Cole L. Blease

Coleman Livingston Blease (October 8, 1868 – January 19, 1942) was an American politician of the Democratic Party who served as the 89th governor of South Carolina from 1911 to 1915, and as a United States senator from 1925 to 1931. Blease was the political heir of Benjamin Tillman. He led a political revolution in South Carolina by building a political base of white textile mill workers from the state's upcountry region. He was notorious for playing on the prejudices of Poor Whites to gain their votes and was an unrepentant white supremacist.

Cole L. Blease
United States Senator
from South Carolina
In office
March 4, 1925  March 3, 1931
Preceded byNathaniel B. Dial
Succeeded byJames F. Byrnes
90th Governor of South Carolina
In office
January 17, 1911  January 14, 1915
LieutenantCharles Aurelius Smith
Preceded byMartin Frederick Ansel
Succeeded byCharles Aurelius Smith
President Pro Tempore of the South Carolina Senate
In office
January 8, 1907 January 12, 1909
GovernorDuncan Clinch Heyward
Martin Frederick Ansel
Preceded byRichard Irvine Manning III
Succeeded byWilliam Lawrence Mauldin
Member of the South Carolina Senate from Newberry County
In office
January 8, 1907 January 12, 1909
Preceded byGeorge Sewell Mower
Succeeded byAlan Johnstone
Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from Newberry County
In office
January 10, 1899 January 8, 1901
In office
November 25, 1890 November 27, 1894
Personal details
BornOctober 8, 1868
Newberry County, South Carolina
DiedJanuary 19, 1942 (aged 73)
Columbia, South Carolina
Resting placeRosemont Cemetery, Newberry, South Carolina
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Lillie B. Summers
Carolina Floyd
Parent(s)Henry Horatio Blease
Mary Ann Livingston Blease
Alma materGeorgetown University
OccupationAttorney

Blease was notorious for his vituperative demeanor. He did not campaign on political promises but on the prejudices of white citizens. Blease advocated lynching (As noted by one study, “ “Sometimes after a lynching,” writes his most acute interpreter, “Blease publicly celebrated the save murder with a bizarre death dance” “).”[1] and was against education for black people. As U.S. senator, he advocated penalties for interracial couples attempting to get married, criticized US First Lady Lou Hoover for inviting a black guest to tea at the White House, and was the architect of Section 1325.

Early life and political career

Blease was born to Henry Horatio Blease (1832–1892) and Mary Ann Livingston Blease (1830–1874) near the town of Newberry, South Carolina, on October 8, 1868, the year that South Carolina's new Reconstruction constitution was adopted, and Black Americans began participating in political life. He grew up in his father's hotel which led him to be uncommonly social.[2] He was educated at Newberry College, the University of South Carolina, and Georgetown University, where he graduated from the law department in 1889.[3] At the University of South Carolina, Blease was expelled for plagiarism and always carried a grudge against the university.[4]

After his schooling was complete, Blease returned to Newberry to practice law and to enter politics. He began his political career in the South Carolina House of Representatives in 1890 as a Democrat and protégé of Benjamin Tillman.[5] In 1895, the state legislature ratified a new constitution that essentially disfranchised Black people, thus crippling the state's Republican Party, which they supported.[6] The state then had a one-party system, run by the Democrats.

Blease's rise to power, as he moved from the South Carolina House of Representatives to the South Carolina Senate in 1900, was built on the support of both the sharecroppers and white mill workers, then an increasingly-important segment of the electorate in South Carolina.[7] But it was not a straightforward rise, Blease lost his seat in the legislature in 1894 and his attempt to re-gain it in 1896.[8] And while he ultimately obtained a state senate seat in 1900, he subsequently lost races to become the Democratic nominee for governor in 1904 and 1906.[8]

In 1910, Blease was elected mayor of Newberry and held that position until November of that year, when he was elected governor of South Carolina.

