William M. Tweed: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|American politician (1823–1878)}} |
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[[Image:Boss_tweed.jpg|thumb|1869 Tobacco label featuring Boss Tweed.]] |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2020}} |
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'''William Marcy Tweed''' ([[April 3]], [[1823]] – [[April 12]], [[1878]]), commonly known as '''"Boss" Tweed''', was an American politician and head of [[Tammany Hall]], the name given to the [[History of the United States Democratic Party|Democratic Party]] [[political machine]] that played a major role in [[History of New York City|New York City]] politics from the 1790s to the 1860s. He was convicted and eventually imprisoned for stealing millions of dollars from the city through [[Political corruption#Graft|graft]]. |
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{{Infobox officeholder |
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| name = William M. Tweed<!--middle name is not "Marcy"--> |
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| image = William M. (Boss) Tweed, N.Y - NARA - 526217 (cropped).jpg |
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| caption = Tweed in 1870 |
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| state_senate = New York |
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| district = 4th |
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| term_start = January 1, 1868 |
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| term_end = December 31, 1873 |
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| preceded = [[George Briggs (New York politician)|George Briggs]] |
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| succeeded = [[John Fox (congressman)|John Fox]] |
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| office1 = [[Grand Sachem]] of [[Tammany Hall]] |
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| term_start1 = 1858 |
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| term_end1 = 1871 |
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| predecessor1 = [[Fernando Wood]] |
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| successor1 = [[John Kelly (New York politician)|John Kelly]] and [[John Morrissey]] |
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| state2 = [[New York (state)|New York]] |
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| district2 = [[New York's 5th congressional district|5th]] |
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| term_start2 = March 4, 1853 |
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| term_end2 = March 3, 1855 |
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| preceded2 = [[George Briggs (1805–1869)|George Briggs]] |
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| succeeded2 = [[Thomas R. Whitney]] |
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| birth_name = William Magear Tweed |
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| birth_date = {{Birth date|1823|4|3}} |
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| birth_place = [[New York City]], U.S. |
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| death_date = {{Death date and age|1878|4|12|1823|4|3}} |
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| death_place = New York City, U.S. |
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| party = [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] |
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| spouse = {{marriage|Jane Skaden|1844}} |
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| profession = [[Bookkeeper]], businessman, [[political boss]] |
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}} |
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'''William Magear<!--*NOT* "MARCY"--> "Boss" Tweed'''{{efn|group=note|Often erroneously referred to as '''William Marcy Tweed''' (see {{slink|#Middle name}})<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/610865/William-Magear-Tweed|title=William Magear Tweed (American politician) – Britannica Online Encyclopedia|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|access-date=November 17, 2009}}</ref>}} (April 3, 1823 – April 12, 1878) was an American politician most notable for being the [[political boss]] of [[Tammany Hall]], the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]]'s [[political machine]] that played a major role in the politics of [[History of New York City (1855–1897)|19th-century New York City]] and [[New York (state)|State]]. |
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==Political Career== |
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Tweed himself was elected to the [[United States House of Representatives]] in [[1852]], the New York City Board of Advisors in [[1856]], and the New York State Senate in [[1867]]. |
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At the height of his influence, Tweed was the third-largest landowner in New York City, a director of the [[Erie Railroad]], a director of the [[Tenth National Bank]], a director of the New-York Printing Company, the proprietor of the [[Metropolitan Hotel (New York City)|Metropolitan Hotel]],<ref>Ackerman, p. 2.</ref> a significant stockholder in iron mines and gas companies, a board member of the [[Harlem Gas Light Company]], a board member of the [[Third Avenue Railway Company]], a board member of the [[Brooklyn Bridge Company]], and the president of the Guardian Savings Bank.<ref>Allen, p. 116.</ref> |
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Financiers [[Jay Gould]] and [[Big Jim Fisk]] made Boss Tweed a director of the [[Erie Railroad]], and Tweed in turn arranged favorable legislation for them. Tweed and Gould became the subjects of political cartoons by [[Thomas Nast]] in 1869. |
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Tweed was elected to the [[United States House of Representatives]] in 1852 and the [[New York County]] Board of Supervisors in 1858, the year that he became the head of the Tammany Hall political machine. He was also elected to the [[New York State Senate]] in 1867. However, Tweed's greatest influence came from being an appointed member of a number of boards and commissions, his control over political [[patronage]] in New York City through Tammany, and his ability to ensure the loyalty of voters through jobs he could create and dispense on city-related projects. |
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In April [[1870]] Tweed secured the passage of a city charter putting the control of the city into the hands of the mayor ([[A. Oakey Hall]]), the [[comptroller]], and the commissioners of parks and public works. He then set about to plunder the city. The total amount of money stolen was never known, but has been estimated from $25 million to $200 million. Over a period of two years and eight months, New York City's debts increased from $36 million in 1868 to more than $130 million by 1870, with little to show for the debt. |
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Boss Tweed was convicted for stealing an amount estimated by an aldermen's committee in 1877 at between $25 million and $45 million from New York City taxpayers from political corruption, but later estimates ranged as high as $200 million (equivalent to ${{Inflation|US-GDP|0.2|1877|r=0}} billion in {{Inflation/year|US}}).<ref>{{cite news |last1=Robinson |first1=Gail |title=Looking Back at 100 |url=https://www.gothamgazette.com/article//20050704/202/1467 |work=Gotham Gazette |date=4 July 2005 }}</ref> Unable to make bail, he escaped from jail once but was returned to custody. He died in the [[Ludlow Street Jail]]. |
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[[Image:Boss_Tweed,_Nast.jpg|thumb|left|''Boss Tweed,'' by Thomas Nast.]] |
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==Early life and education== |
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Tweed defrauded the city by having contractors present excessive bills for work performed- typically ranging from 15 to 65 percent more than the project actually cost. This extra money was divided among Tweed and his subordinates. The most excessive overcharging came in the form of the famous Tweed Courthouse, which cost the city over $11 million to construct, most of it going to line the pockets of Tweed and his gang. The city was also billed $3,000,000 for city printing and stationery over a two-year period. |
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Tweed was born April 3, 1823, at 1 Cherry Street,<ref name=encnyc>Share, Allen J. "Tweed, William M(agear) 'Boss'" in {{cite enc-nyc}}, pp. 1205–1206.</ref> on the [[Lower East Side]] of [[Manhattan]]. The son of a third-generation Scottish chair-maker, Tweed grew up on [[Cherry Street (Manhattan)|Cherry Street]]. His grandfather arrived in the United States from a town near the [[River Tweed]] close to [[Edinburgh]].<ref name="allen">{{cite book|last=Allen|first=Oliver E.|title=The Tiger: The Rise and Fall of Tammany Hall|date=1993|publisher=Addison-Wesley Publishing Company|pages=[https://archive.org/details/tigerrisefalloft00alle/page/80 80–100]|isbn=0-201-62463-X|url=https://archive.org/details/tigerrisefalloft00alle/page/80}}</ref> Tweed's religious affiliation was not widely known in his lifetime, but at the time of his funeral ''The New York Times'', quoting a family friend, reported that his parents had been [[Quakers]] and "members of the old Rose Street Meeting house".<ref>{{cite news |title=The Death of William M. Tweed.; Crowds Of People Around Mr. Douglass' House No One Admitted Except Relatives Tweed's Religious Faith Politicians Who Feel Relieved A Letter Written By John D. Townsend A Month Ago Asking For Tweed's Release |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1878/04/14/archives/the-death-of-william-m-tweed-crowds-of-people-around-mr-douglass.html |work=The New York Times |date=14 April 1878 }}</ref> At the age of 11, he left school to learn his father's trade, and then became an apprentice to a saddler.<ref name=encnyc /> He also studied to be a [[bookkeeping|bookkeeper]] and worked as a brushmaker for a company he had invested in, before eventually joining in the family business in 1852.<ref name=encnyc /> On September 29, 1844, he married Mary Jane C. Skaden and lived with her family on Madison Street for two years.<ref>{{cite book |last=Maher |first=James |url=https://archive.org/details/indextomarriages00mahe |title=Index to Marriages and Deaths in the New York Herald: 1835–1855 |year= 1987 |publisher=Genealogical Publishing Com |isbn=0-8063-1184-3 |page=[https://archive.org/details/indextomarriages00mahe/page/123 123] |quote=Tweed. |url-access=registration}}</ref> |
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==Early career== |
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While he was known primarily for the vast corrupt empire, Tweed was also responsible for building hospitals and orphanages, widening Broadway along the Upper West Side, and securing the land for the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]. |
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[[File:Americus Engine Co No 6 Soiree crop.jpg|thumb|Ticket to an 1859 "soiree" to benefit Tweed's Americus Engine Co.]] |
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Tweed became a member of the [[Odd Fellows]] and the [[Freemasonry|Masons]],<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lynch |first1=Denis Tilden |title='Boss' Tweed: The Story of a Grim Generation |date=2002 |publisher=Transaction Publishers |isbn=978-1-4128-1600-7 |page=418 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ipAxruFk54AC&pg=PA418 }}</ref> and joined a volunteer fire company, Engine No. 12.<ref name=encnyc /> In 1848, at the invitation of state assemblyman John J. Reilly, he and some friends organized the Americus Fire Company No. 6, also known as the "Big Six", as a [[volunteer fireman|volunteer fire company]], which took as its symbol a snarling red [[Bengal tiger]] from a French lithograph,<ref name="allen"/> a symbol which remained associated with Tweed and [[Tammany Hall]] for many years.<ref name= encnyc /> At the time, volunteer fire companies competed vigorously with each other; some were connected with street gangs and had strong ethnic ties to various immigrant communities. The competition could become so fierce, that burning buildings would sometimes be ignored as the fire companies fought each other.<ref>Burrows & Wallace, pp. 654, 724, 823.</ref> Tweed became known for his ax-wielding violence, and was soon elected the Big Six foreman. Pressure from Alfred Carlson, the chief engineer, got him thrown out of the crew. However, fire companies were also recruiting grounds for political parties at the time, thus Tweed's exploits came to the attention of the Democratic politicians who ran the Seventh Ward. The Seventh Ward put him up for Alderman in 1850, when Tweed was 26. He lost that election to the [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] candidate [[Morgan Morgans]], but ran again the next year and won, garnering his first political position.<ref>Burrows & Wallace, p. 823.</ref> Tweed then became associated with the [[Tammany Hall#Political gangs and the Forty Thieves|"Forty Thieves"]], the group of aldermen and assistant aldermen who, up to that point, were known as some of the most corrupt politicians in the city's history.<ref name="allen"/> |
