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American Heritage MagazineAugust/September 1984    Volume 35, Issue 5
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1884 One Hundred Years Ago

On September 3 Belva Ann Bennett Lockwood accepted the nomination of the Woman’s National Equal Rights party, which had convened in San Francisco, and became the first woman to run for the office of President of the United States. She was also the first woman admitted to practice before the Supreme Court.

Her concern for the rights of women began when, as a widow of twenty-four with a child to support, she taught school in Royalton, New York. Men doing the same work, she found, were getting paid twice as much. She complained to the trustees and to the wife of the Methodist minister and was told by that lady, “I can’t help you; you cannot help yourself, for it is the way of the world.”

Against this absurdity she fought until her death in 1917.


 
1909 Seventy-five Years Ago

On August 27 of this year, the ship George Washington arrived in New York City. On board was Sigmund Freud, who had come to deliver five lectures at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, on the occasion of its twentieth anniversary. He was to get his travel expenses and three thousand marks ($714.60). Jung and Ferenczi sailed with him, and on the voyage the three men analyzed each other’s dreams—the first example, according to Freud’s biographer Ernest Jones, of group analysis.

Freud had told friends that all he really wanted to see of America was Niagara Falls, but once he arrived he did the sights of New York: Central Park, Chinatown, the Lower East Side, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Columbia University, and Coney Island. Jones joined the party to dine at Hammerstein’s Roof Garden and to go to the first movie Freud had ever seen. Jones does not name it but calls it “primitive” with “plenty of wild chasing.” Freud was “quietly amused” by it.

The first lecture at Clark was on September 7. Jung had suggested that Freud speak on the interpretation of dreams, but Freud thought that the practical Americans might find such a subject too remote. He decided instead to give a general outline of psychoanalytic theory and composed each lecture during a half-hour walk. He spoke in German without notes.

William James attended the lectures, and Freud has left a moving account of their meeting: “Another event of this time which made a lasting impression on me was a meeting with William James the philosopher. I shall never forget one little scene that occurred as we were on a walk together. He stopped suddenly, handed me a bag he was carrying and asked me to walk on, saying that he would catch me up as soon as he had got through an attack of angina pectoris which was just coming on. He died of that disease a year later; and I have always wished that I might be as fearless as he was in the face of approaching death.”

Thirty years later, he was.

AUGUST 2:The Philadelphia mint issued the first of the Lincoln pennies, which the Treasury Department had ordered in honor of the hundredth anniversary of the President’s birth. The head appearing on the coin was taken from a photograph; the designer was Victor D. Brenner, a twenty-seven-year-old Russian who had come to America as a child, sold matches on the street, and studied art in New York City at Cooper Union. He then studied in Paris and, on his return to the United States, opened a studio. He had always admired Lincoln; when he heard that a new image for the penny was being contemplated, he obtained a photograph, went to work, and sent his winning design to Washington.

The New York Times thought the whole idea was a mistake and preferred the old Indian Head. An editorial complained that “Lincoln does not need the immortality of a copper cent, and the precedent would assuredly be bad in the case of some of his successors. The red Indian in his warbonnet, the sole survival of aboriginal North America, was of value as a cultural memorial, if for nothing else. … It is another ill-considered freak of Mr. [Theodore] Roosevelt’s will, of a piece with his effort last year to remove the motto In God We Trust’ from the silver dollar. Congress defeated that project, and by a freak of its own, it has for the first time inscribed this motto upon the coin of the lowest denomination.”


 
1964 Twenty Years Ago

President Lyndon Johnson appeared on television at 11:37 on the evening of August 4: “My fellow Americans: As President and Commander in Chief, it is my duty to report that renewed hostile actions against United States ships on the high seas in the Gulf of Tonkin have today required me to order the military forces of the United States to take action in reply. … That reply is being given as I speak to you tonight. Air action is now in execution against gunboats and certain supporting facilities in North Vietnam which have been used in these hostile operations.”

Shortly after noon on August 2, three communist torpedo boats had been spotted trailing the U.S. destroyer Maddox in the Gulf. The Maddox fired three warning shots to no effect—the torpedo boats came on. At 3:08 P.M. the Maddox opened fire; two of the trailing craft closed to five thousand yards and launched a torpedo each. They missed. The third maneuvered for position but came under the Maddox’s biggest guns and received a direct hit. It burst into flame. The U.S. aircraft carrier Ticonderoga sent F-8 Crusader jets after the other two and scored two hits with rockets, but the craft limped on to the north. This was the first direct clash between U.S. and Communist armed vehicles since the Korean War.

At the United Nations, Adlai Stevenson called the U. S. reprisals against North Vietnam a “limited and measured response fitted precisely to the attack that produced it, and the deployment of additional U. S. forces to Southeast Asia is designed to make unmistakably clear that the U.S. cannot be diverted by military attack from its obligations to help its friends establish and protect their independence.”

On August 7 the Congress passed a resolution approving the President’s action, the House doing so unanimously and the Senate by a vote of 88 to 2. Dissenting were Alaska’s Ernest Gruening and Oregon’s Wayne Morse.

Johnson’s action in the Gulf of Tonkin crystallized a constitutional dilemma that found its imperfect resolution in the War Powers Act nine years later. The President is the Commander in Chief and so would appear to have the power to send troops to battle; but it is given to the Congress to declare war. The War Powers Act provides that the President can commit troops on his own initiative only when an attack upon the United States or its armed forces creates a national emergency. If this occurs, the President must report to Congress immediately, and if war is not declared within sixty days, the troops must be withdrawn.

AUGUST 4: FBI agents dug a hole in an earthen dam on Olen Burrage’s Old Jolly Farm, six miles southwest of Philadelphia, Mississippi. Twenty feet down they discovered the bodies of the civil rights workers Michael Schwerner, Andrew Goodman, and James Chancy. The first two were white, Chaney black. They had been missing since June 21. Schwerner and Goodman had been shot through the heart; Chaney had been brutally beaten and shot three times.


 
 
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