.
| [As reported in the
New York World, New York Tribune, New York Star,
and New York Times, 6 October 1886. Edited and reprinted in
Charles W. Lomas, The Agitator in American Society
(Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1968), 48-58. ] |
Henry George's 1886
mayoral campaign generated tremendous enthusiasm among New York
City's working people, particularly trade union members. George,
author of the 1879 book Progress and Poverty, considered
private land ownership to be the cause of inequality and advocated
a "single tax" to remedy it. Although George campaigned
for less than a month, he spoke more than one hundred times,
sometimes addressing five or more labor unions and church groups
in a single evening. His acceptance speech for the nomination of
the United Labor Party, delivered at Cooper Union on October 5,
1886, conveyed George's identification with organized labor and
his desire to channel the ground swell of working-class activism
of the mid-1880s toward electoral politics. Some sense of George's
rapport with his working-class supporters can be glimpsed in the
audience reactions of "laughter" and "vociferous
cheers" that a reporter for the New York World
recorded in this account of George's acceptance speech.
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The step I am about to take has not been entered upon lightly. When my
nomination for Mayor of New York was first talked of I regarded it as a
nomination which was not to be thought about. I did not desire to be
Mayor of New York. (Applause and cries of, "But you shall be.")
I have had in my time political ambition, but years ago I gave it up. I
saw what practical politics meant; I saw that under the conditions as
they were a man who would make a political career must cringe and fawn
and intrigue and flatter, and I resolved that I would not so degrade my
manhood. (Great applause and cries of "Bully for you.")
Another career opened to me; the path that I had laid before-that my
eyes were fixed upon-was rather that of a pioneer-that of the men who go
in advance of politics (applause), the men who break the road
that after they have gone will be trod by millions. It seemed to me that
there lay duty and that there lay my career, and since this nomination
has been talked about my friends here and through the country and beyond
the seas have sent me letter after letter, asking me not to lower, as
they are pleased to term it, the position I occupied by running for a
municipal office. But I believe, and have long believed, that working
men ought to go into politics. (applause and cheers) I believe,
and I have long believed, that through politics was the way, and the
only way, by which anything real and permanent could be secured for
labor. In that path, however, I did not expect to tread. That, I
thought, would devolve upon others, but when the secretary of this
nominating convention came to me and said, "You are the only man
upon whom we can unite, and I want you to write me a letter either
accepting or refusing to accept, and giving your reasons," that put
a different face on the matter. I had made up my mind to refuse, but
when he came in that way I could not refuse. (applause) But I
made my conditions. I asked for a guarantee of good faith of the men who
put me forward; I asked for some tangible evidence that my
fellow-citizens of New York really wanted me to act. That evidence you
have given me. All I asked, and more.
(Then turning to the chairman and grasping his hand, Mr. George
continued impressively:) John McMackin, Chairman of the Convention
of Organized Labor, I-accept your nomination, and in grasping your hand
I grasp in spirit the hand of every man in this movement. From now
henceforward let us stand together.
Working-men of New York-organized laborers of New York, I accept your
nomination. (enthusiastic cheering) For weal or for woe, for
failure or for success, henceforward I am your candidate. (VOICE: "And
the next Mayor, too.") I am proud of it from the bottom of my
heart. I thank you for the compliment you have paid me. Never in my time
has any American citizen received from his fellow-citizens such a
compliment as has been consummated to-night; never shall any act of mine
bring discredit upon that compliment. (A VOICE: "That we are sure
of.") (Then dropping the chairman's hand, and coming to the
front of the platform again, Mr. George said, with much solemnity:)
Working-men of New York, I am your candidate; now it devolves upon you
to elect me. (CHORUS OF VOICES: "We will.") In your
name I solicit the suffrages of all citizens, rich or poor, white or
black, native or foreign-born; if any organization of citizens sees fit
to indorse your nomination, well and good; but as you have asked me for
no pledges, so you may rely on me; I will make no pledge to any man or
body of men. As you have nominated me unsolicited, I will solicit the
indorsement of no other party. Whoever accepts me must accept me as the
candidate of organized labor standing alone. And now it devolves upon
you to elect me. You can; but look in the face what is against us. This,
in my opinion, will be one of the fiercest contests that ever took place
in this or any other American city. If money can beat me, I shall be
beaten. Every influence that can be arrayed against me will be used.