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Tweed was elected to the [[United States House of Representatives]] in 1852, but his two-year term was undistinguished.<ref name=gotham837>Burrows & Wallace, p. 837.</ref> In an attempt by Republican reformers in [[Albany, New York|Albany]], the state capital, to control the Democratic-dominated New York City government, the power of the New York County Board of Supervisors was beefed up. The board had 12 members, six appointed by the mayor and six elected, and in 1858 Tweed was appointed to the board, which became his first vehicle for large-scale [[Graft (politics)|graft]]; Tweed and other supervisors forced vendors to pay a 15% overcharge to their "ring" in order to do business with the city.<ref name=gotham837 /> By 1853, Tweed was running the seventh ward for Tammany.<ref name=encnyc /> The board also had six Democrats and six Republicans, but Tweed often just bought off one Republican to sway the board. One such Republican board member was Peter P. Voorhis, a coal dealer by profession who absented himself from a board meeting in exchange for $2,500 so that the board could appoint city inspectors. [[Henry Smith (speaker)|Henry Smith]] was another Republican that was a part of the Tweed ring.<ref name="allen"/> |
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==Tweed's arrest and subsequent flight== |
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[[File:Nast-Prey-Harper's-Weekly-1871.jpg|thumb|''A Group of Vultures Waiting for the Storm to "Blow Over"—"Let Us Prey."'' by [[Thomas Nast]], ''[[Harper's Weekly]]'' newspaper, September 23, 1871. "Boss" Tweed and members of his ring, [[Peter B. Sweeny]], [[Richard B. Connolly]], and [[A. Oakey Hall]], weathering a violent storm on a ledge with the picked-over remains of New York City.]] |
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The end came when one of the plunderers, dissatisfied with the amount he received, gave ''[[The New York Times]]'' evidence that conclusively proved that stealing was going on. In a subsequent interview about the fraud, Tweed's only reply was, "What are you going to do about it?" However, accounts in ''The New York Times'' and political cartoons drawn by [[Thomas Nast]] and published in ''[[Harper's Weekly]]'' resulted in the election of numerous opposition candidates in [[1871]]. Tweed is attributed with exclaiming, "Stop them damned pictures. I don't care so much what the papers say about me. My constituents can't read, but, damn it, they can see pictures!" |
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Although he was not trained as a lawyer, Tweed's friend, Judge [[George G. Barnard]], certified him as an attorney, and Tweed opened a law office on Duane Street. He ran for [[New York City Sheriff's Office|sheriff]] in 1861 and was defeated, but became the chairman of the Democratic General Committee shortly after the election, and was then chosen to be the head of Tammany's general committee in January 1863. Several months later, in April, he became "Grand Sachem", and began to be referred to as "Boss", especially after he tightened his hold on power by creating a small executive committee to run the club.<ref name=encnyc /> Tweed then took steps to increase his income: he used his law firm to extort money, which was then disguised as legal services; he had himself appointed deputy street commissioner – a position with considerable access to city contractors and funding; he bought the New-York Printing Company, which became the city's official printer, and the city's stationery supplier, the Manufacturing Stationers' Company, and had both companies begin to overcharge the city government for their goods and services.<ref name=encnyc /><ref>{{cite book|title=The Tweed Ring|last=Callow|first=Alexander|publisher=Greenwood Press|year=1981|isbn=978-0-313-22761-5|location=Westport, Conn|oclc=7576014}}</ref>{{Rp|17–32}} Among other legal services he provided, he accepted almost $100,000 from the Erie Railroad in return for favors. He also became one of the largest owners of real estate in the city.<ref name="allen"/> He also started to form what became known as the "Tweed Ring", by having his friends elected to office: George G. Barnard was elected [[Recorder of New York City]]; [[Peter B. Sweeny]] was elected [[New York County District Attorney]]; and [[Richard B. Connolly]] was elected City Comptroller.<ref name=gotham837 /> Other judicial members of the Tweed ring included [[Albert Cardozo]], [[John McCunn]], and [[John K. Hackett]].<ref name="allen"/> |
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[[Image:Tweed-Boss-LOC.jpg|thumb|Formal portrait of Tweed.]] |
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When Grand Sachem [[Isaac Vanderbeck Fowler|Isaac Fowler]], who had produced the $2,500 to buy off the Republican Voorhis on the Board of Supervisors, was found to have stolen $150,000 in post office receipts, the responsibility for Fowler's arrest was given to [[Isaiah Rynders]], another Tammany operative who was serving as a United States marshal at the time. Rynders made enough ruckus upon entering the hotel where Fowler was staying that Fowler was able to escape to Mexico.<ref name="allen"/> |
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In October 1871, when Tweed was held on $1,000,000 bail, [[Jay Gould]] was the chief bondsman. The efforts of political reformers [[William H. Wickham]] (1875 New York City mayor) and [[Samuel J. Tilden]] (later the 1876 Democratic presidential nominee) resulted in Tweed's trial and conviction in [[1873]]. He was given a 12-year prison sentence, which was reduced by a higher court and he served one year. He was then re-arrested on civil charges, sued by New York State for $6,000,000, and held in [[debtor's prison]] until he could post $3,000,000 as bail. On [[December 4]], [[1875]], Tweed escaped and fled to [[Cuba]]. |
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[[File:Nast-Boss-Tweed-1871.jpg|thumb|[[Thomas Nast]] depicts Tweed in ''[[Harper's Weekly]]'' (October 21, 1871)]] |
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With his new position and wealth came a change in style: Tweed began to favor wearing a large diamond in his shirtfront – a habit that [[Thomas Nast]] used to great effect in his attacks on Tweed in ''[[Harper's Weekly]]'' beginning in 1869 – and he bought a [[brownstone]] to live in at 41 West 36th Street, then a very fashionable area. He invested his now considerable illegal income in real estate, so that by the late 1860s he ranked among the biggest landowners in New York City.<ref name=encnyc /> |
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His presence in Cuba was discovered by the U.S. Government and he was held by the Cuban government. Before the U.S. Government could arrange for his extradition, Tweed bribed his way onto a ship headed to [[Spain]]. Before he arrived in Spain, the U.S. Government discovered his eventual destination and made arrangements for his arrest as soon as he reached the Spanish coast. The Spanish government identified him, purportedly recognizing Tweed from one of Nast's cartoons, and extradited him to New York; he was delivered to authorities in [[New York City]] on [[November 23]], [[1876]], where he died in the [[Ludlow Street Jail]], just a few blocks from his childhood home, two years later on April 12, 1878, at the age of 55. |
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Tweed became involved in the operation of the [[New York Mutuals]], an early [[professional baseball]] club, in the 1860s. He brought in thousands of dollars per home game by dramatically increasing the cost of admission and [[Sports betting|gambling]] on the team.<ref name="purdy">{{cite book |last1=Purdy |first1=Dennis |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UcQ0P-6P7q4C&pg=PA215 |title=Kiss 'Em Goodbye: An ESPN Treasury of Failed, Forgotten, and Departed Teams |year=2010 |publisher=[[Random House Publishing Group]] |isbn=978-0-345-52047-0 |page=215 |language=en |access-date=5 July 2022}}</ref> He has been credited with originating the practice of [[spring training]] in 1869 by sending the club south to [[New Orleans]] to prepare for the season.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Seymour |first1=Harold |last2=Mills |first2=Dorothy Seymour |title=Baseball: The Early Years |year= 1989 |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |isbn=978-0-19-983917-9 |page=183 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K0AzIUSqzd8C&pg=PA183 |access-date=5 July 2022 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Fountain |first1=Charles |title=Under the March Sun: The Story of Spring Training |year= 2009 |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |isbn=978-0-19-974370-4 |page=11 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uaAMQY5-4nMC&pg=PA11 |access-date=5 July 2022 |language=en}}</ref> |
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He was buried in [[Brooklyn]]'s [[Green-Wood Cemetery]]. |
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Tweed was a member of the [[New York State Senate]] (4th D.) from 1868 to 1873, sitting in the [[91st New York State Legislature|91st]], [[92nd New York State Legislature|92nd]], [[93rd New York State Legislature|93rd]], and [[94th New York State Legislature]]s, but not taking his seat in the [[95th New York State Legislature|95th]] and [[96th New York State Legislature]]s. While serving in the State Senate, he split his time between Albany, New York and New York City. While in Albany, he stayed in a suite of seven rooms in Delevan House. Accompanying him in his rooms were his favorite canaries. Guests are presumed to have included members of the [[Black Horse Cavalry]], thirty state legislators whose votes were up for sale.<ref>Allen, p. 100.</ref> In the Senate he helped financiers [[Jay Gould]] and [[Big Jim Fisk]] to take control of the [[Erie Railroad]] from [[Cornelius Vanderbilt]] by arranging for legislation that legitimized fake Erie stock certificates that Gould and Fisk had issued. In return, Tweed received a large block of stock and was made a director of the company.<ref name="encnyc" /> |
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==Succession== |
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{{start box}} |
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{{succession box|title=[[United States House of Representatives]] from [[New York]], 5th District|before=--|after=--|years=1853-1855}} |
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{{succession box|title=[[New York State Senate]], 4th District|before=--|after=--|years=1868-1873}} |
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{{succession box|title=Grand Sachem of [[Tammany Hall]], with [[Isaac V. Fowler]]|before=[[Fernando Wood]]|after=Himself, with [[Richard B. Connolly]]|years=1858-1859}} |
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{{succession box|title=Grand Sachem of [[Tammany Hall]], with [[Richard B. Connolly]]|before=Himself, with [[Isaac V. Fowler]]|after=Himself, alone|years=1859-1867}} |
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{{succession box|title=Grand Sachem of [[Tammany Hall]]|before=Himself, with [[Richard B. Connolly]]|after=[[John Kelly]] and [[John Morrisey]]|years=1867-1871}} |
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{{end box}} |
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== |
==Corruption== |
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[[File:Portrait of William M. Tweed, standing.jpg|thumb|upright|Tweed c. 1869]] |
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After the election of 1869, Tweed took control of the New York City government. His protégé, [[John T. Hoffman]], the former mayor of the city, won election as governor, and Tweed garnered the support of good-government reformers like [[Peter Cooper]] and the [[Union League Club]], by proposing a new city charter which returned power to City Hall at the expense of the Republican-inspired state commissions. The new charter passed, thanks in part to $600,000 in bribes Tweed paid to Republicans, and was signed into law by Hoffman in 1870. Mandated new elections allowed Tammany to take over the city's Common Council when they won all fifteen aldermanic contests.<ref name=gotham927>Burrows & Wallace, pp. 927–928.</ref><ref name=History.com/> |
