Why Wis The Badger State in
Transcription
Why Wis The Badger State in
WISCONSIN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY Why Wis The Badger State in By John Milton Cooper Jr. W hy did Wisconsin become, politically, the most watched state in the Union during the first two decades of the twentieth century? During this period, when the science of industry and technology affected the daily lives of men and women throughout the nation, the Badger state earned the title, “laboratory of democracy,” by leading the reform movements of that era, reforms that became known collectively as “progressivism” by the end of that twenty-year period. Many people would like to think that this role came naturally to the bright, creative, forward-looking citizens of Wisconsin, yet there was nothing inevitable about the part that the Badger State played in the progressive movement. Other states could have and almost did take the vanguard position in the reform crusades of that era. So, why Wisconsin? Progressivism, as Richard Hofstadter pointed out in the midtwentieth century, arose from the confluence of two streams of 14 reform. The first was agrarian. This was the continuation of Populism that the Democrats had appropriated in 1896 under the leadership of their presidential candidate, William Jennings Bryan. Besides currency inflation, Bryan and his followers also called for railroad regulation, income and inheritance taxes on the wealthy, and legal action to break up the huge business conglomerates, known as “trusts.” When progressivism briefly came to dominate the national political scene in the twentieth century, these faithful Democrats wandered in from the wilderness and entered the promised land of fulfillment with Bryan himself as Moses. Like the prophet, Bryan was barred from his own promised land, the White House, which he ran for twice more after 1896. He found consolation, however, in shepherding many of his fondest programs through Congress as Secretary of State under Woodrow Wilson from 1913 to 1915. The second stream of progressivism, urban reform, arose at the same time as its agrarian counterpart during the late nineteenth century, but from a source different than the Populists SPRING 2004 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY Phil La Follette’s quote made the simple connection between Progressivism and the state of Wisconsin, and in its simplicity also described the fame that Wisconsin received for its Progressive identity. consin? the Progressive Era and Bryan Democrats. Urban reformers were usually groups of citizens who rallied behind insurgent mayors and against the political machines that controlled their respective cities. These reformers attacked the corruption of the machines overall, not as a temporary blight to be remedied by simply throwing out the rascals, but as part of a larger system that tied politics to dominant business interests. Moreover, these reformers cared about their fellow citizens’ economic and social welfare. They emphasized such issues as regulation of utilities and public transportation—which then consisted mainly of streetcars. They also wanted to ease the plight of the poorest citizens, and they soon came to be allied with the pioneers in the new, female-led profession of social work. The most successful and best known of these urban reform movements occurred in the eastern Great Lakes region, in such cities as Cleveland, Toledo, and Detroit. By the twentieth century, these urban reform movements tried to expand to the state level, with varying degrees of success. Did Wisconsin figure much in either of these early streams SPRING 2004 WHS 5-6835 WHS ID 10650 Robert M. La Follette during his tenure as U.S. Senator from Wisconsin, 1906. that later joined progressivism? The answer is, largely, no. Bryan’s programs, largely agrarian in nature, never attracted much of a following here, for several reasons. One was that Wisconsin was acting like other states north of the Ohio River and east of the Missouri River, in not responding favorably to either of those movements. The Great Lakes region rejected many Populist and Bryanite programs because they served only certain farmers and laborers, although Bryan and his followers claimed to speak for them all. Their advocacy of publicly owned crop storage facilities appealed to farmers who grew non-perishable crops, mainly those who lived on the Great Plains and in the South. Few Wisconsin farmers fit that profile, and the state’s growing number of dairy farmers had no use for such policies. On the industrial front, Populists and Democrats allied themselves with unions and strongly supported workers’ rights to organize. But the Democrats’ support of a low-tariff program ran contrary to widespread convictions that a high tariff protected not just business profits but also job creation and high 15 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE wages for industrial workers. Real wages, as expressed in the