David C. Broderick

Coordinates: 37°42′29″N 122°29′03″W / 37.7081°N 122.4842°W / 37.7081; -122.4842
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David Broderick
United States Senator
from California
In office
March 4, 1857 – September 16, 1859
Preceded byJohn B. Weller
Succeeded byHenry P. Haun
Lieutenant Governor of California
Acting
In office
January 9, 1851 – January 8, 1852
GovernorJohn McDougall
Preceded byJohn McDougall
Succeeded bySamuel Purdy
Member of the California Senate
In office
1850–1852
Personal details
Born
David Colbreth Broderick

(1820-02-04)February 4, 1820
Washington, D.C., U.S.
DiedSeptember 16, 1859(1859-09-16) (aged 39)
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Cause of deathHomicide by duel
Political partyDemocratic
Other political
affiliations
Free Soil
Broderick-Terry Dueling Place
Broderick-Terry Dueling Place
Location1100 Lake Merced Boulevard, Daly City, California
Coordinates37°42′29″N 122°29′03″W / 37.7081°N 122.4842°W / 37.7081; -122.4842
Built1859
ArchitectDavid S. Terry and Broderick
DesignatedJune 1, 1932
Reference no.19[1]
David C. Broderick is located in California
David C. Broderick
Location of Broderick-Terry Dueling Place in California
David C. Broderick is located in the United States
David C. Broderick
David C. Broderick (the United States)

David Colbreth Broderick (February 4, 1820 – September 16, 1859) was an attorney and politician, elected by the legislature as Democratic U.S. Senator from California. He lived in New York until moving to California during the Gold Rush. He was a first cousin of politicians Andrew Kennedy of Indiana and Case Broderick of Kansas. At age 39, Broderick was fatally wounded in a duel with jurist David S. Terry, a former friend.

Early years[edit]

Broderick was born in 1820 in Washington, D.C., on East Capitol Street just west of 3rd Street. He was the son of an Irish stonecutter and his wife. His father had come to the United States in order to work on the construction of the United States Capitol. In 1823, Broderick moved with his parents to New York City; there, he attended public schools and was apprenticed to a stonecutter.

Political career[edit]

Broderick became active in politics as a young man, joining the Democratic Party. In 1846, he was the Democratic candidate for U.S. Representative from New York's 5th congressional district, but lost the election to Whig candidate Frederick A. Tallmadge, who gained 42% of the vote to Broderick's 38%.[2]

State Senate career[edit]

Broderick was a member of the California State Senate from 1850 to 1852, serving as its president from 1851 to 1852. Broderick was acting Lieutenant Governor from January 9, 1851 to January 8, 1852, following incumbent John McDougall's succession to the governorship. From then on, Broderick effectively had political control of San Francisco, which under his "utterly vicious"[3] rule soon became notorious for municipal corruption.[4] In the words of his biographer Jeremiah Lynch:[5]

In San Francisco he became the dictator of the municipality. His political lessons and observations in New York were priceless. He introduced a modification of the same organization in San Francisco with which Tammany has controlled New York for lo! these many years. It was briefly this. At a forthcoming election a number of offices were to be filled; those of sheriff, district attorney, alderman, and places in the legislature. Several of these positions were very lucrative, notably that of the sheriff, tax-collector, and assessor. The incumbents received no specified salaries, but were entitled to all or a certain proportion of the fees. These fees occasionally exceeded $50,000 per annum. Broderick would say to the most popular or the most desirable aspirant: 'This office is worth $50,000 a year. Keep half and give me the other half, which I require to keep up our organization in the state. Without intelligent, systematic discipline, neither you nor I can win, and our opponents will conquer, unless I have money enough to pay the men whom I may find necessary. If you agree to that arrangement, I will have you nominated when the convention assembles, and then we will all pull together until after the election.' Possibly this candidate dissented, but then someone else consented, and as the town was hugely Democratic, his selections were usually victorious.

Broderick became rich from this system.[6]

In 1856, Broderick was elected by the state legislature as US Senator from California. (Popular election of senators did not start until the 20th century.) Broderick began his term on March 4, 1857.

Feud and death[edit]

Broderick as a US Senator from California, photographed by Mathew Brady.

At that time, just prior to the start of the American Civil War, the Democratic Party of California was divided between pro-slavery and "Free Soil" factions. Broderick led the Free Soilers. One of his closest friends was David S. Terry, formerly the Chief Justice of the California State Supreme Court. He advocated extending slavery into California. Terry lost his re-election bid because of his pro-slavery platform, and he blamed Broderick for the loss.