Bleasism

Critics and allies of Blease alike used the term Bleasism to "designate the political uprising of first-generation South Carolina millworkers" led by Blease in 1910.[9] The political uprising was different from the one led by Ben Tillman a generation earlier. Whereas Tillman sought agricultural reform and drew his political support from South Carolina's white farmers and planters, Blease was anti-reform and drew his support from white textile mill workers.[9] The movement Blease led was largely characterized by white supremacy and not social policy.[9] But it shared the same enemies as Tillmanism: the newspapers, the railroads, corporations, Charleston aristocrats, and urban businessmen.[10]

A child laborer in a textile mill in Newberry, S.C., the home town of Blease.

Bleasism was made possible by the sociopolitical change South Carolina underwent at the turn of the twentieth century. For instance, in 1880, the state had close to a dozen textile mills, but in 1900 the number had grown to 115.[11] The work force of the mills also changed, becoming increasingly more male each year.[12] Because South Carolina was one of the few Southern states at the time that did not disenfranchise poor white men, Blease actively courted the workers of these mills and built a devoted political base from the men, who hung his photo in their homes and named their children after him.[13]

His appeal to the millworkers and sharecroppers was based on his personality and his view that made the "inarticulate masses feel that Coley was making them an important political force in the state."[14] In fact, little to no policy was tied to Blease but his invectives and shared tongue with the mill workers won him their favor.[15] Because of this, Blease was the only politician in South Carolina who had any independence from Tillman while Tillman was alive.[16] Blease promoted his image as a champion of the common people throughout his career, describing himself as the “poor man’s best friend”[17] while his weekly newspaper during the Twenties encouraged voters to “save South Carolina and Ring Rule and Corporate Control” and elect friends of the “Farmers and Laboring Men.”[18]

One newspaper article commented on Blease’s populist style from one of his speeches:

“Blease pulls up his sleeves, looks over his audience, and launches into his speech. He denounces his enemies, sticks to his friends, declares he has nothing to explain and nothing to apologize for, hits hard at the hostile press, attacks high taxes and those in office who imposed them, gives his opinion of the creation of new offices to be filled with political ‘pets,’ declares his devotion to the working man’s cause, and so on until the driving, dynamic concluding rhetoric is drowned in cheering. He knows the chords to play upon. He knows the popular mind and the little things that affect it. He can be serious or can laugh, can be sentimental or vitriolic, according to the subject in hand. He can express the grouches, the hopes, the irritations, the ambitions of those who believe in him.”[19]

Governor

Blease in 1912

Blease was elected governor in 1910 because he "knew how to play on race, religious, and class prejudices to obtain votes."[14] His legislative program was erratic and without consistency. He favored more aid to white schools but opposed compulsory attendance. He abolished the textile mill at the state penitentiary for health reasons but opposed inspections of private factories to ensure safe and healthful working conditions.[20] Blease vetoed legislation to inspect factories for safety and health considerations, “stating that a man ought to be able to work under any conditions he chose.” He also opposed the medical examination of schoolchildren, “asserting that he would pardon any man who killed a doctor who violated his daughter’s modesty.” [21]

Blease acquired such a bad reputation that he was said to represent the worst aspects of Jim Crow and Benjamin Tillman, who branded Blease's style as "Jim Tillmanism" (Jim Tillman was Benjamin Tillman's nephew, who, as lieutenant governor, had killed a newspaper editor and been acquitted in the case).[22] Blease favored complete white supremacy in all matters. He encouraged the practice of lynching, strongly opposed the education of Black people, and derided an opponent for being a trustee of a black school.[23] He fired administrators without the authority to do so, ignored patronage requests from state legislators, and sparred with the state Supreme Court.[24]

Blease failed to enforce laws and was a scofflaw.[25] On two occasions, he pardoned his black chauffeur when he was cited for speeding.[26] Enjoying the power to pardon, Blease said that he wanted to pardon at least 1,000 men before he exited office because he wanted "to give the poor devils a chance."[27] He is estimated to have pardoned between 1,500 and 1,700 prisoners, some of whom were guilty of murder and other serious crimes.[28] His political enemies suggested that Blease received payments to pardon criminals. Among those he pardoned was former US Representative George W. Murray in 1912. The black Republican had lost an appeal for his conviction of forgery in 1905 by an all-white jury and was sentenced to hard labor. Refusing to serve for a conviction that he claimed resulted from racial discrimination, Murray had left the state permanently for Chicago.