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The new charter put control of the city's finances in the hands of a Board of Audit, which consisted of Tweed, who was Commissioner of Public Works, Mayor [[A. Oakey Hall]] and Comptroller [[Richard B. Connolly|Richard "Slippery Dick" Connolly]], both Tammany men. Hall also appointed other Tweed associates to high offices – such as [[Peter B. Sweeny]], who took over the Department of Public Parks<ref name=gotham927 /> – providing what became known as the Tweed Ring with even firmer control of the New York City government<ref>Paine, p. 140.</ref> and enabling them to defraud the taxpayers of many more millions of dollars. In the words of [[Albert Bigelow Paine]], "their methods were curiously simple and primitive. There were no skilful manipulations of figures, making detection difficult ... Connolly, as Controller, had charge of the books, and declined to show them. With his fellows, he also 'controlled' the courts and most of the bar."<ref>Paine, p. 143.</ref> Crucially, the new city charter allowed the Board of Audit to issue bonds for debt in order to finance opportunistic capital expenditures the city otherwise could not afford. This ability to float debt was enabled by Tweed's guidance and passage of the Adjusted Claims Act in 1868.<ref>Allen, pp. 111–112.</ref> Contractors working for the city – "Ring favorites, most of them – were told to multiply the amount of each bill by five, or ten, or a hundred, after which, with Mayor Hall's 'O. K.' and Connolly's endorsement, it was paid ... through a go-between, who cashed the check, settled the original bill and divided the remainder ... between Tweed, Sweeny, Connolly and Hall".<ref>Paine, p. 144.</ref> |
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Boss Tweed was portrayed by [[Jim Broadbent]] in the [[2002]] film ''[[Gangs of New York]]''. |
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For example, the construction cost of the [[Tweed Courthouse|New York County Courthouse]], begun in 1861, grew to nearly $13 million—about ${{Format price|{{Inflation|US-GDP|13000000|1861|r=-7}}}} in {{Inflation/year|US-GDP}} dollars, and nearly twice the cost of the [[Alaska Purchase]] in 1867.<ref name=History.com/><ref name="digitalhistory">{{cite web|first=Steven|last=Mintz|url=http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?HHID=211|title=Digital History|publisher=Digitalhistory.uh.edu|access-date=July 19, 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091008235848/http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?HHID=211|archive-date=October 8, 2009}}</ref> |
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It is a common misconception that Boss Tweed's middle name was Marcy. While his middle initial was in fact M, it more likely stood for his mother's maiden name, Magear. |
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"A carpenter was paid $360,751 (roughly ${{Format price|{{Inflation|US-GDP|360751|1861|r=-5}}}} in {{Inflation/year|US-GDP}}) for one month's labor in a building with very little woodwork ... a plasterer got $133,187 (${{Format price|{{Inflation|US-GDP|133187|1861|r=-5}}}}) for two days' work".<ref name="digitalhistory" /> Tweed bought a [[marble]] quarry in [[Sheffield, Massachusetts]], to provide much of the marble for the courthouse at great profit to himself.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.neighborhoodpreservationcenter.org/db/bb_files/1984TweedCourthouse.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.neighborhoodpreservationcenter.org/db/bb_files/1984TweedCourthouse.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-09 |url-status=live|title=New York County Courthouse|date=October 16, 1984|publisher=[[New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission]]|access-date=July 28, 2019}}</ref>{{Rp|3}}<ref>{{cite news |title=The Marble in the New Court-House A Very Rich Quarry |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1866/12/25/archives/the-marble-in-the-new-courthousea-very-rich-quarry.html |work=The New York Times |date=25 December 1866 }}</ref> After the Tweed Charter to reorganize the city's government was passed in 1870, four commissioners for the construction of the New York County Courthouse were appointed. The commission never held a meeting, though each commissioner received a 20% [[Kickback (bribery)|kickback]] from the bills for the supplies.<ref>{{cite news |title=The Fraudulent Tax Levy.; A Report from the Council of Reform – How the Swindles of the Ring are to be Covered Up. The Peace Jubilee – Post Festum |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1871/04/13/archives/the-fraudulent-tax-levy-a-report-from-the-council-of-reform-how-the.html |work=The New York Times |date=13 April 1871 }}</ref> |
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[[File:Tammany Ring, Nast crop.jpg|thumb|left|Nast depicts the Tweed Ring: "Who stole the people's money?" / "'Twas him." From left to right: William Tweed, [[Peter B. Sweeny]], [[Richard B. Connolly]], and [[Oakey Hall]]. To the left of Tweed in the background are James H. Ingersoll and Andrew Garvey, city contractors involved with much of the city construction.]] |
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Another common misconception about Boss Tweed is that he was Irish. Although he was born on Cherry Street in Manhattan, he was of Scottish-Irish descent. |
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Tweed and his friends also garnered huge profits from the development of the Upper East Side, especially [[Yorkville, Manhattan|Yorkville]] and [[Harlem]]. They would buy up undeveloped property, then use the resources of the city to improve the area – for instance by installing pipes to bring in water from the [[Croton Aqueduct]] – thus increasing the value of the land, after which they sold and took their profits. The focus on the east side also slowed down the development of the west side, the [[topography]] of which made it more expensive to improve. The ring also took their usual percentage of padded contracts, as well as raking off money from property taxes. Despite the corruption of Tweed and Tammany Hall, they did accomplish the development of upper Manhattan, though at the cost of tripling the city's bond debt to almost $90 million.<ref>Burrows & Wallace, pp. 929–931.</ref> |
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During the Tweed era, the proposal to build a suspension bridge between New York and [[Brooklyn]], then an independent city, was floated by Brooklyn-boosters, who saw the ferry connections as a bottleneck to Brooklyn's further development. In order to ensure that the [[Brooklyn Bridge]] project would go forward, State Senator [[Henry Cruse Murphy]] approached Tweed to find out whether New York's aldermen would approve the proposal. Tweed's response was that $60,000 for the aldermen would close the deal, and contractor [[William C. Kingsley]] put up the cash, which was delivered in a [[carpet bag]]. Tweed and two others from Tammany also received over half the private stock of the Bridge Company, the charter of which specified that only private stockholders had voting rights, so that even though the cities of Brooklyn and Manhattan put up most of the money, they essentially had no control over the project.<ref>Burrows & Wallace, pp. 934–935.</ref> |
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Tweed bought a mansion on [[Fifth Avenue]] and [[43rd Street (Manhattan)|43rd Street]], and stabled his horses, carriages and sleighs on [[40th Street (Manhattan)|40th Street]]. By 1871, he was a member of the board of directors of not only the Erie Railroad and the Brooklyn Bridge Company, but also the Third Avenue Railway Company and the Harlem Gas Light Company. He was president of the Guardian Savings Banks and he and his confederates set up the Tenth National Bank to better control their fortunes.<ref name=encnyc /> |
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==Scandal== |
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Tweed's downfall began in 1871. James Watson, who was a county auditor in Comptroller [[Richard B. Connolly|Dick Connolly]]'s office and who also held and recorded the ring's books, died a week after his head was smashed by a horse in a sleigh accident on January 24, 1871.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-new-york-times-james-watson-sleigh-a/147624659/ | title=James Watson sleigh accident | work=The New York Times | date=January 25, 1871 | page=1 }}</ref> Although Tweed guarded Watson's estate in the week prior to Watson's death, and although another ring member attempted to destroy Watson's records, a replacement auditor, Matthew O'Rourke, associated with former sheriff [[James O'Brien (U.S. Congressman)|James O'Brien]], provided city accounts to O'Brien.<ref>Allen, pp. 118–125.</ref> The [[Orange riots|Orange riot of 1871]] in the summer of that year did not help the ring's popularity. The riot was prompted after Tammany Hall banned a parade of Irish Protestants celebrating a historical victory against Catholicism, namely the [[Battle of the Boyne]]. The parade was banned because of a riot the previous year in which eight people died when a crowd of Irish Catholic laborers attacked the paraders. Under strong pressure from the newspapers and the Protestant elite of the city, Tammany reversed course, and the march was allowed to proceed, with protection from [[NYPD|city policemen]] and [[New York State National Guard|state militia]]. The result was an even larger riot in which over 60 people were killed and more than 150 injured.<ref name="bw1003-1008">Burrows & Wallace, pp. 1003–1008.</ref> |
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Although Tammany's electoral power base was largely centered in the Irish immigrant population, it also needed both the city's general population and elite to acquiesce in its rule, and this was conditional on the machine's ability to control the actions of its people. The July riot showed that this capability was not nearly as strong as had been supposed.<ref name="bw1003-1008"/> |
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[[File:Boss Tweed, Nast.jpg|thumb|Nast shows Tweed's source of power: control of the ballot box. "As long as I count the Votes, what are you going to do about it?"]] |
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Tweed had for months been under attack from ''The New York Times'' and [[Thomas Nast]], the cartoonist from ''[[Harper's Weekly]]'' – regarding Nast's cartoons, Tweed reportedly said, "Stop them damned pictures. I don't care so much what the papers say about me. My constituents don't know how to read, but they can't help seeing them damned pictures!"<ref>{{cite web |author=Bruce Jackson |url=http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~bjackson/lazio.html |title=lazio |publisher=Acsu.buffalo.edu |date=November 2, 2000 |access-date=July 19, 2009 |archive-date=March 14, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080314230903/http://www.acsu.buffalo.edu/~bjackson/lazio.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> – but their campaign had only limited success in gaining traction. They were able to force an examination of the city's books, but the blue-ribbon commission of six businessmen appointed by Mayor [[A. Oakey Hall]], a Tammany man, which included [[John Jacob Astor III]], banker [[Moses Taylor]] and others who benefited from Tammany's actions, found that the books had been "faithfully kept", letting the air out of the effort to dethrone Tweed.<ref name=g1008>Burrows & Wallace, pp. 1008–1011.</ref> |
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The response to the Orange riot changed everything, and only days afterwards the ''Times''/Nast campaign began to garner popular support.<ref name=g1008 /> More important, the ''Times'' started to receive inside information from County Sheriff James O'Brien, whose support for Tweed had fluctuated during Tammany's reign. O'Brien had tried to [[blackmail]] Tammany by threatening to expose the ring's [[embezzlement]] to the press, and when this failed he provided the evidence he had collected to the ''Times''.<ref name="Ellis347-8">Ellis, pp. 347–348.</ref> Shortly afterward, county auditor Matthew J. O'Rourke supplied additional details to the ''Times'',<ref name="Ellis347-8" /> which was reportedly offered $5 million to not publish the evidence.<ref>Paine, p. 170.</ref> The ''Times'' also obtained the accounts of the recently deceased James Watson, who was the Tweed Ring's bookkeeper, and these were published daily, culminating in a special four-page supplement on July 29 headlined "Gigantic Frauds of the Ring Exposed".<ref name=g1008 /> In August, Tweed began to transfer ownership in his real-estate empire and other investments to his family members.<ref name=encnyc /> |
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The exposé provoked an international crisis of confidence in New York City's finances, and, in particular, in its ability to repay its debts. European investors were heavily positioned in the city's bonds and were already nervous about its management – only the reputations of the underwriters were preventing a run on the city's securities. New York's financial and business community knew that if the city's credit were to collapse, it could potentially bring down every bank in the city with it.<ref name=g1008 /> |
