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CAUCUS , a See also: political See also: term used in See also: America of a See also: special See also: form of party meeting, and in See also: Great Britain of a See also: system of party organization
.
The word originated in See also: Boston, Massachusetts, in the early See also: part of the 18th century, when it was used as the name of a political See also: club, the " Caucus " or " Caucas " club
.
Here public matters were discussed, and arrangements made for See also: local elections and the choosing of candidates for offices
.
The first mention of the club in contemporary documents occurs in the See also: diary of See also: John
See also: Adams in 1763, but
See also: William
See also: Gordon (See also: History of the Independence of the See also: United States of America, 1788) speaks of the Caucus as having been in existence some fifty years before the See also: time of writing (1774), and describes the methods used for securing the election of the candidates the club had selected
.
The derivation of the word has been much disputed
.
It was early connected with " caulkers," and it was supposed referred to meetings of the caulkers in the dockyard at Boston in 1770, to protest against the See also: action of the See also: British troops, or with a contemptuous allusion to the See also: lower class of workmen frequenting the club
.
This is, however, a See also: mere guess, and does not agree with the earlier date at which the club is known to have existed, nor with the accounts given of it
.
That it was a fanciful classical name for a convivial club, derived from the See also: late See also: Greek Kaunos, a cup, is far-fetched, and the most plausible origin is an See also: Algonquin word See also: kaw-kaw-was, meaning to talk
.
See also: Indian words and names have been popular in America as titles for See also: societies and clubs; cf
.
" Tammany " (see Notes and Queries. See also: sixth series, vols. xi. and xii.)
.
In the United States "caucus" is used strictly of a meeting either of party managers or of party voters
.
Such might be a " nominating caucus," either for nominating candidates for office or for selecting delegates for a nominating See also: convention
.
The caucus of the party in Congress nominated the candidates for the offices of president andSee also: vice-president from 1800 till 1824, when the convention system was adopted, and the place of the local nominating caucus " is taken by the " primaries " and conventions
.
The word is used in America of the meetings of a party in Congress and other legislative bodies and elsewhere which decide matters of policy and See also: plan See also: campaigns
.
" Caucus " came first into use in Great Britain in 1878
.
The Liberal Association of See also: Birmingham (see LIBERAL PARTY) was organized by Mr See also: Joseph See also: Chamberlain and Mr F
.
Schnadhorst on strict disciplinary lines, more particularly with a view to election management and the control of voters on the principle of
See also: vote as you are told." This managing See also: body of the association, known locally as the " Six See also: Hundred," became the See also: model for other Liberal associations throughout the country, and the Federation of Liberal Associations was organized on the same plan
.
It was to this supposed imitation of the See also: American political " machine " that See also: Lord Beaconsfield gave the name " caucus," and the name came to be used, not in the American sense of a meeting, but of a closely disciplined system of party organization, chiefly used as a stock term of abuse applied by opponents to each other's party machinery
.
CAUDEBEC-EN-CAUX, a See also: town of See also: France, in the department of See also: Seine-Inferieure, 27 M
.
W.N.W. of See also: Rouen by the Ouest-Etat railway
.
Pop
.
(roo6) 2141
.
It is situated on the right See also: bank of the Seine, the tidal See also: wave of which (mascaret) can be well seen at this point
.
The chief See also: interest of the town lies in its See also: church, a
See also: building of the 15th and the early 16th centuries
.
Round its top run balustrades formed of See also: Gothic letters, which read as part of the Magnifict
.
Its west portal, the decoration of the See also: spire of the tower, and its stained See also: glass are among the features whichmake it one of the finest churches of the Rouen diocese
.
The town also possesses several old houses
.
Its See also: industries include tanning and See also: leather-currying, and there is See also: trade in grain
.
The See also: port has a small trade in See also: coal, live-stock and See also: farm produce
.
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