Terry, considered even by his friends as caustic and aggressive,[7] made some inflammatory remarks at a party convention in Sacramento, which Broderick read. He took offense, and sent Terry an equally vitriolic reply, describing:

Terry to be a "damned miserable wretch" who was as corrupt as President James Buchanan and William Gwin, California's other senator. "I have hitherto spoken of him as an honest man—as the only honest man on the bench of a miserable, corrupt Supreme Court—but now I find I was mistaken. I take it all back. He is just as bad as the others."[8]

Passions escalated; on September 13, 1859, former friends Terry and Broderick, both expert marksmen, met outside of San Francisco city limits at Lake Merced for a duel. The pistols chosen for the duel had hair triggers, and Broderick's discharged prior to the final "1-2-3" count, firing prematurely into the ground. Thus disarmed, he was forced to stand as Terry shot him in the right lung. Terry at first believed the shot to be only a flesh wound, but it proved to be fatal. Broderick died three days later, and was buried under a monument erected by the state in Lone Mountain Cemetery in San Francisco. He is the only U.S. Senator ever to be killed in a duel while in office.

In 1942, he was reinterred at Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma, California.

Legacy[edit]

Edward Dickinson Baker, a close friend of Abraham Lincoln, spoke at Broderick's funeral. He expressed the widely held belief that Broderick was killed because of his anti-slavery stance:

His death was a political necessity, poorly veiled beneath the guise of a private quarrel. . .What was his public crime? The answer is in his own words; "I die because I was opposed to a corrupt administration and the extension of slavery."[9]

Some maintain that in his death Broderick became a martyr to the anti-slavery cause, and the episode was part of a national spiral towards civil war. At the Republican National Convention in Chicago in May 1860, a portrait of the late Senator Broderick was hung.[10]

About thirty years later, Terry was shot to death by Deputy United States Marshal David Neagle while threatening Supreme Court Justice Stephen Johnson Field, a friend of Broderick.

Broderick County, Kansas Territory was named for the senator.[11] The former town of Broderick, California, and Broderick Street in San Francisco were also named in his honor.[12]

In 1963, Carroll O'Connor was cast as Broderick, with Brad Dexter as Justice Terry, in "A Gun Is Not a Gentleman" on the syndicated television anthology series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Stanley Andrews. The program portrays Terry mortally wounding Senator Broderick in 1859. Though past allies as Democrats, Terry, a defender of slavery, challenges the anti-slavery Broderick to a duel. After he fatally shoots Broderick, Terry is tried, but the case is dismissed.[13]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Broderick-Terry Dueling Place #19". Office of Historic Preservation, California State Parks. Retrieved 2012-10-07.
  2. ^ Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U. S. Elections. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Inc. 1985. p. 739. ISBN 0-87187-339-7.
  3. ^ Young, John P. San Francisco, a History of the Pacific Coast Metropolis Volume 1, 1912, page 214.
  4. ^ Asbury, Herbert. The Barbary Coast. New York, 1933. Chapter 4.

    From the middle of 1851 to his death, in 1859, Broderick was, for all practical purposes, in absolute control of San Francisco's political machinery. ... And not even his most adoring worshippers have been able entirely to conceal the plain fact that in the final analysis he must, more than any one man, shoulder responsibility for the municipal corruption which was the basic cause of the second uprising of a tormented and enraged citizenry.

  5. ^ Lynch, Jeremiah. A Senator of the Fifties: David C. Broderick of California, 1911, pages 68–69.
  6. ^ Asbury, Herbert. The Barbary Coast. New York, 1933. Chapter 4.

    Broderick's political income from these and other sources was probably several hundred thousand dollars a year, and with such sums at his disposal he not only maintained his hold upon the city but furthered his ambition to be United States Senator, despite the slashing onslaughts of several of the newspapers.

  7. ^ Richards, Leondard. The California Gold Rush and the Coming of the Civil War, "Prologue," pg. 2, 2008
  8. ^ Richards, Leonard. The California Gold Rush and the Coming of the Civil War, "Prologue," pg. 3, 2008
  9. ^ Richards, Leonard. The California Gold Rush and the Coming of the Civil War Prologue, pg. 4, 2008
  10. ^ "[untitled paragraph]". Brooklyn Evening Star. May 16, 1860. p. 2. Retrieved July 17, 2016 – via newspapers.com.
  11. ^ Blackmar, Frank Wilson (1912). Kansas: A Cyclopedia of State History, Embracing Events, Institutions, Industries, Counties, Cities, Towns, Prominent Persons, Etc. Standard Publishing Company. pp. 235.
  12. ^ "The History of San Francisco Place Names".
  13. ^ "A Gun Is Not a Gentleman" on Death Valley Days". Internet Movie Database. 8 February 1963. Retrieved February 28, 2019.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]

Political offices
Preceded by Lieutenant Governor of California
Acting

1851–1852
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. Senator (Class 1) from California
1857–1859
Served alongside: William M. Gwin
Succeeded by