buying power of their dollars, had been rising for two decades. Such job protection and pocketbook concerns appealed far more to Wisconsin workers than did sympathy for unions, which, in the late nineteenth century, had only a small membership here as elsewhere. Finally, populist support of currency inflation repelled small business people and white collar workers throughout the Northeast and Midwest where established communities were not as dependent on borrowed money. Another reason for the Populists’ and Bryanites’ lack of OF HISTORY appeal in this part of the country in the 1890s was political. The two major parties, especially the Republican party, were much more firmly established in the Midwest than on the Great Plains or in the West. Among the Midwestern states, Ohio, Indiana, and, to a lesser extent, Illinois had been competitive two-party states since the Civil War, whereas Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Iowa had been Republican strongholds. Still, dominated by the GOP, Wisconsin was not like the one-party Democratic South. The two-party system did function here when certain issues gained momentum. For instance, Democ- Whi(X3)5235 William Jennings Bryan speaking in Columbus, 1900. 16 SPRING 2004 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY H GX83 R1 1878 This 1878 map of railroad land grants makes clear the level of influence that railroad companies had in Midwestern states, especially Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Iowa. This poster for a December 5, 1874, anti-railroad rally attests to the Progressive belief in bringing together a community’s leaders and the common, or “every” man. WHS Archives 3-3888 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY rats had swept the state in 1890 when Republican incumbent governor, William D. Hoard, and other members of the GOP supported the bitterly contested Bennett Law, which required all schools, including parochial, to teach a common body of subjects in English. Twenty-six Wisconsin counties that had voted Republican in 1888 swung to support Democrats and defeat the law that riled many of the communities that still embraced their native speech. The sporadic nature of these political conditions did not promote an ongoing attraction to Populism or tilt Wisconsin voters toward Bryanite Democracy as much as it did to people living in what Bryan called “the great crescent” of the South and West. U rban reform made more of a dent. There were various WHi(X3)17707 municipal reform efforts in the Railroad construction on the Annapee & Western Railroad near Sturgeon Bay, 1888–1889. larger cities and towns, but none of them Railroad lines continued to reach into areas of Wisconsin through the end of the nineteenth century. ever grew into the full-fledged insurgencies that exploded in cities in other states. It is not clear why this was so. Cleveland, Toledo, and Detroit By then, however, Wisconsin had taken the lead. In 1900 had much in common with Milwaukee, in both their industrial Robert M. La Follette had won the governorship at the head of economies and their mixtures of ethnic groups. The difference an insurgent Republican movement that called for reform of railroad taxation, railroad regulation, and the direct primary. may have been one of the two factors that historians like least to From then on Wisconsin would remain in the vanguard. These acknowledge: chance. Milwaukee and other Wisconsin cities men and women would, in fact, pin the label of “progressive” on may simply have lacked the kind of people, especially leaders, these reform movements. Clearly, Wisconsin’s primacy in who kicked off urban reform movements elsewhere at this time. statewide reform, at least as a matter of timing, also owed a great In any event, when urban reform finally did come to Milwaudeal to the historian’s unloved explanation—chance. Such kee it would be under the banner of the Socialists, who would statewide reform movements were bubbling up all over the dominate the city’s politics for more than three decades, beginMidwest. Ohio or Michigan might have beaten Wisconsin to ning in 1910. the punch, and Iowa came in a close second. Things were different at the state level, but there, too, things But it would be a mistake to credit everything about the state’s did not have to turn out the way they did. In Ohio and Michistatus as the flagship of reform to chance. In several ways, Wisgan, reform mayors made bids for statewide power earlier than consin had been a leader of reform as early as other states. Even they did in Wisconsin. Both Samuel “Golden Rule” Jones of without a major urban reform movement before the twentieth Toledo and Tom L. Johnson of Cleveland were serious concentury, there had been plenty of small city improvement drives tenders for the Ohio governorship during the 1890s, and the and campaigns for municipal ownership of utilities. From 1894 state’s powerful Republican machine had to make strenuous