"one of the ablest, most high-minded, and most trustworthy leaders of public opinion"
Grand Old Partisan honors George Curtis, born February 24 1824. He started out working for a New York City merchant. This young intellectual was a member of a study club along with Henry Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Nathaniel Hawthorne.
After traveling in Europe and the Middle East, Curtis wrote for the New York Tribune. Harper's Weekly later made him its chief editorialist. He married the sister of Robert Gould Shaw, who would command the 54th Massachusetts. Entry into politics was making campaign speeches for Republican presidential nominee John Fremont.
Following year, Curtis described the GOP as: "the great political antislavery party, whose vital force is in the conscience of its supporters, whose central idea is the original American principle the equality of human rights and whose unswerving policy is the planting of the government ineradicably upon that principle." Curtis was delegate at the GOP's 1860, 1864 and 1876 national conventions. Abraham Lincoln offered him a diplomatic post in Egypt. During the year of the President's re-election he lost an election for the U.S. House of Representatives in a very Democrat district. In 1868, he cast an electoral vote for Ulysses Grant, who named him to a commission on civil service reform. President Rutherford Hayes offered him a choice of ambassadorships, but the busy writer preferred to remain at home. Alas, in 1884, Curtis supported the Democrat presidential nominee instead of the Republican standard-bearer. In his final years, he was vice chancellor of New York University. Here is a Video Version of this article on YouTube: https://youtu.be/16sck--EF8w Michael Zak is author of Back to Basics for the Republican Party, a history of GOP civil rights achievement. Each day, Michael Zak's grandoldpartisan YouTube channel and Grand Old Partisan blog celebrate more than sixteen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. And, see Speech Raves for audience feedback from his presentations in thirty-one states. He also wrote the 2005 Republican Freedom Calendar. Clarence Thomas cited Back to Basics for the Republican Party in a Supreme Court decision. See www.youtube.com/q?v=IzxKCiXc5Qc for a brief video of a Texas Republican praising Back to Basics for the Republican Party. "This is the most amazing book about politics that I have ever read. The Overview should be required reading for anyone with even a minor interest in government. The remainder is an enthralling history lesson that I will never forget. For years, we have all been misled about the true nature of the GOP. This is the real deal! Read it and be proud!" "Your book is a national treasure. I'm always recommending it." "Michael Zak wrote the definitive history of the GOP." "Back to Basics for the Republican Party is the most significant contribution to the Republican Party in the last twenty years apart from Ronald Reagan." "Back to Basics for the Republican Party is more important to our party now than ever before." and "one of the best books I ever read"
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