VERBATIM
By
By David Boozer
Somebody had to be the first and, in this case, it happened to be
Robert Randolph. This former navy lieutenant holds the unwelcomed
distinction of being the first person to attack a sitting U.S.
president (some accuse him of attempting an assassination).
Unfortunately, he chose the wrong president.
Many expected better from Randolph. He came from a politically
powerful Virginia family. With great expectations, he joined the
U.S. Navy, serving under some influential naval officers: Commodore
Stephen Decatur, Commodore Charles Goodwin Ridgely, and John
Timberlake. But after his appointment as purser on the USS
Constitution in 1828, his life began to unravel. He was
accused of committing fraud with naval funds, which resulted in an
ugly scandal with larger political implications known as the
Randolph Affair. Fortunately, the fraud case ended in December 1832
when the navy court of inquiry found that he had not committed
fraud, in spite of not being able to account for $4,000.
Unfortunately, President Andrew Jackson got involved. After closely
following Randolph's case for four years, Jackson used his powers
as commander in chief to discharge the lieutenant from the U.S.
Navy. Randolph didn't take this well.
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The former lieutenant waited for the right moment to exact his
revenge, choosing May 6, 1833, while President Jackson waited to
disembark a steamboat at Fredericksburg, Virginia. As the tall,
gaunt president and his entourage sat around a table, Randolph came
onboard, found the president, and struck him in the face. The blow
was enough to bring blood. (Andrew Donelson, the president's nephew
and private secretary, was present and believed the attack was an
assassination attempt.) The other men with the president
intervened, sending Randolph fleeing. He escaped and Jackson chose
not to immediately arrest him. But this did not mean Jackson had
sympathy for him — far from it.
On April 3, 2014, Heritage Auctions will offer
a letter written by an
anonymous author dated May 9, 1833, (just three days after
Randolph attacked Jackson) from Fredericksburg, Virginia, asking
that Jackson forgive and forget his attacker. The boldness of the
unknown author is remarkable: he argues that Jackson should forgive
Randolph for several reasons, such as to ennoble him in the eyes of
his countrymen and as a help to Randolph, who had no "means of
support." Reinstating Randolph in the navy would, the author
reasoned, give "
you an opportunity of exhibiting the noblest
revenge of a noble nature of 'doing good to those who despitefully
use you.'. . . Reinstate him, I pray you." The president was
not at all persuaded.
The sixty-six-year-old whiskey-drinking Tennessean didn't become
president by being soft (during the attack he was still carrying a
bullet in his chest from an 1806 duel) or forgiving toward his
adversaries (he never forgave those who attacked his wife's honor
during the turbulent 1828 presidential campaign), and he wasn't
about to begin being either now. With his blood still boiling, he
took up a pen and endorsed the anonymous letter in bold ink, "Such
a dastard never ought to have been in the Navy he that has
rob[bed]the dead, a brother officer, ought not to associate with
the honest. he whowas patronised by the gallant [Stephen] Decatur
& after his death had the meaness to traduce him# is unworthy
of the countenance of any honest man — [signed] A. J. #Commodore
Ridgely — [signed] A. J."
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Jackson was rightfully angry at the "dastard" Robert Randolph. But
this was bigger than only these two men. Randolph had let the
unwelcomed genie out of its bottle. Since that May 1833 day when
President Jackson was attacked, there have been over twenty known
attempts to assassinate a president or president-elect. Four have
been successful (Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley, and Kennedy).
President Jackson was even the victim of another, more dangerous
assassination attempt two years later when his attacker aimed two
pistols at him; both misfired. This time, Jackson was ready. He
grabbed his cane and set upon the man, severely beating him. Since
John Kennedy, every president except Lyndon Johnson has been
threatened.
This anonymously written letter with an unequivocal response twice
signed by President Jackson certainly has great historical
significance. It will be offered along with many other historical
manuscripts on April 3, 2014, at our
April Manuscripts
Auction #6113 to be held at 445 Park Avenue, 15
th
floor In New York City. A full preview will be available from March
31 through April 3. If you can't make it to New York, you can still
watch the auction live and bid using HERITAGE Live! This convenient
platform has been the choice of over 24,000 bidders in the past
twelve months alone.
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