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[[File:1945-08-07-Los-Angeles-Times-front-page.jpg|thumb|right|upright|The front page of the ''Los Angeles Times'' for August 7, 1945, reporting the US atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima and the death of Johnson.]]
[[File:1945-08-07-Los-Angeles-Times-front-page.jpg|thumb|right|upright|The front page of the ''Los Angeles Times'' for August 7, 1945, reporting the US atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima and the death of Johnson.]]


Having served in the Senate for almost thirty years, Johnson died from [[thrombosis]] at the the [[Bethesda Naval Hospital|Naval Hospital]] in [[Bethesda, Maryland]], on August 6, 1945, the same day as the US [[Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki|conducted atomic bombing of Hiroshima]].<ref>{{cite news|url = https://www.newspapers.com/image/380676995/|title = Death Ends Career of Sen. Johnson|date = August 7, 1945|newspaper = [[Los Angeles Times]]|page = 1|agency = [[Associated Press]]|via = [[Newspapers.com]]|url-access = subscription|accessdate = April 1, 2024}}</ref> He had been in failing health for several months. He was interred in a [[mausoleum]] constructed at [[Cypress Lawn Memorial Park]] in [[Colma, California]] and his remains are interred with those of his wife, Minnie, and two sons.
Having served in the Senate for almost thirty years, Johnson died from [[thrombosis]] at the [[Bethesda Naval Hospital|Naval Hospital]] in [[Bethesda, Maryland]], on August 6, 1945, the same day as the US [[Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki|conducted atomic bombing of Hiroshima]].<ref>{{cite news|url = https://www.newspapers.com/image/380676995/|title = Death Ends Career of Sen. Johnson|date = August 7, 1945|newspaper = [[Los Angeles Times]]|page = 1|agency = [[Associated Press]]|via = [[Newspapers.com]]|url-access = subscription|access-date = April 1, 2024}}</ref> He had been in failing health for several months. He was interred in a [[mausoleum]] constructed at [[Cypress Lawn Memorial Park]] in [[Colma, California]] and his remains are interred with those of his wife, Minnie, and two sons.


==Legacy==
==Legacy==

Revision as of 06:02, 2 April 2024

Hiram Johnson
Johnson, c. 1926
United States Senator
from California
In office
March 16, 1917 – August 6, 1945
Preceded byJohn D. Works
Succeeded byWilliam Knowland
23rd Governor of California
In office
January 3, 1911 – March 15, 1917
LieutenantAlbert Wallace
John Morton Eshleman
William Stephens
Preceded byJames Gillett
Succeeded byWilliam Stephens
Personal details
Born
Hiram Warren Johnson

(1866-09-02)September 2, 1866
Sacramento, California, U.S.
DiedAugust 6, 1945(1945-08-06) (aged 78)
Bethesda, Maryland, U.S.
Resting placeCypress Lawn Memorial Park
Political partyRepublican
Other political
affiliations
Progressive (1912–1916)
SpouseMinne McNeal (1886–1945)
Children2
EducationHeald's Business College
University of California, Berkeley

Hiram Warren Johnson (September 2, 1866 – August 6, 1945) was an American attorney and politician who served as the 23rd governor of California from 1911 to 1917. Johnson achieved national prominence in the early 20th century. He was elected in 1916 as the United States Senator from California, where he was re-elected to five terms and served until his death in 1945.

As a governor, Johnson was a leading American progressive. He ran for vice president on Theodore Roosevelt's Progressive ticket in the 1912 presidential election. As a US senator, Johnson became a leading liberal isolationist, among those "Irreconcilables" who opposed the Treaty of Versailles and rejected the League of Nations. Later, Johnson was also a vocal opponent of the United Nations Charter.

