Whangdoodling (February 1989 | Volume: 40, Issue: 1)

Whangdoodling

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Authors: Bernard A. Weisberger

Historic Era: Era 4: Expansion and Reform (1801-1861)

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February 1989 | Volume 40, Issue 1

 

When these lines appear, a new president will be learning his way around the White House, and the nation will be enjoying a post-inaugural respite from a year full of political commercials, polls, predictions, projections, and analyses. Likewise of spin control, attack videos, photo opportunities, sound bites, and other horrors of electronic campaigning. I apologize for seeming to prolong the agony, but historical reflection is in order.

Like others, I fret intensely over the way in which TY politics, which treats us as if we were all illiterate, is making a mockery of informed voter choice. And then I think of Davy Crockett and of the election of 1840. First, listen to this uneducated backwoodsman describing his run for the state legislature of Tennessee in 1823: “The thought of having to make a speech made my knees feel mighty weak. . . . But, as good luck would have it, these big candidates spoke nearly all day, and when they quit, the people were worn out with fatigue, which afforded me a good apology for not discussing the government. . . . When they were all done, I got up and told some laughable story, and quit. . . . Then, I went home and didn’t go back again till after the election was over. ... I was elected, doubling my competitor, and nine votes over.”

So much for the good old days of serious argument on the issues. Crockett also described other techniques of high-minded canvassing in his dictated autobiography of 1834. He carried a bottle of whiskey and a twist of tobacco in the pockets of his hunting shirt. When he offered a voter a drink, and the man spat out his quid to accept it, "I would out with my twist and give him another chaw. And, in this way, he would not be worse off than when I found him; and I would be sure to leave him in a first-rate humor.”

In 1825, he ran for Congress against the incumbent in his district and lost. It seemed that the price of cotton had gone up to a quarter for a pound, and Davy’s opponent claimed the credit. “I might as well have sung salms over a dead horse,” said Davy, “as to try to make the people believe otherwise; for ... if the colonel hadn’t done it, they didn’t know what had.” But Crockett did win in 1827, and he served three terms in the House. His legislative record is barren, but his stories of Indian fights and bear hunts made him colorful copy. He even did a triumphant speaking tour of Eastern cities.

He was not the first stump whangdoodler to win office in the 1820s. He was blown into Washington by a political hurricane that leveled the barriers of property qualifications for voting and office-holding and established universal manhood suffrage (white males only) in almost every state. The same wind whirled Andrew Jackson into the presidency