onward, every two years brought the gubernatorial election, and efforts to beat them back. In Michigan, even the Republican there was a significant statewide insurgent challenge to the ruling machine’s best efforts failed to thwart the gubernatorial ambipowers in the Republican party. These insurgents plumped the tions of Hazen “Potato Patch” Pingree of Detroit. Pingree was issues of railroad taxation and railroad regulation. In 1894, the the first insurgent reformer to win a statehouse, as he did in insurgent leader was Congressman Nils Haugen, and in 1896 1896, serving from 1897 until 1901. It was in 1901 that a group and 1898 it was La Follette. of reform Republicans in Iowa won the office of governor and One notable historian, David Thelen, has found these grassmajorities in the legislature under Albert B. Cummins and the roots efforts so impressive that he argues that the true heyday of banner of the “Iowa Idea.” This was a platform that combined progressivism in Wisconsin was in the 1890s, before La Follette railroad regulation with anti-trust measures. 18 SPRING 2004 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY took office. Thelen downplays La Follette’s importance and is hard to imagine the insurgents and reformers coming to argues that “Fighting Bob” was only reaping where others had power and passing those laws as soon as they did without La sown. By doing so, Thelen is downgrading that other factor so Follette. He duplicated Pingree of Detroit’s feat of beating the many historians vehemently dislike: the influence of a single established powers within the Republican party, except that La individual or, more colloquially (as well as pejoratively) put, the Follette had no previous experience or the fame of being a “Great Man.” reform mayor. As La Follette told the story, he underwent a This view of Wisconsin progressivism has points in its favor. conversion experience in 1891, like St. Paul’s on the road to A single person does not a movement make. Insurgency and reDamascus, when Republican party leader, U.S. Senator Phileform sentiments had been widespread in the state from the early tus Sawyer, allegedly offered him a bribe. That revelation, he 1890s onward. The candidacies of Haugen and La Follette drew believed, was the truth about the corrupt system that dominaton strong strains of discontent within the Republican ranks. ed politics in the state and nation, a truth that caused his public Once La Follette assumed the governorship, it would become break with Republican leaders. Later he emblazoned the masteven clearer just head of his magahow strong those zine, La Follette’s reform sentiWeekly, with the ments were. biblical injuncAnother factor tion: “You shall that aided Wisknow the truth, consin in entering and the truth shall the reform ranks make you free.” early was the relaLa Follette tive weakness of spent the 1890s the conservative, cultivating potenbusiness-allied eltially insurgent ements that held constituencies. In power in the Re1894 he deferred publican party. to Haugen as the Strictly speaking, standard bearer there was no machbecause, as a Norine that ruled the wegian-American, WHS microfilm P33968 Design by Nick Jehlen state. There were Haugen would On the front page of the first La Follette’s Weekly, issued January 9, 1909, such figures as appeal to Scan“Fighting” Bob’s message appears in biblical verse. In 1929 the magazine’s name would change to The Progressive, the name it carries today, as seen in the November 2001 issue shown on the right. Philetus Sawyer dinavians restive and John C. under Yankee domSpooner, both of whom were United States senators, but they ination of the Republican party. When La Follette assumed the never dominated Wisconsin politics in the way that their fellow insurgent leadership in 1896 and again in 1898, although unsucsenators Thomas C. Platt did in New York or Matthew Quay did cessful in his bids, he drew on Haugen’s ethnic followers while at in Pennsylvania. Rather, the GOP here was a collection of local the same time tapping into anti-railroad sentiment among farmfactions joined in a loose alliance. The relative weakness of a ers and businessmen who were angry over shipping costs. La Folstate’s machine played a big role in determining when the lette added to his program by advocating the abolition of tax reformers were able to win statewide. Iowa had a political strucbreaks that railroads enjoyed and adoption of a new device for ture like Wisconsin’s, with a dominant but not unbeatable choosing party candidates—the direct primary. Between elecRepublican party. Michigan had a somewhat stronger machine, tions, he made himself perhaps the best known person in the state but in 1898 scandals from the Spanish-American War had weakthrough his tireless speaking about reform issues, particularly at ened its leader, Secretary of War Russell Alger. Clearly, then, county fairs. He also contacted like-minded leaders in counties Wisconsin’s leading