Thurlow Weed.
Who indeed has not heard of Thurlow Weed, "The king maker," born at Cairo,
Greene County, New York, November 15, 1797. His father was a teamster and
farmer. The reader can get some insight into the seemingly mysterious power he
held for so many years, when it was known that so great was his thirst for
knowledge that he was glad to wrap bits of a rag carpet about his feet and thus
shod walk through the snow two miles to borrow a history of the French
Revolution, which he mastered at night, stretched before 'the sap bush
fire.'
The more one investigates the character and lives of those men whom we so
often envy, the more we are forced to see that it was will-power rightly
directed that overcame all obstacles. Certain it is to this that Thurlow Weed
owes his everlasting fame as the 'American Warwick'; for knowledge is power. He
first left the farm work as a cabin boy on a Hudson river steamboat bound for
New York, but being born a journalist he soon drifted into a printing office
where he became a good journeyman.
When the second war with Great Britain broke out he enlisted, and served on
the Northern frontier, where by faithfulness he became Quartermaster Sergeant.
When the war was over he returned to the printing office, being at one time in
the same establishment with the late James Harper. Finally he started a paper at
Oxford, New York, in 1818. He afterward became con[69]nected with the Onondaga Times, which he
finally changed to the Republican. For the next few years he is connected
with several different papers until we find him in Rochester at the head of the
Anti-Masonic Enquirer.
About this time the body of a man who had drowned in Lake Ontario was found,
and it was claimed that his name was Morgan; if so, he was a renegade mason. A
question of identity was raised, but as his murder was boldly asserted to have
been the work of Masonry, it caused a great excitement for the time being. This
excitement divided the political parties into Mason and Anti-Mason factions.
Anti-Masonry was the political fertilizer which produced the astonishing growth
of the assiduous Weed, he being sent to the Assembly twice, mainly on that
issue. While at Albany his ability as a party leader becoming so apparent he
was decided upon as the proper person to assume the party leadership against the
obnoxious 'Albany Regency,' the great Democratic power in New York State at the
time. He accordingly moved to Albany and assumed the editorship of the Albany
Evening Journal. Weed was one of the men who consolidated the Anti-Jackson,
Anti-Mason and old Federal factions into the Whig party. The 'Regency' with
which he had to deal consisted of such men as Martin Van Buren, Silas Wright,
Willian L. Marcy and others of equal ability. Such were the men with whom he was
pitted, but they soon found him in every way worthy of their steel. No one,
when speaking of this great political warrior ever thought or spoke of him as a
millionaire. Seemingly no one cared how much he was worth; but what did worry
them was,—what will be the outcome of this secret conclave which we now[70] suspect to be in
progress at the headquarters of the opposition of the 'Albany Regency.'
He went to battle fearlessly, and his terse pen dealt stinging blows straight
in the face of the opponent. Indeed, as an editor he has been rarely equaled.
While Greeley would devote a column to an article, he would take the same
subject and in a few words put the argument in such shape as to carry far more
conviction. His two terms in the State Assembly wound up his career as a
legislator, although he could have had any place within the gift of his party
from 1830 to 1860. His ambition was not to hold office but to rule men, and it
is well-known that his desires were accomplished. He was a great dictator, being
largely instrumental as an independent advisor in the selection of Harrison,
Taylor and Scott. His first trial of personal strength in this line was when he
secured the nomination and election of his personal friend, William H. Seward,
as the first Whig Governor of New York. Mr. Seward, who was an unobtrusive man,
was one time riding with the driver on a stage when that dignitary asked the
stranger his name and business, as was customary when people did not volunteer
the information. The answer was, "Why, I'm William H. Seward, Governor of the
State." This was too good for the driver, whose answer was a loud laugh, plainly
implying that he considered that the gentleman had given a most cute but evasive
answer. "Don't you believe me?" asked Seward. "Of course not," replied the
driver. Mr. Seward, who was acquainted with the proprietor of the next hotel
they came to, agreed to leave it to him. In time they arrived and the driver,
calling out the landlord, immediately said, "This man says he is Governor of New
York State[71]
and we have left the matter to you." "Yes," broke in Seward, "am I not Governor
of this State?" The answer came quick and sharp; "No, but Thurlow Weed is."
"There," exclaimed the ignorant driver, who could not see the point at once; "I
knew you weren't Governor of New York State."
In 1864 Mr. Weed sold the Journal, but never entirely suspended
literary work. He afterward assumed the editorship of the New York
Commercial Advertiser, and often sent letters to the Tribune. In
1882, shortly before his death, the country was set in a flutter by his
publishing the whole details relating to the Morgan matter, which he had kept
all this time claiming it would injure certain parties, but as the last had
died, it was now made public. On November 23rd of the same year one more great
journalist passed away. He left a large estate, but a larger host of
friends.