There will be falsehood and slanders, everything that money and energy
and political knowledge and experience can command. Don't imagine that
those who have their hands in the pockets of this city through their
control of the municipal departments will give up easily (laughter);
don't imagine that the politicians who have made a business of politics
for years and have grown fat upon it will allow the working-men to smash
their machines without trying their utmost to prevent it. But I do
believe, as your chairman has said, that we shall win in spite of all.
And I believe it because I see, in this gathering enthusiasm-a power
that is stronger than money (prolonged applause), more potent
than trained politicians; something that will meet and throw them aside
like chaff before a gale. (renewed applause).
Standing now as your candidate for the Mayoralty of New York City, it
is meet and fitting that I should say something with regard to the
office to which you propose to elect me. It is an important office; it
is a powerful position, but any man who obtains it will be fettered by a
bad system. Our system of government here is very bad. What we should
have is one similar to that of the United States-one executive,
responsible to the people, and the heads of the various departments
appointed by him removable at his pleasure and responsible to him. Then
you will have somebody to call to account. Under our present system you
have dual commissions, commissions of three, or four, or five persons,
and the consequence is you can fix no responsibility anywhere. These men
have to provide for their friends, and therefore there are all sorts of
trading and dickering. Nevertheless the Mayor of New York has large
powers, he has absolute power in appointing commissioners, though he has
no power, as he ought to have, to remove them, with the exception of two
very important commissioners-the Commissioners of Accounts; these he may
appoint and remove at pleasure. Their business is to go through the
departments and see that everything is all correct. But the Mayor has a
greater power, the power of visitation and inquisition, finding out how
things are going; and he has another great power, that of appealing to
public opinion. If elected, as I believe I shall be elected, Mayor, I
will do my utmost to discharge its duties faithfully and well-I will do
my utmost to give you an honest and a clean government. (applause)
I will do my utmost to bring about such changes in legislation as will
remedy defects which have been proved, and I will enforce the laws.
I want this to be distinctly understood-that when I take the oath of
office as Mayor of New York I will be Mayor of the whole city. (prolonged
cheering, ending with three rounds and a tiger from some men in the rear)
I will preserve order at all risks; I will enforce the law against
friends as fully as against enemies. (applause) But there are
some things that, if I am Mayor of New York, I shall stop if I can
prevent them. There will be no more policemen acting as censors of what
shall be said at public meetings. (This last word seemed to be
anticipated and was drowned in a tempest of applause.) I will
support to the utmost of my power and my influence the peace officers of
the city, but if it is in my power to put a stop to it I will put a stop
to the practice which seems to be common among many of the hoodlums of
the force, of turning themselves into judge, jury, and executioner, and
clubbing anybody whom they think ought to be clubbed. Without fear and
without favor I will try to do my duty. I will listen as readily to the
complaint of the richest man in this city as I will to the complaint of
the poorest. (A VOICE: "The rich have nothing to complain of.")
Some of them are under the impression that if I am elected they may
have. No: you are right about it. The rich in this city have very little
to complain of. Corrupt government always is and always must be the
government of the men who have money. Under our republican forms, while
we profess to believe in the equality of all men, the rich have
virtually ruled the administration of the law. It reminds me of an old
fable I used to read in a French book. There was a terrible pestilence
among the animals once upon a time. The lion made proclamation and
called all the beasts together. They were suffering for their sins, he
said, and ought to investigate who it was that provoked the wrath of
Heaven, and then offer him up as a sacrifice. And so all the animals
met. They elected the fox as chairman. (laughter) The lion said
he was a great sinner; that he had eaten many flocks of sheep, and even
once eaten a shepherd. (laughter) The fox said to the lion that
the sheep ought to be complimented to be eaten by his majesty, and as
for the shepherd, it served him right, "for evidently," went
on the fox, "he had been throwing stones at your majesty." And
then the wolf and the hyena and the tiger and so on confessed their
several sins, until it came to the fox, who said he had eaten a great
many chickens, but they crowed so in the morning that they disturbed him
very much. Lastly came the donkey, who said that as he was carrying a
load of hay to the market for his master he turned around and took a
mouthful. "Wicked monster," cried the fox. "But I was
hungry," continued the ass. "He had forgotten to give me my
breakfast." "That makes no difference," cried the fox,
and it was unanimously decided that it was the sin of the ass that
brought the pestilence (laughter), and all the animals fell on
him and tore him to pieces by way of sacrifice. It is so with many rich
criminals and it is so on the other side of the question. The Theiss
boycotters are still in prison. Is there not something in the State of
New York that recalls that battle of the animals? (A voice near one
of the doors here shouted out, "Mr. George, there are three or four
ex-convicts who have been sent here as heelers for Tammany Hall.")