role in progressivism owed a great deal to and in towns across the state and kept their names in an elabofactors other than a single leader. rate filing system, cultivating them through frequent letters and But would Wisconsin have become the vanguard of progresmeetings. sivism without La Follette? Two things need to be considered in The persistence that La Follette showed as an individual answering that question—one is timing and the other is persistence. reflected the persistence of the movement as a whole, as WisOn the matter of timing, Wisconsin became the flagship of consin’s reformers remained committed to progressive proreform by being the first to enact laws on the state level, and it grams and leaders long after the initial burst of enthusiasm. SPRING 2004 19 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE WHi(X3)41543 From the pen of cartoonist Clifford Berryman, Bob La Follette and Teddy Roosevelt struggle for control of the nation’s Progressive leadership. Although La Follette and Roosevelt began as allies, both men’s volatile personalities played a role in ending their professional friendship. PH 2744 The Red Gym, on the UW campus in Madison and illustrated here on an undated postcard, was the scene in 1904 for the Stalwarts’ “bolt” from the Republican convention. Bob La Follette engineered the split by locking out his opponents, by setting up barbed wire around the entrance, and hiring UW football players to act as bouncers to anyone who was not of a Progressive turn of mind. 20 OF HISTORY WHS 3-5324 The September 5, 1922, Cambridge News Extra reported primary election returns of a thorough, dominant Progressive victory that would eventually return La Follette to his senate seat, and welcome John Blaine as Wisconsin’s governor. Each time La Follette vied for the gubernatorial nomination, he came closer. In 1898 the conservatives barely beat back his challenge, and by 1900 he had become unstoppable. He owed his victory not only to his hard work but also to a falling out among the conservative elements he had been battling ever since his political revelation of nearly a decade earlier. In 1900 the Republican nomination was tantamount to election in Wisconsin. Still, La Follette took no chances. As he had done earlier in 1892 and 1896, he spoke vigorously and often for the party’s national ticket. For him, this was not hard to do. The Republican nominee in 1896 and 1900 was William McKinley, a friend from their days in Congress in the 1880s, who had privately stood by La Follette after the break with Sawyer and the Wisconsin conservatives. This support of the national ticket also neutralized any opponents’ allegations of party disloyalty. In the 1900 campaign La Follette made such a virtue of his GOP loyalty that he soft-pedaled his reform issues and jumped on the bandwagon of the party’s leading national issue: retention of the Philippines after the Spanish-American War. In the face of the Democrats’ charge of “imperialism,” La Follette SPRING 2004 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY PH 4063 (3) Guide Jake Borah, Bob Jr., and Bob La Follette Sr., pose by their day’s work in Crystal River, Colorado, in 1907. Two years before, President Theodore Roosevelt used the same guide and shot a bear on his famous Colorado hunting expedition. La Follette’s presidential ambitions seem evident in his decision to have himself photographed in a similar setting with the same guide. During his presidential campaign in 1924, La Follette fought the good fight on a national scale. He and Young Bob appeared at Yankee Stadium September 21, to participate in Steuben Day ceremonies, which honored the German Revolutionary War general, Baron Von Steuben. WHi(X3)13031 La Follette’s statewide campaigns captured the very essence of “whistle stops.” He spoke to a crowd in La Valle when photographers captured him in October 1900. SPRING 2004 Classified File 673 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY became such an enthusiastic, flag-waving imperialist that he turned himself into a regional edition of his party’s chief campaigner and imperialist cheerleader, vice-presidential nominee Theodore Roosevelt. In later years La Follette would adopt a foreign policy that was the opposite of those 1900 stands, and he conveniently forgot what one historian has called his “imperialist flirtation.” T here was another aspect of his career that he and others would also tend to forget in later years after he emerged as “Fighting Bob,” the fearless crusader for truth, righteousness, and justice—his political shrewdness and caution. As he later admitted in his autobiography, La Follette knew better than to overload the political agenda when he became governor. Of his three initial programs, he focused on the two that involved the railroad—taxation and regulation. The low taxes that railroads enjoyed on their properties were a holdover from earlier decades when the state had offered such inducements