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Thus, the city's elite met at [[Cooper Union]] in September to discuss political reform: but for the first time, the conversation included not only the usual reformers, but also [[History of the Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] bigwigs such as [[Samuel J. Tilden]], who had been thrust aside by Tammany. The consensus was that the "wisest and best citizens" should take over the governance of the city and attempt to restore investor confidence. The result was the formation of the Executive Committee of Citizens and Taxpayers for Financial Reform of the city (also known as "the [[Committee of Seventy (New York City)|Committee of Seventy]]"), which attacked Tammany by cutting off the city's funding. Property owners refused to pay their municipal taxes, and a judge—Tweed's old friend George Barnard—enjoined the city Comptroller from issuing bonds or spending money. Unpaid workers turned against Tweed, marching to City Hall demanding to be paid. Tweed doled out some funds from his own purse—$50,000—but it was not sufficient to end the crisis, and Tammany began to lose its essential base.<ref name=g1008 /> |
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Shortly thereafter, the Comptroller resigned, appointing [[Andrew Haswell Green]], an associate of Tilden, as his replacement. Green loosened the purse strings again, allowing city departments not under Tammany control to borrow money to operate. Green and Tilden had the city's records closely examined, and discovered money that went directly from city contractors into Tweed's pocket. The following day, they had Tweed arrested.<ref name=g1008 /> |
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==Imprisonment, escape, and death== |
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[[File:Thomas Nast, Stone Walls Do Not a Prison Make cph.3a00899.jpg|thumb|"Stone Walls Do Not a Prison Make": Editorial cartoon by [[Thomas Nast]] predicting Tweed could not be kept behind bars (''Harper's Weekly'', January 6, 1872)<ref> |
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{{cite news |url=https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/harp/0106.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180919114442/https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/harp/0106.html |archive-date=19 September 2018 |title=On This Day: January 6, 1872 |newspaper=The New York Times }}</ref>]] |
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[[File:Tweed2 at Green-Wood 2024 jeh.jpg|thumb|Tomb in Green-Wood Cemetery]] |
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Tweed was released on $1 million bail, and Tammany set to work to recover its position through the ballot box. Tweed was re-elected to the state senate in November 1871, due to his personal popularity and largesse in his district, but in general Tammany did not do well, and the members of the Tweed Ring began to flee the jurisdiction, many going overseas. Tweed was re-arrested, forced to resign his city positions, and was replaced as Tammany's leader. Once again, he was released on bail—$8 million this time—but Tweed's supporters, such as [[Jay Gould]], felt the repercussions of his fall from power.<ref name=g1008 /> |
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Tweed's first trial before [[Noah Davis (judge)|Judge Noah Davis]],<ref>{{cite web | url=https://history.nycourts.gov/figure/noah-davis/ | title=Noah Davis, Jr }}</ref> in January 1873, ended when the jury was [[hung jury|unable to deliver a verdict]]. Tweed's defense counsel included [[David Dudley Field II]] and [[Elihu Root]].<ref>Allen pp. 138–139.</ref> His retrial, again before [[Noah Davis (judge)|Judge Noah Davis]] in November resulted in convictions on 204 of 220 counts, a fine of $12,750<ref name=encnyc /> (the equivalent of ${{formatnum:{{inflation|US|12750|1873|r=-4}}}} today) and a prison sentence of 12 years; a higher court, however, reduced Tweed's sentence to one year.<ref name="uoooovz">{{Cite web |url=http://www.lowermanhattan.info/news/landmark_tweed_courthouse_has_65546.aspx |title=Lower Manhattan : News {{!}} Landmark Tweed Courthouse Has a Checkered History |access-date=March 16, 2012 |archive-date=February 5, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120205132026/http://www.lowermanhattan.info/news/landmark_tweed_courthouse_has_65546.aspx |url-status=dead }}</ref> After his release from [[The Tombs]] prison, New York State filed a [[civil suit]] against Tweed, attempting to recover $6 million in embezzled funds.<ref name=uoooovz /> Unable to put up the $3 million bail, Tweed was locked up in the [[Ludlow Street Jail]], although he was allowed home visits. During one of these on December 4, 1875, Tweed escaped and fled to Spain,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.americaslibrary.gov/jb/recon/jb_recon_boss_1.html|title=Boss Tweed Escaped From Prison|website=www.americaslibrary.gov|access-date=December 24, 2019}}</ref> where he worked as a common seaman on a Spanish ship.<ref name=g1008 /> The U.S. government discovered his whereabouts and arranged for his arrest once he reached the Spanish border, where he was recognized from Nast's political cartoons. He was turned over to an American warship,<ref name=g1008 /> the {{USS|Franklin|1864|6}}, which delivered him to authorities in New York City on November 23, 1876, and he was returned to prison.<ref name="History.com">[http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/boss-tweed-delivered-to-authorities "'Boss' Tweed Delivered to Authorities"] ''[[History (U.S. TV channel)|History Channel]]'' website, n.d.g. Retrieved February 3, 2015.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=T000440 |title=Tweed, William Marcy, (1823–1878) |publisher=bioguide.congress.gov |access-date=July 19, 2009}}</ref> |
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Desperate and broken, Tweed now agreed to testify about the inner workings of the Tweed Ring to a special committee set up by the Board of Aldermen<ref name=encnyc /> in return for his release. However, after he did so, Tilden, now governor of New York, refused to abide by the agreement, and Tweed remained incarcerated. |
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He died in the Ludlow Street Jail on April 12, 1878, from severe [[pneumonia]], and was buried in [[Brooklyn]]'s [[Green-Wood Cemetery]].<ref>Ackerman, p. 28.</ref> Mayor [[Smith Ely Jr.]] would not allow the flag at City Hall to be flown at [[Half-mast|half staff]].<ref name=encnyc /> |
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==Evaluations== |
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According to Tweed biographer Kenneth D. Ackerman:<blockquote>It's hard not to admire the skill behind Tweed's system ... The Tweed ring at its height was an engineering marvel, strong and solid, strategically deployed to control key power points: the courts, the legislature, the treasury and the ballot box. Its frauds had a grandeur of scale and an elegance of structure: money-laundering, profit sharing and organization.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Hamill |first1=Pete |title='Boss Tweed': The Fellowship of the Ring |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/27/books/review/boss-tweed-the-fellowship-of-the-ring.html |work=The New York Times |date=27 March 2005 }}</ref></blockquote> |
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A minority view that Tweed was mostly innocent is presented in a scholarly biography by history professor Leo Hershkowitz. He states:<blockquote>Except for Tweed's own very questionable "confession," there really was no evidence of a "Tweed Ring," no direct evidence of Tweed's thievery, no evidence, excepting the testimony of the informer contractors, of "wholesale" plunder by Tweed....[Instead there was] a conspiracy of self-justification of the corruption of the law by the upholders of that law, of a venal irresponsible press and a citizenry delighting in the exorcism of witchery.<ref>Leo Hershkowitz, ''Tweed's New York: Another Look''. (New York: Anchor Press, 1977), p 347. [https://archive.org/details/tweedsnewyorkano00hers online]</ref><ref>{{cite journal |id={{ProQuest|1296084413}} |last1=Lankevich |first1=George J. |title=Hershkowitz, Leo, 'Tweed's New York, Another Look' (Book Review) |journal=American Jewish Historical Quarterly |volume=67 |issue=2 |date=1 December 1977 |page=190 }}</ref></blockquote> |
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In depictions of Tweed and the Tammany Hall organization, most historians have emphasized the thievery and conspiratorial nature of Boss Tweed, along with lining his own pockets and those of his friends and allies. The theme is that the sins of corruption so violated American standards of political rectitude that they far overshadow Tweed's positive contributions to New York City.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.myheritage.com/names/william_tweed |language=en |access-date=7 August 2023 |title=William Tweed |website=[[MyHeritage]]}}</ref> |
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Although he held numerous important public offices and was one of a handful of senior leaders of Tammany Hall, as well as the state legislature and the state Democratic Party,<ref name=History.com/> Tweed was never the sole "boss" of New York City. He shared control of the city with numerous less famous people, such as the villains depicted in Nast's famous circle of guilt cartoon shown above. [[Seymour J. Mandelbaum]] has argued that, apart from the corruption he engaged in, Tweed was a modernizer who prefigured certain elements of the [[Progressive Era]] in terms of more efficient city management. Much of the money he siphoned off from the city treasury went to needy constituents who appreciated the free food at Christmas time and remembered it at the next election, and to precinct workers who provided the muscle of his machine. As a legislator he worked to expand and strengthen welfare programs, especially those by private charities, schools, and hospitals. With a base in the Irish Catholic community, he opposed efforts of Protestants to require the reading of the [[King James Bible]] in public schools, which was done deliberately to keep out Catholics. He facilitated the founding of the [[New York Public Library]], even though one of its founders, Samuel Tilden, was Tweed's sworn enemy in the Democratic Party.<ref>Mandelbaum, Seymour J. ''Boss Tweed's New York'' (1965).</ref><ref>Muccigrosso, Robert ed., ''Research Guide to American Historical Biography'' (1988) 1538–42.</ref> |
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Tweed recognized that the support of his constituency was necessary for him to remain in power, and as a consequence he used the machinery of the city's government to provide numerous social services, including building more orphanages, almshouses and public baths.<ref name=encnyc /> Tweed also fought for the [[New York State Legislature]] to donate to private charities of all religious denominations, and subsidize [[Catholic schools]] and hospitals. From 1869 to 1871, under Tweed's influence, the state of New York spent more on charities than for the entire time period from 1852 to 1868 combined.<ref>Ackerman, p. 66.</ref> |
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During Tweed's regime, the main business thoroughfare Broadway was widened between [[34th Street (Manhattan)|34th Street]] and [[59th Street (Manhattan)|59th Street]], land was secured for the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], and the [[Upper East Side]] and [[Upper West Side]] were developed and provided the necessary infrastructure – all to the benefit of the purses of the Tweed Ring. |
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Hershkowitz blames the implications of Thomas Nast in ''Harper's Weekly'' and the editors of ''The New York Times'', which both had ties to the Republican party. In part, the campaign against Tweed diverted public attention from Republican scandals such as the [[Whiskey Ring]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Hershkowitz|first=Leo|title=Tweed's New York: Another Look|date=1977|publisher=Doubleday|location=Garden City, NY}}</ref> |
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Tweed himself wanted no particular recognition of his achievements, such as they were. When it was proposed, in March 1871, when he was at the height of his power, that a statue be erected in his honor, he declared: "Statues are not erected to living men ... I claim to be a live man, and hope (Divine Providence permitting) to survive in all my vigor, politically and physically, some years to come."<ref name=encnyc /> One of Tweed's unwanted legacies is that he has become "the archetype of the bloated, rapacious, corrupt city boss".<ref name=encnyc /> |
