Winfield R. Gaylord
Winfield Gaylord | |
---|---|
Member of the Wisconsin State Senate from the 6th District | |
In office 1909–1913 | |
Personal details | |
Born |
June 14, 1870 |
Died | February 23, 1943 |
Political party | Socialist Party of America |
Winfield Romeo Gaylord was an American minister and Socialist politician from Milwaukee, who served one term (1909–1912) as a member of the Wisconsin State Senate representing the Milwaukee-based 6th Senate District.[1][2] He was the Socialist Party nominee for United States House of Representatives in 1904, 1910, 1912, 1914 and 1916, coming within about 400 votes of victory in both 1910 and 1914; and the 1906 nominee for Governor of Wisconsin.[3]
Background
Gaylord was born June 14, 1870, in Verona, Mississippi. He attended public school in Cleveland, Ohio; studied at Ohio Wesleyan University, Hamline University; Northwestern University, and Chicago Theological Seminary, (graduating from the latter school in 1908), while serving as a pastor in various Methodist and Congregational churches in Minnesota, Illinois and Wisconsin from 1889 to 1902. From 1902 he worked as a lecturer on popular and economic subjects.
Political activity
He served as National Lecturer for the Socialist Party and as a member of the state executive board. In 1904, he was nominated for Congress from the Fourth District, losing to Republican incumbent Theobald Otjen.[4] In 1906, he was the Socialist nominee for Governor of Wisconsin, losing to Republican acting Governor James O. Davidson, coming in third in a five-way race.[5]
He was a delegate to the Milwaukee city charter convention of 1908, and his translation of Changes in the theory and tactics of the (German) social-democracy by Paul Kampffmeyer was published by Charles H Kerr Company Publishers that same year.
Legislative service
Gaylord was elected in November 1908 to the State Senate from the Sixth district (9th, 10th, 19th, 20th and 22nd wards of the City of Milwaukee) for a four-year term to succeed fellow Socialist Jacob Rummel, receiving 6,236 votes against 5,820 for Republican August Langhoff. He was appointed to the standing committees on manufactures and labor, and on public health.[6]
In 1910, he was again the Socialist nominee for the Fourth Congressional District, coming in second to Democratic incumbent William Joseph Cary, and in that banner election year for the Socialist Party of Milwaukee came with 447 votes of unseating the incumbent.[7]
By 1911, he was the statewide Organizer for the Socialist Party. In 1912, with his Senate district had been redistricted out of existence (it had been split between new Fifth and Sixth districts, which were taken by Republican George Weigel and Democrat George Weissleder respectively), he was again the Socialist nominee for the Fourth Congressional District, coming in second again to William Joseph Cary. He was also serving as Chairman of the Socialist Party's statewide executive committee.[8] In 1914 he was the Congressional candidate, and came within 365 votes of unseating Cary.[9] In 1916, he still came in second and received almost one-third of the vote, but Cary extended his winning margin over Gaylord to almost one thousand votes.[10]
Influence and controversy
Gaylord was credited by Carl Sandburg with introducing him to the ideas of the Wisconsin wing of the Socialist Party, and with persuading him to move to Wisconsin.[11]
Gaylord was expelled from the Socialist Party in May 1917 after his and A. M. Simons' letter to Senate of the United States Paul Husting denouncing as treasonable the anti-World War I majority report of the Socialist convention in April 1917 and recommending its suppression by the government was printed in the Congressional Record. Husting used this letter and communications from Gaylord to the Milwaukee Journal in support of the Espionage Act of 1917.[12] He became a leading member of the pro-war element within the labor movement in the United States, speaking on platforms with such conservative icons as Nicholas Murray Butler. He was among those who were present at the September, 1917 organizing meeting of the Wisconsin Loyalty Legion.[13] Gaylord died on February 23, 1943.[14]
References
- ↑ Members of the Wisconsin Legislature, 1848-1999 Madison: State of Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau, 1999
- ↑ Wisconsin Blue Book, 1909 Edition, (Biographical Sketches), page 1095.
- ↑ The Political Graveyard
- ↑ Erickson, Halford, ed. The blue book of the state of Wisconsin Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1905; pp. 1066-67
- ↑ Beck, J. D., ed. The blue book of the state of Wisconsin Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1907; p. 1120
- ↑ Beck, J. D., ed. The blue book of the state of Wisconsin Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1909; pp. 492, 566, 1095
- ↑ Beck, J. D., ed. The blue book of the state of Wisconsin Madison: Democrat Printing Company, State Printer, 1911; p. 729
- ↑ The Wisconsin blue book Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1913; pp. 600, 631
- ↑ The Wisconsin blue book, 1915 Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1915; p. 230
- ↑ The Wisconsin blue book, 1917 Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1917; p. 289
- ↑ Sandburg, Carl, with an introduction by Margaret Sandburg and George Hendrick. Ever the Winds of Chance Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1983, 1999. ISBN 978-0-252-06848-5 , p. 163
- ↑ "Socialists Expel Simons, Gaylord: County Central Committee Vote Stands 63 For and 3 Against" Milwaukee Leader, v. 6, no. 143 (May 24, 1917), pg. 1
- ↑ Kull, George F. "Wisconsin Loyalty Legion" in "Wisconsin's War Activities" section of The Wisconsin blue book, 1919 (Hunter, Paul F., ed.) Madison: Democrat Printing Co., State Printer, 1919; pp. 415-41
- ↑ Biodata