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Tammany Hall’s Forgotten Successes
First Things ^ | November 6, 2013, | Mark Barrett

Posted on 11/14/2013 2:38:22 PM PST by Alex Murphy

As New York elects its first officially Democratic mayor in twenty years, Susanah Black at Front Porch Republic reexamines the legacy of the much maligned Tammany Hall:

When it was functioning correctly, Tammany Hall served as a way to integrate the block-to-block fabric of New York life with the state and national levels of political organization, and the great immigrant influxes of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries are unthinkable without the diligent work of Tammany men on behalf of these new voters.

In contrast to the current practices of electioneering whereby votes are still bought albeit indirectly through marketing and ad agencies, Black writes:

In Tammany New York, votes were acquired through social contact and practical favors, financial and legal assistance, jobs and drinks at the pub. The direct financial beneficiaries were, yes, the politicians and the businessmen who got contracts at far above the market price—but also the poor families whose rent got paid, the boy who got a job working for the new El being put up along Greenwich Street and 9th Avenue, the couple whose hotel room was paid for when they were burnt out of their apartment. In less cynical terms: Tammany was a corruption, but it was a corruption of something good: the idea that government should, as Plunkitt said, be “warm and personal;” that decisions should be made locally; that rulers should directly and practically help the ruled; that there should be an everyday and immediate connection between the politicians and the people

Today’s political system encourages politicians to adopt the priorities of their party’s donor class and most ideological activists; the necessities of fundraising demand it. In the Tammany system political leaders had incentives to move among the people and meet them in the local neighborhood clubhouse, forcing politicians to respond to the direct needs and priorities of the voters. To the Tammany men politics was a personalist project. Ideas and abstractions meant little but relationships meant everything. The district leader had no need to attend fundraisers but woe to him if he missed a funeral. Today’s politicians too often use their power to extend tax breaks to donors, bailout friendly businesses, and meet with lobbyists on a regular basis and yet it’s Tammany’s name which has become a byword for corruption. Get O’Malley’s vote because you got him a job and you’re corrupt, get Goldman Sachs donations because you got them a bailout and it’s business as usual.

As much as progressive historians and contemporary observers might emphasize the corruption, and the corruption was very real, it’s worth remembering that the waves of immigrants which poured into New York during the mid- to late-nineteenth century were facing immense challenges in an enormously hostile culture. It is not at all certain that given a different set of circumstances they would have even survived let alone prospered. Torn from their native lands, the majority of immigrants endured brutal poverty, horrendous living conditions, intense loneliness, and uncertain chances of survival in the new world. For many immigrants the two institutions which provided a lifeline in this perilous situation were the Catholic Church and the Tammany Democratic Party. The Church instilling in its flock not only the theological virtues of faith, hope, and charity through the sacraments but through sermons and schools the very practical virtues of American life: chastity, hard work, and sobriety. In tandem, Tammany would provide jobs, social services, and the opportunity for immigrants to advance up the city’s political and socio-economic ladder.

In many respects, Tammany depended on the same basic structure as the Catholic Church. Both were hierarchical systems with clear lines of authority, both had a “boss” at the top of the hierarchy, both divided the city into smaller manageable divisions, parishes in the case of the Church and wards in the case of Tammany, and both depended on personal relationships cultivated on the level of parish priests and ward heelers to meet the needs of its community. Above all both prized loyalty. And in such a hostile cultural environment, loyalty ensured survival.

This dynamic was illustrated by New York writer Pete Hamill in his memoir of growing up in an Irish immigrant family in Brooklyn, A Drinking Life:

A few weeks before Christmas, 1945, there was a sudden delivery of coal, carried into the house by a burly man arrived with a turkey. I asked who the men were and was told by my father, the party, What party? The Democratic Party. Said in the tone of: Are you an idiot? But I was still puzzled. This wasn’t relief, was it? Of course not. Well, if they give you a turkey and coal, what do you have to give them in return? Loyalty, he said. “Always remember the most important thing in life: Vote the straight ticket.”
That very same virtue of loyalty which ensured community solidarity and survival led to Tammany’s well documented failings: personal corruption, public graft, and the exclusion of certain groups to the advantage of other groups. Yet over time, due to its very pragmatic nature, Tammany showed a remarkable ability to reinvent itself. It became not the preserve of merely the Irish but absorbed new waves of immigrants and integrated them into the fabric of New York. Always suspicious of ideological projects and the idea of government as an instrument of progress, Tammany nonetheless built most of the infrastructure of New York, from the subways to the Brooklyn Bridge, supported labor reforms, and distributed social welfare before the creation of the social welfare state.

As Black reminds us, Tammany is not something to look back on with pure nostalgia. Rather there are lessons to be drawn from its successes and failings. But while its name has become synonymous with its failings neither should we forget its successes.


