Archibald M. Howe

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File:Howe, Archilbald M. (1848-1916).JPG
Archibald Murray Howe (From the Boston Daily Globe, Sept.9, 1900)

Archibald Murray Howe (1848–1916), was a lawyer and historian from Massachusetts. In 1900, he was named as the Vice-Presidential candidate of the short-lived "National Party".

Life and career

Born in Northampton, Massachusetts, in 1848, Howe was of pilgrim ancestry. He grew up in the Boston suburb of Brookline, where he attended a local academy. He graduated from Harvard University in 1869, and, three years later, graduated from the Harvard University School of Law. He served as the private secretary to Republican Henry Lillie Pierce (1825–1896) when the latter was elected to the US House of Representatives in 1872, remaining so until 1877, when Pierce left Congress. Later, Howe served as a member of the School Committee and the Common Council in Cambridge, where he had moved after returning to Massachusetts.

A Republican in politics, who had broken from the party in 1884 to support Democrat Grover Cleveland, Howe argued against the foreign policies of Republican President William McKinley, which Howe and others saw as imperialist. To this end, in 1900 a group of like-minded people met at Carnegie Hall in New York City on 5 September 1900 and formed the National Party[1] as a protest against McKinley. They nominated Donelson Caffery of Louisiana, a US Senator and Democrat, for President and Howe for Vice President. Caffery had not asked to be nominated by a party other than his own, and he quickly withdrew; Howe followed, and the party merely asked its followers nationwide to vote for the party’s electors as a protest vote. Few votes were received.[2]

Howe spent much of his life doing historical research; reading and writing papers on history. He was a member of the Massachusetts Reform Club, and there in 1900 read a paper which denounced imperialism and the "spirit of empire". His obituary in The Boston Globe stated that he was "a brilliant, forceful speaker".

In his final years, Howe was in declining health. On the morning of 6 January 1916, two policemen found Howe, stumbling around in the street, barefoot and in his night-clothes. He was covered in blood, and police found a stab wound to his neck and a large bruise on his head. Taken to the hospital, Howe died later that morning. A search of his home showed the wounds to be self-inflicted.[3] Howe was survived by his wife, Ania Sargeant Divwell, whom he married in 1881.

References

  1. “Third Ticket Now Before the People. National Party Organized and Its Candidates Nominated,” The New York Times, 6 September 1900, 1
  2. “Conscience Votes. They Will Be Polled for National Party, Mr. Howe Thinks,” The Boston Globe, 9 September 1900, 16.
  3. “A.M. Howe Dead in Cambridge. Boston Lawyer was Found in Street. Self-Inflicted Wound in Neck and Bruise on Head. Dies in Hospital – Had Long Been in Ill-Health,” The Boston Globe, 7 January 1916, 13.

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