Roscoe Conkling, Madison Square Park, NYC, NY
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member garmin_geek
N 40° 44.464 W 073° 59.287
18T E 585433 N 4510506
Roscoe Conkling (October 30, 1829 Albany, New York - April 18, 1888) was a politician from New York who served both as a member of the United States House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.
Waymark Code: WM7ZRG
Location: New York, United States
Date Posted: 12/30/2009
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Titansfan
Views: 13

Roscoe Conkling was born in Albany, New York, the son of a Whig politician and judge. Such prominent figures as John Quincy Adams and Martin Van Buren were visitors in the family home. Conkling studied law in Utica and was named the district attorney of Albany at age 21, through his father's influence. He developed a reputation for oration and was viewed as a rising star in Whig politics.

In 1854, Conkling was instrumental in the founding of the Republican Party in New York State. Four years later he was elected mayor of Utica, but resigned after being elected to the House of Representatives, where he served from 1859 to 1863 and later from 1865 to 1867. Conkling was a firm supporter of Abraham Lincoln and later would be aligned with the Radical Republicans. Some of his views, such as taking land from slaveowners to distribute among the former slaves, were regarded as extreme by others in his party.

In 1867, Conkling was elected by the New York legislature to serve in the U.S. Senate. He quickly became one of U.S. Grant's most loyal supporters. With the president's assistance, Conkling dominated patronage in his home state and opposed all efforts at civil service reform.

Conkling was never a widely popular figure. His abrasive nature offended many, politician and voter alike. He dressed in brightly colored clothing, contrasting sharply with the standard black attire of his contemporaries. His reputation was badly tarnished by an affair with the wife of a Senate colleague (and daughter of Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase), which became public knowledge.

In 1876, Conkling aspired to the Republican nomination, the better to continue the cozy relationships of the Grant administration. Reform forces prevailed, however, in Rutherford B. Hayes' nomination. Conkling did not assist the party during the campaign and Hayes exacted revenge by investigating the New York Customhouse, seat of Conkling's power; Chester A. Arthur, a Conkling loyalist, lost his job as chief collector of the port.

In 1880 Conkling, as head of the Stalwart faction, attempted to engineer a third term for Grant. He was opposed by James G. Blaine, leader of the opposition Half-Breeds. A compromise choice was found in James A. Garfield, who alienated Conkling by ignoring his advice about appointments. In May 1881, Conkling resigned from the Senate in protest, assuming the New York legislature would return him to office; they did not. Later, he twice declined an appointment to the Supreme Court, preferring to practice law in New York City. In March 1888, Conkling was caught in a late season blizzard, became ill and died a few weeks later.

Roscoe Conkling was a man easy to dislike. His caustic remarks and strutting physicality managed to offend even his closest political allies. Nevertheless, Conkling may have been the most dedicated of the Radical Republicans; he never wavered in his support of African Americans. Even in his final years as a highly successful New York lawyer, he would put aside other matters to serve the needs of the poor and powerless.Link

The original Madison Square Garden was located adjacent to the park at Madison Avenue and 26th Street. It was owned by William Vanderbilt, and opened in 1879. The building was razed in 1899 and replaced with a Moorish style building designed by Stanford White. The second Madison Square Garden stood until 1925 when it was demolished and replaced by the headquarters of the New York Life Insurance Company. Promoter Tex Rickard built the third Garden that same year at 8th Avenue and 50th Street.

Soon after the creation of the Department of Public Parks in 1870, the square was relandscaped by Ignatz Pilat, Chief Landscape Architect, and William Grant. The new design brought in the sculptures that now highlight the park. One of the works capturing a politician in bronze is Randolph Ranger's statue of William H. Seward (1876), the Secretary of State who purchased Alaska in 1867. He was the first New Yorker to have a monument erected in his honor. Others include J.Q.A. Ward’s sculpture of Roscoe Conkling (1893), a reconstructionist politician.Link

URL of the statue: Not listed

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