After having worked as a stenographer and reporter, Johnson embarked on a legal career. He began his practice in his hometown of Sacramento, California. After he moved to San Francisco, he worked as an assistant district attorney. Gaining statewide renown for his prosecutions of public corruption, Johnson won the 1910 California gubernatorial election with the backing of the Lincoln–Roosevelt League. He instituted several progressive reforms, establishing a railroad commission and introducing aspects of direct democracy, such as the power to recall state officials. Having joined with Roosevelt and other progressives to form the Progressive Party, Johnson won the party's 1912 vice-presidential nomination. In one of the best third-party performances in U.S. history, the ticket finished second nationally in the popular and electoral votes.

Johnson was elected to the US Senate in 1916, becoming a leader of the chamber's Progressive Republicans. He made his biggest mark in the Senate as an early voice for isolationism, opposing U.S. entry into World War I and U.S. participation in the League of Nations.

He unsuccessfully sought the Republican presidential nomination in 1920 and 1924. He supported Democratic nominee Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1932 presidential election. While Johnson supported many of Roosevelt's New Deal programs, by November 1936 he became violently hostile to Roosevelt as a potential dictator. Johnson was in increasingly poor health in his later years, but remained in the Senate until his death in 1945.

Early years

Hiram Johnson was born in Sacramento on September 2, 1866.[1] His father, Grove Lawrence Johnson, was an attorney and Republican U.S. Representative and a member of the California State Legislature whose career was marred by accusations of election fraud and graft.[2] His mother, Mabel Ann "Annie" Williamson De Montfredy, was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution based on her descent from Pierre Van Cortlandt and Philip Van Cortlandt.[3] Johnson had one brother and three sisters.[2]

Johnson attended the public schools of Sacramento and was 16 when he graduated from Sacramento High School in 1882 as the class valedictorian.[4] Too young to begin attending college, Johnson worked as a shorthand reporter and stenographer in his father's law office and attended Heald's Business College.[4][5] He studied law at the University of California, Berkeley from 1884 to 1886, where he was a member of the Chi Phi Fraternity.[4] After his admission to the bar in 1888, Johnson practiced in Sacramento with his brother Albert as the firm of Johnson & Johnson.[6] When the State Bar of California was organized in 1927, William H. Waste, the Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court, was given license number one [7] and Johnson received number two. Both his son, Hiram Jr. and grandson, Hiram III, were later members of the California State Bar.[8]

In addition to practicing law, Johnson was active in politics as a Republican, including supporting his father's campaigns.[9] In 1899, Johnson backed the mayoral campaign of George H. Clark.[9] Clark won, and when he took office in 1900, he named Johnson as city attorney.[9]

In 1902, Johnson moved to San Francisco, where he quickly developed a reputation as a fearless litigator, primarily as a criminal defense lawyer, while becoming became active in reform politics.[10] He attracted statewide attention in 1908 when he assisted District Attorney Francis J. Heney in the prosecution of Abe Ruef and Mayor Eugene Schmitz for graft.[10] After Heney was shot in the courtroom during an attempted assassination, Johnson took the lead for the prosecution and won the case.[11]

Governor of California (1911–1917)

Johnson during his tenure as governor
Johnson and newly elected Lieutenant Governor A.J. Wallace, right, in the Los Angeles Herald, November 9, 1910

In 1910, Johnson won the gubernatorial election as a member of the Lincoln–Roosevelt League, a Progressive Republican movement, running on a platform opposed to the Southern Pacific Railroad. During his campaign, he toured the state in an open automobile, covering thousands of miles and visiting small communities throughout California that were inaccessible by rail.[12] Johnson helped establish rules that made voting and the political process easier. For example, he established rules to facilitate recalls. This measure was used to remove Governor Gray Davis from office in 2003 and to enable an unsuccessful effort to remove Governor Gavin Newsom in 2021.[13]

In office, Johnson was a populist who promoted a number of democratic reforms: the election of U.S. Senators by direct popular vote rather than the state legislature (which was later ratified nationwide by a constitutional amendment), cross-filing, initiative, referendum, and recall elections. Johnson's reforms gave California a degree of direct democracy unmatched by any other U.S. state at the time. When he took office, amid rampant corruption, the Southern Pacific Railroad held so much power it was known as the fourth branch of government. "While I do not by any means believe the initiative, the referendum and the recall are the panacea for all our political ills," Johnson extolled in his 1911 inaugural address, "they do give to the electorate the power of action when desired, and they do place in the hands of the people the means by which they may protect themselves."

