Chester Alan Arthur: The President Who Didn't Want to Be President | 5-Minute Videos

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Chester Alan Arthur loved being vice president: parties galore, and no responsibilities. But after the death of James Garfield, Arthur had to face the music. How did he react? Daily Wire Host Michael Knowles tells Arthur’s unique story.

Script:

When a New York Times reporter sought out Vice President Chester Alan Arthur to get a statement following the death of President James Garfield, Arthur’s valet turned the reporter away. “He is sitting alone in his room,” the valet explained, “sobbing like a child.”

To be President of the United States was the last thing Arthur wanted. Vice President, a position with limitless privileges and almost no responsibilities, that was the job for him. And he was having a grand time of it until an assassin’s bullet changed everything.

Garfield did not die immediately. There were days when it looked like he would recover, but then he would fade again. It didn’t help that his doctors used their unwashed hands to try to recover bullet fragments.

When Garfield finally succumbed on September 19, 1881, Arthur had to face the music.

He was now the twenty-first President of the United States.

At least he looked the part. A fastidious dresser (he was known to try on twenty pairs of pants before choosing one), he cut an imposing figure. He was heavy set with a thick mustache and mutton chop sideburns.

Born in Fairfield, Vermont on October 5, 1829, he was the fifth of nine children. His father was a preacher and committed abolitionist whose strong views on this subject forced him to move the family from town to town. Despite never being in one place for long, Arthur made friends easily. A conscientious student, he attended Union College, became president of the debate society, and pursued a law degree.

As a lawyer, Arthur took a lead role in major civil rights cases, including one that led to the desegregation of the New York City streetcar lines.

After the Civil War where he rose to the rank of brigadier general and distinguished himself as a quartermaster—the person responsible for getting supplies to the troops—he abandoned the law for politics. This pulled him into the orbit of notorious political boss New York Senator Roscoe Conkling. Arthur’s loyalty to Conkling paid off when he was awarded the post of Collector at the New York Customs House, a position that paid over $50,000 per year—more money than any federal officeholder, including the President.

Becoming Vice President was, from a financial point of view, a step down. But it was a step up in prestige. He couldn’t resist the temptation. Access to federal patronage—the chance to give cushy government jobs to his political friends—didn’t hurt either.

But suddenly Arthur wasn’t Vice President anymore. He had the top job now.

And the job changed him.

In one of the least expected and most remarkable turnabouts in presidential history, the quintessential machine politician, a man who once bragged about vote buying, became the President who enacted the most sweeping civil service reform in fifty years. Much to the chagrin of his friends, most especially Conkling, he became an apostle of clean government and set the tone for future reforms that occurred after he left office.

The weight of the office had a deep effect on Arthur, but so did a remarkable correspondence he had with a young Manhattan invalid by the name of Julia Sand. For reasons that aren’t entirely clear, she assiduously tracked Arthur’s every move. Even more amazing, Arthur read her letters and took her advice to heart.

“Great emergencies awaken generous traits, which have lain dormant…” she wrote him in one letter. “If there is a spark of true nobility in you, now is the occasion to let it shine…”

And it did.

But civil service reform was only one of Arthur’s achievements. Another was his passion to rebuild the American Navy which had been woefully neglected since the Civil War. If the nation wanted to be a major player on the world stage, it needed a modern Navy. Arthur asked for eleven new, state-of-art steel ships. Congress gave him four. It was a start.

Arthur also worked to protect the rights of Chinese immigrants. And true to his abolitionist upbringing, his policy toward blacks—he appointed a number of them to important government posts—was among the best of the post-Civil War presidents.

One aspect of Arthur’s personality that did not change was his love of entertaining. The White House, which he insisted on redecorating (it was too drab), was party central. The menus were specially prepared by an imported French chef. Wine and spirits flowed freely. Nobody out-drank or out-ate the host.

#presidents #ushistory #potus
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He's probably one of the most forgotten presidents. I knew very little about him but didn't hear many great things. Arthur did much more than i thought he did.

DarthMalevolence
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Take to pray praise God praying for everyone everyday God bless you all

steveguti
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Absolutely brilliant -- and beautiful. Even more heroic, with his altruism and genius. Thank you for honoring this little-appretiated hero. U are tops.

sheikowi
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It is so great to hear these stories of our past presidents if it wasn't for the contributions like this these people would be forgotten by time.

carlmontney
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Arthur is one of my favorite forgotten and underrated presidents. When Garfield died and people woke up to the realization of who was now the president, you could almost hear the collective groaning from one end of the country to the other. But he surprised everyone and rose to the occasion becoming a pretty decent president all things considered.

jecny
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Thank you God for the gift of an eternal life in heaven amen praise God praying for everyone everyday God bless you all

steveguti
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This was informative and interesting, thank you.

SeasideWitcher
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Whoever our next president is, we can only hope is as dedicated and able to turn things (and even himself) around as this guy apparently was.

I never knew anything about him, and wasn't sure where this video was going with this at first(but in a good way!) but am pleasantly surprised at how his story turned out. A very nice tribute to someone who has sadly been overlooked

earlofwickshire
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That’s Michael Knowles, the host of “The Michael Knowles Show” on “The Daily Wire”!

JesusIsKing
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I only know he's the 21st president because of that dump truck driver guy in Die Hard With a Vengeance lol

Ass_Burgers_Syndrome
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Thanks for your permission to watch the video on Jan 31, 11:00 pacific time. I would like to watch it now!

luederst
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When I was a child, we moved many times. For a little more than a year, we lived in a beautiful neighborhood where 2 little girls lived in a house said to be haunted because it was where the man who shot Lincoln lived. We children had the wrong president. It was Garfield. Last I was there, the house still stood but was abandoned. You can find a picture of the house on the web. Yes, I have played on that porch.

Torby
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"You're next Chester A. Arthur!" -John Wilkes Booth, as portrayed by Bart Simpson

Thoralmir
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Never heard of him. And I thought I knew my presidents.

cannonball
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Stalwarts and Moderates are what the GOP of his day.

revinhatol
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Jesus Christ died for our Sins according to the scriptures and that he Was Buried and that he Rose again the third day praise God praying for everyone everyday God bless you

steveguti
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Didn’t he want to be a Supreme Court justice instead?

BigBroTejano
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Chester Arthur did not look like that title card

watching
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Reforming government and rebuilding our military.
That sounds a lot like a recent politician.

TickedOffPriest
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I can't find the Grover Cleveland episode from Prager U?

benandring