We
admire the fellow who gets to the top
And then doesn’t curs o’er his climb;
The
fellow who spurns to do a few turns
Is the fellow we like every time.
But
the man who’s defeated, and then keeps mum,
Who smiles, but has nothing to say,
Ah!
He is the host we admire the most,
So here’s to mute “W.J.”
c. Aug. 8, 1910
William
Jennings Bryan,
known as the "Boy Orator of the Platte" and the "Great
Commoner," was a political leader with uncommon oratorical abilities and
an affinity for the religious and rural classes. Born on March 19, 1860, in
Salem, Illinois, Bryan idolized Abraham Lincoln, who had been born nearby. In
Lincoln, Bryan saw a public servant with a strong dedication to the common
people and a strong faith in Christian morality. Bryan adopted both.
Bryan attended Illinois College, where he met
his wife, Mary Baird, and graduated from Chicago's Union College of Law in
1883. In 1887 he relocated to Lincoln, Nebraska, which would be his home until
1921. He established a law office with his friend Adolphus R. Talbot and
practiced until 1895, while establishing himself politically among Nebraska's
Democratic leadership. Less business-oriented than other Nebraska Democrats,
such as J. Sterling Morton, Bryan was chosen to run in the 1890 congressional
elections to appeal to the increasingly political Farmers Alliance, which would
evolve into the Populist, or People's, Party. Although traditionally a
Republican state, Nebraska elected Bryan to his first political office. He
served in the House of Representatives from 1891 to 1895. From 1894 to 1896 he
also edited the Democratic Omaha World- Herald.
In 1896 Bryan addressed the Democratic National
Convention in Chicago, giving his famous "Cross of Gold" speech, a
stirring distillation of the complaints of agrarian and urban people who felt
defeated by America's rapid industrialization and entry into world markets. The
electrifying speech won Bryan the presidential nomination at age thirty-six.
Shortly thereafter, the Populist Party also nominated Bryan but attempted to
maintain its independence by nominating a different vice presidential
candidate. During his campaign Bryan virtually ignored the Populist Party,
although he did champion its ideas, chief among them the remonetization of
silver. In part due to fears of political and economic disruption, William
McKinley won the election, but Bryan would now be the perennial Democratic
presidential candidate.
In 1898 Bryan organized a regiment to fight in
the Spanish-American War, but he remained in Florida while the unit went on.
Bryan won the Democratic nomination for the presidency again in 1900; his
campaign attacked America's imperial role following the Spanish-American and
Philippine-American wars. American voters rejected Bryan's antiimperialism and
reelected McKinley by an even larger margin than in 1896. In 1901 Bryan
established The Commoner, which advanced his liberal political views and
conservative religious beliefs.
Bryan received the Democratic presidential
nomination a third time in 1908 but lost to Teddy Roosevelt's chosen successor,
William Howard Taft. From 1913 to 1915 Bryan served as the secretary of state
under President Woodrow Wilson. He resigned in 1915 because he believed that,
despite Wilson's professed neutrality toward the belligerent powers in World
War I, his pro-British actions would lead America into war. Although Bryan
never won the presidency, his influence was immense. He traveled throughout the
country and the world speaking to great crowds on various social and political
issues, including prohibition and women's suffrage (both of which he
supported).
Bryan lived in Lincoln until 1921, when he
moved to Florida. In the last decade of his life his religious conservatism
overshadowed his liberal political beliefs. His final public appearance was in
Dayton, Tennessee, as prosecuting lawyer in the trial of John Scopes, who had
been charged with violating a Tennessee law prohibiting the teaching of the
theory of evolution in the public schools. The opposing counsel, Clarence
Darrow, criticized Bryan's literal interpretation of the Bible, upon which the
Tennessee law relied, and placed Bryan on the stand, forcing him to admit to several
biblical contradictions. The state won the case, but Bryan's own often
self-contradictory testimony highlighted the growing gap between religious
fundamentalism and secularism in the United States.
William Jennings Bryan died on July 26, 1925,
in Dayton, Tennessee, just days after the Scopes trial. When Bryan championed
the cause of the poor rural and urban classes in 1896, he was seen as a radical
voice calling for deep societal change, but by 1925 his was a conservative
voice. By the close of his life he had come to symbolize American divisions
regarding religion. Some found in him a perfect champion of religious
conservatism, while others, such as H. L. Mencken, found him to represent
intolerant religious extremism. Always controversial, Bryan's career saw his
transformation from a crusader for the rights of the common people against
organized wealth to an anti-imperialist and, finally, to a proponent of
biblical creationism.

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