellows are oppressed all around! First, liquor is
taxed in the hands of the manufacturer by the United States Government;
second, the wholesale dealer pays a special tax to the government; third,
the retail dealer is specially taxed by the United States Government;
fourth, the retail dealer has to pay a big tax to the State government.</p>
<p>Now, liquor dealing is criminal or it ain't. If it's criminal, the men
engaged in it ought to be sent to prison. If it ain't criminal, they ought
to be protected and encouraged to make all the profit they honestly can.
If it's right to tax a saloonkeeper $1000, it's right to put a heavy tax
on dealers in other beverages—in milk, for instance—and make
the dairymen pay up. But what a howl would be raised if a bill was
introduced in Albany to compel the farmers to help support the State
government! What would be said of a law that put a tax of, say $60 on a
grocer, $150 on a dry-goods man, and $500 more if he includes the other
goods that are kept in a country store?</p>
<p>If the Raines law gave the money extorted from the saloonkeepers to the
city, there might be some excuse for the tax. We would get some benefit
from it, but it gives a big part of the tax to local option localities
where the people are always shoutin' that liquor dealin' is immoral. Ought
these good people be subjected to the immoral influence of money taken
from the saloon tainted money? Out of respect for the tender consciences
of these pious people, the Raines law ought to exempt them from all
contamination from the plunder that comes from the saloon traffic. Say,
mark that sarcastic. Some people who ain't used to fine sarcasm might
think I meant it.</p>
<p>The Raines people make a pretense that the high license fee promotes
temperance. It's just the other way around. It makes more intemperance
and, what is as bad, it makes a monopoly in dram shops. Soon the saloons
will be in the hands of a vast trust' and any stuff can be sold for whisky
or beer. It's gettin' that way already. Some of the poor liquor dealers in
my district have been forced to sell wood alcohol for whisky, and many
deaths have followed. A half-dozen men died in a couple of days from this
kind of whisky which was forced down their throats by the high liquor tax.
If they raise the tax higher, wood alcohol will be too costly, and I guess
some dealers will have to get down to kerosene oil and add to the
Rockefeller millions.</p>
<p>The way the Raines law divides the different classes of licenses is also
an outrage. The sumptuous hotel saloons, with $10,000 paintin's and
bricky-brac and Oriental splendors gets off easier than a shanty on the
rocks, by the water's edge in my district where boatmen drink their grog,
and the only ornaments is a three-cornered mirror nailed to the wall, and
a chromo of the fight between Tom Hyer and Yankee Sullivan. Besides, a
premium is put on places that sell liquor not to be drunk on the premises,
but to be taken home. Now, I want to declare that from my experience in
New York City, I would rather see rum sold in the dram-shops unlicenced,
provided the rum is swallowed on the spot, than to encourage, by a low
tax, "bucket-shops" from which the stuff is carried into the tenements at
all hours of the day and night and make drunkenness and debauchery among
the women and children. A "bucket-shop" in the tenement district means a
cheap, so-called distillery, where raw spirits, poisonous colorin' matter
and water are sold for brandy and whisky at ten cents a quart, and carried
away in buckets and pitchers; I have always noticed that there are many
undertakers wherever the "bucket-shop" flourishes, and they have no dull
seasons.</p>
<p>I want it understood that I'm not an advocate of the liquor dealers or of
drinkin'. I think every man would be better off if he didn't take any
intoxicatin' drink at all, but as men will drink, they ought to have good
stuff without impoverishin' themselves by goin' to fancy places and
without riskin' death by goin' to poor places. The State should look after
their interests as well as the interests of those who drink nothin'
stronger than milk. Now, as to the liquor dealers themselves. They ain't
the criminals that cantin' hypocrites say they are. I know lots of them
and I know that, as a rule, they're good honest citizens who conduct their
business in a straight, honorable way. At a convention of the liquor
dealers a few years ago, a big city official welcomed them on behalf of
the city and said: "Go on elevatin' your standard higher and higher. Go on
with your good work. Heaven will bless YOU!" That was puttin' it just a
little strong, but the sentiment was all right and I guess the speaker
went a bit further than he intended in his enthusiasm over meetin' such a
fine set of men and, perhaps, dinin' with them.</p>
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<h2> Chapter 22. A Parting Word on the Future of the Democratic Party in </h2>
<p>America</p>
<p>THE Democratic party of the nation ain't dead, though it's been givin' a
lifelike imitation of a corpse for several years. It can't die while it's
got Tammany for its backbone. The trouble is that the party's been chasm'
after theories and stayin' up nights readin' books instead of studyin'
human nature and actin' accordin', as I've advised in tellin' how to hold
your district. In two Presidential campaigns, the leaders talked
themselves red in the face about silver bein' the best money and gold hem'
no good, and they tried to prove it out of books. Do you think the people
cared for all that guff? No. They heartily indorsed what Richard Croker
said at die Hoffman House one day in 1900. "What's the use of discussin'
what's the best kind of money?" said Croker. "I'm in favor of all kinds of
money—the more the better." See how a real Tammany statesman can
settle in twenty-five words a problem that monopolized two campaigns!</p>
<p>Then imperialism. The Democratic party spent all its breath on that in the
last national campaign. Its position was all right, sure, but you can't
get people excited about the Philippines. They've got too much at home to
interest them; they're too busy makin' a livin' to bother about the
niggers in the Pacific. The party's got to drop all them put-you-to-sleep
issues and come out in 1908 for somethin' that will wake the people up;
somethin' that will make it worth while to work for the party.</p>
<p>There's just one issue that would set this country on fire. The Democratic
party should say in the first plank of its platform: "We hereby declare,
in national convention assembled, that the paramount issue now, always and
forever, is the abolition of the iniquitous and villainous civil service
laws which are destroyin' all patriotism, ruin in' the country and takin'
away good jobs from them that earn them. We pledge ourselves, if our
ticket is elected, to repeal those laws at once and put every civil
service reformer in jail."</p>
<p>Just imagine the wild enthusiasm of the party, if that plank was adapted,
and the rush of Republicans to join us in restorin' our country to what it
was before this college professor's nightmare, called civil service
reform, got hold of it! Of course, it would be all right to work in the
platform some stuff about the tariff and sound money and the Philippines,
as no platform seems to be complete without them, but they wouldn't count.
The people would read only the first plank and then hanker for election
day to come to put the Democratic party in office.</p>
<p>I see a vision. I see the civil service monster lyin' flat on the ground.
I see the Democratic party standin' over it with foot on its neck and
wearin' the crown of victory. I see Thomas Jefferson lookin' out from a
cloud and sayin': "Give him another sockdologer; finish him"' And I see
millions of men wavin' their hats and singin' "Glory Hallelujah!"</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 23. Strenuous Life of the Tammany District Leader </h2>
<p>Note: This chapter is based on extracts from Plunkitt's Diary and on my
daily observation of the work of the district leader.—W.L.R.</p>
<p>THE life of the Tammany district leader is strenuous. To his work is due
the wonderful recuperative power of the organization.</p>
<p>One year it goes down in defeat and the prediction is made that it will
never again raise its head. The district leader, undaunted by defeat,
collects his scattered forces, organizes them as only Tammany knows how to
organize, and in a little while the organization is as strong as ever.</p>
<p>No other politician in New York or elsewhere is exactly like the Tammany
district leader or works as he does. As a rule, he has no business or
occupation other than politics. He plays politics every day and night in
the year, and his headquarters bears the inscription, "Never closed."</p>
<p>Everybody in the district knows him. Everybody knows where to find him,
and nearly everybody goes to him for assistance of one sort or another,
especially the poor of the tenements.</p>
<p>He is always obliging. He will go to the police courts to put in a good
word for the "drunks and disorderlies" or pay their fines, if a good word
is not effective. He will attend christenings, weddings, and funerals. He
will feed the hungry and help bury the dead.</p>
<p>A philanthropist? Not at all He is playing politics all the time.</p>
<p>Brought up in Tammany Hall, he has learned how to reach the hearts of the
great mass of voters. He does not bother about reaching their heads. It is
his belief that arguments and campaign literature have never gained votes.</p>
<p>He seeks direct contact with the people, does them good turns when he can,
and relies on their not forgetting him on election day. His heart is
always in his work, too, for his subsistence depends on its results.</p>
<p>If he holds his district and Tammany is in power, he is amply rewarded by
a good office and the opportunities that go with it. What these
opportunities are has been shown by the quick rise to wealth of so many
Tammany district leaders. With the examples before him of Richard Croker,
once leader of the Twentieth District; John F. Carroll, formerly leader of
the Twenty-ninth; Timothy ("Dry Dollar") Sullivan, late leader of the
Sixth, and many others, he can always look forward to riches and ease
while he is going through the drudgery of his daily routine.</p>
<p>This is a record of a day's work by Plunkitt:</p>
<p>2 A.M.: Aroused from sleep by the ringing Of his doorbell; went to the
door and found a bartender, who asked him to go to the police station and
ball out a saloon-keeper who had been arrested for violating the excise
law. Furnished bail and returned to bed at three o'clock.</p>
<p>6.A.M.: Awakened by fire engines passing his house. Hastened to the scene
of the fire, according to the custom of the Tammany district leaders, to
give assistance to the fire sufferers, if needed. Met several of his
election district captains who are always under orders to look out for
fires, which are considered great vote-getters. Found several tenants who
