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Henry
Johnson: The Soldiers’ Suffragist
By Lou Hunsinger Jr.
Williamsport Sun-Gazette
An obscure state senator from Lycoming County may have
played a pivotal role in helping to gain President Abraham
Lincoln re-election in the tough election campaign of 1864.
That state senator's name was Henry Johnson.
Henry Johnson was born in Newton, New Jersey, on June 12,
1819. He came from a distinguished background. His great-grandfather
was Revolutionary War hero, General Daniel Brodhead, who
served in the Continental Congress and was later assigned
by General George Washington to command Continental troops
in Western Pennsylvania. Brodhead also fought Indians in
the area that would become Lycoming County, in the aftermath
of the "Great Runaway" of 1778.
Johnson graduated from Princeton in 1841 and later that
year moved to Muncy, where his mother owned some property.
He opened a law practice that operated successfully for
the next fifty years. Johnson soon became active and prominent
in political affairs, first as a member of the Whig Party
and later as a Republican. He was an early supporter of
the Zachary Taylor-Millard Fillmore Whig ticket in the 1848
election and served for them as an Elector from Pennsylvania
in the Electoral College.
Johnson's political activism produced dividends for him
when he was elected to the Pennsylvania State Senate in
1860. His Senatorial District included Lycoming, Clinton,
Union and Centre counties. He served on various Senate committees.
In 1864, he became chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
At the time, it was the most powerful position in the Senate
and made him the most powerful figure in that body. He also
became the Speaker Pro Temp of the Senate for a time.
It was early in that same year of 1864 that Johnson made
his greatest impact while in the Senate. The Pennsylvania
Supreme Court had ruled as unconstitutional, an 1812 law
that allowed soldiers in the field to vote in elections.
This court ruling deprived those Pennsylvania soldiers of
voting age their suffrage. It also endangered Abraham Lincoln's
chances of winning Pennsylvania in his 1864 re-election
bid. Some historians have speculated that this decision
may have been arrived at for political reasons since a majority
of the justices on the Court were Democrats appointed by
Democratic governors. Johnson sought to remedy this through
the passage of "a joint resolution proposing an amendment
of the Constitution extending the right of suffrage to citizens
in actual military service." Johnson stated his reasons
for the amendment in part by saying, "The bill simply
contemplates incorporating into the constitution of the
state a great measure of remedial justice to our patriotic
and brave soldiers in the field, made necessary by a decision
of the Supreme Court." He shepherded the legislation
through to passage and the voters of the Commonwealth approved
the measure. This action made it possible for Pennsylvania's
soldiers to vote in the all-important 1864 presidential
election, which may have made the difference in Lincoln
carrying Pennsylvania. Lincoln received 296,389 votes, or
51.75%, to McClellan's 276,308 votes, or 48.20%, a razor-thin
margin of a little more than 20,000 votes. John Meginness
writes in his "History of Lycoming County", "His
(Johnson's) official acts constitute a record of patriotism,
ability and zeal which will endure as long as the Constitution
itself."
Johnson himself saw action during the Civil War as a member
of Company K, Fourteenth Pennsylvania Militia, refusing
any rank higher than private. His company saw action during
the Antietam campaign, near Hagerstown, Maryland, in September
of 1862. This experience may have helped to shape his championing
of the soldiers' vote.
After the war, Johnson returned to Muncy to private life.
In addition to continuing his law practice, he became a
founder and first president of the First National Bank of
Muncy, an office that he held for ten years. He also was
very active in veterans' affairs as a member of Post #66
of the G. A. R.
Johnson moved to a mansion at the corner of West Fourth
and Maynard Streets in 1890. This house still stands across
the street from the Lycoming County Historical Museum. Henry
Johnson died on August 11, 1895. His passing was noted by
a resolution of the Lycoming County Bar Association that
stated in part, "He was an able and painstaking lawyer,
faithful alike to court and client. A patriotic and sagacious
legislator, good citizen and upright man, whose record of
service in fifty years of professional and public life has
left his name without stain."
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