This Day in History : [ 19 / Nov ]

James A. Garfield is born

On this day in 1831 future President James A.Garfield is born to an impoverished family near Cleveland Ohio.He weighed a whopping 10 pounds at birth was a voracious reader and as a young boy worked driving the teams of horses that pulled barges along canals.Garfield was a minister in the Disciples of Christ Church a languages scholar and served as president of Hiram College in Ohio before entering politics.

In 1859 he was elected to the Ohio State Senate.He served in the Union Army as a major general during the Civil War but with then-President Lincolns support resigned his commission to make a successful bid for the House of Representatives in 1862.Garfield served in Congress during the Gilded Age when corruption ran rampant in politics.He was implicated in a scandal that rocked the administration of President Ulysses S.

Grant in 1872-1873 in which members of Congress were given shares in the Credit Mobilier construction company with the expectation that they would lend their political support to the companys railroad ventures.Although it was never proven Garfield was accused of accepting a 329 bribe.(Later during the presidential election of 1880 his opponents used the numbers 329 as part of their anti-Garfield campaign scribbling the numbers on the sides of buildings and on streets.) Garfield was a personal friend of Grants successor President Rutherford B.

Hayes and sat on the Congressional commission that awarded Hayes the presidency after a contentious election in 1876.In 1880 he won a seat in the U.S.Senate.

By that time the taint of involvement with the Credit Mobilier scandal had faded and his association with the more well-respected Hayes contributed to his ascension to the presidency in 1881.Garfield did not have enough time to create an enduring presidential legacy.He was shot and mortally wounded by an assassin named Charles Guiteau on July 2 1881.After lingering for 80 days he finally succumbed to his wounds on September 19 1881.

He was succeeded by Vice President Chester Alan Arthur.