Doctor
Charles Hay, after an arduous horse ride from his home in
Private secretary to Abraham Lincoln, author of the acclaimed Pike County Ballads, editorial writer for the New York Tribune, successful businessman, U.S. minister to Great Britain, and Secretary of State under two strong presidents—William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt—Hay is best known for helping to strengthen ties between America and England, and his Open Door notes regarding trade in China.
Although
his father eked out a living as a country doctor, Hay’s childhood memories were
bucolic ones of days passed near the banks of the Mississippi River. “The boys
of my day,” he recalled, “led an amphibious life in and near its [the
With his academic talents outstripping Warsaw’s limited local schools Hay, through financial assistance from his Uncle Milton Hay, a prosperous Springfield, Illinois, lawyer, was sent in 1849 to study at the Pittsfield Private Academy in Pike County, Illinois. The aid offered by his uncle was the first in a series of incidents where Hay’s talents would be recognized by those who could help further his career. Hay helped himself along by becoming what Elihu Root termed “the most delightful of companions,” able to forge friendships that lasted a lifetime.
After
some college-level study at
The
young man from the primitive west took some ribbing at first from his more
sophisticated classmates, but Hay won them over with his ready wit. He also
impressed his classmates through his brilliance in the classroom. “It was the
general opinion that Hay put his book under his pillow and had the contents
thereof absorbed and digested by morning. His quick perception, ready grasp of
an idea and wonderful retentive memory made a mere pastime of study,” one
Graduating in 1858, Hay returned to Illinois and pondered what to do with his life. Although he considered becoming a minister, or returning to the east to try his hand as a writer, his family urged him to study law instead. “They would spoil a first-class preacher,” Hay wrote a friend, “to make a third-class lawyer of me.” Bending to his family’s wishes, Hay moved to Springfield to read law in his uncle’s successful office (located adjacent to the law firm of Lincoln and Herndon).
Life in the
Despite
his complaints about wasting away in Springfield, Hay actually was in the
perfect spot in which to find a means for escaping Western life. His uncle’s
law firm was one of the most prestigious in the state, counting as its former
partners two Illinois governors and Lincoln himself. Hay used his uncle’s
friendship with
From a seemingly innocuous position as assistant private secretary, Hay, during the trying days of the Civil War, worked his way into Lincoln’s good graces, gradually handling more difficult assignments than just routine correspondence--dealing with office seekers, investigating alleged secret societies plotting against the Union cause, and traveling to Canada with New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley to meet with Confederate representatives on a possible peace proposal. Under the president’s tutelage, Hay received “a graduate course in the art of living.”
Hay
learned his lessons well, becoming friendly with Secretary of State WilliamSeward—a friendship that blossomed into a job as secretary of the American
legation in Paris following Lincoln’s assassination. Other diplomatic posts
followed in quick succession: chargĂ© d’affaires at Vienna and secretary of the
legation at Madrid. His experiences abroad made him an attractive catch for
While on the Tribune Hay won literary fame with such dialect poems as “Little Breeches” and “Jim Bludso.” In his editorials written for the newspaper, Hay developed a politically independent reputation through his support for a wide variety of reform measures. Hay, who would later be known as the “Republican laureate” for his Lincoln biography (co-authored by Nicolay) and relentless attacks on the Democrats, went so far as to vote for Democrat Samuel Tilden in his race for governor of New York. Hay continued to chart a politically independent course upon his move to Cleveland in the summer of 1875 with his new wife Clara Louise Stone, daughter of Cleveland railroad tycoon Amasa Stone.
Joining his father-in-law’s business, Hay became a wealthy man himself in the process. The work was far from strenuous, however, as Hay related in a letter to his friend Alvey Adee: “I am here in a nice little shop where I do nothing but read and yawn in the long intervals of work, an occupation that fits me like a glove. My work is merely the care of investments which are so safe that they require no care.” With time on his hands, Hay continued to write for the Tribune and pursue politics.
Disliking life in Cleveland (Dennett described Hay as “a spiritual
outlander” in that midwestern city), Hay looked for any opportunity to return
to Washington, D.C. His independent political stand, however, especially his
opposition to fellow Ohioan Rutherford B. Hayes, elected to the presidency in
1876, kept him out of office. When a position as American minister to
Stung by this rejection, Hay abandoned his political independence for that of a party regular, traveling the country giving speeches blasting the Democrats. Impressed by Hay’s return to the GOP fold, Hayes in October 1879 named Hay to replace the outgoing Assistant Secretary of State Frederick Seward. Hay remained in that post until March 31, 1881, when President James Garfield took office.
Along
with his burning desire to hold political office, Hay’s return to Republican
orthodoxy was also influenced by labor unrest that swept the country in 1877.
“I feel that a profound misfortune and disgrace has fallen on the country,
which no amount of energy or severity can now wholly remedy,” Hay wrote his
father-in-law about the strikes. As he had when he returned to
Although close to Garfield, Hay was left in the political wilderness after his stint as assistant secretary of state ended in 1881. His political aspirations were hamstrung by his support for such losing presidential contenders as James Blaine and John Sherman. Hay managed to keep busy, producing not only The Bread-winners, but also working with Nicolay on a history of Lincoln, published serially in Century magazine for which the duo received the then staggering sum of $50,000. Hay could afford to live a life of leisure. Upon his father-in-law’s death in 1883, Hay and his wife inherited $3.5 million--money Hay would put to good use in furthering his political ambitions.
Betting his political future on Ohio governor William McKinley, Hay used his fortune to help ensure that the former congressman enjoyed a swift rise to the nation’s top office. In 1893 McKinley found himself deeply in debt after a friend, whose note for approximately $100,000 he had endorsed, went bankrupt. Realizing that a debt-ridden McKinley would never be a successful presidential contender, his wily political handler, Mark Hanna, called upon Hay and other wealthy Republicans to come to McKinley’s aid.