Johnson was also instrumental in reining in the power of the Southern Pacific Railroad through the establishment of a state railroad commission. On taking office, Johnson paroled Chris Evans, convicted as the Southern Pacific train bandit, but required that he leave California.

Hiram Johnson at the 1913 California State Fair

Although initially opposed to the bill, Johnson gave in to political pressure and supported the California Alien Land Law of 1913, which prevented Asian immigrants from owning land in the state (they were already excluded from naturalized citizenship because of their race).[14]

1912 vice presidential campaign

In 1912, Johnson was a founder of the national Progressive Party and ran as the party's vice presidential candidate, sharing a ticket with former President Theodore Roosevelt. Roosevelt and Johnson narrowly carried California but finished second nationally behind the Democratic ticket of Woodrow Wilson and Thomas Marshall. Their second-place finish, ahead of incumbent Republican President William Howard Taft, remains among the strongest for any third party in American history.

Johnson was re-elected governor of California in 1914 as the Progressive Party candidate, gaining nearly twice the votes of his Republican opponent John D. Fredericks.[15] In 1917, as one of his final acts as governor before ascending to the U.S. Senate, Johnson signed Senate Constitutional Amendment 26, providing health insurance for all in the Golden State. Then it was put on the ballot for ratification. A coalition of insurance companies took out an ad in The Chronicle, warning it "would spell social ruin to the United States." Every voter in the state, as recounted in a recent issue of the New Yorker, "received in the mail a pamphlet with a picture of the Kaiser and the words 'Born in Germany. Do you want it in California?' " The ballot measure failed by 73 to 27%.

U.S. Senator (1917–1945)

Refusing to give the lady [Peace Treaty of Versailles] a seat—by Senators Borah, Lodge and Johnson
'Gainst the League, Aint' You, Warren? July 26, 1920, political cartoon showing Johnson trying to force President Warren Harding against the League of Nations; Harding was already anti-League of Nations
Time cover, September 29, 1924

In 1916, Johnson ran successfully for the U.S. Senate, defeating conservative Democrat George S. Patton Sr. and took office on March 16, 1917. Johnson was elected as a staunch opponent of American entry into World War I, and allegedly said, "The first casualty when war comes is truth." However, this quote may be apocryphal.[16] As an isolationist, Johnson voted against the League of Nations during his first term.

During his Senate career, Johnson served as chairman of the Committees on Cuban Relations (Sixty-sixth Congress), Patents (Sixty-seventh Congress), Immigration (Sixty-eighth through Seventy-first Congresses), Territories and Insular Possessions (Sixty-eighth Congress), and Commerce (Seventy-first and Seventy-second Congresses).

In the Senate, Johnson helped push through the Immigration Act of 1924, having worked with Valentine S. McClatchy and other anti-Japanese lobbyists to prohibit Japanese and other East Asian immigrants from entering the United States.[14]

In the early 1920s, the motion picture industry sought to establish a self-regulatory process to fend off official censorship. Senator Johnson was among three candidates identified to head a new group, alongside Herbert Hoover and Will H. Hays. Hays, who had managed President Harding's 1920 campaign, was ultimately named to head the new Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America in early 1922.[17]

As Senator, Johnson proved extremely popular. In 1934, he was re-elected with 94.5 percent of the popular vote; he was nominated by both the Republican and Democratic parties and his only opponent was Socialist George Ross Kirkpatrick.[18]

