Mike Heath

67%
Flag icon
With Garfield’s death, the cries of indignation reached such a fevered pitch that they could no longer be ignored. Finally, civil service reform would find its most powerful advocate in the most unlikely of men—Chester Arthur. No man in the country owed more to the spoils system—or to its most powerful advocate, Roscoe Conkling—than Arthur. Since Garfield’s death, however, it had become strikingly apparent that Arthur was no longer the man Conkling had made. “He isn’t ‘Chet Arthur’ any more,” one of Conkling’s men mournfully said after he had taken office. “He’s the President.” In his first ...more
Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine and the Murder of a President
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview