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Showing posts with the label Democrat Party

The Brothers Duffield

Detroit Free Press , September 16, 1876 Apparently there was a split political ticket in the house of Duffield in old Nankin town. WIlliam W., a staunch Democrat and Samuel Tilden supporter, was known as the Colonel and his brother, a Republican, apparently wasn't worthy of a name beyond Duffield despite his rank of lieutenant. As for the Presidential Election in 1876: Tilden had seemingly locked up the election needing only 1 electoral college delegate in the contested final four state outcomes but a special Congressional committee solved the issue with Rutherford B. Hayes winning by a single delegate despite losing the popular vote.

Mr. Buel's Appointments

Detroit Free Press , October 21, 1848 Following the lead of this brief advertisement for Mr. Buel's Appointments turns up some interesting information. Of course, the impetus for the search was Schwarzburg, which was a stop on Alex W. Buel's speaking tour in support of his Democratic nomination for Congress, which he eventually won, as all Democrats running seemingly did in the 1848 election, save for General Cass in his Presidential bid. The speech was October 28th at 7PM. Other stops included Dearborn, Redford, Northville, Plymouth and Wayne. Detroit Free Press , June 13, 1848 Gen. John E. Schwarz's connection with Buel, apparently both Germans and Democrats, extends beyond his stop. In a June 13th Ratification Meeting of Germans at Hickory Hall both Schwarz and Buel spoke to the gathering. Seeing as both were prominent political players it's likely their connections go beyond 1848 but I'll leave that to another time. Detroit Free Press , November 15, 1848

Support the New Deal

Since I think Donald Trump is a liberal you probably don't want my views on the New Deal. Or as the poet E. E. Cummings called it the "Nude eel". Which is saying a lot since Cummings was a communist during WWI. In 1931 he traveled to the Soviet Union and witnessed firsthand the horrors of the Soviet State. His contempt for FDR and his socialist policies were shared by many poets and writers of that era and they excoriated the President, oft openly referring to him as a cripple. Livonia Township Democrats were obviously on board with the New Deal since it was their party platform and they likely won in a landslide as the Democrats held large majorities in Congress. The flyer likely dates to the 1930s when the New Deal was implemented.

A Gathering of the Hard-Fisted at Schwarzburg

Detroit Free Press , August 31, 1848 It appears that Schwarzburg, founded in 1825 by John E. Schwarz, was west of Perrinsville on the south branch of the Rouge in Nankin on the Livonia Township side. Which means almost nothing unless you're a cartographer. That would likely be in the Hines Dr. and Farmington Road area heading towards Wayne Road or thereabouts. Basically the Rouge River border area between Westland and Livonia more or less. No description really lays out the area save for a saw mill, a dam, a tavern and a schoolhouse. Not too many years later the town of Perrinville subsumed the population of Schwarzburg and made it obsolete. As for this article, it concerns a meeting for the repair of the mill-dam in Schwarzburg at which a vote was taken, presumably a straw poll for the Presidential Election, and Whig Party Zachary Taylor received 16 votes to Michigan's own Democratic Senator Lewis Cass. Taylor went on to win and died in office less than two years later.

Whiggery in Rawsonville, 1848

Detroit Free Press , September 15, 1848 I'm not sure why of all the stories that I've come across recently the one about Rawsonville and a Whig party meeting there in 1848 would draw me in but such is the case. Namely because the town is no more and likewise the political party. Furthermore, a Democrat derisively wrote the piece and within it he mocked the two young men from Ypsilanti who made the trek with an old wagon to the meeting on September 2, 1848. Being that these two young speakers, one a son of Dr. P of Ypsilanti and the other a son of Mr. P., were approximately 18 years of age--one had never voted and the other couldn't--the organizer of said meeting called it off and rescheduled for a few days later. On that day only 8 Whigs, including the aforementioned 3, and 18 Democrats showed up. The two young men spoke and at the end the Democrat felt sympathy for the supposed pitiful display of Whiggery.  Two months later Zachary Taylor became the second and final Whig...