Rooti-ti-toot for Senator Smoot
by Davis Bitton
Just a hundred years ago. Practically yesterday. Yet 1904
seems like another world.
If you were a theater-goer or a music lover, you would have
enjoyed 1904. Puccini’s Madame Butterfly was produced
in Milan, Italy. On Broadway, George M. Cohan’s Little
Johnny Jones was packing them in. And from that musical
came a song we all are familiar with I Am a Yankee Doodle
Dandy. Still in its very early stages was the practice
of making recordings and selling the records. Someone who
made his first American recording in 1904 was the Italian
opera tenor Enrico Caruso.
George Bernard Shaw was the celebrated playwright of the day.
A greater writer, Anton Chekhov, wrote a play that opened
in Moscow–The Cherry Orchard. Of special interest
to American audiences was a new play on Broadway called
Peter Pan; or the Boy Who Would Not Grow Up by James
Barrie.
If you enjoyed reading fiction, new books you might have read
that year are Joseph Conrad’s Nostromo; Henry James,
The Golden Bowl; and W.H. Hudson’s Green Mansions.
More to the taste of many readers would have been The
Sea Wolf by Jack London or Gene Stratton Porter’s Freckles.
For readers of non-fiction several important books were published
in 1904. Thorsten Veblen published a landmark analysis
in The Theory of Business Enterprise. Ida Tarbell
and Lincoln Steffens published “muckraking” books exposing
the fraud and corruption of businesses.
And 1904 began the publication of Max Weber’s Die protestantische
Ethik and die Geist des Kapitalismus (later translated
as The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism).
Demonstrably wrong on most of its claims and demolished
as a simple cause-effect argument, Weber’s book nevertheless
posed a significant question and contains an important kernel
of truth. In this age of globalism we continue to discover
that, in addition to institutional foundations like private
property, economic development requires certain habits and
character traits in the population. Standing Marx on his
head, Weber was perceptive enough to discern this core truth.
If your family was anxious to take a vacation trip, one of
the destinations you might consider would be St. Louis.
The great exposition there had officially opened the previous
year, but did not really get going until 1904. After such
a trip, you might come back to your home to report having
tasted a wonderful new product–ice cream. At least it would
have tasted wonderful if you went during the summer.
Automobiles were still few in number, and the roads were so
bad that a long trip would be uninviting. Shopping malls
were far in the future. The newest innovation in retail
merchandising was the mail-order catalogue. Sears Roebuck
mailed out a million copies of its spring catalogue. Its
new rival, Montgomery Ward, responded by sending out three
million catalogues. If you have ever ordered anything from
a catalogue, you know from your mail box that this idea
is still with us.
On the international scene the Japanese attacked a Russian
fleet in Port Arthur. The two countries were vying for
hegemony in the area. Then the two countries fought a
series of land battles. In one two-day battle at Nan Shan
hill, Russian casualties were 830, while the victorious
Japanese lost 744 killed, and 3,573 wounded. U.S. President
Theodore Roosevelt, elected to a second term after assuming
the presidency when William McKinley was assassinated, flexed
the muscles of the United States and the following year
helped mediate the Russian-Japanese differences.
The United States Navy passed France and joined Great
Britain and Japan as one of the top three naval powers.
Some deplored this burgeoning of a new power, while others,
including many who opposed British domination, rejoiced
to see America take its “rightful place.”
In
Morocco an American citizen named Ian Perdicaris and his
step-son were seized by brigands, taken to the mountains,
and held for ransom. The term “terrorist” was not employed
at the time, but we recognize the syndrome. President Theodore
Roosevelt ordered a squadron of the U.S. Navy to Tangier.
I don’t here discuss the complexity of U.S. activity in
the world, much less its ultimate rightness or wrongness.
But it is hard to avoid comparing casualty rates and noticing
interesting similarities with today’s news.
The Wilford Woodruff Manifesto had been issued in 1890,
and Utah’s statehood arrived in January 1896. But in 1904
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was not
basking in the sunshine of positive public opinion. Quite
the contrary.
Anti-Mormon
books and pamphlets were published. Anti-Mormon organizations
were formed. And year was filled with hearings to decide
whether Reed Smoot, an apostle, was eligible to serve as
U.S. Senator from Utah. Witnesses were summoned and interrogated.
Some of these had nothing good to say about Mormons-- those
chosen by the plaintiffs working to bar Smoot from the Senate.
Newspaper headlines were filled with the scary allegations
about the church and its leaders.
The
best study of the whole affair is now Kathleen Flake’s The
Politics of American Religious Identity: The Seating of
Senator Reed Smoot, Mormon Apostle, published this year
by the University of North Carolina Press. In a book of
less than two hundred pages the author doesn’t pretend to
capture all the colorful detail, for which one must still
read the four published volumes of the hearings. But there
is much to praise in Flake’s book. A well written, intelligent
analysis of the issues and their long-range implications,
it will predictably remain the work one must read on this
important subject.
For
those who may not know, Reed Smoot, who had been sworn in,
retained his seat and served as U.S. Senator until 1932.
When Senator Smoot denounced pornographic literature and
sought to tighten restrictions against its publication and
sale, the irrepressible Ogden Nash penned the following:
Oh
rooti-ti-toot for Smoot of Ut.
And his reverent occiput.
Smite, Smoot, smite for Ut.,
Grit your molars and hold your dut.,
Gird up your l–ns,
Smite h-p and th-gh,
We’ll all be Kansas
By and by.
Good
fun, but no one doubted the Senator’s influence within his
party and in shaping important tariff legislation. Less
known were the ways Smoot used his influence in many specific
situations in favor of the church’s missionaries and members.
The
unfavorable national press in 1904 was not the whole story.
I think we can say that the latter-day work stayed on track
Apostle Heber J. Grant, having returned from presiding in
Japan, began his service as president of the European Mission.
In New York City an interesting baptism took place in 1904–John
W. Rigdon, the son of Sidney Rigdon. On Temple Square in
Salt Lake City, where a mission had been distributing pamphlets
for two years, a new Bureau of Information building was
officially dedicated.
The
enormous Salt Lake Stake was divided so that there were
now four stakes in the city. In southeastern Idaho the
sprawling Bingham Stake was divided, and the Blackfoot Stake
was created.
Total
church membership was nearly 325,000, about the same number
of Latter-day Saints now living in Argentina.
We smile at personalities and events in the ongoing
human parade, enjoying the ice cream and the George M. Cohan
songs. But what rallies the enthusiasm and commitment of
Latter-day Saints is not any individual politician but the
work that continues to roll forth. The leaders who have
carried its standard may not fill headlines and news broadcasts,
but it is they who are engaged in acts of eternal import.
It seems appropriate this season of pioneer celebration
to salute our devoted leaders, on all levels and throughout
the world, with a Rooti-ti-toot, Hip-hip-hooray,
and Hurrah for Zion!