Notes
At last we contemplate a candidate who is frank and honest,
sensible and unafraid," wrote critic H. L. Mencken of New
York's Democratic Governor, Alfred Emanuel Smith, regarding
his candidacy in the 1928 presidential elections.
Smith was a Democrat from birth, born in 1873 to a poor Irish
immigrant family on New York City's East Side. At the age of 18,
he was granted a minor city clerkship and soon impressed
Tammany Hall's leaders as an able, outgoing newcomer.
a New York State assemblyman (1904-15) and later speaker
(1913-15), he became increasingly reform-minded, and in 1918
he won the first of four terms as governor of New York. Though
narrowly defeated in the Republican sweep of 1920, he was
reelected in 1922, 1924 and 1926, earning a national reputation
for his progressive programs in such areas as state parks,
housing, improved working conditions, child welfare and care
of the insane.
The favourite son of urban Democrats at the 1924 presidential
convention-where he was nominated as the "happy warrior of
the political battlefield" by Franklin D. Roosevelt-Smith lost
the chance to run for president to John W. Davis. But he proved
unbeatable at the 1928 convention. The first Catholic ever to
win a major party nomination, he launched a hard-hitting
national campaign that made his ever-present derby, wellchewed
cigar and broad New York accent known throughout
the United States.
But Smith's admirable candour, his Catholicism and the
countr y's widespread economic prosperity-which was
generally attributed to the rule of his Republican party
opponents-combined to deny him election to the Presidency
in 1928. It is important to note that Smith did win 41% of the
popular vote carrying the nation's 12 largest cities. After losing
the presidential nomination to Roosevelt in 1932, Smith
abandoned political life for private business. He still remained
active in social causes and helped found the American Urban
League in 1935. He died in New York in 1944.
Literature:
Family Limtcyclojaedem o/ American History, published by Reader's
Digest Association, New York, ? 1975, page 1034.
A similar watch islllustrated in Le Temps de Cartier, by Jader
Barracca, Giampiero Negretti and Franco Nencini, p. 56.