*** Welcome to piglix ***

John Temple Graves

John Temple Graves
John Temple Graves.jpg
Personal details
Born (1856-11-09)November 9, 1856
Willington, South Carolina, United States
Died August 8, 1925(1925-08-08) (aged 68)
Washington, D.C., United States
Political party Democratic (before 1908; 1912–1925)
Independence (1908–1912)
Spouse(s) Mattie Simpson (1878–?)
Anne Cothran (1890–1925)
Children 5

John Temple Graves (November 9, 1856 – August 8, 1925) was an American newspaper editor who is best known for being the vice presidential nominee of the Independence Party in the presidential election of 1908.

Graves was born in 1856 in Willington, South Carolina to General James Porterfield Graves (1820–1914) and Katherine Floride Townes (1827–1858). He was related to the Calhoun family, a prominent family in 18th and 19th-century American politics, and was the great-grandnephew of John Caldwell Calhoun, who served as Vice President of the United States from 1825 until 1832.

He served as a presidential elector for Florida in 1884, and for Georgia in 1888.

In 1903, Graves made a statement on lynching: "The problem of the hour is not how to prevent lynching in the South, but the larger question: How shall we destroy the crime which always has and always will provoke lynching? The answer which the mob returns to this vital question is already known. The mob answers it with the rope, the bullet, and sometimes, God save us! with the torch. And the mob is practical; its theory is effective to a large degree. The mob is today the sternest, the strongest, and the most effective restraint that the age holds for the control of rape."

The newly formed Independence Party decided to hold a national convention in Chicago, Illinois. Graves was nominated as one of the candidates for president on July 27. The first ballot saw a tally of 396 votes for Thomas L. Hisgen, 213 for Graves, 200 for Milford W. Howard, 71 for Reuben R. Lyon, and 49 for William Randolph Hearst. A second ballot brought Hisgen to the doorstep of nomination, gathering 590 votes, compared to 189 for Graves and 109 for Howard. Only in the early morning hours of Wednesday, July 29 did Hisgen go over the top, winning the nomination. Graves was subsequently chosen as the party's nominee for vice president.


...
Wikipedia

...