The California Progressive Party, also named California Bull Moose, was a political party that flourished from 1912 to 1944 and lasted through the 1960s.
California Progressive Party | |
---|---|
Leader | Hiram Johnson |
Founded | 1912 |
Dissolved | 1960s |
Preceded by | Republican Party Populist Party |
Succeeded by | Citizens Party Green Party |
Headquarters | Los Angeles, California |
Ideology | New Nationalism Progressivism Populism |
Political position | Center-left to left-wing |
National affiliation | "Bull Moose" Party (1912–20) Progressive Party (1924–36) Progressive Party (1948-1960s) |
Colors | Green |
History
editIn 1910, Hiram W. Johnson, a nominal Republican who was backed by suffragette and early feminist Katherine Philips Edson[1] and other progressives opposed to monopoly capitalism epitomized by the Southern and Pacific Railroad, was a successful candidate for California governor running with the support of the Lincoln–Roosevelt League. Johnson served as Theodore Roosevelt's running mate as the vice presidential nominee of the national Progressive "Bull Moose" Party in the 1912 Presidential election. The ticket came in second place and received 88 electoral votes, defeating incumbent President William Howard Taft but losing to Democratic candidate Woodrow Wilson.
Johnson was reelected as Governor of California on the Progressive ticket in 1914, a party he co-founded in 1912. In 1916, he was elected as a Progressive to the U.S. Senate and continued his affiliation with the state party throughout his decades in the Senate, while simultaneously winning the Republican nomination. While Johnson was personally close to Theodore Roosevelt, he was much closer ideologically to U.S. Senator Robert "Fighting Bob" La Follette of Wisconsin. Johnson sat out the general election in 1924 after unsuccessfully challenging incumbent Calvin Coolidge for the Republican presidential nomination, which was also contested by Fighting Bob La Follette. Johnson personally disliked La Follette but grudgingly admired his quixotic third-party bid and generally agreed with his 1924 platform.[2]
In 1934, when the La Follettes founded the Wisconsin Progressive Party, the California Progressive Party obtained a ballot line in California and ran seven candidates (all unsuccessful, although Raymond L. Haight got 13% of the vote for Governor of California, running as a moderate against socialist and Democratic nominee Upton Sinclair). In 1936 they elected Franck R. Havenner as Congressman for California's 4th congressional district, and garnered a significant portion of the votes in some other races.
Havenner became a Democrat before the 1938 race; Haight defeated eventual winner Culbert Olson in the Progressive primary election, but received only 2.43% of the vote in the general election as a Progressive; and by the time of the 1942 gubernatorial election, the Progressives were no longer on the California ballot. By 1944, Haight was again a Republican, a delegate to the Republican National Convention.[3] The party nominated the national Progressive Party tickets for president of Henry Wallace and Vincent Hallinan in 1948 and 1952 respectively. The party lasted at the local level and continued to be active through the 50s and 60s but slowly dissolved.
Notable members
editGovernors of California
edit- Hiram Johnson (1911–1917)
- William Stephens (1917–1923)
- Friend Richardson (1923–1927)
- C. C. Young (1927–1931)
- Earl Warren (1943–1953)
Lieutenant Governors of California
edit- John Morton Eshleman (1915–1916)
- William Stephens (1916–1917)
- C. C. Young (1919–1927)
California State Treasurers
edit- Friend Richardson (1915–1923)
United States Senators
edit- Hiram Johnson (1917–1945)
- Sheridan Downey (1939–1950)
United States Representatives
edit- William Stephens (1911–1916)
- William Kent (1911–1917)
- Charles W. Bell (1913–1915)
- John A. Elston (1915–1921)
- Henry S. Benedict (1916–1917)
- Franck R. Havenner (1937–1941, 1945–1953)
- Edouard Izac (1937–1947)
State officials
edit- L. B. Mallory, Chief Clerk of the California State Assembly (1911–1917)
- Edward J. Tyrrell, California State Senator (1911–1919)
- Dominic Joseph Beban, California State Senator (1915–1916)
- William S. Scott, California State Senator (1915–1923)
- J. J. Crowley, California State Senator (1915–1931)
- W. F. Chandler, California State Senator (1915–1919)
- Prescott F. Cogswell, California State Senator (1913–1917), California State Assemblyman (1907–1913)
- Lee C. Gates, California State Senator (1911–1915)
- William J. Carr, California State Senator (1913–1923)
- Edgar A. Luce, California State Senator (1915–1919)
- Frank R. Devlin, California State Assemblyman (1905–1909)
- William P. Kennedy, California State Assemblyman (1915–1917)
- William M. Collins, California State Assemblyman (1913–1920)
- Joseph Edmund Marron, California State Assemblyman (1915–1917)
Local officials
edit- A. J. Barnes, Member of the Los Angeles City Council (1925–1927)
- Otto J. Zahn, Member of the Los Angeles City Council (1925–1927)
- James Stuart McKnight, Member of the Los Angeles City Council (1931–1933)
- Parley P. Christensen, Member of the Los Angeles City Council (1935–1937, 1939–1949)
Other members
edit- Raymond L. Haight, candidate for Governor of California, 1934, 1938
- Vincent Hallinan, candidate for President of the United States, 1952
- Francis J. Heney, candidate for U.S. Senator, 1914
- Alice Lee, civic leader
- George Marston, philanthropist
- Chester Harvey Rowell, progressive leader
References
edit- ^ Braitman, Jacqueline R. (June 1986). "A California Stateswoman: The Public Career of Katherine Philips Edson". California History. 65 (2): 82–95. doi:10.2307/25158366. JSTOR 25158366.
- ^ See: George E. Mowry, The California Progressives. (1963).
- ^ Kevin Starr, Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996; pg. 152-154.