had been burned out, took them to a hotel, supplied them with clothes, fed
them, and arranged temporary quarters for them until they could rent and
furnish new apartments.</p>
<p>8:30 A.M.: Went to the police court to look after his constituents. Found
six "drunks." Secured the discharge of four by a timely word with the
judge, and paid the fines of two.</p>
<p>9 A.M.: Appeared in the Municipal District Court. Directed one of his
district captains to act as counsel for a widow against whom dispossess
proceedings had been instituted and obtained an extension of time. Paid
the rent of a poor family about to be dispossessed and gave them a dollar
for food.</p>
<p>11 A.M.: At home again. Found four men waiting for him. One had been
discharged by the Metropolitan Rail way Company for neglect of duty, and
wanted the district leader to fix things. Another wanted a job on the
road. The third sought a place on the Subway and the fourth, a plumber,
was looking for work with the Consolidated Gas Company. The district
leader spent nearly three hours fixing things for the four men, and
succeeded in each case.</p>
<p>3 P.M.: Attended the funeral of an Italian as far as the ferry. Hurried
back to make his appearance at the funeral of a Hebrew constituent. Went
conspicuously to the front both in the Catholic church and the synagogue,
and later attended the Hebrew confirmation ceremonies in the synagogue.</p>
<p>7 P.M.: Went to district headquarters and presided over a meeting of
election district captains. Each captain submitted a list of all the
voters in his district, reported on their attitude toward Tammany,
suggested who might be won over and how they could be won, told who were
in need, and who were in trouble of any kind and the best way to reach
them. District leader took notes and gave orders.</p>
<p>8 P.M.: Went to a church fair. Took chances on everything, bought ice
cream for the young girls and the children. Kissed the little ones,
flattered their mother: and took their fathers out for something down at
the comer.</p>
<p>9 P.M.: At the clubhouse again. Spent $10 on tickets for a church
excursion and promised a subscription for a new church bell. Bought
tickets for a baseball game to be played by two nines from his district.
Listened to the complaints of a dozen pushcart peddlers who said they were
persecuted by the police and assured them he would go to Police
Headquarter: in the morning and see about it.</p>
<p>10:30 P.M.: Attended a Hebrew wedding reception and dance. Had previously
sent a handsome wedding present to the bride.</p>
<p>12 P.M.: In bed.</p>
<p>That is the actual record of one day in the life Of Plunkitt. He does some
of the same things every day, but his life is not so monotonous as to be
wearisome. Sometimes the work of a district leader is exciting, especially
if he happens to have a rival who intends to make a contest for the
leadership at the primaries. In that case, he is even more alert, tries to
reach the fires before his rival, sends out runners to look for "drunks
and disorderlies" at the police stations, and keeps a very dose watch on
the obituary columns of the newspapers. A few years ago there was a bitter
contest for the Tammany leadership of the Ninth District between John C.
Sheehan and Frank J. Goodwin. Both had had long experience in Tammany
politics and both understood every move of the game.</p>
<p>Every morning their agents went to their respective headquarters before
seven o'clock and read through the death notices in all the morning
papers. If they found that anybody in the district had died, they rushed
to the homes of their principals with the information and then there was a
race to the house of the deceased to offer condolences, and, if the family
were poor, something more substantial.</p>
<p>On the day of the funeral there was another contest. Each faction tried to
surpass the other in the number and appearance of the carriages it sent to
the funeral, and more than once they almost came to blows at the church or
in the cemetery.</p>
<p>On one occasion the Goodwinites played a trick on their adversaries which
has since been imitated in other districts. A well-known liquor dealer who
had a considerable following died, and both Sheehan and Goodwin were eager
to become his political heir by making a big showing at the funeral.</p>
<p>Goodwin managed to catch the enemy napping. He went to all the livery
stables in the district, hired all the carriages for the day, and gave
orders to two hundred of his men to be on hand as mourners.</p>
<p>Sheehan had never had any trouble about getting all the carriages that he
wanted, so he let the matter go until the night before the funeral. Then
he found that he could not hire a carriage in the district.</p>
<p>He called his district committee together in a hurry and explained the
situation to them. He could get all the vehicles he needed in the
adjoining district, he said, but if he did that, Goodwin would rouse the
voters of the Ninth by declaring that he (Sheehan) had patronized foreign
industries.</p>
<p>Finally, it was decided that there was nothing to do but to go over to
Sixth Avenue and Broadway for carriages. Sheehan made a fine turnout at
the funeral, but the deceased was hardly in his grave before Goodwin
raised the cry of "Protection to home industries," and denounced his rival
for patronizing livery-stable keepers outside of his district. The err'
had its effect in the primary campaign. At all events, Goodwin was elected
leader.</p>