In
1897 McKinley appointed Hay as ambassador to England—an American diplomatic
post then second only in importance to that of Secretary of State. “I would
give six-pence,” Adams (a Democrat) proclaimed, “to know how much Hay paid for
McKinley. His politics must have cost.” Whatever the final cost, it was worth it;
after only a year and a half as ambassador, Hay was called back to
Hay’s time in England, at first glance, was a failure. He was unable to achieve agreements on two problems that occurred during his tenure—American claims against Canadians hunting Alaskan seals and an attempt to organize an international conference on bimetallism (the free coinage of silver). One of his few successes came during the Spanish-American war, when
Hay’s real success as an ambassador came not in reaching binding agreements with the British, but in continuing to push for Anglo-American solidarity. In a speech in London in April 1898 Hay hit on that theme, proclaiming: “We [England and the United States] are bound by a tie which we did not forge and which we cannot break; we are joint ministers of the same sacred mission of liberty and progress, charged with duties which we cannot evade by the imposition of irresistible hands.” The one, “indispensable” feature of America’s foreign policy, Hay wrote privately while Secretary of State, “should be a friendly understanding with England”—something he achieved in his seventeen months as ambassador.
On
September 30, 1898, Hay was sworn in as McKinley’s new Secretary of State,
replacing William R. Day, who left to become one of the commissioners to the
peace conference with
Along with inertia at the State Department, Hay had to deal with the U.S.
Senate, a body he believed tried too often to interfere in the administration’s
conduct of foreign affairs, and various politicians’ demands for patronage
jobs. Despairing at the work facing Hay,
Hay brought with him to his new post, however, a philosophy that attempted to move the department into the twentieth century and further America’s growing status as a world power. “We have kept always in view,” the Secretary of State told the New York Chamber of Commerce in 1901, “that our normal activities are in the direction of trade and commerce; that the vast development of our industries imperatively demands that we shall not only retain and confirm our hold on our present markets, but seek constantly . . . to extend our commercial interests in every practicable direction.” Also, Hay was able to craft a staff to his liking with such friends as William Rockhill (as a Far Eastern expert) and Alvey Adee (as assistant secretary).
The
major test of Hay’s diplomatic talents during his seven years in office came on
a matter pertaining to America’s quest for expanded markets for its products—the
carving up of China by European powers.
Although on such issues as aborting the 1850 Clayton-Bulwer Treaty with
On March 8, 1898, shortly before the Spanish-American War broke out, the English government sent a confidential inquiry to U.S. Secretary of State JohnSherman warning that certain “foreign Powers may restrict the opening of China to the commerce of all nations.” The memorandum went on to ask whether the British “could count on the co-operation of the United States in opposing such action by foreign Powers and whether the United States would be prepared to join with Great Britain in opposing such measures should the contingency arise.”
Preoccupied with the coming war with Spain, Sherman and President McKinley
declined Britain’s offer noting they were sticking to “our traditional policy
of respecting foreign alliances and so far as practicable avoiding interference
or connection with European complications.” Rebuffed by the Americans, the
British joined the scramble for their own sphere of influence in
American
policy in China changed, however, when Hay moved into the Secretary of State’s
office. The successful conclusion of the war with
Rockhill received help in his deliberations from Alfred E. Hippisley, a British citizen and member of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs Service, who visited his American friend in the summer of 1899. “I went over as frequently as I could to Washington [from his wife’s family home in Baltimore],” Hippisley recalled, “to discuss the conditions in China with him [Rockhill] and especially what could be done to maintain the ‘open door’ or equality of opportunity for all nations in that country.”
Working from a memorandum on China drawn up by Hippisley, Rockhill prepared his own version for Hay, which the Secretary of State distributed to Germany, Great Britain, France, and Italy on 6 September 1899, and to Japan on 17 November 1899--a diplomatic notice seeking an equal economic playing field for all nations trading in China that became known as the first Open Door Note.
The
note itself, which had been met with popular acclaim in America, offered no
serious deviation from standard American policy. Hay’s true diplomatic skill on
this issue came not from the writing of the note, which credit belongs to
Rockhill and Hippisley, but in his dealings with the response from the European
powers. Most European governments followed the lead of
The Secretary of State had little time to enjoy his success. In the summer of 1900 in
With his carefully crafted China policy under attack, and nearing time for McKinley’s re-election campaign, Hay moved to forestall China’s dismemberment. On July 3, 1900, with the president’s approval, he sent a circular note (the second Open Door Note) to the various powers stating that it was the policy of the United States to preserve China’s “territorial and administrative entity, protect all rights guaranteed to friendly powers by treaty and international law, and safeguard for the world the principle of equal and impartial trade with all parts of the Chinese Empire.”
At
first, Hay’s bold move had seemed to curb the European powers’ appetite for
dismembering China. The American press and public hailed what the New York Journal of Commerce called “one
of the most important diplomatic negotiations of our time.” Hay realized,
however, that
Even
Hay came to realize that attempting to hold together the collapsing Chinese
government from total foreign domination was an impossible task. Just five
months after his note proclaiming
Hay’s
Open Door adventure had a far-reaching effect on American diplomacy in the Far
East in the twentieth century. Instead of seeing Hay’s policy ensuring the
territorial integrity of China as a failure, subsequent State Department
officials made the mistake of trying to live up to a discredited policy. “The
idea of preserving Chinese territorial and administrative entity, in itself a
somewhat ambitious policy,” noted Robert Ferrell of
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