I should not be at all surprised at that.
The politicians whom you have disturbed by your nomination, and a good
many of the respectable journals, think very poorly of this movement,
because they term it, "class movement." They dislike to see
class movements in our politics; they would rather you would go on in
the old way voting for Tammany Hall, or the County Democracy, or the
Republicans. Class movement! What class is it? The working class! Do you
ever ask yourselves how it is that the working-men came to constitute a
class? In the beginning all men had to work. Is it not the dictate of
Scripture: "Thou shalt earn thy bread by the sweat of thy brow"?
Nature gives to man nothing. Without work nothing can be produced. Work
is the producer of all wealth. How, then, is it that there came to be
distinctively a working class? How is it that that working class is
everywhere the poorer class? It is that some men devise schemes by which
they can live without working, by throwing the burden of their work upon
their fellows. An English writer has divided all men into three
classes-working-men, beggar-men, and thieves (loud cheers)-and
this is correct. There are only three ways of getting the product of
labor-by working for it, by having it given to you, and by stealing it.
(laughter) If this is a class movement, then it is a movement of
the working class against the beggar-men and the thieves. ( applause)
A class movement! No. (cheers) It is what Gladstone said of that
great movement on the other side of the water-it is a movement of the
masses against robbery by the classes, and is it not time that there
should be in this city of New York some such movement as this? The
political condition of this city-the metropolis of the western world-is
today a hissing and a reproach through all the monarchies of Europe. Go
over there on the other side and venture to say one word against their
aristocratic institutions and see how quickly you will be met with the
retort that there is no place where there is such open-faced corruption
as in this city of New York. Speak to an Englishman about his rulers and
see how quickly he will answer you to your disadvantage. (A VOICE: "To
hell with them") Oh, no! Not to hell with any country. The man
who is in this labor movement truly and heartily, the man who feels its
spirit and its impulse, becomes a citizen of the world (loud cheers),
a worker for the emancipation of the race. All over the world the
working classes are brothers. (cheers) The quicker and sooner
they recognize that, the quicker the day of redemption will come. I sat
on the platform last night when Mr. Justin McCarthy delivered his
masterly address, and I was very pleased to notice the charity to all
men that was manifest throughout it. Ireland is not struggling for its
rights alone but for the rights of the English people as well. The Land
League movement has brought out the burning declaration of the land for
the people, and is doing its work on both sides of the sea.
But to come back to our own government and time. This government of New
York City-our whole political system-is rotten to the core. It needs no
investigation to discover it. An assemblyman ordinarily "puts up"
more than he can honestly expect to get back in salary. The ordinary
expenditure of a candidate for Congress, I am told, is about $10,000,
and he can make the expenses of his campaign go as high as $80,000. Even
our judges pay some $20,000 for the privilege of running. It is well
understood that a candidate for Mayor must be prepared to spend $75,000,
and it is said that, in a recent campaign, the candidate spent something
like $200,000. Look how money flows everywhere. This morning we read of
Alderman Diwer barbecuing an ox and letting beer run like water-and this
distance from election. Is this vast amount of money thrown out for
simple salaries? The money that is habitually spent in campaigning in
this city is put in as a business investment (applause)-money
out to get money in. Corruption!
Just consider, for a moment, the contemptuous manner in which this
movement of our working class is treated. And why? Just because they
think we haven't the "sinews of war." Because, as Mr. "Fatty"
Walsh says, "Those labor fellows ain't got no inspectors of
election." And under the beautiful system of local politics here,
one rogue is turned out and another let in. Does that improve things? Do
you suppose that Mr. Rollin M. Squire was a sinner above all other
office-holders in this city? (cries of "no") Is not
the present incumbent applying the same old official axe-chopping off
Tammany heads and putting in County Democrats in the same good old
fashion? Is it not well understood that without some such deal tickets
cannot be got up nor candidates run? Look at the outcry that has gone up
over this movement. The cry of alarm "The Democracy must unite,"
is heard everywhere. How has the party of Jefferson and of Jackson
fallen when its two local wings must be called upon to unite, and even
the power of the National Administration brought in to help that unity!
And against what? Against the working man! Why don't they unite, then,
when the obligation is so imperative? Because the difficulty lies in
parcelling out the spoils-in giving out the offices and getting the
proper kind of pledges. As to the principle of the thing, they care
nothing for that. Isn't it time that fresh breath was infused into this
corruption?