as an incentive to build lines and develop communities. Aside from the railroads themselves, almost no one favored continuing these tax breaks. Regulation proved a bit harder to enact, because many politicians in both parties were beholden to the railroads for favors and financing. But regulation, too, was an idea whose time had come. Other states, particularly in the South, had already established railroad regulatory agencies. Ironically, La Follette’s fondest program, the direct primary, proved hardest to pass, but it would have the most important political impact. In retrospect, it seems ironic that this measure, justified on the sacred ground of popular sovereignty, would have had a tough row to hoe. But it did. Not only conservative Republicans but also the state’s rump Democratic party rose to resist this assault on a cardinal principle of their existence—the right to select candidates and thereby control access to political office. It took La Follette four years to push through the direct primary. In the process he fought and won two more reelections, for himself and for majorities in the legislature favorable to his programs. This required him to repeat one of the feats that had won him the governorship. He again organized a faction within the Republican party, but this time he was not just working for himself. He put together slates of candidates for the state assembly and senate based on loyalty to him and his program. This tactic split the party into well-defined and fiercely opposed factions. La Follette’s followers called themselves “Progressives”— one of the first uses of what would become the signature word for this era—and his opponents reached back into Republican party history to call themselves “Stalwarts.” This intraparty division exploded in 1904, when both factions vied—literally—to seize control of the party convention. Governor La Follette and the Progressives prepared better. They used barbed wire barriers to restrict access to the University of Wisconsin’s Red Gym, where the convention was being held, and stationed football players as guards to keep unwelcome Stalwarts 22 WHi 5-1582 Although Bob La Follette had died the year before, an Independence Day celebration at Tomah’s Wayside Inn clearly states that the gathering is “under auspices of La Follette Progressive Republicans. By 1926 the name La Follette and the “Progressives” had become synonymous. out. Infuriated, the Stalwarts held their own convention at an uptown theater. Both sides claimed to be the legitimate Republican ticket, but the Stalwarts were the ones who bore the stigma of bolting. This factional warfare gave the national GOP fits. The bad blood that later grew between La Follette and Theodore Roosevelt, who was now president and running himself in 1904, stemmed in part from what struck him and other national party leaders as dangerous parochial divisiveness. I t is popular to regard reform and political creativity as products of large-minded harmony and consensus. But the opposite was the case with Wisconsin progressivism. The very sharpness of these divisions emboldened the winners, La Follette and his Progressives, to push further in the direction of reform. The “Wisconsin Idea” of drawing on the intellectual expertise of the University of Wisconsin to create and run independent commissions in such areas as banking, insurance, and natural resources, emerged from these heady days of combat and victory. La Follette himself moved on to a vacant seat in the U.S. Senate in 1906 with great reluctance, because he wanted to shepherd more progressive measures through to enactment. By then, Wisconsin was renowned as the flagship state of SPRING 2004 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY Lincoln Steffens, La Follette became a national figure, “Wisconsin’s Little Giant.” This was the first example of what would become a common pattern for progressivism at the state level. A group of reformers would seize control of one or both of the parties, often with a dynamic governor, and push through a program to clean up political corruption and regulate business. Besides Iowa, other states such as Mississippi, Missouri, New WHi(X3)5776 Jersey, and CaliPhil La Follette campaigning for governor at Allis Chalmers Plant, West Allis, September 20, 1930. fornia repeated this experience. New Jersey and reform and the laboratory for new ideas of regulation and popCalifornia were particularly notable because the reform governors ular participation in government. Some of this reputation came there were Woodrow Wilson and Hiram Johnson, both of whom, from favorable publicity. In addition to exposing abuses, the like La Follette, went on to prominent national careers. “muck-raking” journalists pointed to La Follette and his state as Another feature of this pattern that emerged first in Wisconshining exceptions and examples of how to make things better. sin was an inevitable conservative backlash. La Follette’s deparThanks in part to magazine articles by the famous muckraker ture for Washington created a falling out among his followers PH 3652(3) WHi(X3)33375 Phil La Follette signing Unemployment Compensation Law, January 18, 1932. Pictured, left to right: Henry Ohl Jr, Elizabeth Brandeis, Paul Raushenbush, John Commons, La Follette, Henry Huber, Harold Groves, and Robert Nixon. SPRING 2004 The first unemployment check ever issued in the U.S. was to Neils B. Ruud of Madison on August 17, 1936. Rudd endorsed the check, as did well-known minister and social activist, Walter Rauschenbusch, and it can be found today in the archives of the Wisconsin Historical Society. 