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'Alexander Mitchell Palmer' (
May 4,
1872 -
May 11,
1936) was the
Attorney General of the
United States from
1919 to
1921. He was nicknamed ''The Fighting
Quaker'' and he directed the controversial
Palmer Raids.
Early life and education
Palmer was born near
White Haven,
Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, on
May 4, 1872; he attended the public schools of his area and prepared for college at the Moravian Parochial School in
Bethlehem. Palmer graduated from
Swarthmore College in 1891, where he was a member of
Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity.
Judicial, Congressional, and party service
He was appointed official
stenographer of the forty-third judicial district of Pennsylvania in 1892. He studied law and was admitted to the
bar in 1893 and practiced in
Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. Palmer became director of various
banks and public-service corporations and a member of the Democratic State executive committee of Pennsylvania. Palmer was elected as a Democrat to the
61st,
62nd, and
63rd Congresses (
March 4,
1909 -
March 3,
1915); he was not a candidate for renomination in 1914, but ran unsuccessfully for the
United States Senate. Palmer was a delegate to the
Democratic National Convention in 1912 and 1916, and a member of the
Democratic National Committee from 1912 - 1920.
Attorney General
President Woodrow Wilson offered Palmer the post of
Secretary of War, but Palmer declined because of his belief in
pacifism. Instead, he was appointed
Alien Property Custodian on
October 22,
1917, by Wilson, and served until
March 4 of 1919, when he resigned to become
Attorney General of the
United States, in which capacity he served from
March 5, 1919, until
March 4,
1921. Palmer was a contender for the Presidential nomination at the
1920 Democratic National Convention.
Palmer Raids
His tenure as Attorney General was concurrent with the
First Red Scare, and Palmer became a zealous opponent of
anarchist communists,
insurrectionary anarchists, and other radicals who advocated the violent overthrow of the U.S. government. Twice the intended victim of anarchist bomb attacks, the bombing and destruction of his
Washington, D.C. home (which killed the bomber,
Carlo Valdinoci as he was placing the bomb on Palmer's porch) undoubtedly influenced his actions in this area. His campaign against radicalism culminated in what came to be called the
Palmer Raids. These were a series of police roundups, warrantless wiretaps (authorized under the Sedition Act), and mass arrests of suspected leftists and radicals, during which a total of at least 10,000 individuals were arrested. Fearful of extremist violence and revolution, the American public widely supported the raids, and outside of criticism by those apprehended, some civil libertarian groups, and the radical left, condemnation of the raids did not surface until many years later.
Palmer also famously predicted that
Communists would attempt to overthrow the United States government on
May Day 1920. He had some reason for making this statement, as the original anarchist mail bombing had been timed to ensure delivery of the bombs by the Post Office on May Day 1919. The date came and went without incident, but on September 16 of that year, Wall Street was rocked by a violent blast, later known as the
Wall Street bombing. The bomb was constructed with 100 pounds of dynamite and was wrapped with metal shrapnel in order to cause indiscriminate casualties. Concealed in a horse-drawn wagon, the bomb was precisely timed to catch people leaving for their lunch break. The Wall Street bombing killed 38 people and wounded or maimed over 400, causing extensive property damage and leaving visible marks on several Wall Street buildings to this day. In spite of the Palmer raids, the ''Galleanist'' (followers of
Luigi Galleani) bomb campaign would continue for another twelve years, until most of its members had been prosecuted, deported, or become inactive.
See also
★
Luigi Galleani
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Sacco and Vanzetti
★
Communist Party USA
References
Avrich, Paul, ''Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background'', Princeton University Press, 1991
Multimedia
★
Listen to Palmer speak
Sources
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★
The Political Graveyard
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''Who Built America V.II''