Johnson was a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee continuously for 25 years, from the 66th Congress (1919–21) through the 78th Congress (1943–44) and one of its longest serving members. In 1943, a confidential analysis of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, made by British scholar Isaiah Berlin for his Foreign Office, stated that Johnson:

is the Isolationists' elder statesman and the only surviving member of the [William E.] Borah-[Henry Cabot] Lodge-Johnson combination which led the fight against the League in 1919 and 1920. He is an implacable and uncompromising Isolationist with immense prestige in California, of which he has twice been Governor. His election to the Senate has not been opposed for many years by either party. He is acutely Pacific-conscious and is a champion of a more adequate defence of the West Coast. He is a member of the Farm Bloc and is au fond, against foreign affairs as such; his view of Europe as a sink of iniquity has not changed in any particular since 1912, when he founded a short-lived progressive party. His prestige in Congress is still great and his parliamentary skill should not be underestimated.[19]

In 1945, Johnson was absent when the vote took place for ratification of United Nations Charter, but made it known that he would have voted against this outcome.[citation needed] Senators Henrik Shipstead and William Langer were the only ones to cast votes opposing ratification.[20]

Presidential politics

Following Theodore Roosevelt's death in January 1919, Johnson was the most prominent leader in the surviving progressive movement; the Progressive Party of 1912 was dead. In 1920 he ran for the Republican nomination for president but was defeated by conservative Senator Warren Harding. Johnson did not get the support of Roosevelt's family, who instead supported Roosevelt's long-time friend Leonard Wood. At the convention, Johnson was asked to serve as Harding's running mate, but he declined.[21]

Johnson sought the 1924 Republican nomination against President Calvin Coolidge, but his campaign was derailed after he lost the California primary. Johnson declined to challenge Herbert Hoover for the 1928 presidential nomination, instead choosing to seek re-election to the Senate.[21]

In the 1932 presidential election, Johnson broke with President Hoover. He was one of the most prominent Republicans to support Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt.[21] During Roosevelt's first term, Johnson supported the president's New Deal economic recovery package and frequently 'crossed the floor' to aid the Democrats. By late 1936, however, he was convinced that Roosevelt was a very dangerous would-be dictator. Johnson, although in poor health, attacked Roosevelt and the New Deal following FDR's attempt to take control of the Supreme Court in 1937.[22]

Personal life

Hiram Johnson Sr. (left) with his oldest son, Hiram Johnson Jr. c. 1920–1925

In January 1886, Johnson married Minne L. McNeal (1869–1947). The couple had two sons: Hiram W. "Jack" Johnson Jr. (1886–1959), and Archibald "Archie" McNeal Johnson (1890–1933). Both sons practiced law in California and served in the army. Hiram Jr. was a veteran of World War I, and attained the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Army Air Corps while stationed at Fort Mason in San Francisco during World War II. Archie Johnson was a major of field artillery corps and was wounded in action during the First World War.[23][24]

Death

The front page of the Los Angeles Times for August 7, 1945, reporting the US atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima and the death of Johnson.

Having served in the Senate for almost thirty years, Johnson died from thrombosis at the Naval Hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, on August 6, 1945, the same day as the US conducted atomic bombing of Hiroshima.[25] He had been in failing health for several months. He was interred in a mausoleum constructed at Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma, California and his remains are interred with those of his wife, Minnie, and two sons.

Legacy

During his first term gubernatorial inaugural address on January 3, 1911, Johnson declared that his first duty was "to eliminate every private interest from the government and to make the public service of the State responsive solely to the people." Committed to "arm the people to protect themselves" against such abuses, Johnson proposed amending the state Constitution with "the initiative, the referendum and the recall." All three of these progressive reforms were enacted during his governorship, forever guaranteeing Johnson's stature as the preeminent progressive reformer of California politics. His contribution as the driving force behind the direct democratic process for removal of elected officials was revisited in the media and by the general public during the successful 2003 California recall election of Democrat governor Gray Davis. Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger, the eventual winner, referred to Johnson's progressive legacy in his campaign speeches. Johnson's stature in fostering the California recall and ballot initiative direct democratic processes again surfaced in the media during the unsuccessful 2021 California recall election of Democrat governor Gavin Newsom.[26]

On August 25, 2009, Governor Schwarzenegger and his wife, Maria Shriver, announced that Johnson would be one of 13 inducted into the California Hall of Fame that year.