23 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY and led to a partial victory for the Stalwarts. The same thing would happen in other states with progressive movements. Statehouse reformers rarely proved to be a politically long-lived breed. T his was where Wisconsin was different, indeed unique. In the Badger state what proved to be evanescent was not progressive control, but the Stalwart and conservative backlash. A second wave of progressivism swept the state in 1910. La Follette was re-elected to the Senate, Francis McGovern won the governorship, and Progressives regained majorities in the Legislature. In the next four years, another, even bigger program of reform measures saw the light of enactment. The Progressives fell out again in 1914, thereby allowing the Stalwarts to reign again WHi(X3)22749 for six years. But in 1920, the Progressives Robert M. La Follette Jr. (standing in center with hand in pocket) speaks to a crowd roared back, to begin a dominance that, in Mauston on October 4, 1936, at a Progressive Party rally. except for brief interruptions, would last for nearly 20 years. Another, truly unique feature of progressivism in Wisconsin party affiliation but had only run on a Progressive presidential was continued control by La Follette. Unlike other progressive and vice-presidential ticket, not a separate party. By the 1930s, governors who went on to Washington, he ruled over his politithe Great Depression gave the younger La Follettes the opporcal following at home with an iron hand. This control proved to tunity to form a new Progressive party partly in order to retain be a mixed blessing. Its major disadvantage was that La Foltheir following. These Progressives enjoyed a brief, tumultuous lette’s personal relations with other progressives often deterhistory in Wisconsin. As governor, Phil was able to push mined how well or how badly the movement fared. In 1910 La through substantial reform legislation, especially in social welFollette topped the ticket when he won re-election to the Senate fare. The Wisconsin plans for relief and old age pensions and swelled the victory for the rest of his followers. In 1914, became the model for Social Security at the national level, and however, his vendetta against McGovern—who had defied him such professors from the University of Wisconsin as Edwin in national politics in 1912—was a major factor in the ProgresWitte and Elizabeth Brandeis played a large role in drafting sives’ defeat. La Follette entered into a similar vendetta against the Social Security Act that set up the national system. Likehis one-time top lieutenant, Irvine Lenroot, who had toed the wise, a member of Wisconsin’s Public Service Commission, line in 1912 but later broke with La Follette over intervention in David Lillienthal, became one of the founders and guiding World War I. The fallout between the two men helped to prospirits of the Tennessee Valley Authority. long the Stalwarts’ reign. After the war, La Follette patched This later flowering of Wisconsin progressivism ended things up enough with his followers to regain a progressive win abruptly with Phil La Follette’s disastrous defeat for re-election of the governorship in 1920 by John J. Blaine and to gain a triin 1938 and his abject failure to expand the Progressives into a umphal re-election for himself in 1922. national party. He never sought elective office again. His brothLa Follette ruled over Wisconsin politically until he died in er, Bob Jr., managed to get re-elected senator on the Progressive 1925. Death, however, did not end his influence. One of his ticket in 1940. Orland Steen Loomis won the governorship on sons, Robert (“Young Bob”) Jr., succeeded him in the Senate, that line in 1942, but he died before taking office. At the end of where he served until 1947. The other son, Philip (“Phil”), World War II, the Progressives disbanded and moved into one later won three terms as governor, in 1930, 1934, and 1936. or the other of the traditional parties. Young Bob’s bid to return They also managed to do something that their father had shied to the Republicans crashed when he was defeated for that away from doing—they left the Republican party. Even in his party’s nomination in 1946 by Joseph R. McCarthy. Other Prorun for president in 1924, “Old Bob” had not renounced