In this movement of ours there is hope of better things. In a city
where it has long been held that a man must be rich, very rich, to hold
its highest office, you have put up a poor man. (cheers) In a
city where it is a standing rule that a candidate must disburse money,
you propose to furnish your own money. And you have a candidate who is
free from pledges. Can your Johnny O'Briens say that when their
candidate is nominated? (cries of "no, no") If the
much hoped for union of Tammany Hall and Irving Hall and the County
Democracy does take place, can it be said of their candidate that he
stands free of pledges as to how he will parcel out the jobs in his
gift? Remember that until you can elect men who are free you cannot
expect an unfettered administration.
This movement aims at political reform; but that is not all. That is
not the entire significance of my candidacy. We aim, too, at social
reform. (applause) As declared in the platform you heard here
to-night we aim at equal rights for all men. Chattel slavery is dead,
but what we do tonight is to unfurl again the standard of the equal
rights of man, to take up again the sentiment of the Declaration of
Independence. (applause) Upon us devolves the duty of
overthrowing that more insidious form of slavery which results in
industrial slavery. This movement is a revolt of the masses not simply
against political corruption, but against social injustice. (applause)
And is it not time, and is this not the place? (cries of "yes,"
and applause) Look over our vast city, and what do we see? On one
side a very few men richer by far than it is good for men to be, and on
the other side a great mass of men and women struggling and worrying and
wearying to get a most pitiful living. In this big metropolis in this
year of grace, 1886, we have a vast surging class of so-called free and
independent citizens, with none of whom the wild, Red Indian, in
anything like his native state, could afford to exchange. We have hordes
of citizens living in want and in vice born of want, existing under
conditions that would appall a heathen. Is this by the will of our
Divine Creator? (A VOICE: "No.") It is the fault of
men (applause,), and as men and citizens on us devolves the duty
of removing this wrong; (applause) and in that platform that the
convention has adopted and on which I stand, the first true step in that
direction is taken. Why should there be such abject poverty and
destitution in this city on the one side and such wealth on the other?
There is one great fact that stares in the face anyone who chooses to
look at it. That fact is that the vast majority of men and women and
children in New York have no legal right to live here at all. Most of
us-99 per cent at least-must pay the other one per- cent by the week or
month or quarter for the privilege of staying here and working here.
See how we are crowded in New York. London has a population of 15,000
to the square mile. Canton, in crowded China, has 35,000 inhabitants
within the same area. New York has 54,000 to the square mile, and
leaving out the uninhabited portion it has a population of 85,000 to the
square mile. In the Sixth Ward there is a population of 149,000 to the
square mile; in the Tenth Ward, 276,000; in the Thirteenth, 224,000,
including roads, yards, and all open places. Why, there is one block in
this city that contains 2,500 living beings and every room in it a
workshop. There is in one ward a tenement covering one quarter of an
acre, which contains an average of 1,350 people. At that rate a square
mile would contain 3,456,000. Nowhere else in the civilized world are
men and women and children packed together so closely. As for children,
they die almost as soon as they enter the world. In the district known
as the Mulberry Bend, according to Commissioner Wingate's report, there
is an infant death-rate of 65 per cent, and in the tenement district he
says that a large percentage of the children die before they are five
years of age.
Now, is there any reason for such overcrowding? There is plenty of room
on this island. There are miles and miles and miles of land all around
this nucleus. Why cannot we take that and build houses upon it for our
accommodation? Simply because it is held by dogs in the manger who will
not use it themselves, nor allow anybody else to use it, unless they pay
an enormous price for it-because what the Creator intended for the
habitation of the people whom He called into being is held at an
enormous rent or an enormous price. Did you ever think, men of New York,
what you pay for the privilege of living in this country? I do not ask
what you pay for bricks and mortar and wood, but for rent, and the rent
is mainly the rent of the land. Bricks and mortar and wood are of no
greater value here than they are in Long Island or in Iowa. When what is
called real estate advances it is the land that is getting more
valuable; it is not the houses. All this enormous value that the growth
of population adds to the land of this city is taken by the few
individuals and goes for the benefit of the idle rich, who look down
upon those who earn their living by their labor.