Johnson held the record as California's longest-serving United States Senator for over 75 years, until it was broken by Democrat Dianne Feinstein on March 28, 2021. He remains the longest serving Republican senator and the longest serving male senator from California.[27]

The Hiram Johnson papers, consisting primarily of hundreds of letters that Johnson wrote to his two sons over the course of decades, and that his son, Hiram Jr. donated in 1955, reside at the Bancroft Library at the University of California, Berkeley.[28]

Hiram Johnson High School in Sacramento, California is named in his honor.

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ Lower, Richard Coke (1993). A Bloc of One: The Political Career of Hiram W. Johnson. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-8047-2081-6 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b Lower, pp. 1–3.
  3. ^ Augsbury, Mary Ellis (1916). Johnston, Sarah hall (ed.). Lineage Book, National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Vol. XLIII, 1903. Harrisburg, PA: Telegraph Printong Company. p. 56 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ a b c Lower, p. 5.
  5. ^ MIller, Jay Wilson (1964). The Independent Business School in American Education. New York, NY: Gregg Division, McGraw-Hill. p. 211. Heald's Business Colleges, of California, report that the following well - known persons were former students: Hon. Hiram Johnson, former Governor of California...
  6. ^ Lower, p. 7.
  7. ^ "California State Bar, Attorney Search".
  8. ^ "California State Bar, Attorney Search".
  9. ^ a b c Lower, pp. 10–11.
  10. ^ a b Lower, p. 13.
  11. ^ Lower, p. 15.
  12. ^ Michelson, Marion (November 19, 1910). "Hiram Johnson Stumped the State in Automobile Prompt at Every Date". Sausalito News. Vol. 26, no. 47. Retrieved September 30, 2020.
  13. ^ "Hiram Johnson, California Studies Weekly". Archived from the original on May 27, 2021. Retrieved May 27, 2021.
  14. ^ a b Niiya, Brian. "Hiram Johnson". Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
  15. ^ "The only successful progressive leader". The Independent. November 16, 1914. Retrieved July 24, 2012.
  16. ^ Wikiquote, Hiram Johnson
  17. ^ "Will Hays: America's Morality Czar" Archived September 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, "Source: 'Will Hays.' Encyclopedia of World Biography Supplement, Vol. 21. Gale Group, 2001." Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  18. ^ "HarpWeek – Elections – 1912 Biographies". elections.harpweek.com. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  19. ^ Hachey, Thomas E. (Winter 1973–1974). "American Profiles on Capitol Hill: A Confidential Study for the British Foreign Office in 1943" (PDF). Wisconsin Magazine of History. 57 (2): 141–153. JSTOR 4634869. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 21, 2013.
  20. ^ Fitzpatrick, 1975.
  21. ^ a b c Hamilton, Marty (September 1962). "Bull Moose Plays an Encore: Hiram Johnson and the Presidential Campaign of 1932". California Historical Society Quarterly. 41 (3): 211–221. doi:10.2307/25155490. JSTOR 25155490.
  22. ^ Fitzpatrick, pp. 253-263.
  23. ^ "HIRAM JOHNSON JR. PROPOSED FOR JOB". San Francisco Call. May 14, 1911. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  24. ^ Willis, William L. (1913). History of Sacramento County, California: Biographical Sketches of The Leading Men and Women of the County Who Have Been Identified With Its Growth and Development from the Early Days to the Present. Los Angeles, California: Historic Record Company. Retrieved February 13, 2021.[permanent dead link] Transcribed by Peggy Hooper, 2011
  25. ^ "Death Ends Career of Sen. Johnson". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. August 7, 1945. p. 1. Retrieved April 1, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  26. ^ Curwen, Thomas (September 5, 2021). "Has California's unique brand of direct democracy gone too far? Recall is ultimate test". Los Angeles Times.
  27. ^ Haberkorn, Jennifer (March 28, 2021). "Dianne Feinstein becomes California's longest-serving U.S. senator". Los Angeles Times.
  28. ^ Hiram Johnson papers, 1895–1945