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[[File:Boss tweed.jpg|thumb|An 1869 cigar box label featuring Tweed]] |
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==Middle name== |
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Tweed never signed his middle name with anything other than a plain "M.", and his middle name is often mistakenly listed as "Marcy". His actual middle name was Magear, his mother's maiden name.<ref>Anbinder, Tyler. "Tweed, William Magear (03 April 1823–12 April 1878), political 'boss' of New York City in the Civil War era." ''American National Biography''. February 2000. Oxford University Press.</ref> |
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Confusion derived from a Nast cartoon with a picture of Tweed supplemented with a quote from [[William L. Marcy]], the former governor of New York.<ref>{{cite book|last=Nevius|first=Michelle|title=Inside the Apple: A Streetwise History of New York City|year=2009|publisher=Free Press|location=New York|isbn=978-1-4165-8997-6|pages=120|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O8K5OCC4CMwC&pg=PA120}}</ref> |
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==In popular culture== |
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* [[Arthur Train]] featured Tweed in his 1940 novel of life in Gilded Age New York, ''Tassels On Her Boots''. Tweed is portrayed as having contempt for the people he rules, at one point saying that once he would have been a Baron, with a castle, levying tribute on the people. But now, "'Boss', they call me – and they are glad to have me." |
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* In 1945, Tweed was portrayed by [[Noah Beery Sr.]] in the [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] production of ''Up in Central Park'', a [[musical comedy]] with music by [[Sigmund Romberg]].<ref>[http://ibdb.com/production.php?id=1669 ''Up In Central Park'' (1945)] on [[Internet Broadway Database]].</ref> The role was played by [[Malcolm Lee Beggs]] for a revival in 1947.<ref>[http://ibdb.com/production.php?id=473592 ''Up In Central Park'' (1947)] on [[Internet Broadway Database]].</ref> In the [[Up in Central Park|1948 film version]], Tweed is played by [[Vincent Price]].<ref>[http://www.afi.com/members/catalog/AbbrView.aspx?s=&Movie=25791 ''Up in Central Park''] at [[AFI Catalog]].</ref> |
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* On the 1963–1964 [[CBS]] TV series ''[[The Great Adventure (U.S. TV series)|The Great Adventure]]'', which presented one-hour dramatizations of the lives of historical figures, [[Edward Andrews]] portrayed Tweed in the episode "The Man Who Stole New York City", about the campaign by ''[[The New York Times]]'' to bring down Tweed. The episode aired on December 13, 1963.<ref>[https://www.tvguide.com/tvshows/the-great-adventure/episode-1040029/201760/ "The Great Adventure: The Man Who Stole New York City"] ''[[TV Guide]]''.</ref><ref>[http://www.tv.com/shows/the-great-adventure/the-man-who-stole-new-york-city-376546/cast/ "The Great Adventure: The Man Who Stole New York City"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181118214304/http://www.tv.com/shows/the-great-adventure/the-man-who-stole-new-york-city-376546/cast/ |date=November 18, 2018 }} ''[[TV.com]]''.</ref><ref>[http://ctva.biz/US/Anthology/GreatAdventure.htm "The Great Adventure (1963–64)"] ''Classic TV Archive''.</ref><ref>{{IMDb title|0592454|The Great Adventure: The Man Who Stole New York City}}</ref> |
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* In [[John Varley (author)|John Varley]]'s 1977 science-fiction novel, ''[[The Ophiuchi Hotline]]'', a crooked politician in a 27th-century human settlement on the Moon assumes the name "Boss Tweed" in emulation of the 19th-century politician, and names his lunar headquarters "Tammany Hall".<ref>[[John Clute|Clute, John]] "Varley, John" in Clute, John and [[Peter Nicholls (writer)|Nicholls, Peter]] (eds.) (1995) ''The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction'' New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 1271. {{ISBN|0-312-13486-X}}. Quote: "...JV's first – and finest – novel, ''The Ophiuchi Hotline''...".</ref><ref>Staff [https://www.enotes.com/topics/ophiuchi-hotline/in-depth "The Ophiuchi Notline Analysis – John Varley"] ''eNotes''.</ref><ref>Nicholls, James (October 30, 2016) [http://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/no-father-no-mother-shes-just-like-the-other "No father, no mother, she's just like the other"] ''James Nicholls Reviews''.</ref> |
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* Tweed was played by [[Philip Bosco]] in the 1986 TV movie ''Liberty''.<ref>[http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/465782/Liberty/full-credits.html "Liberty: Full Credits"] [[TCM.com]].</ref> According to a review of the film in ''[[The New York Times]]'', it was Tweed who made the suggestion to call the [[Statue of Liberty]] by that name, instead of its formal name ''Liberty Enlightening the World'', in order to read better in newspaper headlines.<ref>O'Connor, John J. (June 23, 1986) [https://www.nytimes.com/1986/06/23/arts/liberty-a-glimpse-of-history.html "'Liberty,' A Glimpse of History"] ''[[The New York Times]]''.</ref> |
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* Andrew O'Hehir of ''The New York Times'' notes that ''Forever'', a 2003 novel by [[Pete Hamill]], and ''[[Gangs of New York]]'', a 2002 film, both "offer a significant supporting role to the legendary Manhattan political godfather Boss Tweed", among other thematic similarities.<ref>O'Heheir, Andrew (January 19, 2003) [https://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/19/books/not-a-bridge-and-tunnel-guy.html "Not a Bridge-and-Tunnel Guy"] ''[[The New York Times]]''.</ref> In a review of the latter work, Chuck Rudolph praised [[Jim Broadbent]]'s portrayal of Tweed as "giving the role a masterfully heartless composure".<ref>Rudolph, Chuck (January 20, 2002). [https://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/gangs-of-new-york Gangs of New York] ''Slant Magazine''.</ref> |
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* Tweed appears as an antagonist in the 2016 novel, ''Assassin's Creed Last Descendants'' where he is the Grand Master of the American Templars during the [[American Civil War]].<ref>Rad, Chloi (February 18, 2016) [https://www.ign.com/articles/2016/02/18/assassins-creed-last-descendants-novels-announced "Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants Novels Announced"] ''IGN''.</ref> |
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== See also == |
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* [[Elbert A. Woodward]] |
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* [[Timothy Sullivan|Timothy "Big Tim" Sullivan]] |
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* [[Tweed law]] |
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* [[William J. Sharkey (murderer)]] |
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==References== |
==References== |
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'''Notes''' |
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{{notelist|group=note}} |
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'''Citations''' |
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* ''Boss Tweed'', Gotham Gazette, New York, 4 July 2005.-[http://www.gothamgazette.com/article//20050704/202/1467 Source]. |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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'''Bibliography''' |
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*Sante, Luc (2003). ''Low Life: Lures and Snares of Old New York''. Farrar, Straus, & Giroux. |
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* Ackerman, K. D. (2005). ''Boss Tweed: The rise and fall of the corrupt pol who conceived the soul of modern New York''. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers. {{ISBN|0-7867-1435-2}}. |
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* {{cite gotham}} |
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* Callow, Alexander B. (1966). ''The Tweed Ring''. New York: Oxford University Press |
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* Ellis, Edward R. (2004). ''The Epic of New York City: A Narrative History''. Carroll & Graf Publishers. {{ISBN|0-7867-1436-0}}, |
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* Hershkowitz, Leo. ''Tweed's New York: Another Look''. (New York: Anchor Press, 1977), [https://archive.org/details/tweedsnewyorkano00hers online] |
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* [http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Tweed-Wi.html "William Marcy [sic] Tweed"] Encyclopedia.com ([[Cengage]]), May 23, 2018 |
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* Mandelbaum, Seymour J. (1965). ''Boss Tweed's New York''. New York: John Wiley. {{ISBN|0-471-56652-7}} |
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* Paine, Albert B. (1974). ''Th. Nast, His Period and His Pictures''. Princeton: Pyne Press. {{ISBN|0-87861-079-0}} (The original edition, published in 1904, is now in the [[public domain]].) |
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* [[Lucy Sante|Sante, Lucy]] (2003). ''Low Life: Lures and Snares of Old New York''. New York: Farrar, Straus, & Giroux. {{isbn|978-0374528997}} |
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* Staff (July 4, 2005). [https://www.gothamgazette.com/open-government/2878-boss-tweed "Boss Tweed"], ''[[Gotham Gazette]]'' |
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==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
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* Lynch, Denis Tilden (2005) [1927]. ''Boss Tweed: The story of a grim generation''. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Michigan Historical Reprint Series, Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan. {{isbn|9781425548940}}; [https://books.google.com/books?id=8_eQzwEACAAJ 1927 1st edition] published by [[Boni & Liveright]] |
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* Kenneth D. Ackerman, ''Boss Tweed: The Rise and Fall of the Corrupt Politician who Conceived the Soul of New York'' (2006). |
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* Mandelbaum, Seymour J. ''Boss Tweed's New York'' ([[1965]]) (ISBN 0-471-56652-7) |
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* Hershkowitz, Leo, ''Tweed's New York: Another Look'' (1977). |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{Commons}} |
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* [http://www.davidpietrusza.com/tammany-hall-links.html Tammany Hall Links] |
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{{wikiquote|Boss Tweed}} |
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* [http://greatcaricatures.com/articles_galleries/nast/html/02_nast.html Thomas Nast Caricatures of Boss Tweed & Tammany Hall] |
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{{Biographical Directory of Congress|T000440}} |
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* [http://www.green-wood.com/2010/william-magear-boss-tweed/ Green-Wood Cemetery page for WM Tweed ] |
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* [http://www.wdl.org/en/item/6780 Map Showing the Portions of the City of New York and Westchester County under the Jurisdiction of the Department of Public Parks] talks about Tweed's takeover of the New York City parks system, from the [[World Digital Library]] |
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** {{Cite AmCyc|wstitle=Tweed, William Marcy |short=x |noicon=x}} |
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** {{Cite NIE|wstitle=Tweed, William Marcy|year=1905 |short=x |noicon=x}} |
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** {{Cite Collier's|wstitle=Tweed, William Marcy|year=1921 |short=x |noicon=x}} |
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Latest revision as of 21:54, 8 December 2024
William M. Tweed | |
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Member of the New York Senate from the 4th district | |
In office January 1, 1868 – December 31, 1873 | |
Preceded by | George Briggs |
Succeeded by | John Fox |
Grand Sachem of Tammany Hall | |
In office 1858–1871 | |
Preceded by | Fernando Wood |
Succeeded by | John Kelly and John Morrissey |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New York's 5th district | |
In office March 4, 1853 – March 3, 1855 | |
Preceded by | George Briggs |
Succeeded by | Thomas R. Whitney |
Personal details | |
Born | William Magear Tweed April 3, 1823 New York City, U.S. |
Died | April 12, 1878 New York City, U.S. | (aged 55)
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse |
Jane Skaden (m. 1844) |
Profession | Bookkeeper, businessman, political boss |
William Magear "Boss" Tweed[note 1] (April 3, 1823 – April 12, 1878) was an American politician most notable for being the political boss of Tammany Hall, the Democratic Party's political machine that played a major role in the politics of 19th-century New York City and State.