his gressives did become Republicans, but the most significant of 24 SPRING 2004 WISCONSIN MAGAZINE the younger members of the party turned to the Democratic party to find a new home. Of the Democratic leaders who emerged as serious contenders in Wisconsin politics from the late 1950s onward, all of them except one had been Progressives. These included Gaylord Nelson, William Proxmire, Horace Wilkie, James Doyle, Carl Thompson, John Reynolds, Getty As a now aging “Young Bob” surveys a crowd in Portage on March 17, 1946, he witnesses both the anguish of the Progressive Party faithful who wish to stay separate from the GOP, and those who believe the independent course has had its run. After the party’s formal decision to dissolve, most of the former Progressives actually became Democrats. and Thomas Fairchild. The exception, a birthright Democrat, was Patrick Lucey. By the middle of the twentieth century, Wisconsin had come to look like some, though not all, of its neighboring states in the Midwest. It featured clean government, well-run public services, enlightened social attitudes, and a vigorous liberal wing within one of the two major parties. But this was a far cry from the state’s progressive heyday at the beginning of the century or its second season in the limelight in the 1930’s. Only once afterward were the eyes of the nation again on Wisconsin. That was when the state drew attention during Joe McCarthy’s rampage in the early 1950s—attention that most Badgers would gladly have done without. There was nothing remarkable about this lapse from national fame. It had happened over a century before with the eclipse of the Virginia Dynasty of the early presidents. What was remarkable was how long Wisconsin’s day in the sun lasted. Here again, that second least favored of historians’ explanations, the Great Man, seems inescapable. Without La Follette and his sons this simply would not have happened. It is not necessary to invoke that ambiguous and overused word “charismatic” to describe the La Follettes’ roles in making Wisconsin famous. A better description is to note that the progenitor and one of his offspring showed an unremitting, sometimes frightening, intensity and a flair for dramatizing and SPRING 2004 OF HISTORY personalizing issues. Those qualities kept Wisconsin politics at a high temperature, often a fever pitch. This emotional inferno led to bad as well as good consequences. Among the consequences were the repeated internal breakdowns in the progressive coalition, thanks mainly to the father’s and sons’ personal behavior. Another came during World War I when the polarized political atmosphere in Wisconsin was nastier and more repressive than anywhere else, except in the West. The fault did not lie directly with La Follette but, instead, with his opponents, who tried to capitalize on his opposition to the war to wreak revenge on him and try to destroy his power in Wisconsin. He was the source for much of the political divisiveness, but his opponents had taken it to a level of personal attack on his loyalty, character, and even his family, all of which cut far deeper than any barbed wire, literal or virtual, that he had ever constructed. This polarizing, realigning role of a single individual and a family in a state is not quite unique in twentieth century American politics. The other shining example comes from a state that is in many ways the polar opposite to Wisconsin—Louisiana. There, Huey Long shook up, dominated, and realigned that state’s politics around himself and his family and established patterns that lasted about as long as such patterns did in Wisconsin. What Louisiana’s corrupt, raffish Kingfish and the incorruptible, upright Fighting Bob had in common, besides immense political talent, was a leftward orientation in favor of the less advantaged and against entrenched privilege, as well as an extraordinary ability to make themselves the central political issue. Both men wrought remarkable achievements. Of the two, La Follette established a far more respectable, elevated reputation for public service and devotion to principle. Transferred to our state, that achievement played an indispensable role in making Wisconsin the flagship of reform and the laboratory of democracy. About the Author John Milton Cooper Jr. is E. Gordon Fox Professor of American Institutions at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he has taught since 1970. Robert La Follette was a major figure in his first book, and his most recent book is Breaking the Heart of the World: Woodrow Wilson and the Fight for the League of Nations. Since 1991 he has served on the Society’s Board of Curators and is currently chair of the Stewardship Committee. He is married to Judith W. Cooper, who is senior vice-president and associate general counsel of Credit Union National Association (CUNA). He is a member of the First Congregational Church and the Downtown Rotary, both in Madison, and a Paul Harris Fellow. 25