But what do we propose to do about it? We propose, in the first place,
as our platform indicates, to make the buildings cheaper by taking the
tax off buildings. We propose to put that tax on land exclusive of
improvements, so that a man who is holding land vacant will have to pay
as much for it as if he was using it, just upon the same principle that
a man who goes to a hotel and hires a room and takes the key and goes
away would have to pay as much for it as if he occupied the room and
slept in it. In that way we propose to drive out the dog in the manger
who is holding from you what he will not use himself. We propose in that
way to remove this barrier and open the land to the use of labor in
putting up buildings for the accommodation of the people of the city. (applause)
I am called a Socialist. I am really an individualist. I believe that
every individual man ought to have an individual wife, and is entitled
to an individual home. (applause) I think it is monstrous, such
a state of society as exists in this city. Why, the children, thousands
and thousands, have no place to play. It is a crime for them to play
ball in the only place in which they can play ball. It is an offence for
them to fly their kites. The children of the rich can go up to Central
Park, or out into the country in the summer time; but the children of
the poor, for them there is no playground in the city but the streets;
it is some charity excursion which takes them out for a day, only to
return them again to the same sweltering condition. There is no good
reason whatever why every citizen of New York should not have his own
separate house and home; and the aim of this movement is to secure it.
We hold that the land belongs to the entire people. We hold that the
value of the land of this city, by reason of the presence of this great
population, belongs to us to apply to the welfare of the people.
Everyone should be entitled to share in it. It should be for the use of
the whole people, and for the beautifying and adornment of the city, for
providing public accommodations, playgrounds, schools, and facilities
for education and recreation. Why, here is this building in which we are
assembled, the Cooper Institute; its superintendent told me only a
little while ago they accommodated only about one tenth of the young
people who are flocking here to get an education to enable them to make
a livelihood. Instead of relying upon the beneficence of individuals,
we, the people of New York, ought to furnish the institutions ourselves.
We ought to have in this city of New York twenty such institutions as
this. What the platform aims at is the taking for the use of the people
all that value and benefit which result from social growth. We believe
that the railroads of this city ought to be taken properly and legally
by the people and run for the benefit of the people of New York. (applause)
Why should it not be so? Any individual putting up a big building, such
as the Norse building, the Cyrus Field building, the Western Union
building, puts in an elevator. But he does not put in that elevator a
man with a bell-punch strung around his neck to collect fares. He gains
the advantage in the increased value of his building. So we could take
their railroads and run them. We could take those railroads and run them
free, let everybody ride who would, and we could pay for it - out of the
increased value of the people's property in consequence. These are but
steps, but the aim of this movement, and this is its significance, is
the assertion of the equal rights of man-the assertion of his equal and
inalienable right to life and to all the elements that the Creator has
furnished for the maintenance of that life.
Here is the heart of the labor question, and until we address ourselves
to that the labor question never can be solved. These little children
who die in our tenement districts, have they no business here? Do they
not come into life with equal rights from the Creator? In the early days
of New Zealand, when the English colonists bought land from the natives,
they encountered a great difficulty. After they had bought and paid for
a piece of land, the women would come with babes in their arms and would
say: "We want something for these babes." The reply was: "We
paid you for your land!" Then they who had parted with the land
answered: "Yes, yes, yes, but you did not pay these babes. They
were not born then."
I expect, my friends, to meet you many times during this campaign, and
expect to make my voice heard in all parts of this city. I am ready to
meet any questions that may be addressed to me, and to do whatever in me
lies for the success of our ticket. (applause) I am your
candidate for Mayor of New York. (vociferous cheers, followed by
three cheers and a rattling tiger) It is something that a little
while-ago I never dreamt of. Years ago I came to this city from the
West, unknown, knowing nobody, and I saw and recognized for the first
time the shocking contrast between monstrous wealth and debasing want.
And-here I made a vow, from which I have never faltered, to seek out and
remedy, if I could, the cause that condemned little children to lead
such a life as you know them to lead in the squalid districts. It is
because of that that I stand before you tonight, presenting myself for
the chief office of your city-espousing the cause, not only of your
rights but of those who are weaker than you. Think of it! Little ones
dying by thousands in this city; a veritable slaughter of the innocents
before their time has come. Is it not our duty as citizens to address
ourselves to the adjustment of social wrongs that force out of the world
those who are called into it almost before they are here-that social
wrong that forces girls upon the streets and our boys into the grogshops
and then into penitentiaries? We are beginning a movement for the
abolition of industrial slavery, and what we do on this side of the
water will send its impulse across the land and over the sea, and give
courage to all men to think and act. Let us, therefore, stand together.
Let us do everything that is possible for men to do from now until the
second of next month, that success may crown our efforts, and that to us
in this city may belong the honor of having led the van in this great
movement. (great enthusiasm and cheering )
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