6 or 7 August 1876 • Elmira, N.Y.
(Transcript and paraphrase: MTB, 2:581, UCCL 05983)
(SUPERSEDED)
Eighteen hundred and seventy-six was a Presidential year—the year of the Hayes-Tilden campaign. Clemens and Howells were both warm Republicans and actively interested in the outcome, Clemens, as he confessed, for the first time in his life. Before his return to Hartford he announced himself publicly as a Hayes man, made so by Governor Hayes’s letter of acceptance, which, he said, “expresses my own political convictions.”1 His politics had not been generally known up to that time, and a Tilden and Hendricks club in Jersey City had invited him to be present and give them some political counsel, at a flag-raising.2 He wrote, declining pleasantly enough, then added:
“You have asked me for some political counsel or advice: In view of Mr. Tilden’s Civil War record my advice is not to raise the flag.”3
Explanatory Notes
On McDermott’s envelope, Clemens wrote: Flag-raising.
Declined.
On 28 June 1876, at the Democratic national convention in St. Louis, Samuel J.
Tilden (1814–86), governor of New York, had been nominated as presidential candidate; on 29 June, Thomas A. Hendricks (1819–85), governor of Indiana, had been nominated as
vice-presidential candidate (New York Times: “How the Thing Was Done,”
“Nomination of Candidates,” 29 June 76, 1, 2; “The Ticket Completed,” 30 June 76, 1).
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