At the height of his influence, Tweed was the third-largest landowner in New York City, a director of the Erie Railroad, a director of the Tenth National Bank, a director of the New-York Printing Company, the proprietor of the Metropolitan Hotel,[2] a significant stockholder in iron mines and gas companies, a board member of the Harlem Gas Light Company, a board member of the Third Avenue Railway Company, a board member of the Brooklyn Bridge Company, and the president of the Guardian Savings Bank.[3]
Tweed was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1852 and the New York County Board of Supervisors in 1858, the year that he became the head of the Tammany Hall political machine. He was also elected to the New York State Senate in 1867. However, Tweed's greatest influence came from being an appointed member of a number of boards and commissions, his control over political patronage in New York City through Tammany, and his ability to ensure the loyalty of voters through jobs he could create and dispense on city-related projects.
Boss Tweed was convicted for stealing an amount estimated by an aldermen's committee in 1877 at between $25 million and $45 million from New York City taxpayers from political corruption, but later estimates ranged as high as $200 million (equivalent to $5 billion in 2023).[4] Unable to make bail, he escaped from jail once but was returned to custody. He died in the Ludlow Street Jail.
Early life and education
[edit]Tweed was born April 3, 1823, at 1 Cherry Street,[5] on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. The son of a third-generation Scottish chair-maker, Tweed grew up on Cherry Street. His grandfather arrived in the United States from a town near the River Tweed close to Edinburgh.[6] Tweed's religious affiliation was not widely known in his lifetime, but at the time of his funeral The New York Times, quoting a family friend, reported that his parents had been Quakers and "members of the old Rose Street Meeting house".[7] At the age of 11, he left school to learn his father's trade, and then became an apprentice to a saddler.[5] He also studied to be a bookkeeper and worked as a brushmaker for a company he had invested in, before eventually joining in the family business in 1852.[5] On September 29, 1844, he married Mary Jane C. Skaden and lived with her family on Madison Street for two years.[8]
Early career
[edit]Tweed became a member of the Odd Fellows and the Masons,[9] and joined a volunteer fire company, Engine No. 12.[5] In 1848, at the invitation of state assemblyman John J. Reilly, he and some friends organized the Americus Fire Company No. 6, also known as the "Big Six", as a volunteer fire company, which took as its symbol a snarling red Bengal tiger from a French lithograph,[6] a symbol which remained associated with Tweed and Tammany Hall for many years.[5] At the time, volunteer fire companies competed vigorously with each other; some were connected with street gangs and had strong ethnic ties to various immigrant communities. The competition could become so fierce, that burning buildings would sometimes be ignored as the fire companies fought each other.[10] Tweed became known for his ax-wielding violence, and was soon elected the Big Six foreman. Pressure from Alfred Carlson, the chief engineer, got him thrown out of the crew. However, fire companies were also recruiting grounds for political parties at the time, thus Tweed's exploits came to the attention of the Democratic politicians who ran the Seventh Ward. The Seventh Ward put him up for Alderman in 1850, when Tweed was 26. He lost that election to the Whig candidate Morgan Morgans, but ran again the next year and won, garnering his first political position.[11] Tweed then became associated with the "Forty Thieves", the group of aldermen and assistant aldermen who, up to that point, were known as some of the most corrupt politicians in the city's history.[6]
Tweed was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1852, but his two-year term was undistinguished.[12] In an attempt by Republican reformers in Albany, the state capital, to control the Democratic-dominated New York City government, the power of the New York County Board of Supervisors was beefed up. The board had 12 members, six appointed by the mayor and six elected, and in 1858 Tweed was appointed to the board, which became his first vehicle for large-scale graft; Tweed and other supervisors forced vendors to pay a 15% overcharge to their "ring" in order to do business with the city.[12] By 1853, Tweed was running the seventh ward for Tammany.[5] The board also had six Democrats and six Republicans, but Tweed often just bought off one Republican to sway the board. One such Republican board member was Peter P. Voorhis, a coal dealer by profession who absented himself from a board meeting in exchange for $2,500 so that the board could appoint city inspectors. Henry Smith was another Republican that was a part of the Tweed ring.[6]
Although he was not trained as a lawyer, Tweed's friend, Judge George G. Barnard, certified him as an attorney, and Tweed opened a law office on Duane Street. He ran for sheriff in 1861 and was defeated, but became the chairman of the Democratic General Committee shortly after the election, and was then chosen to be the head of Tammany's general committee in January 1863. Several months later, in April, he became "Grand Sachem", and began to be referred to as "Boss", especially after he tightened his hold on power by creating a small executive committee to run the club.[5] Tweed then took steps to increase his income: he used his law firm to extort money, which was then disguised as legal services; he had himself appointed deputy street commissioner – a position with considerable access to city contractors and funding; he bought the New-York Printing Company, which became the city's official printer, and the city's stationery supplier, the Manufacturing Stationers' Company, and had both companies begin to overcharge the city government for their goods and services.[5][13]: 17–32 Among other legal services he provided, he accepted almost $100,000 from the Erie Railroad in return for favors. He also became one of the largest owners of real estate in the city.[6] He also started to form what became known as the "Tweed Ring", by having his friends elected to office: George G. Barnard was elected Recorder of New York City; Peter B. Sweeny was elected New York County District Attorney; and Richard B. Connolly was elected City Comptroller.[12] Other judicial members of the Tweed ring included Albert Cardozo, John McCunn, and John K. Hackett.[6]
When Grand Sachem Isaac Fowler, who had produced the $2,500 to buy off the Republican Voorhis on the Board of Supervisors, was found to have stolen $150,000 in post office receipts, the responsibility for Fowler's arrest was given to Isaiah Rynders, another Tammany operative who was serving as a United States marshal at the time. Rynders made enough ruckus upon entering the hotel where Fowler was staying that Fowler was able to escape to Mexico.[6]
With his new position and wealth came a change in style: Tweed began to favor wearing a large diamond in his shirtfront – a habit that Thomas Nast used to great effect in his attacks on Tweed in Harper's Weekly beginning in 1869 – and he bought a brownstone to live in at 41 West 36th Street, then a very fashionable area. He invested his now considerable illegal income in real estate, so that by the late 1860s he ranked among the biggest landowners in New York City.[5]
Tweed became involved in the operation of the New York Mutuals, an early professional baseball club, in the 1860s. He brought in thousands of dollars per home game by dramatically increasing the cost of admission and gambling on the team.[14] He has been credited with originating the practice of spring training in 1869 by sending the club south to New Orleans to prepare for the season.[15][16]
Tweed was a member of the New York State Senate (4th D.) from 1868 to 1873, sitting in the 91st, 92nd, 93rd, and 94th New York State Legislatures, but not taking his seat in the 95th and 96th New York State Legislatures. While serving in the State Senate, he split his time between Albany, New York and New York City. While in Albany, he stayed in a suite of seven rooms in Delevan House. Accompanying him in his rooms were his favorite canaries. Guests are presumed to have included members of the Black Horse Cavalry, thirty state legislators whose votes were up for sale.[17] In the Senate he helped financiers Jay Gould and Big Jim Fisk to take control of the Erie Railroad from Cornelius Vanderbilt by arranging for legislation that legitimized fake Erie stock certificates that Gould and Fisk had issued. In return, Tweed received a large block of stock and was made a director of the company.[5]
Corruption
[edit]After the election of 1869, Tweed took control of the New York City government. His protégé, John T. Hoffman, the former mayor of the city, won election as governor, and Tweed garnered the support of good-government reformers like Peter Cooper and the Union League Club, by proposing a new city charter which returned power to City Hall at the expense of the Republican-inspired state commissions. The new charter passed, thanks in part to $600,000 in bribes Tweed paid to Republicans, and was signed into law by Hoffman in 1870. Mandated new elections allowed Tammany to take over the city's Common Council when they won all fifteen aldermanic contests.[18][19]
The new charter put control of the city's finances in the hands of a Board of Audit, which consisted of Tweed, who was Commissioner of Public Works, Mayor A. Oakey Hall and Comptroller Richard "Slippery Dick" Connolly, both Tammany men. Hall also appointed other Tweed associates to high offices – such as Peter B. Sweeny, who took over the Department of Public Parks[18] – providing what became known as the Tweed Ring with even firmer control of the New York City government[20] and enabling them to defraud the taxpayers of many more millions of dollars. In the words of Albert Bigelow Paine, "their methods were curiously simple and primitive. There were no skilful manipulations of figures, making detection difficult ... Connolly, as Controller, had charge of the books, and declined to show them. With his fellows, he also 'controlled' the courts and most of the bar."[21] Crucially, the new city charter allowed the Board of Audit to issue bonds for debt in order to finance opportunistic capital expenditures the city otherwise could not afford. This ability to float debt was enabled by Tweed's guidance and passage of the Adjusted Claims Act in 1868.[22] Contractors working for the city – "Ring favorites, most of them – were told to multiply the amount of each bill by five, or ten, or a hundred, after which, with Mayor Hall's 'O. K.' and Connolly's endorsement, it was paid ... through a go-between, who cashed the check, settled the original bill and divided the remainder ... between Tweed, Sweeny, Connolly and Hall".[23]
For example, the construction cost of the New York County Courthouse, begun in 1861, grew to nearly $13 million—about $350 million in 2023 dollars, and nearly twice the cost of the Alaska Purchase in 1867.[19][24] "A carpenter was paid $360,751 (roughly $9.6 million in 2023) for one month's labor in a building with very little woodwork ... a plasterer got $133,187 ($3.5 million) for two days' work".[24] Tweed bought a marble quarry in Sheffield, Massachusetts, to provide much of the marble for the courthouse at great profit to himself.[25]: 3 [26] After the Tweed Charter to reorganize the city's government was passed in 1870, four commissioners for the construction of the New York County Courthouse were appointed. The commission never held a meeting, though each commissioner received a 20% kickback from the bills for the supplies.[27]
Tweed and his friends also garnered huge profits from the development of the Upper East Side, especially Yorkville and Harlem. They would buy up undeveloped property, then use the resources of the city to improve the area – for instance by installing pipes to bring in water from the Croton Aqueduct – thus increasing the value of the land, after which they sold and took their profits. The focus on the east side also slowed down the development of the west side, the topography of which made it more expensive to improve. The ring also took their usual percentage of padded contracts, as well as raking off money from property taxes. Despite the corruption of Tweed and Tammany Hall, they did accomplish the development of upper Manhattan, though at the cost of tripling the city's bond debt to almost $90 million.[28]
During the Tweed era, the proposal to build a suspension bridge between New York and Brooklyn, then an independent city, was floated by Brooklyn-boosters, who saw the ferry connections as a bottleneck to Brooklyn's further development. In order to ensure that the Brooklyn Bridge project would go forward, State Senator Henry Cruse Murphy approached Tweed to find out whether New York's aldermen would approve the proposal. Tweed's response was that $60,000 for the aldermen would close the deal, and contractor William C. Kingsley put up the cash, which was delivered in a carpet bag. Tweed and two others from Tammany also received over half the private stock of the Bridge Company, the charter of which specified that only private stockholders had voting rights, so that even though the cities of Brooklyn and Manhattan put up most of the money, they essentially had no control over the project.[29]
