Today in Canada’s Political History: Birthday of America’s first “Canadian” President!

Today, of course, is the birthday, in 1829, of the man who should be known as the favourite President of the United States by all Canadians. I speak of Chester A. Arthur, the 21st President to preside over affairs in our neighbouring country.In 1880 the delegates electing a Presidential candidate chose Mr. Arthur as James Garfield’s running mate. Not long after, the negative campaigning regarding Canada’s favourite President was in play.  The scandal? It was whispered that the VP wannabe was born in – good God! – Canada.I’ll let distinguished American historian Warren Perry, writing for the U.S. National Portrait Gallery’s blog, tell the full story.

“Chester Alan Arthur was born on October 5, 1829, in Fairfield, Vermont.  Both the date and the location of Arthur’s birth have been the subject of some speculation.

The man who would become the twenty-first American president was not a heroic type, nor was he modest, though he did understand politics and was quite capable of achieving both bureaucratic and political goals.  Arthur worked hard for the Republican Party, rising in the ranks through the New York political machine which was partly of his own creation.  Though he never saw combat, Chester Arthur preferred to be addressed as General Arthur, a title given him when he was a quartermaster general of New York state during the Civil War.Arthur ascended to the presidency in the wake of James Garfield’s slow demise, Garfield having been a victim of an assassin’s bullet and poor ensuing medical treatment.  In his work Chester A. Arthur: A Quarter-Century of Machine Politics, biographer George Frederick Howe writes of an accusation cast upon Chester Alan Arthur before the election of 1880, in which Arthur was vice presidential candidate and James A. Garfield’s running mate:If in 1881 the American public was fairly well informed about Chester A. Arthur’s earliest years, it was because of an interesting hoax. A New York attorney, Arthur P. Hinman, startled the voters of the country shortly after the election of 1880 by interviews in which he accused General Arthur of being a British subject. To support the claim, he presented an elaborate story of Arthur’s birth, purporting to show that he had been born in Canada, of a British father and an American mother. The enterprising New York Sun investigated Hinman’s tale and published a complete refutation the day after Arthur took the oath as President. His origins were widely understood when he became the twenty-first President of the United States.Had Hinman’s tale been true, Arthur would have been ineligible to run for the United States executive office.  Article Two, Section One of the United States Constitution states that, “No person except a natural born citizen of the United States, at the time of the adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President...” and it continues to say that person must be at least thirty-five years old and a resident of the United States for a minimum of fourteen years.Interestingly, “at the time of the adoption of this Constitution” (signed in September 1787), all of the men in that room who might have wished to become president would have had a difficult time with a literal interpretation of the phrases “natural born citizen of the United States” and “resident of the United States for fourteen years.”How so?  First, after necessary ratifications, the Constitution became the basis for the federal government in 1789, and any man old enough to be eligible to be president at the time would have been a British citizen at birth if he was born in any of the colonies; if he was not born in the colonies, he would not be eligible at all.For example, a man such as Alexander Hamilton, born in the West Indies, was not eligible for the presidency under the Constitution.  As it was interpreted, however, a man such as George Washington—a man who was born in the colonies and who lived to see them become states—was eligible because he was a “natural born citizen.”  Second, in 1789, the United States was only thirteen years old as a nation, so it would not be possible for anyone to have been a citizen for fourteen years.Though born close to Canada in the uppermost part of Vermont, Chester Arthur was certainly a “natural born citizen” of the United States.  To add to the mix, Arthur’s date of birth has also been questioned, some sources contending that he was born in 1829, others asserting that he was born in 1830.  It was Arthur’s own pride that produced this small historical discrepancy.   Biographer Thomas C. Reeves clarifies this problem noting that “the traditional date of 1830 is incorrect.  Arthur made himself a year younger, no doubt, out of simple vanity, sometime between 1870 and 1880.”What this American historian, however, left out were two clues that, in my view, suggest, at minimum, that President Arthur had a thing for Canada. Chester, it must be noted, held a Canadian salmon fishing record based on his pre-Presidential fishing in our country. And, as President, in an era when U.S. Chief Executives were not, by convention, allowed to leave America and her soil while in office, President Arthur, on a private fishing trip, crossed into Canadian waters at the Thousand Islands when the Yankee fish weren’t biting.To me these are facts enough for me to celebrate Chet Arthur as America’s first Canadian President. He is – and will always be – one of his nation’s greatest-ever leaders in my books. That is my story and I’m sticking to it …[caption id="attachment_585059" align="aligncenter" width="285"] Chester Arthur fishing in Canada[/caption][caption id="attachment_585058" align="aligncenter" width="621"] Chester Arthur's Vermont birthplace.[/caption]Arthur Milnes is an accomplished public historian and award-winning journalist.  He was research assistant on The Rt. Hon. Brian Mulroney’s best-selling Memoirs and also served as a speechwriter to then-Prime Minister Stephen Harper and as a Fellow of the Queen’s Centre for the Study of Democracy under the leadership of Tom Axworthy.  A resident of Kingston, Ontario, Milnes serves as the in-house historian at the 175 year-old Frontenac Club Hotel.