Segregation was also encouraged under Blease. A proposal put forward by Blease (and passed into law) segregated the black and white convicts of county chain gangs.[29]

Despite his racist politics and contradictory approach to reform, a number of positive measures were nevertheless enacted during Blease’s time as governor. Better provision for common schools was introduced, along with a special tax on hydroelectric companies, and a state tuberculosis sanitarium. [30] In 1914 a State Warehouse System was established under which, as noted by one study, “low insurance rates were provided and storage receipts were guaranteed by the State – consequently they immediately became acceptable collateral for the local banks. Thus cotton farmers could get at least some cash on which to live and operate.”[31] A law of February 1911 established maximum working hours for women in mercantile establishments “provided also that they should not be required to work after 10 o’clock at night.” [32] An Act of February 1912, concerning notice of suspension of work, required employers to give notice to their employees give notice to their employees, while another Act from that same month provided for the provision of headlights on locomotives.[33] A 1914 law required railroad companies to maintain shelters at division points “if repair work is regularly done at such points.”[34] A statute related to the working hours of women in mercantile establishments was amended (No. 262) “by authorizing its enforcement by duly authorized agents of the commissioner of labor as well as by himself and the inspectors connected with the department.”[35] A law of February 1914 allowed for labor organizations with a national or international charter to “form mutual associations, incorporated or unincorporated, for the purpose of aiding their members or their beneficiaries in times of sickness and death by levying equitable assessments for the payment of sick relief or death benefits, upon compliance with the terms of this act.” Another Act from that same month provided for railroad warning boards to be erected.[36]

The factory law was changed in 1912 “so as to absolutely prohibit the employment of children under 12.”[37] A measure dated February the 20th 1912 provided that in cities with a population of 5,000 or over “no child under 14 years of age shall be employed as messenger and no minor under 18 shall be so employed between 10pm and 5pm.”[38] A law related to public health was also introduced,[39] a law to provide for the custody of destitute, abandoned and unprotected children.[40] An Act of February the 18th 1911 provided for the payment of one annual pension for the benefit of deceased pensioners, either a soldier or soldier’s widow.[41] An Act of March the 1st 1913 sought to require Clemson College to furnish, at cost, serum to state citizens for treating hog cholera, with the serum provided free to poor persons unable to pay for it.[42] Another law authorized the awarding of 51 beneficiary scholarships “by holding competitive examinations; said scholarships to be of the value of $100 per annum and free tuition.” This measure became law without Blease’s approval.[43] Blease’s lack of support for this measure was arguably due to the fact that, while he believed in free scholarships, he felt that “they should be divided among the people, and not all poured into the laps of a few families.”[44]

Opposition to soft drinks

Blease disliked the newly developed carbonated soft drinks. In his gubernatorial inaugural address in 1911, he said:

I also, in this connection, beg leave to call your attention to the evil of the habitual drinking of Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola, and such like mixtures, as I fully believe they are injurious. It would be better for our people if they had nice, respectable places where they could go and buy a good, pure glass of cold beer, than to drink such concoctions.[45]

Re-election in 1912

In 1912, Blease faced Ira B. Jones in the Democratic gubernatorial primary and narrowly won the contest, and subsequently another term as governor. Jones, a Tillmanite and Chief Justice on the state Supreme Court, was no match for Blease on the stump.[46] Jones claimed that Bleasism "led to anarchy" and campaigned on "law and order."[47] He had Charleston Mayor John P. Grace campaign against Blease in the upcountry.[48] Further, he argued that Blease rewarded his friends with positions in government.[49] But Blease ultimately prevailed in the contest.

