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CASSIUS MARCELLUS CLAY (1810-1903)

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 470 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CASSIUS
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MARCELLUS CLAY (1810-1903)
  ,
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American politician, was born in Madison county,
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Kentucky, on the 19th of
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October 181o . He was the son of Green Clay (1757–1826), a Kentucky soldier of the war of 1812 and a relative of Henry Clay . He was educated at Centre College,
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Danville, Kentucky, and at Yale, where he graduated in 1832 . Influenced to some extent by William Lloyd Garrison, he became an advocate of the abolition of
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slavery, and on his return to his native state, at the
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risk of social and
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political
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ostracism, he gave utterance to his belief . He studied law, but instead of practising devoted himself to a political career . In 1835, 1837 and 1840 he was elected as a Whig to the Kentucky legislature, where he advocated a
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system of gradual emancipation, and secured the establishment of a public school system, and a much-needed reform in the
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jury system . In 1841 he was defeated on account of his abolition views . In 1844 he delivered
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campaign speeches for Henry Clay throughout the North . In 1845 he established, at Lexington, Kentucky, an anti-slavery publication known as The True American, but in the same
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year his office and press were wrecked by a
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mob, and he removed the publication office to
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Cincinnati,
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Ohio . During this and the earlier period of his career his zeal and
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loot temper involved him in numerous
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personal encounters and several duels, in all of which he
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bore himself with a reckless bravery . In the Mexican War he served as a captain of a Kentucky
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company of militia, and was taken prisoner, while reconnoitring, during General Scott's advance on the City of Mexico . He
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left the Whig party in 185o, and as an anti-slavery
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candidate for governor of Kentucky polled 5000 votes .

In 1856 he joined the Republican party, and wielded considerable

influence as a
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Southern representative in its
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councils . In 186o he was a leading candidate for the
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vice-presidential nomination . In 1861 he was sent by President Lincoln as minister to Russia; in 1862 he returned to
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America to accept a commission as major-general of
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volunteers, but in March 1863 was reappointed to his former
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post at St
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Petersburg, where he remained until 1869 . Disapproving of the Republican policy of reconstruction, he left the party, and in 1872 was one of the organizers of the Liberal-Republican revolt, and was largely instrumental in securing the nomination of Horace Greeley for the
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presidency . In the political
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campaigns of 1876 and 188o he supported the Democratic candidate, but rejoined the Republican party in the campaign of 1884 . He died at
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Whitehall, Kentucky, on the 22nd of
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July 1903 . See his autobiography, The
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Life,
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Memoirs, Writings, and Speeches of Cassius
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Marcellus Clay (Cincinnati, 1896) ; and The Writings of Cassius Marcellus Clay (edited with a " Memoir" by Horace Greeley . New York, 1848) .

End of Article: CASSIUS MARCELLUS CLAY (1810-1903)
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