
James
A. Garfield was born on November 19, 1831,
in Orange Township, Ohio.
Garfield was raised by his mother as his father
died when he 17 months old. In 1851, He
enrolled in Hiram
College in Hiram,
Ohio before transferring to Williams
College in Williamstown,
Massachusetts. At Williams, James became
a member of the Delta
Upsilon fraternity. In 1856, Garfield
returned to Hiram College as a professor of classical
languages. Just one year later, in 1857, he was
made president of the college.
On November 11,
1858, he married Lucretia Rudolph. Together, they
would have seven children. James soon discovered,
however, that he was more suited to politics and
the study of law than academia. In 1859, he was
elected as state Senator of
Ohio and was admitted to the Ohio bar in 1860.
During the Civil War, Garfield served under several
generals and saw action at the Battle
of Shiloh in Tennessee and Siege at Corinth
(Mississippi). He served as the Chief-of-Staff
under General William
Rosecrans’ Army
of the Cumberland. He would eventually be
promoted to major general, but left the Army to
serve in the House
of Representatives. James would be re-elected
as an Ohio representative every two years for 18
years.
In 1880, Garfield’s political career was
damaged by controversies surrounding the publication
of the Morey Letter. The Morey Letter was allegedly
a letter written by James Garfield indicating that
he favored an increase in Chinese immigration.
At the time, increased Chinese immigration was
very unpopular among politicians and Garfield failed
to confirm or deny the allegations because he could
not remember if he wrote it. Nevertheless, at the Republican
National Convention in 1880, Garfield gained
support of his party and was nominated for President.
He would defeat the Democratic candidate Winfield
Scott Hancock to become the nation’s
twentieth president.
Unfortunately, Garfield had little time to accomplish
anything as president. On July 2, 1881, just under
four months into his presidency, he was shot in
Washington D.C. by Charles J. Guiteau, an attorney
who was angry he was did receive a federal job.
Guiteau would later be convicted and executed for
assassination. Although Garfield was not killed
immediately, he slowly deteriorated over a period
of several months. He died on September
19, 1881 of complications from his wounds.
Some historians believe he would have survived
if his medical team would have been more capable.
Many believe the infections that ultimately caused
his death were inadvertently introduced to his
body by his own doctors. He was only 49 years old.
Today, James A. Garfield is buried in Cleveland,
Ohio. He is one of only three presidents
to have died before his mother.