Blease had made an agreement with Ben Tillman, who was running for re-election to the Senate, that the two would endorse each other. However, Tillman betrayed this promise several days before the election by releasing a letter denigrating Bleasism.[50]

Post-governorship and pre-Senate political life

Failed campaigns for the Senate

In 1914, before Blease's tenure as governor was over, Blease was so confident that he would be elected to the U.S. Senate if he ran that he visited the Senate chambers in Washington to choose his desk.[51] However, after numerous blunders including his speech at the 1912 National Governors' Conference in Richmond, Virginia, Blease's popularity had waned and the incumbent, Senator Ellison D. Smith was able to secure re-election by 15,000 votes.[51]

In a show of spite for progressive governor-elect Richard Irvine Manning III, Blease resigned five days before the end of his second term on January 14, 1915, so that he did not have to attend Manning's inauguration.[52] Lieutenant Governor Charles Aurelius Smith succeeded to the governorship and performed ceremonial functions during his five days in office.

After leaving office, Blease moved his criminal law practice from Newberry to Columbia and continued railing against his political enemies.[53] He occupied his time giving speeches in rural towns and discussing his use of the governor's parole power in national forums.[54] Further, he spoke out against Governor Manning's policies regarding prohibition (Blease popularly said he would not enforce the dispensary laws in the wet cities, Charleston and Columbia) and Manning's newly created administrative agencies which he called useless.[55]

In 1917, Blease denounced America's entry into World War I.[56] However, he recanted this position the following year.[57] Nonetheless, his statements came back to haunt him when he ran for the 1918 Democratic nomination for the Senate after Tillman died. President Wilson declared that Blease was no friend of the administration, and former allies of Blease failed to endorse him, both occurrences led to Blease losing the race.[57]

Post-World War I

Following his loss in 1918, Blease was inactive politically for the next three years.[57] But as the political climate turned more reactionary after 1919, when the state and nation suffered with postwar economic adjustments, Blease's popularity rebounded. Blease did not run for any public office in 1920.[57] However, Blease threw his hat in the ring once again in 1922 when he ran for governor.[57] Blease failed to capture a majority of the votes and lost to Thomas Gordon McLeod in the run-off by over 15,000 votes.[58]

In virtually all of his campaigns, Blease used a catchy, nonsensical, nonspecific campaign jingle that became well known to virtually every voter in South Carolina in the era. For instance, he used, "Roll up your sleeves, say what you please... the man for the job is Coley Blease!"

Single term in the U.S. Senate and death

A photograph of Blease when he was in the U.S. Senate.

Election

In 1924, Blease defeated James F. Byrnes in the Democratic primary and was elected to the US Senate. His campaign foreshadowed his style as senator. Blease's defeat of Byrnes was widely credited to a rumor campaign that Byrnes, who was raised as a Roman Catholic in Charleston, had not really left that faith.[59] Such an assertion in an overwhelmingly-Protestant state, while the Ku Klux Klan was at the height of its power, ruined Byrnes's political hopes that year. As Senator, Blease continued to voice his staunch opposition to the education of African Americans in the most racist of terms. In 1925, he told a Charlotte, North Carolina newspaper: "I think the greatest mistake a white man ever made was to put his hand in his pocket to educate a nigger. You can’t educate a horse or a mule or a cow, and you can't educate a nigger. They weren't made to be educated. We don't need them for lawyers or pharmacists and all that. They were made to cut wood, draw water, and work in the fields."[60] Nonetheless, some have argued that Blease was considerably more moderate in the election than in his previous political campaigns.[61]

Views and policies

In 1926, Blease proposed an anti-miscegenation amendment to the US Constitution to require Congress to set a punishment for interracial couples attempting to get married and for people officiating an interracial marriage, but Congress never submitted it to the states.