Further reading

  • Blackford, Mansel Griffiths. "Businessmen and the regulation of railroads and public utilities in California during the Progressive Era." Business History Review 44.03 (1970): 307–319.
  • Feinman, Ronald L. Twilight of progressivism: the western Republican senators and the New Deal (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981)
  • Le Pore, Herbert P. "Prelude to Prejudice: Hiram Johnson, Woodrow Wilson, and the California Alien Land Law Controversy of 1913." Southern California Quarterly (1979): 99–110. in JSTOR
  • McKee, Irving. "The Background and Early Career of Hiram Warren Johnson, 1866–1910." Pacific Historical Review (1950): 17–30. in JSTOR
  • Miller, Karen A.J. Populist nationalism: Republican insurgency and American foreign policy making, 1918–1925 (Greenwood, 1999)
  • Olin, Spencer C. California's prodigal sons: Hiram Johnson and the Progressives, 1911–1917 (U of California Press, 1968)
  • Olin, Spencer C. "Hiram Johnson, the California Progressives, and the Hughes Campaign of 1916." The Pacific Historical Review (1962): 403–412. in JSTOR
  • Olin, Spencer C. "Hiram Johnson, the Lincoln-Roosevelt League, and the Election of 1910." California Historical Society Quarterly (1966): 225–240. in JSTOR
  • Olin, Spencer C. "European Immigrant and Oriental Alien: Acceptance and Rejection by the California Legislature of 1913." Japanese Immigrants and American Law (Routledge, 2019) pp. 331–343. online
  • Shover, John L. "The progressives and the working class vote in California." Labor History (1969) 10#4 pp: 584–601. online
  • Weatherson, Michael A., and Hal Bochin. Hiram Johnson: Political Revivalist (University Press of America, 1995)
  • Weatherson, Michael A., and Hal Bochin. Hiram Johnson: A Bio-Bibliography (Greenwood Press, 1988)

Unpublished PhD dissertations that are online

  • Dewitt, Howard Arthur. "Hiram W. Johnson and American Foreign Policy, 1917-1941" (The University Of Arizona; Proquest Dissertations Publishing, 1972. 7215602).
  • Fitzpatrick, John James, III. "Senator Hiram W. Johnson: A Life History, 1866-1945." (University Of California, Berkeley; Proquest Dissertations Publishing, 1975. 7526691).
  • Liljekvist, Clifford B. "Senator Hiram Johnson" (University Of Southern California; Proquest Dissertations Publishing, 1953. Dp28687)
  • Nichols, Egbert R. Jr. "An Investigation Of The Contributions Of The Public Speaking Of Hiram W. Johnson To His Political Career" (University Of Southern California; Proquest Dissertations Publishing, 1948. 0154027).
  • Weatherson, Michael Allen. "A Political Revivalist: " The Public Speaking Of Hiram W. Johnson, 1866-1945" (Indiana University; Proquest Dissertations Publishing, 1985. 8516663).

Primary sources

  • Johnson, Hiram. The diary letters of Hiram Johnson, 1917–1945 (Vol. 1. Garland Publishing, 1983)

Archives

Party political offices
Preceded by Republican nominee for Governor of California
1910
Succeeded by
First Progressive nominee for Vice President of the United States
1912
Party dissolved
Progressive nominee for Governor of California
1914
Republican nominee for U.S. Senator from California
(Class 1)

1916, 1922, 1928, 1934, 1940
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Minor Moore
Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from California
(Class 1)
Endorsed

1934, 1940
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of California
1911–1917
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 1) from California
1917–1945
Served alongside: James D. Phelan, Samuel M. Shortridge, William Gibbs McAdoo, Thomas M. Storke, Sheridan Downey
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Cuban Relations Committee
1919–1921
Position abolished
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Patents Committee
1921–1923
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Senate Commerce Committee
1930–1933
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time
September 29, 1924
Succeeded by