<p>A recent contest for the leadership of the Second District illustrated
further the strenuous work of the Tammany district leaders. The
contestants were Patrick Divver, who had managed the district for years,
and Thomas F. Foley.</p>
<p>Both were particularly anxious to secure the large Italian vote. They not
only attended all the Italian christenings and funerals, but also kept a
close lookout for the marriages in order to be on hand with wedding
presents.</p>
<p>At first, each had his own reporter in the Italian quarter to keep track
of the marriages. Later, Foley conceived a better plan. He hired a man to
stay all day at the City Hall marriage bureau, where most Italian couples
go through the civil ceremony, and telephone to him at his saloon when
anything was doing at the bureau.</p>
<p>Foley had a number of presents ready for use and, whenever he received a
telephone message from his man, he hastened to the City Hall with a ring
or a watch or a piece of silver and handed it to the bride with his
congratulations. As a consequence, when Divver got the news and went to
the home of the couple with his present, he always found that Foley had
been ahead of him. Toward the end of the campaign, Divver also stationed a
man at the marriage bureau and then there were daily foot races and fights
between the two heelers.</p>
<p>Sometimes the rivals came into conflict at the death-bed. One night a poor
Italian peddler died in Roosevelt Street. The news reached Divver and
Foley about the same time, and as they knew the family of the man was
destitute, each went to an undertaker and brought him to the Roosevelt
Street tenement.</p>
<p>The rivals and the undertakers met at the house and an altercation ensued.
After much discussion the Divver undertaker was selected. Foley had more
carriages at the funeral, however, and he further impressed the Italian
voters by paying the widow's rent for a month, and sending her half a ton
of coal and a barrel of flour.</p>
<p>The rivals were put on their mettle toward the end of the campaign by the
wedding of a daughter of one of the original Cohens of the Baxter Street
region. The Hebrew vote in the district is nearly as large as the Italian
vote, and Divver and Foley set out to capture the Cohens and their
friends.</p>
<p>They stayed up nights thinking what they would give the bride. Neither
knew how much the other was prepared to spend on a wedding present, or
what form it would take; so spies were employed by both sides to keep
watch on the jewelry stores, and the jewelers of the district were bribed
by each side to impart the desired information.</p>
<p>At last Foley heard that Divver had purchased a set of silver knives,
forks and spoons. He at once bought a duplicate set and added a silver tea
service. When the presents were displayed at the home of the bride, Divver
was not in a pleasant mood and he charged his jeweler with treachery. It
may be added that Foley won at the primaries.</p>
<p>One of the fixed duties of a Tammany district leader is to give two
outings every summer, one for the men of his district and the other for
the women and children, and a beefsteak dinner and a ball every winter.
The scene of the outings is, usually, one of the groves along the Sound.</p>
<p>The ambition of the district leader on these occasions is to demonstrate
that his men have broken all records in the matter of eating and drinking.
He gives out the exact number of pounds of beef, poultry, butter, etc.,
that they have consumed and professes to know how many potatoes and ears
of corn have been served.</p>
<p>According to his figures, the average eating record of each man at the
outing is about ten pounds of beef, two or three chickens, a pound of
butter, a half peck of potatoes, and two dozen ears of corn. The drinking
records, as given out, are still more phenomenal. For some reason, not yet
explained, the district leader thinks that his popularity will be greatly
increased if he can show that his followers can eat and drink more than
the followers of any other district leader.</p>
<p>The same idea governs the beefsteak dinners in the winter. It matters not
what sort of steak is served or how it is cooked; the district leader
considers only the question of quantity, and when he excels all others in
this particular, he feels, somehow, that he is a bigger man and deserves
more patronage than his associates in the Tammany Executive Committee.</p>
<p>As to the balls, they are the events of the winter in the extreme East
Side and West Side society. Mamie and Maggie and Jennie prepare for them
months in advance, and their young men save up for the occasion just as
they save for the summer trips to Coney Island.</p>
<p>The district leader is in his glory at the opening of the ball He leads
the cotillion with the prettiest woman present—his wife, if he has
one, permitting—and spends almost the whole night shaking hands with
his constituents. The ball costs him a pretty penny, but he has found that
the investment pays.</p>
<p>By these means the Tammany district leader reaches out into the homes of
his district, keeps watch not only on the men, but also on the women and
children; knows their needs, their likes and dislikes, their troubles and
their hopes, and places himself in a position to use his knowledge for the
benefit of his organization and himself. Is it any wonder that scandals do
not permanently disable Tammany and that it speedily recovers from what
seems to be crushing defeat?</p>
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