In 1929, in protest of First Lady Lou Hoover's invitation of Jessie DePriest, the African-American wife of Illinois Representative Oscar De Priest, to tea at the White House, Blease proposed a resolution, "[t]o request the Chief Executive to respect the White House," demanding for the Hoovers to "remember that the house in which they are temporarily residing is the 'White House'."[62] In support of the resolution, Blease read the 1901 poem "Niggers in the White House" on the floor of the Senate. After immediate protests from Northern Republican Senators Walter Edge and Hiram Bingham, the poem was excluded from the Congressional Record.[62][63] Bingham described the poem as "indecent, obscene doggerel" which gave "offense to hundreds of thousands of our fellow citizens and... to the Declaration of Independence and our Constitution."[63] Blease withdrew the resolution but said that he did so "because it gave offense to his friend, Senator Bingham, and not because it might give any offense to the Negro race."[63]

That year, Blease made a significant contribution to American immigration law. He brokered a compromise between dueling factions and shepherded a bill through congress which criminalized unlawful entry into the United States, thus paving the way for Section 1325.[64]

Byrnes defeated Blease in his 1930 run for re-election to the Senate.[65] Blease died in Columbia, South Carolina on the night of January 19, 1942, a day after he underwent surgery.[66]

References

Notes

  1. Ben Tillman and the Reconstruction of White Supremacy By Stephen Kantrowitz, 2015, P.296
  2. Simkins 1944 p. 486.
  3. "Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress - Cole Blease". bioguideretro.congress.gov. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  4. Lander, Ernest: A History of South Carolina 1865-1960, p. 141. University of South Carolina Press, 1970.
  5. Simon, Bryant. The Appeal of Cole Blease of South Carolina: Race, Class, and Sex in the New South,” The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 62, No. 1 (Feb., 1996), pp. 57 – 59.
  6. Simkins 1967 p. 224.
  7. Lander, Ernest: A History of South Carolina 1865-1960, p. 49. University of South Carolina Press, 1970.
  8. Simkins 1944 p. 487.
  9. Simon, Bryant (February 1996). "The Appeal of Cole Blease of South Carolina: Race, Class, and Sex in the New South". The Journal of Southern History. 62 (1): 60, 66. doi:10.2307/2211206. JSTOR 2211206.
  10. Stone, Clarence N. (1963). "Bleaseism and the 1912 Election in South Carolina". The North Carolina Historical Review. 40 (1): 54–74. JSTOR 23517346.
  11. Simon 1996 at 61.
  12. Simon 1996 at 62.
  13. Simon 1996 at 63.
  14. Lander, Ernest: A History of South Carolina 1865-1960, p. 50. University of South Carolina Press, 1970.
  15. Simkins 1944 p. 488.
  16. Simkins 1944 at 489.
  17. From Yeoman to Redneck in the South Carolina Upcountry, 1850-1915 By Stephen A. West, 2008]
  18. [Ben Tillman and the Reconstruction of White Supremacy By Stephen Kantrowitz, 2015, P.296]
  19. Antic Governor Cole Blease Sent to Senate; Capital Keeps Eye on Constitution Smasher
  20. Miller, Anthony (1977). Coleman Livingston Blease, South Carolina Politician. Graduate Thesis submitted to the University of North Carolina. Found at http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/uncg/f/miller_anthony_1971.pdf.
  21. Coleman Blease (South Carolina Encyclopedia biography)
  22. Simkins 1944 p. 389.
  23. Miller 1971 p. 27.
  24. Stone 1963 p. 63.
  25. Miller 1971 p. 56.
  26. Simkins 1944 p. 501.
  27. Lander, Ernest: A History of South Carolina 1865-1960, pages 51-52. University of South Carolina Press, 1970.
  28. "Pardoning power in S.C." Post and Courier. July 25, 2017. Retrieved December 13, 2020.
  29. History of South Carolina, ed. by Yates Snowden, in collaboration with H. G. Cutler and an editorial advisory board, including special contributors. v. 2, P.1064-65
  30. Coleman Blease (South Carolina Encyclopedia biography)
  31. Year Book of the Department of Agriculture of the State of South Carolina Volumes 43–47By South Carolina, Department of Agriculture, 1945, P.151
  32. Chronological Development of Labor Legislation for Women in the United States By Florence Patteson Smith, P.136
  33. Labor Legislation of 1912, P.196
  34. Labour Legislation of 1914, P.16
  35. Labour Legislation of 1914, P.17-18
  36. Labour Legislation of 1914, P.204
  37. Monthly Labor Review, September 1915, Volume I, Number 3 P.65
  38. Bulletin Issues 46–55 By United States. Office of Education, 1913, P.183
  39. Acts and joint resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina, 1911, P.92
  40. Acts and joint resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina, 1911, P.135
  41. Acts and joint resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina, 1911, P.157
  42. Acts and joint resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina 1913, P.194-195
  43. Report of the Federal Security Agency, Office of Education, Volume 2 By United States. Office of Education, 1914, P.285
  44. ANNUAL MESSAGE OF GOVERNOR COLE. L. BLEASE TO THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF SOUTH CAROLINA JANUARY 12 1915, P.11
  45. "Blease 1911 inaugural address, page 85" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 25, 2011. Retrieved March 16, 2009.
  46. Stone 1963 p. 57.
  47. Stone 1963 at p. 59.
  48. Stone 1963 at 60.
  49. Stone 1963 at 63.
  50. Stone 1963 at 67.
  51. Hollis, Daniel W. (1979). "Cole Blease: The Years between the Governorship and the Senate, 1915-1924". The South Carolina Historical Magazine. 80 (1): 1–17. JSTOR 27567534.
  52. Hollis, Daniel W. (1979). "Cole Blease: The Years between the Governorship and the Senate, 1915-1924". The South Carolina Historical Magazine. 80 (1): 1–17. JSTOR 27567534.
  53. Hollis 1979, p. 4.
  54. Hollis 1979 at 5.
  55. Hollis 1979 at pp. 8-9.
  56. Hollis 1979 at 17.
  57. Hollis 1979 at 16.
  58. "South Carolina Governor - Thomas Gordon McLeod - 1923-1927". www.sciway.net. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  59. "Byrnes, James Francis". South Carolina Encyclopedia. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  60. The Crisis, April 1925, 275.
  61. Hollis 1979 p. 18.
  62. "Offers 'Nigger' Poem". Providence Evening Tribune. June 18, 1929. p. 7. Retrieved September 16, 2013.
  63. "Blease Poetry is Expunged from Record". The Afro-American. June 22, 1929. Retrieved September 16, 2013.
  64. Stanley-Becker, Isaac (June 25, 2019). "Who's behind the law making undocumented immigrants criminals? An 'unrepentant white supremacist.'". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
  65. Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 105,Indianapolis, 10 September 1930. Retrieved from https://newspapers.library.in.gov/?a=d&d=IPT19300910.1.5&e=-------en-20--1--txt-txIN-------.
  66. Wire service, “Ex-Senator Dies”, The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Tuesday 20 January 1942, Volume 48, page 1.

