Thomas Riley Marshall
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For more information on Thomas Riley Marshall, visit Britannica.com.
• Born: Mar. 14, 1854, North Manchester, Ind.
• Political party: Democrat
• Education: Wabash College, 1873; read law, 1874–75
• Previous government service: governor of Indiana, 1909–10
• Vice President under Woodrow Wilson, 1913–21
• Subsequent government service: U.S. Coal Commission, 1922–23
• Died: June 1, 1925, Washington, D.C.
Thomas Marshall was a lawyer active in Democratic party campaigns, and he served one term as governor of Indiana. He was a favorite-son candidate for President in 1912, and after switching his delegation to Woodrow Wilson he was rewarded with the Vice Presidential nomination. He served for two terms, the first Vice President to do so in nearly a century. He presided over the Senate with fairness and over the cabinet when Wilson was in Paris negotiating the Treaty of Versailles after World War I. Marshall told the secretaries that he was presiding “informally and personally” and not seeking “to exercise any official duty or function.” At first opposed to U.S. entry into World War I, Marshall loyally supported Wilson's decision to intervene as well as the Treaty of Versailles. He opposed the woman suffrage amendment in the postwar period. He offered a definitive word on the Vice Presidency when he quipped: “There were two brothers. One ran away to sea, the other was elected Vice President, and nothing was ever heard from either of them again.”
Marshall is also remembered as the man who said, “What this country needs is a good five cent cigar.” Marshall had Presidential ambitions of his own, but Wilson successfully blocked him. After his Vice Presidency, Marshall served on the U.S. Coal Commission.
See also Wilson, Woodrow
Sources
Bibliography
See his recollections (1925).
| Thomas Riley Marshall | |
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| In office March 4, 1913 – March 4, 1921 |
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| President | Woodrow Wilson |
| Preceded by | James S. Sherman |
| Succeeded by | Calvin Coolidge |
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27th
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| In office January 11 1909 – January 13 1913 |
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| Lieutenant(s) | Frank J. Hall |
| Preceded by | Frank Hanly |
| Succeeded by | Samuel M. Ralston |
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| Born | March 14 1854 |
| Died | June 1 1925 (aged 71) |
| Nationality | american |
| Political party | Democratic |
| Spouse | Lois Irene Kimsey Marshall |
| Signature | |
Thomas Riley Marshall (March 14, 1854 – June 1, 1925) was an American politician who served as the twenty-eighth Vice President of the United States of America under Woodrow Wilson from 1913 to 1921.
Marshall was born in North Manchester, Indiana, where he frequently spent time listening to lawyers. Marshall studied law at Wabash College. He was admitted to the bar in 1875 and began his career as a lawyer in Columbia City, Indiana.
He served as
At the 1912 Democratic convention in Baltimore, Marshall's name was put in as Indiana's choice for President. For a time it looked as if Marshall might actually end up as a compromise nominee, but ultimately William Jennings Bryan agreed to endorse Woodrow Wilson; Indiana's delegates successfully lobbied to have Marshall named the vice presidential candidate. He was elected on the Wilson ticket in 1912, was reelected in 1916 and served as Vice President until 1921. It is said that Marshall initially turned down the nomination, assuming the job would be boring. Marshall is currently the last governor to serve two full terms as Vice President.
Marshall was not particularly fond of Wilson. Though Wilson invited Marshall to cabinet meetings, Marshall's ideas were rarely considered. In 1913 Wilson took the then unheard-of step of meeting personally with members of the Senate in the Capitol building. Before this, Presidents had made a habit of using the Vice President (who serves as President of the Senate) as a go-between with the Senate; Wilson took advantage of the opportunity to show that he had no intention of trusting Marshall with delicate business. Since that time presidents have rarely relied on their vice presidents in dealing with the Senate.
As Marshall made little news and was viewed as something of a comic foil in Washington, a number of Democratic party insiders wanted him dumped from the 1916 ticket. Wilson, after deliberating, ultimately decided that it would demonstrate party unity if he kept Marshall on; thus in 1916 Marshall became the first Vice President re-elected since John C. Calhoun in 1828 and Wilson and Marshall became the first President and Vice President team to be re-elected since Monroe and Tompkins in 1820. It was also the first presidential election ever in which the incumbent vice president won all the states won by the incumbent president, something that has since become the norm when a president seeks reelection.
During his second term, Marshall saw the United States enter World War I. Wilson sent him
out on the road, speaking across the country to encourage Americans to buy war bonds and
support the war effort. This was a job to which Marshall was well suited; he had been earning extra money as a public speaker while Vice President. Also in his second term Marshall became the first Vice President to
conduct cabinet meetings; Wilson left him with this responsibility while traveling
in Europe to sign the
After suffering a more mild one the previous month, on October 2,
Marshall returned to Indianapolis after his term as Vice President and resumed his law practice. He also wrote a number of books on the law as well as his Recollections, a memoir. In 1922-23 he served as chair of the Federal Coal Commission.
Marshall died on a visit to Washington, D.C. in 1925 and is interred in Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Indiana. Incidentially, Crown Hill Cemetery also holds the remains of Benjamin Harrison, the 23rd President of the United States and two other United States Vice-Presidents: Charles W. Fairbanks and Thomas A. Hendricks.
Marshall is best known for a phrase he introduced to the American lexicon. During a Senate debate in 1917, a particularly bellicose Senator catalogued what he felt the country needed: "What this country needs is more of this; what this country needs is more of that." Marshall leaned over to a clerk and quipped, "What this country needs is a really good five-cent cigar."
The story may be apocryphal, but Marshall was known for having a quick wit. Upon his election as vice president, Marshall sent President-elect Woodrow Wilson a book, inscribed "From your only Vice." He was known to greet citizens walking by his office on the White House tour by asking them to "be kind enough to throw peanuts at me." Upon hearing of his nomination as Vice President (he was not present at the convention), Marshall quipped that he was not surprised, as "Indiana is the mother of Vice Presidents, home of more second-class men than any other state."
One of his favorite jokes was about a woman with two sons, one of whom ran away and went to sea and one of whom was elected Vice President of the United States. Neither was ever heard of again.
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| Preceded by J. Frank Hanly |
1909-1913 |
Succeeded by Samuel M. Ralston |
| Preceded by John W. Kern |
Democratic Party Vice Presidential candidate 1912 (won), 1916 (won) |
Succeeded by Franklin D. Roosevelt |
| Preceded by James S. Sherman |
Vice President
of the United States March 4, 1913 – March 4, 1921 |
Succeeded by Calvin Coolidge |
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| Territorial: Harrison • Posey
Jennings • Boon • W. Hendricks • Ray • Noble • Wallace • Bigger • J. Whitcomb • Dunning • Wright • Willard • Hammond • Lane • Morton • Baker • T. Hendricks • Williams • Gray • Porter • Gray • Hovey • Chase • Matthews • Mount • Durbin • Hanly • Marshall • Ralston • Goodrich • McCray • Branch • Jackson • Leslie • McNutt • Townsend • Schricker • Gates • Schricker • Craig • Handley • Welsh • Branigin • E. Whitcomb • Bowen • Orr • Bayh • O'Bannon • Kernan • Daniels |
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