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			James A. Garfield Home
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		<copyright>Copyright (c) 2013 Grand Valley State University All rights reserved.</copyright>
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			Recent documents in James A. Garfield Home
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								<p><strong>James A. Garfield home.</strong>   In the 1870s, James A. Garfield was widely regarded as the Republican  party's greatest orator.  He established his reputation in the U.S.  House of Representatives, where he had served since the Civil War.  He  became the Republican nominee for president in an era when it was  considered undignified for presidential candidates to campaign on their  own behalf.  (Others campaigned for them.)  What to do with such a great  orator -- hide one of his greatest strengths under a bushel  basket?  The solution was to encourage Garfield to deliver speeches from  his front porch.  So it was Garfield's oratorical gifts that gave rise,  in 1880, to the first "front porch campaign" in American history.  Some  17,000 visitors came to hear the Republican candidate during the autumn  of 1880.  The picture above is of Garfield's home in Mentor, Ohio.   (Locals pronounce "Mentor" to rhyme with "enter.") The house  was punningly dubbed "Lawnfield" by reporters who staked out a spot on  the grass.  This view is from Mentor Avenue, looking at the famous front  porch where Garfield speechified.</p>

							
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						Thu, 26 May 2011 07:53:06 PDT
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								<p><strong>James A. Garfield -- a "dark horse" candidate</strong>.   This panel from the museum at the Garfield National Historic Site in  Mentor, Ohio, tells of the drama at the Republican National Convention  of 1880.<br> <br> A "dark horse" is a person who suddenly and unexpectedly  receives political support to run for office.  The term was probably  first used in a novel by Benjamin Disraeli titled The Young Duke  (1831).  In American presidential politics it was first applied in 1844  to James K. Polk, who won the Democratic nomination on the eighth  ballot, and went on to win the election.</p>

							
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						Thu, 26 May 2011 07:53:05 PDT
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								<p>James A. Garfield had the second  shortest presidency in U.S. history -- only 200 days -- the last 80  of which were a death vigil.  Yet he was a remarkable man and several  facts about him are worth noting.<br> <br> Garfield was the last of America's true "log cabin"  presidents.  He was from a poor family that subsisted in a log cabin on  the Ohio frontier.  So our 20th president could really claim log-cabin  status, unlike Andrew Jackson and William Henry Harrison, who were  called log-cabin presidents but who were from the gentry and reinvented  themselves after they went West. <br> <br> Garfield only lived to the age of 48, but he had an  extremely diverse curriculum vitae.  He was a classics professor, a  college president, an ordained minister, a lawyer, a Civil War general, a  congressman, a senator-elect, one of the greatest orators of his day,  and the 20th president of the United States.  Even as president, he  preferred to be called "General." <br> <br> Garfield was a self-taught military man who greatly  admired Napoleon.  Inside his house, Lawnfield, are two portraits of the  French general.<br> <br> <em>The above profile of the 20th president is on the grounds of the James A. Garfield National Historic Site in Mentor, Ohio.</em></p>

							
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						Thu, 26 May 2011 07:53:04 PDT
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								<p>Garfield was a dark  horse candidate during the campaign of 1880.  He never expected to be  nominated at the Republican convention.  Because of his superb  oratorical skills, he ran the first successful "front porch campaign" in  U.S. history so that he could give speeches.  (In the 19th century,  following George Washington's example, it was thought unbecoming for  presidential candidates to campaign on their own behalf.)  Some 17,000  people called on the Republican nominee at Lawnfield during the campaign  of 1880.</p>

							
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						Thu, 26 May 2011 07:53:02 PDT
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								<p>Garfield is the only president to go straight from the U.S. House of Representatives to the White House.<br> <br> Garfield had a scholarly temperament and valued  education.  In fact, he proposed a federal department of education.<br> <br> Garfield was the second murdered president in U.S. history.</p>

							
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						Thu, 26 May 2011 07:53:01 PDT
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								<p>Garfield was a  bibliophile with a considerable private library.  Four years after his  death in 1881, his wife Lucretia (called "Crete") added more space  to Lawnfield to hold a library built up by and dedicated to her  husband.  Letters and other papers were kept in a fireproof vault off  the main room.  Some historians trace the modern presidential library  system to Mrs. Garfield's initiative.</p>

							
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						Thu, 26 May 2011 07:53:00 PDT
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