Everything about John Griffin Carlisle totally explained
John Griffin Carlisle (
September 5,
1834 –
July 31,
1910) was a prominent
American politician in the
Democratic Party during the last quarter of the 19th century. He served as the
Speaker of the United States House of Representatives from 1883 to 1889 and as
United States Secretary of the Treasury from 1893 to 1897 during the
Panic of 1893. As a
Bourbon Democrat he was a leader of the conservative, pro-business wing of the party, along with President
Grover Cleveland.
Carlisle was born in what is now
Kenton County, Kentucky, and began his public life as a lawyer in
Covington, Kentucky, under
John W. Stevenson. Despite the political difficulties that taking a neutral position during the
American Civil War caused him, Carlisle spent most of the 1860s in the
Kentucky General Assembly, serving in the
Kentucky House of Representatives and two terms in the
Kentucky State Senate, and was elected
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky in 1871, succeeding his former law mentor Stevenson.
After Carlisle's term as
Lieutenant Governor ended in 1875, he ran for and won a seat in the
United States House of Representatives for
Kentucky's 6th district. On the main issues of the day, Carlisle was in favor of coining silver, but not for free coinage, and favored lower tariffs. He became a leader of the low-tariff wing of the Democratic Party, and was chosen by House Democrats to become
Speaker in 1883 over
Samuel J. Randall, a leader of the party's protectionist wing.
Carlisle became a leader of the conservative
Bourbon Democrats and was mentioned as a presidential candidate but the Democrats passed him over at their conventions for
Winfield S. Hancock in 1880 and
Grover Cleveland in 1884. Discomfort with nominating a southerner after the Civil War played a role in Carlisle's failure to win either nomination. In 1892 Carlisle was again proposed as a candidate for president at the Democratic convention, but this time Carlisle asked that he not be considered. It was reported at the time that Carlisle dropped out with the understanding that Cleveland, once nominated, would appoint him to his Cabinet.
In 1890, Carlisle was appointed to the
United States Senate to fill the unexpired term of
James B. Beck. When Cleveland was again elected to the Presidency in 1892, he chose Carlisle as his
Secretary of the Treasury.
Carlisle's tenure as Secretary was marred by the
Panic of 1893, a financial and economic disaster so severe that it ended Carlisle's political career. In response to a run on the American gold supply, Carlisle felt forced to end silver coinage. He also felt compelled to oppose the 1894
Wilson-Gorman Tariff Act bill. These two stands were widely unpopular among agrarian Democrats. In 1896 Carlisle strenuously opposed 1896 Democratic presidential nominee
William Jennings Bryan, supporting a third
National Democratic Party (United States) ("Gold Democrat") candidate instead.
By 1896 the once remarkably popular Carlisle was so disliked due to his stewardship of the currency that he was forced to leave the stage in the middle of a speech in his home town of Covington due to a barrage of rotten eggs.
He moved to
New York City, where he practiced law until his death.
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