TOPICS: Catholic; History; Moral Issues; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: catholic
As much as progressive historians and contemporary observers might emphasize the corruption, and the corruption was very real, it’s worth remembering that the waves of immigrants which poured into New York during the mid- to late-nineteenth century were facing immense challenges in an enormously hostile culture. It is not at all certain that given a different set of circumstances they would have even survived let alone prospered. Torn from their native lands, the majority of immigrants endured brutal poverty, horrendous living conditions, intense loneliness, and uncertain chances of survival in the new world. For many immigrants the two institutions which provided a lifeline in this perilous situation were the Catholic Church and the Tammany Democratic Party. The Church instilling in its flock not only the theological virtues of faith, hope, and charity through the sacraments but through sermons and schools the very practical virtues of American life: chastity, hard work, and sobriety. In tandem, Tammany would provide jobs, social services, and the opportunity for immigrants to advance up the city’s political and socio-economic ladder.

In many respects, Tammany depended on the same basic structure as the Catholic Church. Both were hierarchical systems with clear lines of authority, both had a “boss” at the top of the hierarchy, both divided the city into smaller manageable divisions, parishes in the case of the Church and wards in the case of Tammany, and both depended on personal relationships cultivated on the level of parish priests and ward heelers to meet the needs of its community. Above all both prized loyalty. And in such a hostile cultural environment, loyalty ensured survival.

I liked this part of the referenced article, found in the original but not included in First Things' analysis:

“Personal” and “local” are not synonyms for “good” or “just” any more than “spiritual” is– there can be personal, local and spiritual evil as well as good, and these evils can cut that much closer. This is dirty laundry that must be aired, in any appeal to the good that might be found in something like Tammany.

1 posted on 11/14/2013 2:38:22 PM PST by Alex Murphy
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To: Alex Murphy
Charlie Manson's forgotten musical career.

John Wilkes Booth's forgotten triumphs on the stage.

2 posted on 11/14/2013 2:42:53 PM PST by Steely Tom (If the Constitution can be a living document, I guess a corporation can be a person.)
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To: Steely Tom
John Wilkes Booth's forgotten triumphs on the stage.

Hitler's forgotten triumphs in art.

3 posted on 11/14/2013 2:44:29 PM PST by dfwgator (Fire Muschamp.)
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To: Steely Tom
This line from the article brings guffaws:

In less cynical terms: Tammany was a corruption, but it was a corruption of something good: the idea that government should, as Plunkitt said, be “warm and personal;” that decisions should be made locally; that rulers should directly and practically help the ruled; that there should be an everyday and immediate connection between the politicians and the people

Caddyshack
"So I got that going for me...."

4 posted on 11/14/2013 2:48:29 PM PST by Alex Murphy ("the defacto Leader of the FR Calvinist Protestant Brigades")
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To: Alex Murphy

George Plunkitt...tammany man...had some of his thoughts and speeches put into print. The book is about tiny and a very good read.

I’d recommend it just as a one day read after reading The Vampire Economy by Mises...Vampire Economy is a tract explaining what it was like to conduct business and run a factory or be involved in industry in Nazi Germany. It is shocking how close we are 2 living the same life here in the United States now.

in no way am i comparing our politics to Nazism as it relates to racism but economic model wise there isn’t much difference.


5 posted on 11/14/2013 2:52:43 PM PST by TheErnFormerlyKnownAsBig (It is going to be Foot to Ass combat on election day....my foot and a Rat's ass.)
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To: Alex Murphy

DIMS yearning for the “good old days.”

It would be icing on the cake to see NYC implode with their newly, uh, elected, DIM mayor.


6 posted on 11/14/2013 2:53:18 PM PST by Arm_Bears (Refuse; Resist; Rebel; Revolt!)
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To: Alex Murphy

That idea has a very real history. And it’s from Europe, where, not surpringly, the immigrants in question originated.

In America the notion was that people would take care of themselves and each other, not depend on the king, the squire, the government, etc.

Noblesse oblige is a not wholly corrupt idea, but there’s little American about it.


7 posted on 11/14/2013 2:55:53 PM PST by Sherman Logan
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To: Steely Tom

Today Obama said the media has not reported the ACA’s successes. Tammanay Hall’s successes skipped over.

So by the associative law of algebra, Obama is equal to or greater than Tammany Hall. (how was that for a stretch ??).

:-)


8 posted on 11/14/2013 2:58:42 PM PST by llevrok (Obama 2008 : "If you vote for me, aaaaaa, you can keep your country")
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To: Alex Murphy

The author should move to Virginia for a little nostalgia for Tammany Hall. Terry McAullife is cut from the same mold as Boss Tweed. I predict on his last day in office, ole Terry will be ripping the copper piping out of the walls of the governor’s mansion. He is going to suck up every tax payer dollar he can get his hands on. The only good thing is that the layabouts will not get any, Terry is not going to share.


9 posted on 11/14/2013 4:39:01 PM PST by gusty
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