Bibliography

  • Adams, James Truslow (1940). Dictionary of American History. Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • Burnside, Ronald Dantan (1963). The Governorship of Coleman Livingston Blease of South Carolina, 1911-1915. Indiana University.
  • Simkins, Francis Butler (1944). Pitchfork Ben Tillman, South Carolinian (first paperback ed.). Louisiana State University Press. OCLC 1877696
  • Simon, Bryant (1996). "The Appeal of Cole Blease of South Carolina: Race, Class, and Sex in the New South". Journal of Southern History. 62 (1): 57–86. doi:10.2307/2211206. JSTOR 2211206.
  • Simon, Bryant (1998). A Fabric of Defeat: The Politics of South Carolina Millhands, 1910-1948. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-4704-6.
  • Stone, Clarence N. (1963). "Bleaseism and the 1912 Election in South Carolina". North Carolina Historical Review. 40: 54–74.
  • Hollis, Daniel W. (1978). "Cole L. Blease and the Senatorial Campaign of 1924" (PDF). Proceedings of the South Carolina Historical Association: 53–68. Retrieved March 23, 2017.
  • Hollis, Daniel W. (1979). "Cole Blease: The Years Between the Governorship and the Senate, 1915-1924". South Carolina Historical Magazine. 80: 1–17.
  • Lander, Ernest McPherson Jr. (1970). A History of South Carolina, 1865-1960. University of South Carolina Press. pp. 49–53, 141. ISBN 0-87249-169-2.
  • Miller, Anthony Barry (1971). Coleman Livingston Blease. University of North Carolina, Greensboro.
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