Tweed bought a mansion on Fifth Avenue and 43rd Street, and stabled his horses, carriages and sleighs on 40th Street. By 1871, he was a member of the board of directors of not only the Erie Railroad and the Brooklyn Bridge Company, but also the Third Avenue Railway Company and the Harlem Gas Light Company. He was president of the Guardian Savings Banks and he and his confederates set up the Tenth National Bank to better control their fortunes.[5]
Scandal
[edit]Tweed's downfall began in 1871. James Watson, who was a county auditor in Comptroller Dick Connolly's office and who also held and recorded the ring's books, died a week after his head was smashed by a horse in a sleigh accident on January 24, 1871.[30] Although Tweed guarded Watson's estate in the week prior to Watson's death, and although another ring member attempted to destroy Watson's records, a replacement auditor, Matthew O'Rourke, associated with former sheriff James O'Brien, provided city accounts to O'Brien.[31] The Orange riot of 1871 in the summer of that year did not help the ring's popularity. The riot was prompted after Tammany Hall banned a parade of Irish Protestants celebrating a historical victory against Catholicism, namely the Battle of the Boyne. The parade was banned because of a riot the previous year in which eight people died when a crowd of Irish Catholic laborers attacked the paraders. Under strong pressure from the newspapers and the Protestant elite of the city, Tammany reversed course, and the march was allowed to proceed, with protection from city policemen and state militia. The result was an even larger riot in which over 60 people were killed and more than 150 injured.[32]
Although Tammany's electoral power base was largely centered in the Irish immigrant population, it also needed both the city's general population and elite to acquiesce in its rule, and this was conditional on the machine's ability to control the actions of its people. The July riot showed that this capability was not nearly as strong as had been supposed.[32]
Tweed had for months been under attack from The New York Times and Thomas Nast, the cartoonist from Harper's Weekly – regarding Nast's cartoons, Tweed reportedly said, "Stop them damned pictures. I don't care so much what the papers say about me. My constituents don't know how to read, but they can't help seeing them damned pictures!"[33] – but their campaign had only limited success in gaining traction. They were able to force an examination of the city's books, but the blue-ribbon commission of six businessmen appointed by Mayor A. Oakey Hall, a Tammany man, which included John Jacob Astor III, banker Moses Taylor and others who benefited from Tammany's actions, found that the books had been "faithfully kept", letting the air out of the effort to dethrone Tweed.[34]
The response to the Orange riot changed everything, and only days afterwards the Times/Nast campaign began to garner popular support.[34] More important, the Times started to receive inside information from County Sheriff James O'Brien, whose support for Tweed had fluctuated during Tammany's reign. O'Brien had tried to blackmail Tammany by threatening to expose the ring's embezzlement to the press, and when this failed he provided the evidence he had collected to the Times.[35] Shortly afterward, county auditor Matthew J. O'Rourke supplied additional details to the Times,[35] which was reportedly offered $5 million to not publish the evidence.[36] The Times also obtained the accounts of the recently deceased James Watson, who was the Tweed Ring's bookkeeper, and these were published daily, culminating in a special four-page supplement on July 29 headlined "Gigantic Frauds of the Ring Exposed".[34] In August, Tweed began to transfer ownership in his real-estate empire and other investments to his family members.[5]
The exposé provoked an international crisis of confidence in New York City's finances, and, in particular, in its ability to repay its debts. European investors were heavily positioned in the city's bonds and were already nervous about its management – only the reputations of the underwriters were preventing a run on the city's securities. New York's financial and business community knew that if the city's credit were to collapse, it could potentially bring down every bank in the city with it.[34]
Thus, the city's elite met at Cooper Union in September to discuss political reform: but for the first time, the conversation included not only the usual reformers, but also Democratic bigwigs such as Samuel J. Tilden, who had been thrust aside by Tammany. The consensus was that the "wisest and best citizens" should take over the governance of the city and attempt to restore investor confidence. The result was the formation of the Executive Committee of Citizens and Taxpayers for Financial Reform of the city (also known as "the Committee of Seventy"), which attacked Tammany by cutting off the city's funding. Property owners refused to pay their municipal taxes, and a judge—Tweed's old friend George Barnard—enjoined the city Comptroller from issuing bonds or spending money. Unpaid workers turned against Tweed, marching to City Hall demanding to be paid. Tweed doled out some funds from his own purse—$50,000—but it was not sufficient to end the crisis, and Tammany began to lose its essential base.[34]
Shortly thereafter, the Comptroller resigned, appointing Andrew Haswell Green, an associate of Tilden, as his replacement. Green loosened the purse strings again, allowing city departments not under Tammany control to borrow money to operate. Green and Tilden had the city's records closely examined, and discovered money that went directly from city contractors into Tweed's pocket. The following day, they had Tweed arrested.[34]
Imprisonment, escape, and death
[edit]Tweed was released on $1 million bail, and Tammany set to work to recover its position through the ballot box. Tweed was re-elected to the state senate in November 1871, due to his personal popularity and largesse in his district, but in general Tammany did not do well, and the members of the Tweed Ring began to flee the jurisdiction, many going overseas. Tweed was re-arrested, forced to resign his city positions, and was replaced as Tammany's leader. Once again, he was released on bail—$8 million this time—but Tweed's supporters, such as Jay Gould, felt the repercussions of his fall from power.[34]
Tweed's first trial before Judge Noah Davis,[38] in January 1873, ended when the jury was unable to deliver a verdict. Tweed's defense counsel included David Dudley Field II and Elihu Root.[39] His retrial, again before Judge Noah Davis in November resulted in convictions on 204 of 220 counts, a fine of $12,750[5] (the equivalent of $320,000 today) and a prison sentence of 12 years; a higher court, however, reduced Tweed's sentence to one year.[40] After his release from The Tombs prison, New York State filed a civil suit against Tweed, attempting to recover $6 million in embezzled funds.[40] Unable to put up the $3 million bail, Tweed was locked up in the Ludlow Street Jail, although he was allowed home visits. During one of these on December 4, 1875, Tweed escaped and fled to Spain,[41] where he worked as a common seaman on a Spanish ship.[34] The U.S. government discovered his whereabouts and arranged for his arrest once he reached the Spanish border, where he was recognized from Nast's political cartoons. He was turned over to an American warship,[34] the USS Franklin, which delivered him to authorities in New York City on November 23, 1876, and he was returned to prison.[19][42]
Desperate and broken, Tweed now agreed to testify about the inner workings of the Tweed Ring to a special committee set up by the Board of Aldermen[5] in return for his release. However, after he did so, Tilden, now governor of New York, refused to abide by the agreement, and Tweed remained incarcerated.
He died in the Ludlow Street Jail on April 12, 1878, from severe pneumonia, and was buried in Brooklyn's Green-Wood Cemetery.[43] Mayor Smith Ely Jr. would not allow the flag at City Hall to be flown at half staff.[5]
Evaluations
[edit]According to Tweed biographer Kenneth D. Ackerman:
It's hard not to admire the skill behind Tweed's system ... The Tweed ring at its height was an engineering marvel, strong and solid, strategically deployed to control key power points: the courts, the legislature, the treasury and the ballot box. Its frauds had a grandeur of scale and an elegance of structure: money-laundering, profit sharing and organization.[44]
A minority view that Tweed was mostly innocent is presented in a scholarly biography by history professor Leo Hershkowitz. He states:
Except for Tweed's own very questionable "confession," there really was no evidence of a "Tweed Ring," no direct evidence of Tweed's thievery, no evidence, excepting the testimony of the informer contractors, of "wholesale" plunder by Tweed....[Instead there was] a conspiracy of self-justification of the corruption of the law by the upholders of that law, of a venal irresponsible press and a citizenry delighting in the exorcism of witchery.[45][46]
In depictions of Tweed and the Tammany Hall organization, most historians have emphasized the thievery and conspiratorial nature of Boss Tweed, along with lining his own pockets and those of his friends and allies. The theme is that the sins of corruption so violated American standards of political rectitude that they far overshadow Tweed's positive contributions to New York City.[47]
Although he held numerous important public offices and was one of a handful of senior leaders of Tammany Hall, as well as the state legislature and the state Democratic Party,[19] Tweed was never the sole "boss" of New York City. He shared control of the city with numerous less famous people, such as the villains depicted in Nast's famous circle of guilt cartoon shown above. Seymour J. Mandelbaum has argued that, apart from the corruption he engaged in, Tweed was a modernizer who prefigured certain elements of the Progressive Era in terms of more efficient city management. Much of the money he siphoned off from the city treasury went to needy constituents who appreciated the free food at Christmas time and remembered it at the next election, and to precinct workers who provided the muscle of his machine. As a legislator he worked to expand and strengthen welfare programs, especially those by private charities, schools, and hospitals. With a base in the Irish Catholic community, he opposed efforts of Protestants to require the reading of the King James Bible in public schools, which was done deliberately to keep out Catholics. He facilitated the founding of the New York Public Library, even though one of its founders, Samuel Tilden, was Tweed's sworn enemy in the Democratic Party.[48][49]
Tweed recognized that the support of his constituency was necessary for him to remain in power, and as a consequence he used the machinery of the city's government to provide numerous social services, including building more orphanages, almshouses and public baths.[5] Tweed also fought for the New York State Legislature to donate to private charities of all religious denominations, and subsidize Catholic schools and hospitals. From 1869 to 1871, under Tweed's influence, the state of New York spent more on charities than for the entire time period from 1852 to 1868 combined.[50]
During Tweed's regime, the main business thoroughfare Broadway was widened between 34th Street and 59th Street, land was secured for the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Upper East Side and Upper West Side were developed and provided the necessary infrastructure – all to the benefit of the purses of the Tweed Ring.
Hershkowitz blames the implications of Thomas Nast in Harper's Weekly and the editors of The New York Times, which both had ties to the Republican party. In part, the campaign against Tweed diverted public attention from Republican scandals such as the Whiskey Ring.[51]
Tweed himself wanted no particular recognition of his achievements, such as they were. When it was proposed, in March 1871, when he was at the height of his power, that a statue be erected in his honor, he declared: "Statues are not erected to living men ... I claim to be a live man, and hope (Divine Providence permitting) to survive in all my vigor, politically and physically, some years to come."[5] One of Tweed's unwanted legacies is that he has become "the archetype of the bloated, rapacious, corrupt city boss".[5]
Middle name
[edit]Tweed never signed his middle name with anything other than a plain "M.", and his middle name is often mistakenly listed as "Marcy". His actual middle name was Magear, his mother's maiden name.[52]
Confusion derived from a Nast cartoon with a picture of Tweed supplemented with a quote from William L. Marcy, the former governor of New York.[53]
In popular culture
[edit]- Arthur Train featured Tweed in his 1940 novel of life in Gilded Age New York, Tassels On Her Boots. Tweed is portrayed as having contempt for the people he rules, at one point saying that once he would have been a Baron, with a castle, levying tribute on the people. But now, "'Boss', they call me – and they are glad to have me."
- In 1945, Tweed was portrayed by Noah Beery Sr. in the Broadway production of Up in Central Park, a musical comedy with music by Sigmund Romberg.[54] The role was played by Malcolm Lee Beggs for a revival in 1947.[55] In the 1948 film version, Tweed is played by Vincent Price.[56]
- On the 1963–1964 CBS TV series The Great Adventure, which presented one-hour dramatizations of the lives of historical figures, Edward Andrews portrayed Tweed in the episode "The Man Who Stole New York City", about the campaign by The New York Times to bring down Tweed. The episode aired on December 13, 1963.[57][58][59][60]
- In John Varley's 1977 science-fiction novel, The Ophiuchi Hotline, a crooked politician in a 27th-century human settlement on the Moon assumes the name "Boss Tweed" in emulation of the 19th-century politician, and names his lunar headquarters "Tammany Hall".[61][62][63]
- Tweed was played by Philip Bosco in the 1986 TV movie Liberty.[64] According to a review of the film in The New York Times, it was Tweed who made the suggestion to call the Statue of Liberty by that name, instead of its formal name Liberty Enlightening the World, in order to read better in newspaper headlines.[65]
- Andrew O'Hehir of The New York Times notes that Forever, a 2003 novel by Pete Hamill, and Gangs of New York, a 2002 film, both "offer a significant supporting role to the legendary Manhattan political godfather Boss Tweed", among other thematic similarities.[66] In a review of the latter work, Chuck Rudolph praised Jim Broadbent's portrayal of Tweed as "giving the role a masterfully heartless composure".[67]
- Tweed appears as an antagonist in the 2016 novel, Assassin's Creed Last Descendants where he is the Grand Master of the American Templars during the American Civil War.[68]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Notes
- ^ Often erroneously referred to as William Marcy Tweed (see § Middle name)[1]
Citations
- ^ "William Magear Tweed (American politician) – Britannica Online Encyclopedia". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved November 17, 2009.
- ^ Ackerman, p. 2.
- ^ Allen, p. 116.
- ^ Robinson, Gail (July 4, 2005). "Looking Back at 100". Gotham Gazette.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Share, Allen J. "Tweed, William M(agear) 'Boss'" in Jackson, Kenneth T., ed. (1995). The Encyclopedia of New York City. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300055366., pp. 1205–1206.
- ^ a b c d e f g Allen, Oliver E. (1993). The Tiger: The Rise and Fall of Tammany Hall. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company. pp. 80–100. ISBN 0-201-62463-X.
- ^ "The Death of William M. Tweed.; Crowds Of People Around Mr. Douglass' House No One Admitted Except Relatives Tweed's Religious Faith Politicians Who Feel Relieved A Letter Written By John D. Townsend A Month Ago Asking For Tweed's Release". The New York Times. April 14, 1878.
- ^ Maher, James (1987). Index to Marriages and Deaths in the New York Herald: 1835–1855. Genealogical Publishing Com. p. 123. ISBN 0-8063-1184-3.
Tweed.
- ^ Lynch, Denis Tilden (2002). 'Boss' Tweed: The Story of a Grim Generation. Transaction Publishers. p. 418. ISBN 978-1-4128-1600-7.
- ^ Burrows & Wallace, pp. 654, 724, 823.
- ^ Burrows & Wallace, p. 823.
- ^ a b c Burrows & Wallace, p. 837.
- ^ Callow, Alexander (1981). The Tweed Ring. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-22761-5. OCLC 7576014.
- ^ Purdy, Dennis (2010). Kiss 'Em Goodbye: An ESPN Treasury of Failed, Forgotten, and Departed Teams. Random House Publishing Group. p. 215. ISBN 978-0-345-52047-0. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ Seymour, Harold; Mills, Dorothy Seymour (1989). Baseball: The Early Years. Oxford University Press. p. 183. ISBN 978-0-19-983917-9. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ Fountain, Charles (2009). Under the March Sun: The Story of Spring Training. Oxford University Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-19-974370-4. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ Allen, p. 100.
- ^ a b Burrows & Wallace, pp. 927–928.
- ^ a b c d "'Boss' Tweed Delivered to Authorities" History Channel website, n.d.g. Retrieved February 3, 2015.
- ^ Paine, p. 140.
- ^ Paine, p. 143.
- ^ Allen, pp. 111–112.
- ^ Paine, p. 144.
- ^ a b Mintz, Steven. "Digital History". Digitalhistory.uh.edu. Archived from the original on October 8, 2009. Retrieved July 19, 2009.
- ^ "New York County Courthouse" (PDF). New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. October 16, 1984. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
- ^ "The Marble in the New Court-House A Very Rich Quarry". The New York Times. December 25, 1866.
- ^ "The Fraudulent Tax Levy.; A Report from the Council of Reform – How the Swindles of the Ring are to be Covered Up. The Peace Jubilee – Post Festum". The New York Times. April 13, 1871.
- ^ Burrows & Wallace, pp. 929–931.
- ^ Burrows & Wallace, pp. 934–935.
- ^ "James Watson sleigh accident". The New York Times. January 25, 1871. p. 1.
- ^ Allen, pp. 118–125.
- ^ a b Burrows & Wallace, pp. 1003–1008.
- ^ Bruce Jackson (November 2, 2000). "lazio". Acsu.buffalo.edu. Archived from the original on March 14, 2008. Retrieved July 19, 2009.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Burrows & Wallace, pp. 1008–1011.
- ^ a b Ellis, pp. 347–348.
- ^ Paine, p. 170.
- ^ "On This Day: January 6, 1872". The New York Times. Archived from the original on September 19, 2018.
- ^ "Noah Davis, Jr".
- ^ Allen pp. 138–139.
- ^ a b "Lower Manhattan : News | Landmark Tweed Courthouse Has a Checkered History". Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
- ^ "Boss Tweed Escaped From Prison". www.americaslibrary.gov. Retrieved December 24, 2019.
- ^ "Tweed, William Marcy, (1823–1878)". bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved July 19, 2009.
- ^ Ackerman, p. 28.
- ^ Hamill, Pete (March 27, 2005). "'Boss Tweed': The Fellowship of the Ring". The New York Times.
- ^ Leo Hershkowitz, Tweed's New York: Another Look. (New York: Anchor Press, 1977), p 347. online
- ^ Lankevich, George J. (December 1, 1977). "Hershkowitz, Leo, 'Tweed's New York, Another Look' (Book Review)". American Jewish Historical Quarterly. 67 (2): 190. ProQuest 1296084413.
- ^ "William Tweed". MyHeritage. Retrieved August 7, 2023.
- ^ Mandelbaum, Seymour J. Boss Tweed's New York (1965).
- ^ Muccigrosso, Robert ed., Research Guide to American Historical Biography (1988) 1538–42.
- ^ Ackerman, p. 66.
- ^ Hershkowitz, Leo (1977). Tweed's New York: Another Look. Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
- ^ Anbinder, Tyler. "Tweed, William Magear (03 April 1823–12 April 1878), political 'boss' of New York City in the Civil War era." American National Biography. February 2000. Oxford University Press.
- ^ Nevius, Michelle (2009). Inside the Apple: A Streetwise History of New York City. New York: Free Press. p. 120. ISBN 978-1-4165-8997-6.
- ^ Up In Central Park (1945) on Internet Broadway Database.
- ^ Up In Central Park (1947) on Internet Broadway Database.
- ^ Up in Central Park at AFI Catalog.
- ^ "The Great Adventure: The Man Who Stole New York City" TV Guide.
- ^ "The Great Adventure: The Man Who Stole New York City" Archived November 18, 2018, at the Wayback Machine TV.com.
- ^ "The Great Adventure (1963–64)" Classic TV Archive.
- ^ The Great Adventure: The Man Who Stole New York City at IMDb
- ^ Clute, John "Varley, John" in Clute, John and Nicholls, Peter (eds.) (1995) The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 1271. ISBN 0-312-13486-X. Quote: "...JV's first – and finest – novel, The Ophiuchi Hotline...".
- ^ Staff "The Ophiuchi Notline Analysis – John Varley" eNotes.
- ^ Nicholls, James (October 30, 2016) "No father, no mother, she's just like the other" James Nicholls Reviews.
- ^ "Liberty: Full Credits" TCM.com.
- ^ O'Connor, John J. (June 23, 1986) "'Liberty,' A Glimpse of History" The New York Times.
- ^ O'Heheir, Andrew (January 19, 2003) "Not a Bridge-and-Tunnel Guy" The New York Times.
- ^ Rudolph, Chuck (January 20, 2002). Gangs of New York Slant Magazine.
- ^ Rad, Chloi (February 18, 2016) "Assassin's Creed: Last Descendants Novels Announced" IGN.
Bibliography
- Ackerman, K. D. (2005). Boss Tweed: The rise and fall of the corrupt pol who conceived the soul of modern New York. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers. ISBN 0-7867-1435-2.
- Burrows, Edwin G. and Wallace, Mike (1999). Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-195-11634-8.
- Callow, Alexander B. (1966). The Tweed Ring. New York: Oxford University Press
- Ellis, Edward R. (2004). The Epic of New York City: A Narrative History. Carroll & Graf Publishers. ISBN 0-7867-1436-0,
- Hershkowitz, Leo. Tweed's New York: Another Look. (New York: Anchor Press, 1977), online
- "William Marcy [sic] Tweed" Encyclopedia.com (Cengage), May 23, 2018
- Mandelbaum, Seymour J. (1965). Boss Tweed's New York. New York: John Wiley. ISBN 0-471-56652-7
- Paine, Albert B. (1974). Th. Nast, His Period and His Pictures. Princeton: Pyne Press. ISBN 0-87861-079-0 (The original edition, published in 1904, is now in the public domain.)
- Sante, Lucy (2003). Low Life: Lures and Snares of Old New York. New York: Farrar, Straus, & Giroux. ISBN 978-0374528997
- Staff (July 4, 2005). "Boss Tweed", Gotham Gazette
Further reading
[edit]- Lynch, Denis Tilden (2005) [1927]. Boss Tweed: The story of a grim generation. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Michigan Historical Reprint Series, Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan. ISBN 9781425548940; 1927 1st edition published by Boni & Liveright
External links
[edit]- United States Congress. "William M. Tweed (id: T000440)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
- Green-Wood Cemetery page for WM Tweed
- Map Showing the Portions of the City of New York and Westchester County under the Jurisdiction of the Department of Public Parks talks about Tweed's takeover of the New York City parks system, from the World Digital Library
- Texts on Wikisource:
- William M. Tweed
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